|
To subscribe to Capitol Fax, click
here. Subscriptions are $350 per year. To advertise on the Capitol Fax Blog, please click here. |
Friday, Feb 17, 2006
Single-game tickets go on sale today, so I figured it would be a good time to restart Friday White Sox blogging.
Let’s start with this article in the Post-Dispatch sent in by an alert reader about our star pitching.
But this article about our new DH is very heartening.
As this past offseason progressed, it became increasingly tougher for Kenny Williams to talk with Jim Thome.
It wasn’t that the general manager regretted trading for the native son from downstate Peoria, even though popular “grinder” and defensive whiz Aaron Rowand was sent to Philadelphia as part of the deal for the prolific slugger. And it wasn’t that Thome’s rehabilitation from right elbow and back problems was coming along slower than expected.
If anything, the White Sox had to slow down Thome because he was experiencing such great results during his workouts. Instead, Williams simply needed a break from Thome’s endless supply of intensity and enthusiasm. It was a rough offseason for Williams, who battled painful kidney stones during much of November and December, and he truly needed some time away from the game to get ready for the grind of the 2006 effort to repeat.
“I just got out of bed from all the issues I was having, so I’m not ready for Spring Training yet,” said Williams with a smile, speaking with the media during SoxFest.
“So, I try and stay away from Jim Thome as much as possible,” Williams added. “Seriously, he gets me so fired up and ready to go, and I needed those extra couple of weeks.”
And the accolades keep coming.
“We did a good job getting Jim, there’s no secret,” said Konerko, who led the White Sox with 40 home runs and 100 RBIs in 2005. “We won a lot of low-scoring games where we didn’t hit the ball well.
“You try to shore up that area and score some more runs. You always try to better your weakness, and we got better offensively. With Jim, it’s a guy not only with potential on the field, but he’s also one more guy in the clubhouse with a voice of reason.”
If Konerko’s happy, I’m happy.
Go Sox.
- posted by Rich Miller 15 Comments
|
Friday, Feb 17, 2006
What can you say about Edwin Eisendrath’s new cable TV ad? “Breathtakingly horrible,” was how one friend described it last night.
He doesn’t look into the camera (note to producer: invest in a teleprompter), the script is sub-par to say the least, he doesn’t read well, and it made my friends and I laugh until we cried last night.
This ad makes Edwin Eisendrath the Ed Wood of Illinois politics.
I usually don’t put my own opinion on Questions of the Day, but I just had to get that off my chest.
Anyway, you can see the ad on his homepage.
I’ll buy dinner for the funniest commenter.
UPDATE: Illinoize blogger Abraham Lincoln has a new post up about Oberweis’ first TV ad and a tagline contest. And the winner of that contest will have dinner with myself and the winner of this contest. Keep them coming!
- posted by Rich Miller 81 Comments
|
Friday, Feb 17, 2006
Here is the full text of the letter sent by Republican Party Chairman Andy McKenna to Ron Gidwitz. I wrote about this in today’s Capitol Fax, and here is another story about the fight.
February 16, 2006
Mr. Ronald Gidwitz
Ron Gidwitz for Governor
57 West Grand Ave.
Suite 300
Chicago, IL. 60610
Dear Ron:
On behalf of the Illinois Republican State Central Committee, I am writing to express our collective disappointment with your decision this week to air a negative television advertisement about a fellow Republican. Instead of attacking our own candidates, we as a Party should focus our attention on the failures of the Democrats and the fiscally reckless and ethically challenged record of Governor Rod Blagojevich.
As you know, the Committee adopted a Code of Conduct last December that asks all Republican candidates for elective office to abide by certain guidelines during the course of their campaigns, including a promise to avoid any “misrepresentations†or “distortions†regarding fellow primary candidates and their records. Unfortunately, you chose not to sign the Code, so I have included a copy for your further review.
Our goal as Republicans is to earn back the trust of voters, and in doing so, we have a responsibility to encourage all candidates to present their campaign messages in an accurate and straight-forward manner. That is why it is so important for all of us to avoid misrepresentations and distortions. A vigorous debate about issues and ideas strengthens our Party; distorted negative attacks weaken our credibility.
