June 2005

Steve Brown Earns His Pay

Nice one:

“Obviously we’re not encouraging political work in government offices, but why not encourage people to vote when they come into a government office looking for help on a government program or service?” asked Steve Brown, spokesman for House Speaker and Illinois Democratic Party Chairman Michael Madigan. “Remember, these are the people (Republicans) … who basically don’t like anybody to be able to vote. They want to go back to an era when it was very hard to vote.”

Ralph attributes the quote to Da Speaker. Given the Speaker is the most ironically titled official in Springfield, that’s probably appropriate.

Orr gets mentioned by me because I’m still happy about the optical scan choice.

Cook County Clerk David Orr, who championed early voting, said many of the changes do not help one party or the other.

“It’s good public policy,” he said. “I’m telling you, quite frankly, that I support things that I believe will be good for the electorate. Yes, there are hard-core Democrats and hard-core Republicans, but there are a lot of people in between.”

How Friggen Nutty is the Pharmacists for Life International?

They are the ones attacking Governor Rod Blagojevich for instituting the emergency order requiring pharmacies that stock contraceptives to dispense them upon receipt of a valid prescription (the order includes the ability to make professional decisions regarding the pharmaceutical).

They are calling the Govenor, Rod “Slobodan” Blagojevich.

Governor “Slobodan” Blagojevich refuses to back down from his unconstitutional rule making dispensing of abortion drugs mandatory for IL pharmacists, even if they invoke the state’s healthcare provider conscience clause. Hiz Honor continues to show a despotic disrespect for the law and freedom of religion and conscience, as did his “namesake” who is up for war crimes following ethnic cleansing in Bosnia-Heczegovina. The Guv would love to cleanse IL of any pharmacists who still have a conscience, or so it seems!

Let’s start with what’s wrong here

1) He only requires pharmacies to dispense drugs they already carry
2) He’s a doofus, but he isn’t a genocidal dictator. You lose pretty much all credibility when you compare promulgating an emergency order regarding contraceptives to genocide. No, not pretty much all, all credibility
3) The Health Care Conscious Clause applies to individuals delivering care and even then there is controversy over whether it covers pharmacists. Let’s say it does, the order doesn’t require an individual pharmacist to do anything. It requires a pharmacy that carries a drug to dispense that drug, order it as its written policies require (or not if they don’t carry it), at the patient’s direction to return the script or pass it along to a pharmacy that will.
4) and talk about bashing an ethnicity…

Americans United for Life are suing him over the rule as well.

The guffaw line is

The suit alleges in part that the Governor’s emergency rule violates the Illinois Health Care Right of Conscience Act by telling compelling pharmacy owners who do not want to carry drugs such as the morning-after pill that can cause abortions to act against its ethical and moral beliefs in dispensing such drugs.

What they don’t quite realize is that the text is quite clear

Upon receipt of a valid, lawful prescription for a contraceptive,
a pharmacy must dispense the contraceptive, or a suitable
alternative permitted by the prescriber, to the patient or the
patient?s agent without delay. If the contraceptive, or a suitable
alternative, is not in stock, the pharmacy must obtain the
contraceptive under the pharmacy?s standard procedures for
ordering contraceptive drugs not in stock, including the
procedures of any entity that is affiliated with, owns, or
franchises the pharmacy. However, if the patient prefers, the
prescription must either be transferred to a local pharmacy of
the patient?s choice or returned to the patient, as the patient
directs.

The simple conclusion one should reach is that if your policy is to not stock a drug, you would have a standard procedure of not doing so–and hence could then return the script or pass it on to a pharmacy that does carry it.

What the order does is very simple–if you carry a contraceptive, you have to dispense it upon receipt of a valid prescription and assuming you don’t identify a therapeutic problem for the patient.

There are many, many things for which to criticize Rod Blagojevich, but in this case the Governor has shown good judgment in issuing an order that is narrowly tailored yet guarantess women reasonable access to drugs that a pharmacy already provides.

And it wasn’t just once they call him Slobodan

BTW, when I said Crooks and Liars and Eriposte at The Left Coast missed the point on this issue the other day, that should have read miss an important point—my apologies for the more awkward language.

UPDATE: Oliver Willis reminds me Media Matters did work up on Pharmacists fro Life International

UPDATE 2: Apparently Albertson’s is allowing pharmacists to refer such prescriptions to other pharmacists. Dobson’s Focus on the Family applauds the move:

Citizen Link(Dobson’s Gang): “Pharmacists should not be forced to fill prescriptions or the ‘morning after’ abortion pill,” he said, “if it iolates their conscience.” Albertsons distributed a memo to all its Illinois pharmacists stating it would accommodate their right of conscience by permitting them to refer prescriptions to which they conscientiously object to another Albertsons pharmacist or to a competitor.

More….

Blagojevich imposed an “emergency rule” stating that a pharmacist “must dispense . . . without delay” contraceptives, including so-called emergency contraceptives such as the “morning after” pill, despite the state’s right-of-conscience act.

Steven H. Aden, chief litigation counsel of CLS’s Center for Law and Religious Freedom, said the right of conscience is an important component of religious liberty. “Pharmacists should not be forced to fill prescriptions for the ‘morning after’ abortion pill,” he said, “if it violates their conscience.”

Shortly after ADF and CLS filed suit, Albertsons distributed a memo to all its Illinois pharmacists stating it would accommodate their right of conscience by permitting them to refer prescriptions to which they conscientiously object to another Albertsons pharmacist or
to a competitor.

“We applaud the decision by Albertsons to restore to Mr. Scimio and other Albertsons pharmacists the same rights they had prior to the governor’s action,” Aden said, “and allow them to be true to their beliefs about the sanctity of human life.”

