2008

Funny, Residency Not a Big Deal in 2004-2006 for the Trib Editorial Board

Copyright 2006 Chicago Tribune Company
Chicago Tribune

February 27, 2006 Monday
Chicagoland Final Edition

SECTION: EDITORIAL ; ZONE CN; Pg. 14

LENGTH: 965 words

HEADLINE: For Democrats: Duckworth

BODY:

Veteran Rep. Henry Hyde is one of the most respected members of Congress, an eloquent and intellectual powerhouse, one of the great voices of conservative thought. After 32 years, he’s calling it quits. In most districts, that might prompt a quiet succession. Hyde is a Republican in a Republican-leading district and he supports state Sen. Peter Roskam (R-Wheaton) as his successor. Roskam does not face a primary challenge.

But Democrats, encouraged by the success of Rep. Melissa Bean in a nearby district, think they have a chance to win Hyde’s seat. They are engaged in quite a tussle to decide who will get the chance to face Roskam.

Christine Cegelis, a software engineer, picked up 44 percent of the vote against Hyde in 2004. She’s running again. But Democrats have a better candidate in Tammy Duckworth, a veteran of the Iraq war who has fresh and pragmatic views on trade, health care, taxes and other issues. Duckworth was an Army National Guard major when she was grievously injured in Iraq, losing both of her legs. She has some well-considered views on how the U.S. and Iraqis can finish the job there and bring American soldiers home. Duckworth is endorsed over Cegelis and Wheaton College professor Lindy Scott.

Not There….

Copyright 2006 Chicago Tribune Company
Chicago Tribune

October 19, 2006 Thursday
Chicago Final Edition

SECTION: EDITORIAL ; ZONE C; Pg. 28

LENGTH: 964 words

HEADLINE: Melissa Bean’s moxie

BODY:

In 2004 the Tribune endorsed Melissa Bean over the longest-serving Republican in the U.S. House, with the expectation that she would be a pro-growth, pro-trade congresswoman. She has delivered.

Rep. Bean has recognized the need to listen very carefully to her constituents–she’s a Democrat in a district that gave 56 percent of its vote to President Bush in 2004. She has charted a moderate, independent course and earned the support of Republicans and Democrats. She has been strong on national defense. She took a risk by voting for the Central America Free Trade Agreement. She knew that would anger some in organized labor–but that it would help businesses in her district expand and create jobs. She is an advocate for small business, gaining her the endorsement of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. She has the Tribune’s endorsement for a second term in the 8th Congressional District.

Her opponent, Republican David McSweeney, is not a bad fit for this district; we endorsed him in the GOP primary. His campaign efforts to make Bean out to be a liberal fall flat, however. Bean is endorsed over McSweeney and Bill Scheurer of Lindenhurst.

Not There….

Copyright 2004 Chicago Tribune Company
Chicago Tribune

October 11, 2004 Monday
Chicagoland Final Edition


SECTION: EDITORIAL ; ZONE CN; Pg. 20

LENGTH: 944 words

HEADLINE: Time for Crane to retire

BODY:

When Republican leaders passed over Rep. Phil Crane for the chairmanship of the House Ways and Means Committee in 2001, it was a clear signal that they didn’t trust him with a prominent role in Congress. Crane might have taken the hint–after three decades of modest achievement in the House, it was time to leave. But he didn’t.

The Tribune has admired and supported Crane’s strong advocacy of free trade. But it has become evident that Crane’s interest in serving his constituents has evaporated. He has used his seat in Congress as a cozy sinecure. In the last four years he has taken more than $109,000 in trips to spots around the world paid for by lobbyists and other private interests. Republican leaders privately acknowledge that Crane has gotten lazy and is out of touch with his constituents. The leaders have not been successful at shaking him out of his lethargy. It’s time for a change.

The Tribune endorses Melissa Bean, an energetic, pragmatic Democrat from Barrington, in the 8th Congressional District. Bean, a business consultant, is not quite the ardent free-trader that Crane is, but she understands that free trade creates opportunities for U.S. firms and that foreign competition ultimately strengthens U.S. markets. She has sound views on tax policy, health care and education reform. She will, unlike Crane, pay close attention to the folks back home. Bean is endorsed.

Not There…

What’s the Deal Dold? We all know you are going to endorse Kirk and that’s fine–that’s the Trib–but why not take Seals and Footlik on about their issues instead of what you seemed to think was a non-issue previously?