In our opinion, questions exist about the accuracy of the charges in your current advertisement that need to be resolved. Therefore, we believe you should present the public with appropriate and specific documentation to defend your charges. Otherwise, we respectfully request that you edit the content of the message to accurately and truthfully reflect your opponent’s record.
We have a great opportunity to win back the Governor’s office this year. Let’s keep our eye on the ball. By turning our attacks on each other, we provide aid and comfort to our Democratic opponents who will eagerly exploit our internal differences, divide our ranks and help us defeat ourselves.
Sincerely,
Andy McKenna
Chairman
cc: Republican State Central Committee Members
Republican County Chairmen
Republican Candidates for Governor
Discuss.
- posted by Rich Miller 63 Comments
|
Friday, Feb 17, 2006
· The US Attorney for southern Illinois found himself under intense fire from Chicago federal prosecutors yesterday.
· Gov. Blagojevich’s office accused of trading state funds for votes.
· Check out stories about Gov. Blagojevich’s new TV ad and the campaign kickoff here, here, here and here.
· General Assembly cuts judges, candidates sue.
· Cell phone antenna called “butt-ugly.”
· Daley family in-law pleads guilty.
· Chicago wants wi-fi.
· Downstate hospital snared in Medicare probe.
· More later.
· Gidwitz family selling Picasso painting. Auction could bring in $50 million.
· OneMan, as always, is asking the right question.
· News haikus.
· Racism becoming an issue in pork plant battle.
· Conservative explains why he opposes guv’s preschool plan, and has an interesting little mention about $7500 that Blagojevich paid to an Iowa political operative last year.
· Hyde Park blogger calls the guv’s PowerPoint presentation a “bold experiment.”
· UPDATE: And I’m still looking for a new name for this feature.
· The governor has just released the schedule for his announcement fly-around:
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 19th
Springfield - 10:30am
Lincoln Park Pavilions Pre-School
1601 N. 5th St.
Marion - 1pm
Marion Civic Center
800 Tower Square Plaza
Chicago - 4:45 pm
Alivio Medical Center
966 W. 21st St.
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20th
Rockford - 9:30am
Rockford Airport
Rock Island - 11am
Rock Island Airport
Quincy - 1pm
Quincy Airport
Metro East - 2:30pm
Cahokia Airport
Peoria - 4:30pm
Peoria Airport
- posted by Rich Miller 6 Comments
|
Friday, Feb 17, 2006
On the day that the governor begins running his first TV ad of the season, he’s hit with two potentially troubling stories in the Chicago Tribune.
The first is a potentially ominous tollway contract piece.
The Illinois State Toll Highway Authority has fired a computer software company that won a contract to track construction projects three months after it contributed money to Gov. Rod Blagojevich–even though the firm initially was not a finalist in the bidding process. […]
The company, Cantillon said, failed to design the system needed to responsibly manage its ambitious $5.3 billion road reconstruction plan. “We just didn’t get off to a good start,” she said. “CapitalSoft’s product wasn’t delivering the features we needed.” […]
But documents the Tribune obtained under the Freedom of Information Act show that CapitalSoft finished fourth behind three other companies seeking the contract.
The criteria for submitting bids said “no more than three (3) bidders with the highest overall score” would be invited to give a presentation.
But an exception was made for CapitalSoft, which donated $5,000 to the Blagojevich campaign while the tollway was evaluating proposals for the contract.
And the second is about a grand jury investigation that nobody had heard about until now.
A Cook County grand jury is investigating whether Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s administration improperly used its power to shut down a suburban landfill run by a relative of his estranged father-in-law, sources said Thursday.
One of the officials for the state Environmental Protection Agency involved in shutting down the Joliet dump acknowledged Thursday that he and another EPA administrator had recently testified before the grand jury.
But William Child, bureau chief for the EPA’s bureau of land management, declined to say what he was asked.
A law enforcement source confirmed the investigation centers on the EPA’s decision to close the landfill in January 2005 and whether the governor’s office engaged in official misconduct or abuse of power in calling for the EPA to look into the landfill.
Sources said the questioning has centered on whether the EPA was pressured by officials in the governor’s office to deviate from standard procedures on the case.
Uh-oh.
- posted by Rich Miller 16 Comments
|
Friday, Feb 17, 2006
UPDATE: The three candidates are on Chicago Public Radio between 9 and 10 this morning. Listen here. (Hat tip: Austin Mayor.)
