Hastert To Announce Next Week

One way or the other.  From Congressional Daily:

Rep. Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., the longest serving Republican speaker, will announce whether he will seek re-election next week, while a handful of candidates say they are already primed to run for the 14th District seat if it opens up. “I will probably make that announcement in the middle of August,” Hastert said in a brief interview last week. Despite speculation in Washington and at home that he will not seek a 12th term, Hastert declined to indicate which way he was leaning. An aide said today Hastert has not scheduled an announcement, but he will turn to his political future next week after he returns from a trip to Japan and China. The timing of the announcement is also driven by the Illinois election calendar, which allowed potential candidates to begin circulating petitions Tuesday. National Republican Congressional Committee Chairman Tom Cole of Oklahoma applauded Hastert for not leaving House Republicans to defend an open seat in the middle of an election cycle. “He could have easily resigned immediately after the election,” Cole said in an interview just before the recess. “I am hopeful he will serve out his term.”
Wealthy businessman Jim Oberweis, state Sen. Chris Lauzen and Geneva Mayor Kevin Burns have taken steps to run for the GOP nomination if the seat is open. “We’ve been talking to people around the district and have been going everywhere around the district if Denny decides not to run,” Oberweis said. Oberweis, who runs a mutual fund and a family dairy, disclosed he might spend $2.5 million each for the primary and the general election. Oberweis has made three unsuccessful bids for statewide office. Lauzen, a former accountant elected to the state Senate in 1992, said his political strength lies in his grassroots network and that he already represents about 250,000 district residents. Taking a shot at Oberweis, Lauzen said, “When our group runs a campaign, we win, and Jim doesn’t.”
The Democratic primary field began to narrow this week as state Rep. Linda Chapa LaVia announced she would not run. That leaves businessman and physicist Bill Foster, attorney Jotham Stein and 2006 nominee John Laesch as likely rivals for the nomination. Foster, who founded a company that provides lighting for major entertainment events, has indicated he might spend $1 million each for the primary and the general. Foster worked at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory with notable breakthroughs in particle physics. He jumped into politics last year when he signed onto the campaign of now-Rep. Patrick Murphy, D-Pa. Although Republicans have historically dominated the 14th District, Foster’s campaign manager, Thomas Bowen, said Foster is prepared to run regardless of Hastert’s decision, noting that population growth has changed the district. “I am operating under the assumption that people are wedded to change, that either way it doesn’t matter,” Bowen said.

Go Daniel

My name is Daniel Biss and I’m running for State Representative here in Illinois.  I’m a math professor by day, but starting early in the Bush administration, I got so upset about the direction the country was going that I started doing a lot of grassroots organizing to affect change.

In other words, I’m very proud to say that I come out of the same new movement that produced the progressive blogosphere.

As you might imagine, I was incredibly excited to discover that Yearly Kos would take place in Chicago.  I knew it would be a great opportunity to meet fantastic activists and network.  I didn’t realize it would give our campaign a new focus and goal.  I had no idea the netroots would come into town and transform our campaign overnight.  Read more to see how it happened.

It all started on July 6, when ActBlue’s blog announced that our campaign was the 4th ranking state-level campaign in the country in terms of dollars raised via ActBlue in Q2.

We were proud of that accomplishment, of course, but then something interesting happened: local reporters and bloggers got very interested, and it led to a small flurry of coverage, including this positive article in the Pioneer Press, a widely-distributed suburban weekly.

We in the campaign were very excited about this, and wondered how to build on it.  First we thought we should try to become the #1 fundraising campaign; however, because some of the other candidates have such huge budgets, that probably wouldn’t be possible.

We realized, however, that while raising the most dollars was probably out of reach, we were within striking distance of having the most donors of any state-level campaign in the country.