The Weird Experience Argument

Let’s stipulate that experience already lost in the Presidential race with the three with the most experience out of the race in Dodd, Biden, and Richardson.

Slate and AP make important points about the idea that Hillary has the experience:

Edwards served a single term in the Senate. Obama served eight years in the Illinois state Senate and is halfway through his first term in the U.S. Senate. Clinton is about to begin her eighth year in the U.S. Senate. Going by years spent as an elective official, Obama’s 11 years exceeds Clinton’s seven, which in turn exceeds Edwards’ six. But it’s a silly calculus. They all come out about the same, even when you factor in Clinton’s youthful work on the House judiciary committee’s impeachment inquiry, her membership on the board of the Legal Services Corp., her chairmanship of the Arkansas Educational Standards committee, her crafting of an unsuccessful national health-care bill, and her sharing Bill Clinton’s bed most nights while he was Arkansas governor and president of the United States.

============

But a Dec. 26 New York Times story revealed that during her husband’s two terms in office, Hillary Clinton did not hold a security clearance, did not attend meetings of the National Security Council, and was not given a copy of the president’s daily intelligence briefing. During trips to Bosnia and Kosovo, she “acted as a spokeswoman for American interests rather than as a negotiator.” On military affairs, most of her experience derives not from her White House years but from serving on the Senate armed services committee.

If you notice, Obama actually has more experience running organizations–one of the reasons the COO quote was incredibly stupid.  He’s making the right argument in the sense that the Power of the President is to persuade, but in an incredibly dumb and awkward way.

From the AP 

Obama’s accomplishments are more substantial and varied than Clinton suggests. And he has a longer record in elected office than she does, as a second-term New York senator.

Obama was a community organizer and led a voter-registration effort in Chicago that added tens of thousands of people to the rolls. He was a civil rights attorney and taught at one of the nation’s premier universities. He helped pass complicated measures in the Illinois legislature on the death penalty, racial profiling, health care and more. In Washington, he has worked with Republicans on nuclear proliferation, government waste and global warming, amassing a record that speaks to a fast start while lacking the heft of years of service.

The Illinois Democrat likes to quote something Bill Clinton once said: “The truth is, you can have the right kind of experience and the wrong kind of experience. Mine is rooted in the real lives of real people, and it will bring real results if we have the courage to change.”

After college, Obama moved to Chicago for a low-paying job as a community organizer. He worked with poor families on the South Side to get improvements in public housing, particularly the removal of asbestos.

“Nobody else running for president has jumped off the career track for three or four years to help people,” said Jerry Kellman, who first hired Obama as a community organizer.

Obama also fought for student summer jobs and a program to keep at-risk children from dropping out of school. More importantly, say those who worked with Obama, he showed people how to organize and confront powerful interests.

Working with the kinds of coalitions to put together community organization and voter registration drives is at least as good as running a panel on education reform.

The Voice of Moderate Conservatism

Voters, though, might have reason to question either candidate’s long-term commitment to them. Seals still lives a couple of blocks outside the district — he says he can’t afford to move into the 10th. Footlik just recently returned to the area, renting a home in Buffalo Grove.

You’d think Dold and gang might be familiar with the history of the father of modern conservatism:

His support for free trade with Ireland and his advocacy of Catholic emancipation were unpopular with his constituents and caused him to lose his seat in 1780. For the remainder of his parliamentary career, Burke sat for Malton, another pocket borough controlled by Rockingham.

The point not being that Dan is the reincarnation of Edmund Burke, but that living a few blocks away from a District or even renting a house there isn’t much of an issue–it certainly isn’t for Melissa Bean who still doesn’t live in IL-8 and yet the Trib doesn’t bring it up.

When it’s Alan Keyes, that’s a bit different, but given the highly gerrymandered districts in Illinois, it’s hard to make a compelling case that a few blocks matters and neither the Bean nor the Duckworth races offer much evidence that voters care about residency as much as they do about whether a person actually represents them.

But how about a guy who won’t return calls on the war for over a month? Which matters more? A few blocks or a war?

Leadership Defined

From the AP:

WASHINGTON (AP) – Some Illinois congressional races are a battleground over the Iraq war issue even while candidates appear to want it off voters’ radar.