First, a profile of Tammy Duckworth in the Sun-Times.
Touring a Wheaton rehabilitation hospital, Democratic congressional candidate Tammy Duckworth ripped President Bush’s proposed federal budget, saying it doesn’t provide enough money for health care or medical research.
The wounded Iraqi war veteran, who lost both legs when her helicopter was shot down in 2004, said proposed budget cuts would make it more difficult for Chicago area residents to receive the intensive medical care and therapy provided at the Marianjoy Rehabilitation Hospital.
“There is a direct connection between care that people get here in Wheaton and the decisions made in Washington,'’ Duckworth said during a visit to the hospital with former U.S. Sen. Max Cleland, who lost both legs and an arm in the Vietnam War.
And a profile of candidate Lindy Scott in the Tribune.
If there’s a stereotype of a Democrat politician–or any politician, for that matter–Lindy Scott does not fill the bill.
The trim, bearded Wheaton College professor, who’s trying to succeed outgoing U.S. Rep. Henry Hyde (R-Ill.) in a west suburban congressional district, is the former pastor of a Des Plaines evangelical church and an eight-time Chicago Marathon runner.
For 16 years he taught in Mexico City, where he founded the Evangelical Free Church of Mexico, and he now teaches Spanish and the history of church-state relations in Latin America. His wife is Brazilian and their three children have tri-citizenships: the United States, Brazil and Mexico.
Though white evangelical Christians typically vote Republican, Scott says his faith led him to the other side of the aisle. “I cherish life, and life should be cherished across the board,” Scott said, greeting students in the campus coffee shop with a friendly, “Hola!”
Scott has already done two mailers and has made himself a presence in the district. It’s possible that Christine Cegelis, who ran last time but has no money and a campaign in disarray, could come in third.
- posted by Rich Miller 18 Comments
|
Thursday, Feb 16, 2006
I’m told that Governor Blagojevich has a new 60-second TV ad up about education and jobs. Rate it here if you’ve seen it.
UPDATE: His campaign website is here. The ad isn’t up yet, but keep an eye on it today. The guv has a press conference planned for this afternoon morning.
UPDATE: I’m guessing that since he has a fly-around scheduled for Monday that he finally announces his candidacy on Sunday. We’ll see.
UPDATE: The ad will be on the governor’s campaign website tonight, I’m told.
UPDATE: From the AP.
Gov. Rod Blagojevich will formally announce his re-election campaign this weekend with a two-day, eight-city tour of the state.
Blagojevich will visit Springfield, Marion and Chicago on Sunday, and on Monday he will travel to Rockford, Rock Island, Quincy, Cahokia and Peoria.
Today Blagojevich debuted his first campaign ad of the primary season, however his campaign spokesman Doug Scofield said the governor does not plan to debate his challenger, Edwin Eisendrath.
UPDATE: I’ve asked the campaign to reconsider its decision to post the ad on the web tonight and instead make it available much earlier. We’ll see. Meantime, here’s Topinka’s new ad. Discuss as well.
UPDATE: If you’re not in the Chicago area or in the Springfield/Champaign/Decatur market, you can probably quit looking for the ad on TV. Doesn’t appear that they’ve bought anywhere but those two markets.
UPDATE: From the Sun-Times.
Acknowledging to viewers that he has “ruffled feathers and had some rocky moments,†Gov. Blagojevich launched his re-election campaign today with a round of television commercials that tout his tax, healthcare and education policies but makes no mention of the federal investigation dogging his administration.
“I know sometimes you wonder what the governor’s up to,†Blagojevich says into the camera in the 60-second ad. “Well, four years ago in the face of a $5 billion deficit and job losses, you had asked me to get things done. It might surprise you to learn the progress we’ve made.â€
And the AP:
“I’m a little older and hopefully wiser, but one thing hasn’t changed. I’m as committed as ever to work for you. Thanks for the chance,” Blagojevich says in the ad
UPDATE: Edwin Eisendrath press release:
“Today a coal industry lobbyist who moonlights as the governor’s spokesman tells us the governor was running for re-election. In fact, he’s running for cover. Just like George Bush, who loves a good photo op, the governor is opting to avoid his record and hide behind his special interest funded ads. Next thing you know, Pat Quinn will have to shoot someone!” Eisendrath said.
