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Afternoon roundup

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* Press release…

Today, 27th Ward Democratic Committeeperson and Chair Walter Burnett announced the date, time, and location for the Democratic Party’s Fifth District Illinois State Senate Committee meeting. The Committee will conduct in-person interviews at Plumbers Local 130, 1340 W Washington, Basement, Chicago, IL 60607 to fill the vacancy in the 5th District of the Illinois State Senate created by the resignation of Senator Patricia Van Pelt. Doors will open at 12:30pm and the meeting will begin promptly at 1:00pm. The meeting will conclude upon the completion of the candidate interviews, committee deliberations, and an appointment to fill the vacancy by a majority of the entire weighted vote of the Committeepersons.

Candidates who would like to apply for the position of 5th District State Senator will need to send their cover letter and resume to this email address: wbj863@gmail.com by August 11, 2023.

The members of the 5th District’s election committee include Committeeperson Daniel LaSpata (1st Ward), Committeeperson Tim Egan (2nd Ward), Comitteeperson John Daley (11th Ward), Committeeperson George Cardenas (12th Ward), Committeeperson Mike Rodriguez (22nd Ward), VACANT (24th Ward), Committeperson Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25th Ward), Committeeperson Walter Burnett (27th Ward), Committeeperson Jason Ervin (28th Ward), Committeeperson Chris Taliaferro (29th Ward), Committeeperson Scott Waguespack (32nd Ward), Committeeperson Emma Mitts (37th), Committeeperson Brendan Reilly (42nd Ward), and Committeeperson Lucy Moog (43rd Township).

What:

Democratic Committee Meeting to fill the vacancy in the office of the Illinois State Senate for the 5th District

When:

Tuesday, August 15, 2023
12:30pm - Doors open to public and press
1:00pm - Meeting and interviews begin

The apparently vacant 24th Ward Committeeperson slot can only be filled by the central committee, per party bylaws.

* Daily Southtown

Residents of Robbins looked up at their town’s water tower last week and watched as hundreds of gallons of water cascaded down from the top.

When a water main broke July 28 and increased the flow of water into the tower, it triggered the emergency overflow system used to prevent the water tower from bursting. It also resurfaced questions about why the state’s leadership isn’t doing more to upgrade the community’s infrastructure.

“If the governor really cared about the people, he’s a billionaire. He could fix all of Illinois himself,” said Robbins Mayor Darren Bryant, who is asking lawmakers for $40 million for his town to conduct infrastructure upgrades. “Put a billion to it, governor, if you want to run for president.”

Yeah, that’ll work.

* Meanwhile, here’s Fox 32

Community leaders are calling for a meeting with Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker saying violence is a disease and civility is the cure.

The purpose of the proposed meeting with the governor is to lay out the Illinois Plan of Civility. […]

State Rep. La Shawn Ford said civility involves kindness, empathy, and understanding while promoting respectful and polite behavior.

Rep. Ford should teach a class in how to regularly get TV news coverage.

* Rick Pearson

When the Will County Board decided to send four of its members to the National Association of Counties’ legislative conference in Washington this past February, the contingent included new Republican board member Daniel Butler of Frankfort. […]

Little more than two years earlier, prior to being elected to office, Butler was in Washington attending then-President Donald Trump’s “Stop the Steal” rally. Butler joined the march to the U.S. Capitol but he was not charged and he said he did not enter the building as insurgents staged a deadly insurrection in a failed attempt to stop the counting of Electoral College votes that made Biden the nation’s president.

Displaying a long history on social media of propagating elaborate and widely debunked conspiracy theories — ranging from pandemic vaccines linked with computer chip technology to a QAnon-backed tale contending Italian satellites were used in 2020 to switch votes from Trump to Biden — Butler won a seat on the Will County Board on Nov. 8. […]

Butler said he still has doubts that Biden’s vote total in defeating Trump exceeded that of President Barack Obama and said he recalls hearing that “some satellite in Rome that the Vatican has” was used to switch votes from Trump to Biden and “they traced stuff that went to a server in Germany.” […]

Butler’s election was assisted by more than $3,300 worth of campaign mailings paid by the Illinois Republican Party, campaign records show. The Illinois GOP did not respond to a request for comment.

Um, wait. Butler claims the Pope’s satellite was used to defeat Trump? Are there no Catholic voters in that guy’s district or in the ILGOP who might be just a wee bit upset about this? Sheesh.

