Illinois Congressional Races

Houston, We Have a Lawsuit

I owe Chris Lauzen and John Zahm apologies (Zahm was a volunteer, not employee of Lauzen’s campaign). I figured the lawsuits would start in the primary-probably with Zahm.

Nope.   The Oberweis family sues first!

The content of the DCCC piece is not my favorite argument given it was a contractor, but at the same time if you are going to insist you are sending 12 million people back to Mexico in a few months, the irony is wonderful.  It’s definitely not lawsuit material.  Except, in the 14th.

I knew if I held out, someone would come through in this race….

Daily Dolt: Bill Pascoe

It’s clear Jim Oberweis isn’t smart enough to argue his way out of a paper bag, so let’s look at the most recent Trib editorial on the fumbling campaign run by the man who cannot win:

Total fiction. All of it. These people don’t exist. They were created by Oberweis’ campaign, which bought stock photos to use in the ad.

They’re nice-looking folks, although they’re sporting awfully big smiles given that they could be slapped with Foster’s huge tax increases.

Oh, wait, these families don’t exist. They’re fake.

The flier cops to this trickery in itty bitty print at the bottom. “The four examples above are fictional, and any similarity between these characters and any real people is pure coincidence,” it reads.

Pure coincidence? Makes us think any similarity between the Oberweis campaign and the truth is pure coincidence.

He’s done this kind of thing before. In 2006, he ran a TV ad that used fake headlines from several newspapers to trash his Republican opponent for governor, Judy Baar Topinka. The ad had the Tribune masthead above a headline that said: “Investigation into Topinka.” The Tribune didn’t run that headline or those words.

This page endorsed Bill Foster earlier this week. One reason for that decision: Oberweis has shown in four campaigns that he plays fast and loose with the truth.

By the way, using Oberweis’ calculations, the Wadsworths must be paying $34,250 in taxes on their $73,000 income. And that’s before the $8,905 increase.

They really need a new tax accountant.

Oh, that’s right. They’re not real.

Trib Endorses Foster

Consistent Theme?

 This page is closer to Oberweis than Foster on several economic and foreign policy issues. But we watched Oberweis in his races for the U.S. Senate in 2002 and 2004, and for governor in 2006. We’ve watched this race for Congress. His campaign style has consistently been nasty, smug, condescending … and dishonest.

In 2004, he ran an ad in which he hovered over Soldier Field in a helicopter and said 10,000 illegal aliens come to the U.S. each day, “enough to fill Soldier Field every single week.” The number was grossly inflated and the ad smacked of fear-mongering.

In 2006, he ran TV ads that used headlines from the Tribune and other newspapers to attack an opponent. But the headlines were fake. They hadn’t appeared in the newspapers.

This year, Oberweis’ campaign is based on the notion that his opponent is a big-spending liberal. Oberweis’ TV and radio ads quote Foster saying, “There’s nothing in life that you can’t improve by pouring money at it. …”

Foster did say that, at a League of Women Voters debate. But the transcript makes it clear he was talking about the federal government’s “poor efforts” to improve air-traffic-control safety. His conclusion: “This is one example of a place I would look to save taxpayer dollars.”

And Oberweis’ immediate response at the debate? He said: “I find myself in the almost embarrassing position of tending to agree with Bill on some of his comments there.”

The sum impression of Oberweis from four campaigns: He sees public office as an opportunity to pick a fight.

Beacon Endorses Foster

There’s a theme developing:

What we hear over and over from Republicans and Democrats in our communities is that people are tired of the bickering and divisiveness in government, whether in Springfield or Washington. Oberweis’ relentless attacks on state Sen. Chris Lauzen in the Republican primary election hint that he is not the right candidate to end government gridlock.

Foster isn’t as “extreme” as his opponent has branded him. On Oberweis’ signature issue of illegal immigration, the two men actually agree on much — both support better border security, a worker-visa program and workplace enforcement that includes some form of a national ID card. Foster, however, takes a more realistic and compassionate approach to dealing with the millions of undocumented workers already here.

Make no mistake, immigration reform is a Fox Valley issue as much as a national one. Foster supports a path to citizenship and points out that if absolute workplace enforcement were to be put in place today, some local businesses would be shut down. Oberweis has taken a harder line, saying stronger employer sanctions will lead to 12 million to 20 million illegal immigrants going home. That’s wishful thinking at best.