- posted by Rich Miller 64 Comments
|
Thursday, Feb 16, 2006
ABC-7 ran a story yesterday featuring Republican gubernatorial candidate Ron Gidwitz defending his new TV ad that attacks Judy Baar Topinka. Gidwitz even got a little assist from one of his other opponents.
“From what I can tell, everything Ron said is accurate. The truth of the matter is, Judy will not take a pledge to increase taxes,” said Bill Brady, (R)-candidate for governor.
But other party leaders expressed some concern.
Republican leaders like Tom Cross are worried about GOP candidates going after each other instead of the real target, governor Blagojevich.
“I happen to think at this point Judy’s our best candidate in the fall. I hope she can get through the primary relatively unscathed, and I would hope that all the people in our party will understand we don’t want a candidate that is so scarred it’s hard,” said Ill. Rep. Tom Cross, (R)-minority leader.
But Gidwitz is undaunted.
“If you have a weak record it shouldn’t be surprising that you’re going to be embarrassed by it. Those that have what we believe to be strong records should not be bothered,” said Gidwitz.
UPDATE: News release from Congressman Ray LaHood:
Following months of being stuck in third-place in the polls, Ron Gidwitz has unleashed a torrent of desperate and negative ads against frontrunner Judy Baar Topinka. Those ads are filled with inaccuracies and misleading
statements, and our state doesn’t need more mud-slinging from a struggling campaign.
The Gidwitz campaign has clearly crossed the line with its attack against Judy. Politicians do not have to use negative ads to be elected and that is why I have always chosen to run positive campaigns based on the facts.
Tough ads are part of the political process, but voters deserve to be presented with the truth – not fiction. Ron is attempting to smear her record by using bogus facts and figures.
Judy Baar Topinka is clearly our best candidate to beat Rod Blagojevich in November. Misleading negative ads like these won’t help Ron Gidwitz, but they could help Rod Blagojevich.
Today I am calling on the Gidwitz campaign to get the facts straight and correct the ad, or take it off the air immediately.
- posted by Rich Miller 34 Comments
|
Thursday, Feb 16, 2006
The Daily Herald does the big picture.
Gov. Rod Blagojevich unveiled a spending plan Wednesday that cements the Chicago Democrat’s dramatic political about-face: from fiscal penny-pincher to leader of a major expansion of government programs that likely will cost taxpayers more each year.
During Blagojevich’s first two years, he played the role of fiscal conservative, battling his own party’s efforts to inflate spending and blasting lawmakers as “drunken sailors†engaged in a “spending orgy.â€
But as re-election looms, he’s increasingly become the politician many conservatives and Republicans feared he would be after he ended a quarter-century of Republican rule in 2002.
In the last six months alone, he’s proposed sweeping increases in government entitlements, although he says he’s investing in the future and protecting children. Even critics admit giving health care to children and creating state-paid preschool sound like good ideas, but they add that once enacted, the ideas don’t go away and every year become more expensive.
Copley touches on the conflict.
To loud cheers from Democrats, Gov. Rod Blagojevich presented a $55.4 billion state budget Wednesday that gives more money to preschool programs, a tuition tax credit and health care.
But Republican lawmakers literally jeered the governor when he said state pensions are better off under his leadership and that he has eliminated the budget deficit.
The Tribune hits the campaign theme.
Transforming his budget speech into an election-year political rally, Gov. Rod Blagojevich drew cheers from Democrats and jeers from Republicans Wednesday as he implored lawmakers to pass a $55.3 billion spending plan that boosts social programs.
Delivering his address from the ornate House chambers, the Democratic governor at some points sounded like a polished sales representative in a corporate suite, at others a fiery preacher in the pulpit.
…And gives us a good example of how much the Republicans are opposing the governor’s spending increases.
House Minority Leader Tom Cross (R-Oswego) said Blagojevich’s suggestion that the budget is balanced and the state’s fiscal house is in order is “absurd.”
Cross, the father of a child with juvenile diabetes and an ardent advocate for stem-cell research, said he was unsure whether the state could afford many of the governor’s proposals, including one for a 5-year, $100 million research program.
And the Sun-Times, via the AP, breaks down the numbers.