* The task force report isn’t due until next March, which will be too late to implement RCV for the presidential primary cycle…

Governor Pritzker signed SB2123 into law [last week] , greenlighting a task force to evaluate the implementation of Ranked Choice Voting (RCV) in presidential primaries and to analyze the necessary modernization of Illinois’ elections equipment and systems. The Ranked Choice and Voting Systems Task Force will begin convening to analyze the state’s capacity for implementation of RCV and will release a comprehensive report in March, 2024.

The convening of this task force will be the first time in Illinois history that there will be a concerted state-led effort to review RCV and the state’s capacity for implementation. The task force’s work will give lawmakers and election officials a better understanding of RCV, while also facilitating an accounting for how the state certifies certain election systems and equipment, many of which are outdated and less secure.

“Ranked Choice Voting helps ensure everyone’s vote counts” said Patrick Hanley at FairVote Illinois. “Modernizing election equipment is not only critical to implementing Ranked Choice Voting, but it will also ensure election integrity and security at a time when election workers and the systems they use are under increased threat.”

Right now, more than 30% of Illinois’ counties are utilizing outdated voting machines and systems. The RCV Task Force’s report will provide details about the costs of updating these machines to process RCV ballots and make elections more fair and more secure. […]

RCV in presidential primaries is an elegant solution to many of the problems facing our electoral system today. It solves the wasted vote problem that happens now in our current system where voters who vote early can select a candidate who later drops out before the Illinois contest, rendering their vote wasted and their voice silenced.

In 2020, 70,000 Democratic votes were wasted in the presidential primary. Likewise, 30,000 Republican votes were wasted in Illinois’ 2016 presidential primary.

Our current system allows people to vote early for presidential candidates in primaries, even if they are no longer in the race

“Too many votes are wasted in presidential primaries because our current system allows people to vote early for candidates who eventually drop out before the primary day,” State Representative and State Central Committeeman Maurice West (D-Rockford) said. “Ranked Choice Voting ensures voters’ voices are heard and helps solve that problem. It’s a common-sense solution to address a flaw in our system, and I’m grateful for the Governor’s support in exploring this important issue.”

RCV gives voters the option to rank candidates in order of preference – first, second, third, and so on. If their first choice is not viable, their vote counts for their highest-ranked candidate who is. The ability to rank backup choices ensures voters’ voices are heard and rewards candidates with the broadest appeal.

Currently Maine and Alaska have adopted RCV statewide, including for presidential primaries, and over 60 cities and counties have adopted RCV for local elections.

* Press release…

State Representative Tony McCombie (Savanna) was successful in spearheading five legislative initiatives through the Illinois House, all of which passed with bipartisan support and were recently signed into law by Governor JB Pritzker.

“These bills are common sense solutions for Illinois and will help make communities across our state safer, streamline certain government processes, and celebrate those who fight for our nation,” said McCombie. “For me, this is about solving problems and making life better for residents.”

The bills signed by the Governor include:

House Bill 3203: Works to curb the fentanyl epidemic affecting communities across the state by allowing a pharmacist or retailer (rather than only a pharmacist) to sell fentanyl test strips over-the-counter to the public to test for the presence of fentanyl.

House Bill 3206: Beginning July 1, 2024, the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation shall supplement all paper-based certificates and licenses (rather than certificates, licenses, and authorities) with a digitally verified electronic credential.

House Bill 3436: Allows the issuance of the Thank a Line Worker license plate decal by the Illinois Department of Education and creates the Thank a Line Worker Scholarship Fund through the purchase of the decals, which shall be paid as grants in support of scholarships for students studying electrical distribution at an Illinois college or university.

House Bill 1465: Increases competitive bidding threshold to $30,000 for Road Districts as had been done for townships.

Senate Bill 1072: Designates the Honor and Remember flag as the specific symbol to acknowledge American servicemen and women who lost their lives in the line of duty.

* Press release…

Today, Governor JB Pritzker signed SB 2195, also known as the “So Kids Can Move” initiative, which will allow thousands of children and youth with limb loss or limb difference to afford prosthetic care that enables them to participate in physical activities. This legislation makes Illinois just the fourth state in the nation to pass this act. […]

The legislation requires insurance coverage for medically necessary prosthetic or custom orthotic devices to maximize the patient’s whole-body health and function. It amends the Accident and Health Article of the Illinois Insurance Code and codifies that with respect to an enrollee at any age, coverage of a prosthetic or custom orthotic device shall be provided.