This is just wrong on so many levels. The order never required INDIVIDUAL PHARMACISTS to dispense the drug. It required that a pharmacy that carried a drug dispense the drug upon a valid prescription if they carry that drug. Nothing in the rule forces individuals to dispense drugs. Albertson’s isn’t restoring anything–and it’s complying with the law. Whether an individual pharmacist dispenses is irrelevant to the rule. The rule only requires that a pharmacy dispense what it carries–so the choice by Albertson’s is a choice between employer and employee. In short, Focus on the Family is lying about the rule to try and make an issue out of something that doesn’t exist.

He?s a senior?sort of, 62 years old. Harold was that way.

Tom Roeser has a senior moment himself over on Jeff Berkowitz’s blog

Berkowitz: Who?s that?

Roeser: Danny Davis.

Berkowitz: You want Danny Davis to be Mayor of the City of Chicago? He?s your guy?
You?re supporting [Cong.] Danny Davis [D- Chicago, 7th CD]?

Roeser: He?s not ?my guy.?

Berkowitz: This could be the kiss of death for Danny.

Roeser: Well, I know.

Berkowitz: Just kidding.

Roeser: Well, it probably is. But, he reminds me of Harold [Washington], in many ways. He?s a senior?sort of, 62 years old. Harold was that way.

Berkowitz: He has what [Cong.] Mark Kirk has called the ?Voice of God.?

Roeser: The voice of God and also he has a presence and a grace

Such as when he was crowning Reverend Moon as the Messiah?

What Atrios Said about Hemmer

Here

There are so many things one can say about Bill Hemmer leaving CNN. First, of course, is thank God! Next thought is what does it fucking say about CNN that they’d make Bill Hemmer their White House correspondent. What does it say about Bill Hemmer, who’s usually even more smug about the art of journalism than Aaron Brown is, that he’d quit rather than actually have to do something besides read a teleprompter or stand in a storm.

Not that I care to watch 24/7 coverage of a runaway blonde or frank discussions of Michael Jackson’s penis, but Miles O’Brien is one of the more tolerable newscasters and he actually has some expertise in a subject area other than runaway brides (he was the space correspondent and does a great job).

Hemmer’s worst work had to be covering suicide bombings in Israel that instead of dealing in facts, he just went on and on about how horrible it was. Of course, it was horrible and any idiot could see that when the people were crying and bleeding and in terrible distress. It’s like he didn’t realize he was on TV and they had these things called pictures we could observe to pick up that point.

It’s come to the point where I only watch Nancy Grace and I do that because it’s such a trainwreck and want to be entertained for a few minutes while she screams about convicting the hordes.

How Much Credit Does the Governor Get for the Session?

First, let me stipulate that as bad as I think the budget is, no one pays attention to that who isn’t already voting one way or another. Budgets are far too detailed for the average swing voter and just don’t affect their vote much.

The print press has pretty much given the budget as a win to Blagojevich and in the sense that it gets him out of the press and takes the primary attack against him out of play, that’s certainly true. Rich Miller’s column is pretty much the conventional wisdom, and it’s pretty much correct in terms of the budget helping the Governor out in a tough time.

I think that success is fleeting though. Next year, as pointed out in an interview with The Speaker, the budget probably won’t be much different and so going into the election one might be tempted to think Blagojevich has avoided his biggest problem.

But I don’t think he has, I think Rich points it out here:

Just about every reporter I know who is employed by a major media outlet is working on at least one big story about alleged corruption or shady practices within the Blagojevich administration. Not all of these investigations will bear fruit, of course, but we can expect plenty of negative reports in the days and weeks ahead. His “window” could close soon as reporters dig into the shenanigans at the Department of Central Management Services, the state lottery and allegedly hinky hiring practices all over the place.

The thing about the Administration is that by repeating endlessly the mantra that Blagojevich was changing the way the state does business, he’s legitimately set himself up to be held to a higher standard. Now, with the dam broken after the CMS audit and Tony Rezko appearing on every corner, every reporter who had a tip on something shady can go after it because the editors believe there is something worth going after. There’s smoke and so probably there is fire. As those pop up, some may be minor, some may be major, some may be devastating, but such stories never produce good results. One doesn’t go in looking for corruption and come out finding a well run agency. The stories have three possible results with varying degrees in each category:

1) Corruption
2) Incompetence
3) Story is killed

None produce good publicity and every story can start with the hook that while he ran in 2002 promising to change the way business was done in Springfield……

The advantage of keeping your nose clean as a politician is that generally reporters are well fed by campaigns and state government. They can go and get the differing sides to a policy dispute or cover an interesting angle to a press release and when it’s busy they can’t justify spending resources just combing through potential tips that’ll take a lot of time to track down. Under the game when there isn’t a big issue of corruption out there, it means that incumbents do okay and can build up name recognition and get credit for specific bills or programs. However, when a story breaks and it looks like there is blood in the water, everyone wants to break the hot story and to do that they have to start following up on rumblings in Springfield or Chicago and investigate–competition works for the public good.

Making it worse–the timing for the CMS audit and other issues comes as the Lege adjourns and the Springfield press now has a lot of free time on its hands to track down stories. Those efforts are likely to produce a drip, drip, drip effect with new negative stories on a consistent basis.

Add to that a grand jury investigation and a potential challenger in Devine and it gets very hard to get back on message for the administration. What he needs is a strong challenge from the right wing so he can define himself against conservative Republicans. But with a Republican primary most of the fire is going to be within the Republican circular firing squad and that won’t let himself define his positions in relation to them–and worse, a moderate like Topinka could emerge posing a real threat to him in a general election.

So the Governor did avoid a platform for the Republicans to attack him everyday, but he also freed up the press to investigate every orifice that Tony Rezko has.