BOTTOM LINE: $45.4 billion in operating expenses, a 4.2 percent increase, plus $9.95 billion for building and maintenance.
WHERE IT GOES: 33.2 percent to welfare; 25.7 percent education; 16.1 percent human services; 11.2 percent government services; 7.1 percent economic development; 5 percent public safety; 1.6 percent business and environmental regulation.
NEW MONEY: $1.38 billion, including $878 million in natural tax-revenue growth.
EDUCATION: $440 million in new funding, including offering preschool to every 3- and 4-year-old and $10 million in grants to schools to reduce class sizes.
PENSIONS: $437 million to government pension systems; additional money possible from selling state assets for $30 million, selling the long-dormant 10th casino license.
HEALTH: $10 million for a program to offer health coverage to low-income veterans who live far from veterans’ medical centers; $3 million for more nurses; $15 million for stem-cell research.
PRISONS: Partly open Thomson Correctional Center with 75 guards and 200 inmates; open 200-bed unit to treat methamphetamine users at Southwestern Illinois Correctional Center.
CIGARETTE TAX: $10 million from a tax on cigars.
ENVIRONMENT: $16.5 million more for the Department of Natural Resources, including $1 million for a statewide water supply survey and enhancements at parks and natural areas.
- posted by Rich Miller 16 Comments
|
Wednesday, Feb 15, 2006
SurveyUSA has released its monthly tracker of gubernatorial job approval ratings.
Gov. Blagojevich’s 41 percent approval and 54 percent disapproval is about the same as last month.
More details here.
UNRELATED UPDATE: Don’t forget about Illinoize.
- posted by Rich Miller 20 Comments
|
Wednesday, Feb 15, 2006
More Tribune poll numbers.
Seven out of 10 Chicago voters don’t believe Mayor Richard Daley’s assertions that he was unaware of wrongdoing in city contracting and hiring, but more than half of voters still approve of the job he is doing, a new Tribune/WGN-TV poll shows.
A majority of the survey’s participants have concluded that Daley is responsible for personnel and contract decisions and aren’t satisfied with his past efforts to eliminate fraud and corruption in those areas. Still, the poll found that when it comes time to vote, most voters will view the scandals that have rocked City Hall as less important than what Daley has done to improve the city.
With one year before the next city mayoral balloting, the poll found that if Daley ran for re-election today against U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., the race would be up for grabs. In a three-way contest that also included U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez, the poll showed Daley could be forced into a runoff. […]
Only 18 percent of voters in the poll said they believe Daley had no knowledge of how city contracts and jobs were awarded.
Sixty percent said they think the mayor is personally responsible for overseeing the selection of city contractors, and only about one in four said they were satisfied with Daley’s previous efforts to prevent corruption in contracting and city hiring. Nearly four out of five said they believe political loyalty should not determine who gets a city job, the poll found.
But half of the voters said they are satisfied with the mayor’s efforts since the City Hall scandals broke to eliminate favoritism, corruption and fraud in contracting and hiring. […]
Nearly 60 percent of respondents said improvements were more important to them than wrongdoing at City Hall when deciding whether to vote for Daley. Only 27 percent said they rated the scandals more important.
- posted by Rich Miller 14 Comments
|
Wednesday, Feb 15, 2006
We had a lot of activity on the blog yesterday after I posted a few lines about Ron Gidwitz’s new TV ad. I figured it might be a good QOTD.
Here’s a roundup of the coverage with the question below.
· The Sun-Times proclaims “Gidwitz gives Topinka a venomous Valentine.”
“Judy Baar Topinka supports bigger government,” the narrator says in the 30-second spot. “More spending. More taxes. More debt.”
Topinka immediately fired off an angry letter to Gidwitz demanding he stop airing the commercials, calling them “reprehensible,” “dishonest” and “blatantly false.”
“He is misguided or he doesn’t understand or he is making a very grievous mistake,” Topinka told the Sun-Times.
Gidwitz campaign manager Joe Calomino said they have no plans to pull the commercial.
“The facts are the facts, and she’s wrong,” Calomino said.
There are facts and then there are political facts.
· “Gidwitz ad rips into Topinka’s record” writes the Daily Herald.
Gidwitz’s 30-second ad claims Topinka doubled spending in the treasurer’s office, sponsored a sales tax increase while a state senator and backed billions in new debt.
