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Disagreeable Mediocrity as a Politician

Toobin on Burris:

 

During his long career in Illinois politics, Burris has encountered many of the state’s most influential figures, some of them principled risk-takers and some corrupt rogues. And it’s been clear that Burris belongs to neither category. He is a conventional politician, one guided far more by cautious self-interest than by ideological passion. His self-regard may be greater than that of some of his peers; he is especially known for the words of self-celebration carved into the wall of a mausoleum that is waiting for him in a Chicago cemetery. (The structure bears the inscription “Trail Blazer” and lists such accomplishments as being the first African-American undergraduate at Southern Illinois University to be an exchange student at the University of Hamburg, in Germany.) “He was a figure of fun, because he was highly egocentric,” Alan Dobry, a former Democratic ward committeeman in Chicago, said of Burris’s years as a local politician. “When he was in office, he had two aides who went around with him, and they were generally referred to as the ‘Rolaids.’ ” According to the Harvard sociologist William Julius Wilson, a longtime student of Chicago politics, Burris “was a soldier, part of the machine. He’s not a distinguished politician. He’s not a powerful political thinker.” Of course, this description hardly distinguishes Burris from many of his colleagues on Capitol Hill. In his very ordinariness, Burris may represent a triumph of sorts for the civil-rights movement, which was, at least in part, a struggle for black people to be seen as just like everybody else.

I think the traditional view of Burris as a perfect fit in as a Soviet style functionary has given Burris a free pass for far too long.

 

At a minimum, Roland Burris was an incompetent boob.  Let’s look at how he left the Comptroller’s office (and some of the issues were never dealt with by Netsch either, but she was there for a couple years and then running for office.  Roland ran the office for 12 years with Loleta Didrickson and then Hynes cleaning the damn place up.

Auditor General Holland has been busting the chops of inept electeds for years and here is a story on the state of the Comptroller’s office in 1997:

 

St. Louis Post-Dispatch (Missouri)


May 31, 1997, Saturday, FIVE STAR LIFT EDITION 
Correction Appended

Comptroller Seeks To Regain $ 8 Million In Cemetery Funds

The Illinois Comptroller’s Office is seeking to recover more than $ 8 million in misspent cemetery trust funds that it is supposed to monitor, a state audit said Friday.

The problem is that until recently the comptroller’s office didn’t have enough control over the funds, according to the report from Auditor General Bill Holland.

The comptroller is responsible for licensing cemetery operators and making sure they properly administer trust funds that people pay into for future maintenance of graves, crypts or other cemetery services.

“Prior to 1995, the Office’s Cemetery Care and Burial Trust Department placed little emphasis on the quality or accuracy of information provided by licensees,” the audit said. “As a result, several situations arose whe re, although annual reports had been filed as required, substantial sums of money were improperly diverted from trust funds.”

Comptroller Loleta Didrickson agreed with the audit’s findings and has been working to fix the deficiencies, according to the audit and a spokesman for Didrickson. Laws adopted last year at Didrickson’s urging give her office more power to oversee the trust funds.

 

Where does this become important in Roland’s political career?

As a lobbyist he has done several years of lobbying for those very cemetery owners (August 1996 Comptroller’s Newsletter):

 

When someone purchases a cemetery plot from a licensed private cemetery, a portion of that sale is required to
be placed in trust so that the care of that plot will be perpetually provided.  There are similar trust requirements for funeral homes and other providers of pre-need service. The Comptroller has had the responsibility to regulate privately held funeral home, cemetery and burial trusts (excluding religious or fraternal) since 1972, but in those 23 years, only nine licenses have been revoked within an industry that’s grown from having trust funds of $2.8 million in 1978 to $667 mil- lion today, with projections that level will hit $1 billion in 1998.

An investigation of the cemetery and funeral industry conducted by the Comptroller’s Office revealed that some unscrupulous operators have raided cemetery care trust funds, removing monies intended to provide perpetual care for the cemetery and using those funds for unauthorized purposes.