* I would’ve guessed Washington, DC /s…


Field Museum: 33 (+ 5 heads)
Oriental Institute Museum: 5
Art Institute of Chicago: 2

Evanston - 1
Naperville - 1 (Naperville Central High School, Late Ptolemaic pd - one of the only HS in the world with its own mummy)

Urbana-Champaign - 1

Source: https://t.co/umcix2geNk

— Wonder City Studio (@wonder_city_) August 6, 2023

* Isabel’s roundup…

posted by Rich Miller
Monday, Aug 7, 23 @ 2:13 pm

Comments

  1. “said Robbins Mayor Darren Bryant, who is asking lawmakers for $40 million for his town to conduct infrastructure upgrades.”

    Local governments around the country just had a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to apply for water-based infrastructure projects through ARPA to address problems like these. Why would the State focus on bailing out local governments if they missed out on putting in an application for ARPA funds?

    “I would’ve guessed Washington, DC”

    Hiyo!

    Comment by NIU Grad Monday, Aug 7, 23 @ 2:26 pm

  2. Not thrilled with the movement on ranked choice voting. It will be an administrative nightmare and not worth it or necessary in my opinion. Just another idea that looks to change how we hold elections in this country. If you are looking to fix a broken system, you can start by trying to find better candidates - not voting systems that may help your candidates get elected.

    Comment by Hannibal Lecter Monday, Aug 7, 23 @ 2:33 pm

  3. ==Um, wait. Butler claims the Pope’s satellite was used to defeat Trump? Are there no Catholic voters in that guy’s district or in the ILGOP who might be just a wee bit upset about this? Sheesh.==

    If you made a Venn Diagram of “Catholics who attend mass regularly” and “Catholics who regularly vote Republican,” you would get a fair bit of.overlap. if you drew a third circle labeled “Catholics who respect the words and authority of Pope Francis as legitimate,” that would be on the complete opposite edge of the paper from that overlap.

    I remain somewhat surprised we have not yet encountered schism.

    Comment by Roadrager Monday, Aug 7, 23 @ 2:36 pm

  4. The Pope has a satellite? Really. Some people will buy anything. The 2020 Presidential race wasn’t as much Biden vs Trump as it was Anti-Trump vs Pro-Trump. The Anti-Trump voters won. There was more of them.

    Comment by Appears Monday, Aug 7, 23 @ 3:00 pm

  5. Heidi Steven’s columns are among my favorite things to read. Always fun and usually inspirational. FOPO, a fear for adults as well as Middle Schoolers. Smile emoji.

    Comment by froganon Monday, Aug 7, 23 @ 3:20 pm

  6. –Are there no Catholic voters in that guy’s district or in the ILGOP who might be just a wee bit upset about this?–

    There probably are, but none of them are going to read this, because there is zero local news in Will County which will ever be reporting on this.

    As much as I dislike it, the only reliable source of local news in Will County, is a newspaper in Chicago.

    Comment by TheInvisibleMan Monday, Aug 7, 23 @ 3:26 pm

  7. @Appears

    Strange as it would seem, the Pope does indeed have a satellite. “Spei Satelles” launched earlier this year. Its about the size of a football and was built by University of Turin and launched back in June. My understanding is that its a cubesat that broadcasts audio.

    Not commenting on the merit of his point, but there is a danger of being proved wrong when you scoff at something as being “outlandish” when you are dealing with a literal nation state and the item in question costs about as much as an single family house in Illinois.

    Comment by Just Another Anon Monday, Aug 7, 23 @ 4:02 pm

  8. What I was commenting on was that votes was changed (and they weren’t), it could have been done locally. It didn’t have to involve other nations.

    Comment by Appears Monday, Aug 7, 23 @ 4:30 pm

  9. I like RCP for a couple reasons.
    1. You potentially get more people behind a candidate out of a primary. One example would be 2010 GOP Gov Primary where the top 3 got roughly 20% of the vote each. Using RCP may have seen quite different results and possibly a different Governor elected.
    2. While using a run-off format in Chicago Mayor race forces candidates to sharpen there campaigns between round 1 and round 2, it’s also an extra cost for running an election process twice. While there would be heavy upfront costs in educating the public on RCV, it would pay dividends whenever there is a crowded field of candidates for Mayor.

    Comment by From DaZoo Monday, Aug 7, 23 @ 4:51 pm

  10. (+ 5 heads)
    That’s way more info than I needed today.

    Comment by Bruce( no not him) Monday, Aug 7, 23 @ 5:44 pm

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