“Topinka. More of the same when it’s time for a change,†a male announcer’s voice says.
Topinka, who is the front-runner in polls while Gidwitz is running third, said her office has assumed more responsibilities than her predecessor, including the state’s lost-property program. Spending on regular operations has increased from just over $6 million to just under $8 million in her 11 years in office, aides said — far less than the double the ad claims.
“It’s dishonest. If he wants to hit me on something, hit me on something that exists. That is fair,†said Topinka, who started airing her own biographical TV spot Tuesday.
And the Tribune writes:
The ad, called “More,” suggests that Topinka would continue the kind of state government Democratic Gov. Rod Blagojevich has led.
The ad’s first claim is that Topinka “doubled spending” on her office.
While the number of people in the treasurer’s office has increased during Topinka’s tenure, so have the functions assigned to it in recent years.
Personnel records from the treasurer’s office show that 185 people work for Topinka, compared with 141 in 1995 when she took office.
Her campaign said the additional employees were from other state departments that had duties moved into the treasurer’s office. When compared directly, campaign aides contend she has actually reduced staff.
The question is, what do you think of all this? Will the ad backfire? Will it work?
- posted by Rich Miller 37 Comments
|
Wednesday, Feb 15, 2006
Here are a few excerpts from today’s budget preview stories.
· The Tribune’s story, “Election-year plan of plenty,” has several details.
Gov. Rod Blagojevich will unveil a $55.3 billion campaign year budget Wednesday highlighted by a broad-based social agenda that includes early learning programs and health care for kids while keeping his promise not to raise state income or sales taxes. […]
With something for nearly every constituency, the Blagojevich spending plan would pump a $400 million increase into prekindergarten programs through high school, including money to launch the nation’s first universal preschool for children as young as 3.
Blagojevich would pay to train 100 new Illinois State Police cadets, relocate the state’s Sexually Violent Persons program from Joliet to a new, larger facility in Downstate Rushville and partially open a long-vacant new prison in northwestern Illinois. For the first time in 6 years, the budget also would increase rates for child-care providers.
The governor also will propose $15 million to launch a 5-year, $100 million plan to provide funds for regenerative stem cell research, according to budget documents obtained by the Tribune.
· The Sun-Times writes about the pension proposal.
Gov. Blagojevich today will suggest diverting cash from the future sale of Illinois’ disputed 10th casino license to reduce the $38 billion shortfall facing the state’s public pension systems. […]
“I don’t think the idea even dignifies a response,” said Rep. Mark Beaubien (R-Wauconda), the House Republican’s lead budget negotiator. “That’s so classic Blagojevich: ‘When we sell the 10th license, we’ll give the money to pensions.’ In the year 2010? 2011? 2012? When? It’s pandering, that’s what it is.”
The Daily Herald takes my Capitol Fax story from yesterday and advances it an interesting notch.
Democratic Gov. Rod Blagojevich today will ask lawmakers to sell the state’s college loan portfolio to fetch as much as $500 million to pay for $1,000 college tax credits to parents of freshmen and sophomores at state schools.
The contract to sell the student loans, which would keep the same terms, could go to a firm with ties to the chairman of Blagojevich’s 2002 governor campaign. […]
McNeil confirmed the contract to sell the loans could go to Scott Balice Strategies, which has served as the tollway’s financial consultant. The firm is a “strategic partner†and has shared office space with lobbying outfit Wilhelm and Conlon. David Wilhelm was Blagojevich’s 2002 campaign chairman but has said he stopped lobbying a couple of years ago. Scott Balice has given $15,500 to Blagojevich’s campaign fund since 2000.
Use this as a budget address open thread. Live-blog if you can. I want commenters to get some practice doing this because I might have a big announcement in the coming days.
- posted by Rich Miller 15 Comments
|
Wednesday, Feb 15, 2006
· I think we need a better title for this daily item. Suggestions, please.
· “Democrat Linda Hawker, secretary of the Illinois Senate, is running for Sangamon County clerk and hopes to take on incumbent Republican Clerk Joe Aiello in the fall.”
I’ve known Linda forever. I don’t endorse, but I do wish her well.
· Worker attacked in prison kitchen.
· 3 new judgeships eliminated.