In an attempt to protect the public from the greed and mismanagement of the few “bad apples” in the industry, the
Comptroller’s reform package estab lishes a two-tiered audit process that allows the Office to use private Certified
Public Accountants to more closely scrutinize those operations showing signs of financial difficulty.  It also makes explicit the authority to conduct investigations in cases of suspected fraud, to file civil suits on behalf of consumers, and  provides for the appointment of independent trustees to oversee the largest of trust funds (more than $500,000).

 

Add that to his close ties to the Blagojevich administration and the contracts he got from the state government during that time including soliciting a lobbyist close to Rod Blagojevich for state work.

The pattern or Roland Burris’ career is certainly not one of being a dynamic agent of change, but he’s far more connected to the trough of political favors and revolving doors than anyone was pointed out yet.  Certainly his ego overshadows other parts of his life, but his efforts to cash in on his public service since leaving office and being cozy with those who can deliver jobs and money to him have been going for some time.  He never effectively regulated an industry he oversaw during a period of explosive growth.  If anything, his incompetence kept him from being more effective at wringing money out of those he sought contracts and favors from.  His efforts to talk to the Blagojevich administration largely centered on finding jobs for family members or getting some work thrown his way.


Chris Kennedy?

Really:

 

Sneed has learned Chris Kennedy, son of the late U.S. Sen. Robert Kennedy, may be this/close to entering the U.S. Senate sweepstakes from Illinois.

•    •    To wit: “Right now, it’s an 85 percent chance Chris is going to do it,” a top Kennedy source tells Sneed.

•    •    Poll ’em: Sneed is told Kennedy, who runs the Merchandise Mart, has commissioned Obama pollster John Anzalone — and has talked to media consultants Larry Grisolano and John Kupper, who now run the firm once headed by David Axelrod, President Obama’s senior adviser.

•    •    Translation: The poll, which is expected at the end of the week, “will give him a better lay of the land in this ever-changing race,” the source said.

•    •    The rationale: Top Dem party sources tell Sneed a Kennedy candidacy would bring instantaneous name recognition. “He’s also lived here for 25 years, is in his late 40s, comes from a business background, and has that Kennedy magic,” the source added.

•    •    The chat: Although the outcome of the poll would not be the only factor in whether Kennedy runs, word is Kennedy is concerned about media spillover from the drubbing his cousin, Caroline Kennedy, got during her ill-fated bid to get appointed to Hillary Clinton’s seat in New York.

 

The rationale is that he’s a rich guy with a famous name who thinks he’s entitled to the damn position.  We have enough dynasties in Illinois politics without importing one from Massachusetts.

Schakowsky Polling Numbers


To: Interested Parties

From: Lake Research Partners

Subject: The 2010 Democratic Primary for U.S. Senate in Illinois

Date: April 24, 2009

Findings from a recent survey of likely Democratic Primary voters in Illinois show a wide open race for the Democratic nomination for the U.S. Senate seat currently held by Senator Roland Burris, with Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky holding a narrow lead over all candidates, including the incumbent Senator. In addition, when voters learn more information (positive and negative) about the candidates, Schakowsky expands her lead over the field.[1] Schakowsky’s message resonates strongly with a Democratic electorate hungry for progressive leadership that will once again provide Illinois families a chance at the American Dream.

· Congresswoman Schakowsky owns a slight lead in a race that is wide open at this early stage. In an initial three-way trial heat, Schakowsky takes nearly a quarter of the vote (24%), narrowly edging out State Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias (22%). Senator Roland Burris draws just 18% of the vote – a striking indicator of his vulnerability. The intensity of support also narrowly favors Schakowsky (16% strong support), followed by Giannoulias (15%) and Burris (10%). Still, with over one-third (36%) of the Democratic Primary electorate undecided, this seat is up for grabs.

· After voters hear positive statements about the candidates, Schakowsky posts a double-digit lead. Schakowsky’s lead grows from 2 points in the initial ballot to 16 points after voters hear more about the candidates (see text of statements on following page). She leads Giannoulias on the three-way ballot, 38% to 22%, with 21% undecided. C.E.O. Cheryle Jackson attracts 17% of the vote.[2]

    • Notably, the percentage of voters who support Schakowsky strongly on the informed ballot (23% strong support) outnumbers the total percentage of voters who support Giannoulias (22% overall support).