So that became our goal: to get to #1 in the country in terms of number of donations, and to get there during the Yearly Kos convention.  By doing it during the conference, we wouldn’t only be helping our campaign raise money and get attention, we’d be proving to local media and political insiders that this is a new kind of campaign, built on a new base of supporters.  They’d always understand, not just during the campaign, but even more importantly after I’m elected, that we represent a new force in progressive politics, a new partnership between political candidates and a nationwide network of activists.

So we set up a special ActBlue page to raise funds at the convention.  Whenever I met people at the conference, I’d tell them about our goal and ask them to give whatever they could via that dedicated ActBlue page.

The contributions started rolling in, faster than I could have imagined and as I write this diary, the page has raised over $1,000 from 34 donors!

This afternoon I got an email from ActBlue staff telling me that, sure enough, we’ve reached our goal and we now have more individual donations on ActBlue than any other state-level candidate!

We are a part of a movement that is changing the face of politics in America.  We are building — and funding — this campaign with the energy and hard work of ordinary people who have for way, way too long been shut out of the process.  I can’t tell you how proud and honored I am to be a small part of this movement.

I’m writing this diary to thank the community for playing such an exciting role in our campaign.  I’m also writing to ask you to help keep the momentum going!

First, please head to that special YKos ActBlue page to keep this amazing run of donations going.

But that’s not the only way you can help.  Forward the above link (http://www.actblue.com/page/dbyk2007?refcode=dkosdiary) to 5 friends and explain why any contribution will help build this critical relationship between a progressive movement and a progressive candidate.

Check out our website and sign up for our e-mail list.  Direct friends to our website.

Join us at our campaign kick-off event on Sunday, August 19.  Bring a couple of friends.

This campaign is built on the values, principles, and open communication style that brought this community together. I’m honored to partner with you. Your work is making all the difference in the world.

Chapa LaVia Out

This has been pretty much known for a while, but the mess in Springfield slowed down the announcement

AURORA — Word has come from the camp of state Rep. Linda Chapa LaVia that she has dropped her bid for higher office.

Chapa LaVia, D-Aurora, formed an exploratory committee in May to gauge support for a potential run at the 14th District seat currently held by Yorkville Republican Dennis Hastert. But a Chapa LaVia spokesman confirmed Monday that the three-term representative has decided to withdraw herself from consideration, and focus on her hometown of Aurora and the 2008 state House election.

“It was a long decision, I can tell you that,” said Ron Cook, a Chapa LaVia campaign staffer. “She is flattered and honored by the people willing to step forward and support her for this position.”

In the end, Cook said, Chapa LaVia felt she could do more good by remaining in Aurora as a state representative. He said it was not a matter of being qualified for the position, and her committee found support for her run at the office.

“She’s very dedicated to (the 83rd) District,” Cook said. “Her value is where she’s at, with her role now in the state, and she can’t improve on that by going to Congress.”

Chapa LaVia herself was unavailable for comment. In May, she said she would only consider a run at the 14th Congressional District if Hastert retired at the end of his current term. Hastert, a former speaker of the House who has represented the district for 11 terms, has not announced whether he will retire when his term ends in 2008.

Chapa LaVia’s withdrawal leaves three Democrats vying for the nomination: Geneva scientist Bill Foster, Geneva businessman Jotham Stein, and Hastert’s former opponent, John Laesch.

Three Republicans have also formed exploratory committees, including State Sen. Chris Lauzen, R-Aurora; Geneva mayor Kevin Burns; and Aurora dairy owner Jim Oberweis. However, all three are waiting to see whether Hastert runs again before throwing their hats into the ring

.A decision is expected from Hastert’s camp this month.

From Foster’s Campaign:


“Linda Chapa LaVia is a tireless fighter for
Illinois families and I hope to earn her support and the support of every person in the 14th district who wants to change Washington,” said Bill Foster.

I talked with both Foster and Stein at YKos and hope to do interviews with them in the coming months.  I missed Laesch, but my hope is to have all the Democratic candidates. 