· Not a single DeKalb County doctor accepts Medicaid patients.
· More later.
· Tollway settles big lawsuit.
· Power Point and Vikings.
· More character witnesses for Ryan trial.
· City workers wonder: What are my odds of being indicted?
· Badges for library trustees. Yep. Goofy.
· Blogger is polled, blogs about the questions.
I did not write anything down so I am doing this from memory but the reasons for voting for Mike Jacobs had to do with him being instrumental in getting funding for the WIU campus in Moline, support for the Thomson Prison, his support for education and things like that. The reasons for voting against Mike Jacobs were him “speaking before thinking†when defending the riverboat gambling industry and him saying that union workers made too much money and since he was appointed rather than elected he was beholden to the party insiders rather than to the voters.
· Richard Norton Smith apparently has very thin skin.
- posted by Rich Miller 17 Comments
|
Wednesday, Feb 15, 2006
It just gets weirder.
On Tuesday, six correctional officers were suspended with pay because they are subjects of the sheriff’s internal investigation of Saturday’s jail break, Cunningham said.
Sources said one of those guards, a 36-year-old ex-Marine, has admitted he helped the inmates escape to give a political boost to a former jail supervisor, Richard Remus, who is running for Sheahan’s post in the March 21 Democratic primary.
Prosecutors on Tuesday night charged that correctional officer, Darin Gater, with a variety of offenses, and he is due in court today. […]
Still, one official close to the investigation said, “I’m absolutely not convinced with the Remus angle. That’s one of the problems I’m having. At best, I think it was a hope that it would assist Remus. But I cannot and do not believe anybody would be that stupid that they wouldn’t realize their heads would roll if something bad happened on their watch.”
And weirder.
News also broke Tuesday the jailbreak itself was no secret.
Authorities had been tipped to the planned breakout hours before the escape, officials said. In fact, word of the planned escape had made it all the way to the maximum security section of the jail where the inmates were housed, officials said.
What happened next still remains unclear, but six guards from that wing, including Gater, were suspended with pay Tuesday pending the outcome of an internal sheriff’s investigation, according to statements from sheriff’s officials.
And here’s some background on Richard Remus.
Remus split with Sheahan after Remus and his brother lost their jobs with the sheriff’s office.
And the blood feud thickened in recent days when a jail guard who once worked for Remus reportedly admitted that he helped six inmates escape from Cook County Jail to embarrass Sheahan and Dart — and to help Remus. Remus denies any involvement.
Remus, 48, is half Irish and half German, and grew up in the 19th Ward since the sixth grade. He worked on Mayor Daley’s first mayoral campaign and helped Michael Sheahan in his first campaign for sheriff. […]
Richard Remus’ name surfaced in 2003 when inmates sued him for allegedly leading a mass-beating in 1999. They said Remus stood on a table shouting, “SORT runs the jail.” The county settled the lawsuit. Remus was forced out of his job after an internal affairs investigation. A grand jury that investigated the incident said of Remus:
- posted by Rich Miller 1 Comment
|
Tuesday, Feb 14, 2006
Ron Gidwitz is reportedly running a negative TV ad. Go check out his site. More later.
UPDATE: Charges are iffy, to say the least. Topinka demanding that the ad be withdrawn.
- posted by Rich Miller 50 Comments
|
Tuesday, Feb 14, 2006
Carl Nyberg may be onto something here.
Illinois should pass a law that if you turn-in the ghost payroller you get a bounty, say 30% of the money the ghost payroller pilfered.
Then the government gets to sue the ghost payroller, the supervisor and the political patron to recover the money, the bounty and court costs.
Post your own innovative ideas for catching the bad apples and reforming Illinois in the comments. And, let’s not get into the name game, shall we? Just post ideas, not complaints.
- posted by Rich Miller 26 Comments
|
Tuesday, Feb 14, 2006
First, read the entire story. Here’s an excerpt:
Both Republican candidates for the 56th District state representative seat are grappling with what to do with 500,000 illegal immigrants since deporting them isn’t a realistic option.
Incumbent Paul Froehlich of Schaumburg supports the idea of issuing driving certificates so undocumented immigrants can legally apply for driver’s licenses and insurance.