· Even after voters hear negative information about Schakowsky and the other candidates, Schakowsky retains a solid lead over the field.


· Even more impressive, Schakowsky’s lead is not a function of superior name recognition, which actually belongs to Giannoulias. Voters have a slightly more informed opinion of Giannoulias, and both candidates are viewed positively. Despite Giannoulias’ advantage in name recognition, however, Schakowsky leads throughout.

· Bottom Line: At this early stage in the race, Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky is the strongest candidate in a wide open race for the Democratic nomination for Illinois’ U.S. Senate seat. Schakowsky’s lead on the initial ballot against incumbent Senator Roland Burris and several other serious candidates is impressive, and once voters learn more about each of the candidates they coalesce around her candidacy in significant numbers. Even after hearing a strong attack on Schakowsky, the Congresswoman retains her lead.




[1] Lake Research Partners designed and administered this survey of 600 likely February 2010 Democratic Primary voters in Illinois. The survey was conducted from April 19-22, 2009. The margin of error for this poll is +/-4.0%.

[2] On the informed ballot, Cheryle Jackson was substituted for Roland Burris in order to simulate the most competitive scenario with an African-American woman in the race.

 

 

++++

 

Overall, this poll is very good for Schakowsky. It tends to show that Bob Creamer’s conviction won’t matter much in the primary and she does well overall.   Between her and Giannoulias the race will be over electability and getting union support.  Burris is pretty much an afterthought and will be a fool if he runs.  Striket that, he’s a fool anyway.  He’ll just be a bigger fool.

 

Read More

Running for President

The judge seemed surprised that Rod Blagojevich wasn’t taking the charges seriously the other day.  From Eric’s column today:

The most telling new detail comes from Bob Arya, Blagojevich’s senior adviser from 2006 to early 2008.

Arya, who confirmed Brackett’s account in an interview Monday, said all major speeches needed the OK of a Washington consulting firm that was trying to position Blagojevich for a presidential run.

Arya said it was this consulting firm that inserted disastrously aggressive anti-business rhetoric into Blagojevich’s 2007 budget address. In early drafts, the need for a new tax on gross business receipts was framed as an attempt to close loopholes and make the tax system more progressive, Arya said.

“But the consultants said he should turn the issue into big business against the little guy,” Arya said. “So he tried to make businesses look nefarious when they were just following the law. All this did was inflame a lot of people whose support he needed.”

What’s amazing about this is anyone paying attention knew he was going to prison in 2007.  I made that point repeatedly in the 2006 race–so that Rod Blagojevich is delusional now isn’t news. He always has been.

 

 

Small Fixes, Big Safety Gains

There is some good in Chicago:

Many Chicago streets are not designed for cyclists, said Sadowsky, and need engineering changes, such as more lighting, fewer parked cars and lane adjustments to reduce collisions.

And particular intersections present safety issues, Sadowsky said. The one where Fabeck was killed has an overpass.

Another problematic intersection with heavy congestion is Kedzie Boulevard and Armitage Avenue, he said. There were two deaths resulting from bike-car collisions within a year: Amanda Annis, 24, and Blanca Ocasio, 19.

The alliance has worked with the CTA to reduce congestion at that intersection by moving a bus stop from the east side of Kedzie to the west, said Sadowsky.

“We also removed parking on Kedzie,” Sadowsky said. “There was a sign that was too close to the intersection that made it difficult for cars turning to see pedestrians and cyclists,” he said adding that there are ongoing discussions with aldermen to put a bicycle lane on Kedzie Boulevard between North Avenue and Palmer Boulevard.

This level of cooperation never would have happened in years past.  It still needs improvement, but  one of the most positive aspects is that the alliance is able to provide CTA and the city relatively low cost fixes.  The Active Transportation Alliance is doing excellent work. One thing I’d suggest for their web site is some explicit links to road safety courses for cyclists.  They are immensely helpful in teaching people who commute safety.

Oh, and they are hiring so those out there looking for a good progressive job–take a look.