A review by The Associated Press found voters who want to use campaign or House Web sites to check candidates’ views, can sometimes find the war not even among issues the sites focus on.

Republican Congressman Mark Kirk has shown virtually no interest in bringing it up, although each of his potential Democratic challengers do.

Kirk is a former House International Relations Committee general counsel, State Department aide and Persian Gulf War veteran. And he serves as a Naval Reserve commander in the Pentagon’s war room.

Kirk and his spokesman didn’t respond to messages left by The Associated Press over the past month seeking comment.

Response from Seals:

Congressional candidate Dan Seals (IL-10) condemned Kirk's lack of
accountability on the war in Iraq, saying that his priorities were out
of line with the 10th district.

"The war in Iraq is one of the top issues I hear about from voters
across the 10th district," Seals said. "Yet, time after time, Mark
Kirk has shown that he is more interested in playing political games
than addressing the serious issues facing our country."

Kirk has not only avoided discussing his position on the war in Iraq,
but he has also failed to ask the tough questions of the Bush
administration. In May 2007, the Chicago Tribune reported that Kirk
visited the White House to "deliver what one participant called a
'strong signal' about the electoral dangers that 'war fatigue and war
weariness' pose for Republicans in 2008."

"When Mark Kirk had a chance to sit down with President Bush to
discuss the war in Iraq, he didn't urge the President to change
course. He simply told the President that the war was hurting his re-
election chances," Seals said. "Now, Kirk's failure to answer the
tough questions about his failed leadership on the war is another sign
that we need change in Washington."

What’s amusing is that some are trying to sell Kirk as some principled statesman.  The thing is–you have to speak to be such a thing.

The Trib Does a Funny

The Republican race is a tough affair between businessman Jim Oberweis of Sugar Grove and state Sen. Chris Lauzen of Aurora. Oberweis ran unsuccessfully for U.S. Senate in 2002 and 2004 and for governor in 2006. Lauzen has been in the Senate for 14 years, where he has alienated many legislators and been minimally effective. An odd quirk: Lauzen once sought to change his legal name to Christopher J. Lauzen, CPA. Yes, that would have been his full name. He didn’t think enough people knew he was a certified public accountant. He eventually dropped the idea.

This page has been critical of Oberweis’ campaign tactics, particularly his vitriolic anti-immigration message. He has acknowledged that he made mistakes in past campaigns. He has a much better grounding on national issues than Lauzen, and to our knowledge, has never tried to change his name to Jim Oberweis, Dairy King.

Oberweis, who has Hastert’s support, is endorsed. There is a third GOP candidate, Michael Dilger, who lives many miles from the district in Evanston.

Let’s remember who Oberweis is:

[kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/Nst-aXvdrR4" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /]

Defunct blogger Polis had the definitive take on the commercial

Those Oberweis copter commercials may be the funniest thing on tv these days (save Arrested Development). Forget the fact that his numbers are said to be way off, just having him spout off that anti-immigrant rhetoric over the noise of copter blades is high comedy. The only thing that would improve on this would be if he was flying over the Mexican border with a rifle picking off crossing illegals. “Even if I stay up here and shoot all day, I can’t make a dent out of the thousands who are stealing YOUR jobs!”

He also has Mittmentum issues 

I suppose the Tribune felt they had to endorse someone, but if there was ever a place for a a non-endorsement, this was it.

Marin Points Out the Obvious–Can Dold Pay Some Attention

 Marin on Lipinski

Make no mistake, given his dad’s still-mighty political machine, Lipinski could walk away with another victory, earning not just a third term but more. He will begin to qualify for the glorious benefits that six years in Congress guarantee. Like the potential for lifetime health care benefits and a splendid pension.

Pera has less in common with the Lipinski machine than any other contender when it comes to social, economic or foreign policy matters. Pera is more liberal, Lipinski more conservative, on everything from social issues to support for the Iraq war.

But more important may be Pera’s willingness to buck accepted Chicago political practices. It is he who has most aggressively raised the ethical questions that Dan Lipinski has long needed to answer but apparently just can’t.

Questions like how in the world can he justify having had his father, now a lobbyist for the transportation industry, on his payroll as a consultant?

How can he comfortably take campaign contributions from the airline and rail companies that also pay his dad’s salary?

And how the heck can he allow his dad’s so-called charity, the All American Eagle Fund, which does precious little charity except for needy politicians, pay for work done by Dan’s congressional chief of staff?

