April 2005

Blogging Victories

Bumped to ensure it gets the attention it should. Will be on top through 4-19.

While I’m pretty reluctant to join in blogger triumphalism, I have it on good word that the City of Chicago’s decision to pull back from selecting Inkavote as the voting system was derailed by comments spurred from blogs! Credit should go to Deadly Earnest who doesn’t post often, but was the guy pushing the issue. Inkavote is complicated and simply doesn’t work well. It makes no sense to go to it from punch cards.

That the City pulled back is a good sign. It’s apparently looking at electronic machines or optical scan from what I hear. The State of Illinois is reducing the amount for machines so optical scan is looking especially attractive on cost, though it is problematic when you have so many judges on a ballot as those in the City do.

For those that want to continue to influence the Board, here’s the e-mail.

For those feeling really wonky–go here for the RFP responses and questions and answers.

But most of all–good job out there!

Remember to encourage a system that produces a reliable paper trail above all else. You avoided a trainwreck.

But that’s not the point.

Charles Madigan offers up one of the better and understated analysis of the Tom DeLay scandals.

Thus far, DeLay has been cheered by the House Republicans who love him and the largesse he has spread around, sort of backed by a timid White House, and resolute in claiming this is all a conspiracy cobbled together by the Democrats and the vile liberal media who love them.

Perhaps.

The problem is that the record of unsavory behavior in the House has shifted across party lines many times. Wright and Rostenkowski are just two modern examples of Democrats who stepped over the line. That Gingrich and DeLay are Republicans may well be immaterial. These things, it seems, are about power and how it may corrupt the people it embraces, not at all about political ideology.

It’s why Manius Curius Dentatus stuck to his turnips.

The defense that many of DeLay’s supporters are echoing these days is that nothing he has done was illegal and it all fell within the boundaries of House ethical rules, apparently a shifting set of standards frequently adapted to the times and maintained by a shifting set of House members, recently adjusted to include DeLay supporters.

But that’s not the point.

The point is how it looks to those who live outside the U.S. House. There are no fat cats in their lives to finance anything. They pay as they go, generally with their own money.

People don’t sympathize with people who defend themselves with the letter of the law:

The question is how much of this kind of stuff does it take before the House Republicans, despite their affection for DeLay’s efforts and the role they played in building the Republican House majority, say, “That’s enough” and send the majority leader packing?

DeLay’s problems take on more weight when they are viewed in light of the kind of trouble that preceded him in the House.

Rostenkowski must stand as an exception because he was brought down not by House members who tired of shenanigans but by a federal prosecutor with a big staff and a passion for measuring how House money was spent.

Jim Wright and Newt Gingrich provide better bad-behavior models.

In his explanation to the International Academy of Trial Lawyers of his role in leading the Wright investigation, Richard Phelan (now a Chicago litigator) noted that ethical standards are what makes a professional a real professional.

“Political ethics serve much the same purpose by preserving the politician’s independence from improper influence. … At the most basic level, political ethics prohibit the blatant purchase and sale of influence,” Phelan wrote.

Sounds like Dentatus, doesn’t it?

Welcome To St. Louis Jamison

A student at Homewood Flossmoor is coming out today and he’s attending Wash U in the fall. You’ll be entirely welcome at Wash U Jamison so just hang in there pal.

In what will amount to a schoolyard battle of messages, a couple hundred other students are expected to wear shirts citing “crimes against God,” namely “discrimination against … my 10 Commandments, my prayers, my values, my faith, my God.”

I’m not sure how their 10 commandments are being discriminated against, but hey, that’s free speech. You can say what you want no matter how nonsensical it is.

do know that Christian students, their right to pray has been taken from them,” Jacobs said. “Their right to believe in their values has become an offense to many people. The Bible has become an offense.”

Right to pray taken away? Uh, no. Actually no such law or rule is in place. The second part appears to be a bit of pot-kettle issues where they are criticizing another’s values, but they are being the victim…

Fundaising Already

Okay, I’ve set up an ACT Blue Account for the five races I’m currently suggesting people send money.

Those races are

Bean, Cegelis, Lane Evans, Missouri Democratic Senate Race, and the DCCC.

Bean, Cegelis and the DCCC will be there for the cycle. Lane will be on until I determine he doesn’t have a serious challenger and the Missouri Senate race will be on as long as a real candidate shows up sooner or later. I’m also keeping an eye on IL-18, but I’m not raising money unless there is a serious Democratic candidate.

Teachers Overpaid

Oops. Jim Oberweis targets the wrong group and OneMan points it out.

It’s fine to run against educrats and make a lot of noise about making the system more efficient and such (see Blagojevich. R.), but don’t attack teachers. Remember, most people like the teachers who teach their kids and so it just comes off wrong.

I’m sure FTN and Oberweis staffer Joe Weigand planted this nugget, but really, even if you think it is true, say it differently.

I can already here the Blagorgeous if Jim were to win

“Balancing the budget on the back of teachers”

You’d think a perennial candidate would learn. Oh, wait, that’s why he’s a perennial.

Just wait for the commercial. He’ll be in a balloon over a school track talking about teachers making too much.