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Please, don’t do stuff like this (Updated)

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* Daily Herald poses a campaign question to a government employee on state time

Prompted by what he calls “radical” changes in Illinois’ criminal justice system, DuPage County Sheriff James Mendrick is skipping a potential third term as the county’s top cop and setting his sights instead on the governor’s mansion. […]

Pritzker has not said whether he will run again in 2026. With a growing national profile as an outspoken opponent of President Donald Trump, his name also has been floated as a possible Democratic nominee for president in 2028.

Press secretary Alex Gough said via email Thursday that nothing has changed regarding Pritzker’s reelection plans, and declined to comment on Mendrick’s announcement.

Apparently, Gough told him Pritzker had already spoken to this and then referred the reporter to the campaign side.

* I don’t have hard data, but I have decades of experience listening to state government spokespersons regularly complain about reporters asking them campaign questions during state hours.

Hey, I’ve done it sometimes without thinking. It happens. But it’s not right to put a government employee in that position.

People write stories all the time about ethics violations, etc., yet it’s reporters who might be committing the most common ethics breach.

* Anyway, here’s an announcement/background roundup from Isabel…

…Adding… The governor was asked about Sheriff Mendrick during an unrelated event…

Good luck. Everybody has the option of running for public office. I understand he announced yesterday on his Facebook page, and so I don’t really have anything to say more about that. And I have not made up my mind about whether I would run for re-election.

posted by Rich Miller
Friday, Feb 28, 25 @ 10:54 am

Comments

  1. We want our state back’
    Wo is we? Back from where? Ohand where does he want to go? Sounds like this whack job wants to outflank CommandoIves. Does he get the Uline/Proft money?

    Comment by Annonin' Friday, Feb 28, 25 @ 11:05 am

  2. “He made the surprise move after choosing not to leave Illinois because he didn’t like how it’s being run. He’s now staying put in Woodridge after his 25-year-old son said he wasn’t budging.”

    He wanted to leave the state but his adult son didn’t want to move so now he’s running for governor of said state?

    Cool midlife crisis, bro.

    – MrJM

    Comment by @misterjayem Friday, Feb 28, 25 @ 11:11 am

  3. The Sheriff will have the support of the IL Sheriffs’ Association, and I am pretty sure most of those departments will be drumming up support for the revocation of the SAFE-T Act with their local constituents. This could become really ugly. Uglier still if these Sheriffs and Deputies start drumming up the “undocumented are illegal and therefore have no human rights protections” mantra.

    Comment by H-W Friday, Feb 28, 25 @ 11:24 am

  4. Speaking of ethics I am unclear on this since he is still sheriff, but in campaigning or I guess press meetings about running can he be in uniform?

    Comment by DuPage Saint Friday, Feb 28, 25 @ 11:36 am

  5. It can never be an ethical breach for a reporter to ask a public official a question at any time.

    Comment by Eric Zorn Friday, Feb 28, 25 @ 11:45 am

  6. - It can never be an ethical breach for a reporter to ask a public official a question at any time. -

    I agree with that, but is a press secretary a public official?

    Comment by Excitable Boy Friday, Feb 28, 25 @ 11:53 am

  7. Eric Zorn, I agree. It’s not unethical. It just makes the reporter look like they don’t know the difference between campaign and government work.

    Comment by Ducky LaMoore Friday, Feb 28, 25 @ 12:06 pm

  8. **It can never be an ethical breach for a reporter to ask a public official a question at any time.**

    So, do you think that it is appropriate for reporters to ask government side staff about political side issues?

    Comment by JoeMaddon Friday, Feb 28, 25 @ 12:23 pm

  9. “The large response comes after DuPage County Sheriff James Mendrick said he would not enforce the ban. He is one of more than 80 of the 102 sheriffs in the state who said they are not enforcing the new law.”

    Law Enforcement Officer: It’s in the name. LEOs, whether they agree with a law or not should not pick and choose which laws they will enforce. That is a dereliction of duty.

    I’m curious. For any lawyers reading this, by making these statements publicly could these sheriffs be liable civilly or criminally if someone is injured or killed by a FOID card holder with an assault weapon in their jurisdiction because they refuse to enforce this ban?

    Comment by Steve Polite Friday, Feb 28, 25 @ 12:25 pm

  10. ===It can never be an ethical breach for a reporter to ask a public official a question at any time. ===

    A public official, yes. A government worker? No.

    Eric, if you can’t tell the difference, you’re part of the problem.

    Comment by Rich Miller Friday, Feb 28, 25 @ 12:36 pm

  11. @11:36 ===”running can be in uniform?”===

    There is a prohibition against police doing political campaigning in uniform. However it does not apply to sheriffs, as sheriffs are a political office as well as a law enforcement officer.

    Comment by Dupage Friday, Feb 28, 25 @ 12:40 pm

  12. Gough is a great guy and it was an honest mistake. His recent tweet about William Kelly was pretty funny.

    Comment by What a Time Friday, Feb 28, 25 @ 12:53 pm

  13. Mr. Zorn - I revere the 1st amendment and have enjoyed your work on many occasions, but I do not share the absolutism expressed in your post which would seem to put reporters on a pedestal above everyone else as above reproach in everything rather than the mere professional citizens that they are.

    There are plenty of situations a reporter could ask a question that is an ethical breach. Like if it was a leading question that was not based in fact but created a scandal for the politician simply for the reporter having asked it.

    Comment by hisgirlfriday Friday, Feb 28, 25 @ 12:56 pm

  14. ===Gough is a great guy and it was an honest mistake===

    Gough made no mistake. The reporter did.

    Comment by Rich Miller Friday, Feb 28, 25 @ 12:57 pm

  15. - It can never be an ethical breach for a reporter to ask a public official a question at any time. -

    Blanket statements can end up all wet.

    Comment by Dotnonymous x Friday, Feb 28, 25 @ 1:11 pm

  16. This is not a country of kings. Politicians are not above scrutiny. It can never be an ethical breach for a reporter to ask a public official a question at any time.

    Comment by Garfield Ridge Guy Friday, Feb 28, 25 @ 1:28 pm

  17. Couldn’t Mendrick have just bought a hot Yellow Corvette?

    Comment by Dotnonymous x Friday, Feb 28, 25 @ 1:35 pm

  18. ===Politicians are not above scrutiny===

    Hey dummy, Alex Gough is not a politician. He’s a state worker.

    Comment by Rich Miller Friday, Feb 28, 25 @ 1:36 pm

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