It’s The End of the World and I Feel Fine

Lappin himself is an interesting character.  He’s a Republican which is nothing strange, but his activism on Israel is tied to the International Fellowship of Christian and Jews.  Lappin is on the board of directors.

What I’ve always found fascinating is that a group like IFCJ allies itself with fundamentalist Christians who think they are bringing about the rapture.  John Hagee has won awards from IFCJ for his support of Israel, but Hagee is one of these characters who base his support on the fact that by supporting Israel, we can lead to a war with Russia and the Muslim nations attacking Israel.  He wants the world to end.

When addressing audiences receptive to Scriptural prophecy, however, Hagee welcomes the coming confrontation. He argues that a strike against Iran will cause Arab nations to unite under Russia’s leadership, as outlined in chapters 38 and 39 of the Book of Ezekiel, leading to an “inferno [that] will explode across the Middle East, plunging the world toward Armageddon.” During his appearance on Hinn’s program at the end of last March, for example, the host enthused, “We are living in the last days. These are the most exciting days in church history,” but then went on to add, “We are facing now [the] most dangerous moment for America.” At one point, Hinn clapped his hands in delight and shouted, “Yes! Glory!” and then urged his viewers to donate money faster because he is running out of time to preach the gospel.

Because someone ‘supports’ Israel doesn’t mean they are for Israel’s security.  IFCJ has ties to many premillenial dispensationalists who have a goal of bringing about Armageddon.

Seriously.  The ‘support’ isn’t aimed towards making Israel a safe, secure nation, but a nation that is attacked by Islamic nations and Russia in the case of Hagee.  It’s not about peace, it’s about war and literally the end of the world.

It’s a long road to peace for Israel.  Having loons with bad fundamentalist theology as close allies won’t lead to peace–it’ll encourage war.  There are no easy roads to peace for Israel given the chaos in the Palestinian territories, but working to incite a region wide war isn’t in anyone’s interest.
Hagee himself is slightly less offensive than most Premillenial Dispensationalists because he doesn’t buy into the notion that Jews have to die and go to hell during Armageddon.

So if you think that we should be facilitating the end of the world, Andrew Lappin seems to think that’s just fine.

To the Point on Lappin

As an added bonus–Dan Seals position paper on Israel which is solid.

The continuing issue of attacking Kos for a limited number of comments compared to millions made is getting sillier every day.  James Boyrce Responds in a diary at Kos

One of the many things wrong in the world today is that some people, in this case supporters of Congressman Mark Kirk (Republican Illinois) are quick to wave the charge of racism without a thought in the world as to whom they are charging, and how those charge might feel.

During the Kerry Campaign in 2004, I spent quite a bit of time traveling with Cam Kerry, John’s brother, who converted to Judaism when he got married. Many of those trips also involved my friend Jay Footlik, who was the campaign’s Middle East Advisor.

The times I spent learning about this issue was the deepest and most personal exposure I had ever had to the historical and present challenges facing members of the Jewish faith and the country of Israel

I recall, vividly, as I sat there speechless, in a Holocaust Memorial service in New York City with Cam, Jay and his wife, a native-born Israeli as I watched Holocaust widows shuffle past us; small, frail, yet immensely powerful women – each and every one of them.

As such, I take the charge leveled by a supporter of Mark Kirk’s very seriously. And I find it very disturbing that it would be so easily bandied about.

Almost immediately as YearlyKos ended, one of Mark Kirk’s biggest supporters, a gentlemen by the name of Andy Lappin sent an email out to a very large list and it is making its way around the Internet.

Here are some of the quotes and charges that Mr. Lappin felt he needed to make about Jay, and Dan Seals, Jay’s primary opponent in the Illinois 10th, and their appearance at YearlyKos.

What’s troubling is that Seals and Footlik speak to our community with one mouth and then run to a convention filled with anti-Semitic bloggers.

The charge of being an anti-Semitic is one that should never be made lightly and certainly one that should never be made of a group of 1,500 people – many of whom, like Jay, are Jewish.

