Gun Bills Deadlocked in Springfield

According to the State Journal Register

Which isn’t such a big deal when you read this:

In 2001, 47 percent of the guns recovered after Illinois crimes came from other states, a number that grew from 35 percent in 1996, she said.

Illinois’ laws fairly effectively reduce the ease criminals can get a hold of guns, but any increase in that effectiveness would have to come from other states imposing similar laws. Funny, but no one in Illinois has a hard time getting a firearm under current law, but you’d never know that from the whining from the NRA**

**voted post most likely to get flamed for the month.

Home Alone

It appears Central Management Services has left the state agencies home alone accounting for savings from CMS

The so-called savings were supposed to correspond to efficiency devolving from CMS, which now manages contracts and facilities previously handled by individual agencies. But the individual agencies had trouble identifying savings that trickled down to them.

So, money was kicked back that couldn’t be specifically tagged to a saving. It just had to be kicked back regardless of where it came.

This leads to this line:

His audits said “the use of appropriations for purposes other than those authorized by the General Assembly effectively negates a fundamental control established in state government.”

Actually, that understates the case, but auditors are the masters of the understatement.

Unfortunately, the audits are not available on-line.

Keyes Still Sorta Around

Keyes is trolling for money with Keyesmediacentral.com

He’s also behind something to do with Illinoisunited.com which is coming soon. Really, Alan, you can can stay in Maryland. No one would be bothered. And hey, there’s an open Senate seat! And you know, you did relatively well against Sarbanes with 38%–now that his seat is open, give the Maryland GOP more of a headache than they are already dealing with in the Governor’s mansion.

2006 GOP Gubernatorial Cattle Call Open Thread

I’ll probably do a couple comment threads during the week, but we are one week out from the one year mark on the GOP Primary. Next Monday will be the first of 52 Cattle Calls!

The Potential Contenders

Steve Rauschenberger
Judy Barr Topinka
Patrick O’Malley
Ron Gidwitz
Bob Schillerstrom
Joe Birkett
Ray LaHood
Bill Brady
Jim Oberweis
John Shimkus
Dan Rutherford

There’s more and feel free to drop them in comments. Try not to slander anyone…making fun of good–accusing of dastardly deeds without evidence bad.

Feel free to slot people as you think they may go for other races as well.

Resist the urge to come up with a dream team–this is about how it’s likely to play out.

All I have to say for the next week is that, this slate is like a gift from heaven for those of us who enjoy making fun of politicians. Add to it the Democratic incumbent, take away my need for sustenance and money, and this could be a full time job.

Redistrict? No. Reform? Yes

Many national and local Democrats are pushing for Illinois Dems to redistrict mid decade and lamenting that we got Rahm Emanuel to head up the DCCC and now he’s not be allowed to play hardball like he should.

The larger question being missed is what’s the strategy? To look as bereft of ideals as the party in power? That’s a hell of a campaign slogan–they’re dirty so we had to get down in the dirt with them….

Or does the Party take a look at the problem and turn it into an issue that many can relate to and run with it?

The comparison of the current Congressional GOP to the Dems in Congress during the 1980s/early 1990s is a great comparison in that both had little to do with policy and more with personal power of the leaders.

DeLay is like a treasure trove of examples of the abuse of power and every time he gets hit, he uses organizational power to shield him.

It’s people like him that lead to a strong desire for term limits–people being angry about how anyplace could keep electing someone so corrupt and out of the mainstream of American values.

Term limits are a stupid idea that limits choices of whom you may vote arbitrarily. So instead of promising a ‘vote’ on term limits as the ‘Contract on America’ did, the Democrats should run on non-partisan redistricting similar to Iowa’s plan.

It’s a reform idea that would force the most complacent in Congress to have to defend their votes, it would make far fewer safe seats in Congress, and it resonates with all those people stuck in safe seats who hate that they can’t vote for someone who has a chance.

Most importantly, it changes the debate from one of insiders complaining about who slimed who, to one of a party of reform versus a party of corruption. The issue alone won’t deliver districts, but it is another step towards reframing the debate to a debate that benefits a party outside of power. Even better, it’s a good idea for American democracy.

The national Dems need to take the high ground and recast this debate into one that doesn’t focus on tit-for-tat insider fighting, but one that can create a message of reform for the Party to run under.

Many safe district Congressman will fight the idea, but they need to be persuaded with a heavy dose of party discipline. In case they haven’t noticed the House of Representatives has been in Republican control for 10 years and running the party as an incumbent protection racket isn’t helping to promote our values. It’s helping incumbent members and that isn’t one of our values.

Trying to argue it’s an argument over the high ground versus all out warfare misses that in all out political warfare, you need a compelling mesage to win. We can be as devious as they can isn’t the way to communicate such a message.