January 2009

Enabling

Mark Brown writes a somewhat bitter and spot on column about Burris.

Congratulations to everyone who stood up for the right of our crooked governor to pick the person who will represent the people of Illinois in the U.S. Senate.

It appears they will be victorious and that Roland Burris in short order will realize his long held dream to join the exclusive club of 100.

The other members of the club have lost their backbone and are preparing to sell the voters of this state down the Illinois River. They seem to have come to the conclusion that this whole stinky business –much like the polluted waterway — is a mess of our own making.

They may have a point, gutless as they are for abandoning us in our hour of need, the president-elect included.

Still, what a grand triumph for democracy and the rule of law.

It’s not every day that a man facing federal criminal charges of attempting to sell a Senate seat — and any other decision that would fetch a big campaign donation — is allowed the opportunity to make the appointment anyhow.

My Good Friend

This is a complete farce:

“My good friend Secretary of State White says that, uh, he certainly would sign the document,” Burris said, adding that the only reason White told him he would not sign it now was because the case was in court. “The suit that we filed may have to cause him to hold it up.” Inadvertently transposing “then” and “now,” Burris added, “He said if he knew now what he knew then he wouldn’t have done what he did.”

White spokesman Dave Druker confirmed White and Burris had “a cordial conversation” Wednesday but denied White is having second thoughts about his decision.

“I don’t want to contradict Mr. Burris,” Druker said. “But I think Secretary of State White feels very strongly that he did the right thing. I think he feels badly that his friend Roland Burris was [the one Blagojevich appointed] but Burris was never the issue. It was always the governor. He feels very strongly that this governor should not be appointing anybody. If the [Illinois] Supreme Court tells him to sign it, he will do it in a moment.”

If he does make it to the Senate, he has the annoying rhetoric of my good friend down.  He’s got that going for him at least.

It’s Your Duty To Read the House Impeachment Report

Here.

So far, what I’ve read is quite good and actually readable for a document such as this. The context for impeachment is quite good, though it raises the question of what the hell is taking so long if they understand it.
I would suggest Illinois teachers incorporate portions into the government and history classes–especially for accelerated or AP classes.

One of the basic things I think the press has missed pointing out (not all of them, but on balance) is that this isn’t a process that requires due process. It is a process that is political in the way that passing a bill is political.  You have rules, but there are no Constitutional guarantees to being Governor or any other office holder.

Genson is arguing for due process because he has a losing hand.  Fair enough-that’s his job.

But the notion that this had to take so long is where the problem with this idea of deliberation and due process falls down. There is no practical concern that the Governor will not be impeached by a majority in the House regardless of what happens in the hearings.  There is no practical concern that there are 20 Senators to vote with Blagojevich in a Senate trial.  All of this is in effect a show trial and given the nature and scope of the conduct completely unnecessary.

Geoghagen Announces for IL-5

I’m running for Congress in the Fifth District of Illinois. As a Chicago lawyer for thirty years I have fought for working people in this District and throughout the city. I have represented unions as well as people with no unions to protect them. In plant closings I have helped them recover health and pension benefits. I obtained health care for the uninsured. I’ve been pressing the State of Illinois to crack down on payday lenders.

In my life as a lawyer I have lived out a commitment to one cause above all – to bring economic security to working Americans, in our District, in our country. That’s the same commitment I will bring to Congress. We’re deep in an economic crisis unlike any other we’ve known. It may last years. We need new and creative ways to protect working Americans, especially our older working people who have no real pensions to live on.

For years we’ve heard the doomsayers: “We can’t afford Social Security.” “We can’t afford ‘single payer’ national health.” One thing we all learned from the $700 billion bailout: We’ve got the money to do all of this and more. At the moment, the Federal Reserve is literally printing money, to give not billions but trillions to banks and financial firms. To the people of this District, the banks and others have gotten their money. Now it’s your turn. Here’s the bailout I will go to Congress to get:

First, I want to expand Social Security, our public pension system, to replace, not overnight but in stages, the private pension system which has collapsed. Social Security now pays about 38 to 39 percent of your working income. In other developed countries, it averages 65 percent. That’s where our fiscal stimulus should be: a commitment to reach this goal, a public pension that ordinary working people can live on.

Second we have to move to single payer health care program, at least in phases: we might begin with extending Medicare to children, but the government should ultimately be the single payer for all. That’s not because single payer is the only ethical and efficient way to protect us all. No, it’s also because it is crucial to making us competitive globally. Through single payer and expanded Social Security, the goal is to pick up the “non-wage” labor costs that employers now have to pay. That’s already how other countries out-compete us: they have the government and not the private employer pick up these non-wage health and pension costs.

Unless we have government pick up the costs of pensions and health care, our companies can’t compete, and we’ll go on piling up huge trade deficits. We’ll have debacles like GM, which has collapsed in part because of the health and pension costs that the federal government should have been paying all along.

For years, the conservatives have said: “We can’t do this. The money isn’t there.” Well, the money is there. It was there for the Iraq war, a colossal waste of money, and for the bailout, the first half of which has been a colossal waste as well. And if we now have the government pick up non-wage labor costs with the use of general revenues, we will in fact make it cheaper and easier for our companies to hire. This is in fact the best and most realistic approach for a long term recovery.

Finally we have to put limits on returns to financial firms. We should re-enact the usury laws, the interest-rate caps that were in place in America up till the 1970s. We need to stop the rates of 30 to 35 percent, the hidden fees, the hundreds of ways that banks pull our money out of industry and into gambling and speculation.

In my campaign I will have a single minded focus on getting people out of debt, that’s why I so strongly support the Employee Free Choice Act and other changes in our labor laws. And the plan I am setting out here will help make our country more competitive. I’m a strong supporter of President Obama. Yes, I strongly support his program to repair our infrastructure. Even so, we don’t have to pave the streets with gold. If not the meltdown then the bailout should have opened our eyes. The real fiscal stimulus has to be the kind that brings financial security to the middle class. The message of this campaign is: We’re moving beyond the bailout. Now it’s your turn. Please join us www.geogheganforcongress.com

That’s Our Roland

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zYAKQGb1b8k[/youtube]

His ideas aren’t as insane as Keyes, but he’s every bit the egomaniac who has little tolerance for those who he thinks are fools–which is everyone who disagrees with him.

Bonus points to the reporter who asks him if he has a mouse in his pocket the next time he uses the Royal We.