On what does Mr. Lappin base his charge of racism? A collection of quotes pulled from comments from old diaries from the site. What he is suggesting is that these comments – made in some cases years ago, mean that YearlyKos was full of anti-Semites.

Here’s one Mr. Lappin used:

“Once we lock up a Majority, where we don’t need Lieberman, I hope they will kick him to the curb like the dog he is.”

Not the politest post I have ever seen, but I fail to see anything anti-Semitic in this.

Some of the other quotes that Mr. Lappin noted were, actually, inappropriate. However, as Mr. Lappin gleefully claims:

Many times posts are left up for weeks or months until watchdog groups raise concerns over anti-Semitism–at that point, Kos removes the blog pages.  Fortunately, there are other savvy bloggers out there who keep archived copies.

Damm right. If anything is posted that’s wrong, it gets pulled. That’s the right thing to do.

So why would one of Congressman Mark Kirk’s largest supporters attack especially Jay Footlik on the issue of his faith and Israel?

Simply politics as usual. Kirk’s, and soon Jay’s, district is 18% Jewish and for all practical purposes on Election Day, the number is closer to 23%.

If Mark Kirk can’t run on his support for Israel, what can he run on? His continued support for the war in Iraq? His rubber stamp votes to support George Bush?

Ah, now you see the problem.

It’s far easier to paint me, and you, and everyone else at YearlyKos as an anti-Semite. It’s far easier to wave the flag of racism. It’s disgusting.

Mr. Lappin:

Don’t call me, and my friends, and my fellow bloggers and attendees at YearlyKos anti-Semitic ever again.

Because I will sue you for defamation and libel.

Are we clear?

Footlik Response

Once again, Mark Kirk has shown he has nothing to offer the people of Illinois’ 10th district other than more of George Bush and Karl Rove’s ugly politics of smear and fear – and why we desperately need a change in Washington.

Instead of trying to end the catastrophic war in Iraq that he helped start, or explaining why he voted last week to protect tobacco companies instead of providing health care to millions of uninsured children or why he remains silent on President Bush’s ill advised proposal to sell arms to Saudi Arabia, all Mark Kirk can do is try to distract the voters with outright lies.

This time, Kirk sent a lapdog to attack my strong connection to Israel and to the Jewish people.

Let there be no doubt about my views and my record:

Unlike Mark Kirk, I have lived in Israel, and for much of my time there, Israel was experiencing the most violent period in recent memory. Homicide bombers were blowing up cafes and buses nearly every week. I worked alongside Israel’s leaders devising strategies to improve safety and security – and help strengthen the US-Israel relationship. My wife, an Israeli, wore the IDF uniform, serving in the Israeli Air Force. My family and I were in Haifa when the first missiles hit during last year’s Israel-Hezbollah war. I know what security and peace would mean to Israelis – and I will work my hardest to achieve it.

I have come face-to-face with anti-Semites, and in every instance – every single one – I have condemned any form of anti-Semitic speech. Whether it comes from the mouth of a blogger or a preacher, anti-Semitism – like xenophobia, racism, and homophobia – has no place in the 10th district, in Chicagoland, in Illinois, in the United States, and the entire world.

I suppose I should be astonished that the Kirk campaign would attack me – a Jew and someone who has lived in Israel – on whether I am sufficiently pro-Israel or sensitive to anti-Semitism.

Yet when it comes to saying the indefensible, supporting the unfounded, and voting for some of the most failed policies we’ve seen in a generation, Mark Kirk no longer surprises. The voters of the 10th district have seen it all – this is just another sad display of Kirk’s politics of personal destruction and division.

The fact is, Mark Kirk has done this for years. It’s time to send a message – the safety and security of Israel is much too important to be tossed around in a partisan contest. It’s time for the Bush-Kirk-Rove lie machine to end in 2009.

I call on Mark Kirk to denounce these types of divisive and dishonest attacks.