In Chicago, we expect so little of our politicians. And ethical questions are treated often with disdain. As though it’s almost naive to demand the separation of church and state, or in this case, the separation of special interests from government business.

Dan Lipinski is not a bad guy. He’s well-educated. Earnest. And there’s reason to believe he’s grown some on the job.

In addition, he loves his father. “And he does not lobby me,” contended the congressman.

Why would he need to?

It’s not just a stand against 8 years of unchecked corruption in DC that the Tribune has largely been a cheerleader for, but a time to stand against the entire history of the Chicago Machine.  It’s not what it used to be, but it still has life and it needs to be put out of our misery.  And there couldn’t be a better place to take a stand than against the Lipinskis.
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Huh

Quinn endorses Laesch

Perhaps he can figure out why Laesch is so against the AMT–everyone is for changing the AMT–Laesch wants to get rid of it according to his Tribune interview.   Even for people making over $1 million a year. Seriously.

Why?  The problem with the tax isn’t that it’s innately unfair, it’s that it hasn’t kept up with inflation and hits a lot of families in middle incomes.

36:50
CT: I’d just like to ask each of you if you would favor making the Bush tax cuts permanent. And, if so, why? If not, why? And also, what you would do … the Democrats in Congress attempted to do a PAYGO, one-year fix of the Alternative Minimum Tax, a $50 million fix. And they kind of [or, “finally”?] gave it up.  They fixed it, but they haven’t figured out a way to pay for it, and that violated their PAYGO pledge.
So, I’d like to know what you think about that, and what you would have done differently. Mr. Laesch, we’ll start with you.  So, Bush tax cuts and AMT tax.

JL: (starts on Bush tax cuts)
37:50
So, it’s probably a temporary Band-Aid on the Alternate [sic] Minimum Tax. But, some sort of inflation indexing. I didn’t look at my questionnaire when we pulled this out, and I realized I didn’t answer that question when I was coming up here. … [inaudible] …
But, there has to be some sort of temporary fix of the Alternate Minimum Tax.

CT: Well, they’ve been doing one-year fixes every year since 2003.

JL: JL: Well, the long-term goal is to get rid of that.  I don’t think that it worked.  IS THAT A FAIR STATEMENT?[inaudible/trailed off].

CT: They estimate it’ll cost a trillion dollars to get rid of the Alternative Minimum Tax, because its assumptions have been built into all revenue projections going forward. So, just eliminating it would take a trillion dollars out of projected revenues. So, um …

38:50
JL: But, what I said is, that’s the long-term goal. If we stabilize the economy, and get more people back to work with good-paying jobs, there’s gonna be more tax revenue to use. So that’s the goal here over five to ten years, that the Congress is gonna have to deal with.

[Break – discussing job creation]

40:15
CT: On the AMT, the Democrats wanted to pay for that one-year patch, and they finally gave up and passed it and didn’t pay for it. What’s your take on that, and what would you have done differently?

JL: [talks about foreign policy and committees]

41:15 I would also listen to the things voters in the 14th are concerned about. And I understand there’s a huge disparity in the concentration of wealth. Geneva-St. Charles area is very affluent, the area of the district, but the further west you go, there’s more and more people who are struggling from job losses, especially as you get out to Whiteside County, where they lost the steel mill, and a number of other places … Caterpillar, [inaudible – Aurora?], those places are all –-.  Yeah, those are the people I will listen to and consider, and in tax policy, what’s going to help those people most.

41:50 I think just the short-term patch is an inflation index, indexing for inflation … with respect to the AMT, and the long-term goal should be to get rid of it.

WTF is he talking about… and perhaps Quinn could explain the problem to him.

Some Nightmares End

Alexi Giannoulis finally comes to terms on the damn Springfield hotel agreeing to a foreclosure agreement with Cellini and gang.  .

Dollarwise, strictly speaking, this wasn’t the biggest mess, but damn if coming to a conclusion didn’t take 25 years and who knows how many taxpayer dollars.
Alexi has taken some hits lately and largely they appear to not look good, but legal.  Whatever his prior experience was with the family bank, he’s getting things done for the State of Illinois and as someone who was a sharp critic during the campaign, this is another job well done.

He has a good future in Illinois politics and progressive Illinois activists should keep an eye out on how they should help him.