His challenger, Palatine-Schaumburg High School District 211 board member Anna Klimkowicz of Schaumburg, is skeptical about what incentive immigrants would have to seek out such certificates if they’re already driving.
“It would be one less legal problem for them to deal with,†Froehlich said during an interview with both candidates at the Daily Herald on Monday.
Froehlich believes the idea is a practical benefit to all motorists on the road. It would remove the barrier that keeps undocumented immigrants from taking the exams to get their licenses and allow them to have the insurance they’d need if involved in accidents, he said.
Froehlich added that he’d like to see that fingerprinting and a criminal and terrorism background check be made a condition of getting the certificates.
Discuss, but try not to get all hot-headed.
- posted by Rich Miller 37 Comments
|
Tuesday, Feb 14, 2006
· The AP has a list of known spending requests in tomorrow’s budget address.
· More on “Pay to Lay.”
· Topinka has a new TV ad.
· Brutal schedule for candidate forums in the 10th CD.
· Healthcare debated in the 6th CD.
· SJ-R supports Blagojevich pre-school plan.
· Community colleges want more money for counseling programs.
· More trouble in Chicago Heights.
· Acting US Attorney for southern Illinois could be on serious hot seat in Ryan trial.
· Forgot to mention this yesterday, but here’s my analysis of the Tribune’s latest poll.
· The Inside Dope celebrates one year of blogging. Congrats! Also, I dig the Valentine’s Day color scheme.
· Sex Ed plan a hot topic.
· Major Blagojevich backer will cost state taxpayers an additional $100 million in next fiscal year’s budget.
· Thomson prison could finally open this fall.
· Interesting article on learning.
· Rep. McKeon to testify as character witness for George Ryan.
· I think I’ll be drinking my Pepsi straight up from now on. Yuck.
· IL GOP hoped to raise over a million dollars last night.
- posted by Rich Miller 9 Comments
|
Tuesday, Feb 14, 2006
Ronald E. Adams, the father-in-law of state Rep. James Brosnahan, passed away recently. Here are the arrangements via the Tribune:
Funeral Wednesday, 10:30 a.m. from Modell Funeral Home, 7710 S. Cass Ave., Darien. to Our Lady of Peace Church, Mass 11 a.m. Visitation Tuesday, 3 to 9 p.m. Please omit flowers.
Also, political consultant and friend Glenn Hodas unexpectedly lost his mom, Alice Hodas, over the weekend.
Her funeral is on Wed. Feb. 15 at St. Paul’s Catholic Church in Genesee Depot in Wisconsin. She will then be buried in the church cemetery. Should people wish, they can make a contribution to the Humane Animal Welfare Society of Waukesha County, 701 Northview, Waukesha, WI 53187; or to St. Paul’s Catholic Church, Human Concerns Fund, PO Box 95, Genesee Depot, WI 53127
My most sincere sympathies to all.
- posted by Rich Miller Comment
|
Tuesday, Feb 14, 2006
Political hardball is one thing, but this is more than we’re used to.
A Cook County Jail guard has admitted to investigators that he helped six inmates escape over the weekend to give a political advantage to a former jail supervisor running for sheriff, a law enforcement source said Monday.
The 36-year-old guard confessed that he allowed a convicted killer, two accused robbers and two others charged with aggravated kidnapping and battery to bust out of the jail to cast a shadow on Sheriff Michael Sheahan’s management of the complex at 26th and California.
The guard knew the negative publicity would hurt Sheahan’s chief of staff, Tom Dart, who is running for sheriff, the source said.
And the guard admitted he helped engineer the escape to give a political boost to Richard Remus, a candidate in the Democratic primary election and the former leader of the jail’s Special Operations Response Team, the source said. The guard is a member of the SORT unit.
Remus denied any involvement in the plot, and a law enforcement source said there was no evidence connecting him to it.
Actually, I think the escape initially hurt Cook County Board President John Stroger more than anyone else because he has denied the sheriff money to hire new guards.
UPDATE: The Tribune posted a late story on its website containing the same allegations. Looks like they got scooped bigtime.
- posted by Rich Miller 14 Comments
|
|
Support The Capitol Fax Blog
Visit our advertisers...
Search the 95th General Assembly By Bill Number
(example: HB0001)
|
Search the 95th General Assembly By Keyword
|
Quick Links
|
|