We got everything we wanted

Umm…well, as Bernard Schoenburg points out, not really

Blagojevich said he would close the state prison at Vandalia and the youth prison at St. Charles. At the end of May, in a surprise proposal, Blagojevich also backed closure of the Pontiac Correctional Center. None of those ideas were in the final compromise.

He pushed a “Balanced Budget Act” designed to require every spending bill to include a source of the funds. That constitutionally questionable idea sounded good, but went nowhere.

He said he would pass a “Responsible Spending Act” to require that, for every billion-dollar increase in the budget, $50 million would be put in a rainy day fund. Fancy name. Not done.

Ditto the “On Time Bill Payment Act,” under which the state would have to pay its bills within 60 days or draw on a line of credit to do so. Sounds like more of that “borrow and spend” that House Speaker MICHAEL MADIGAN, D-Chicago, accused the governor of doing too much of. It didn’t pass.

He wanted $400 million in new money for education. He actually got $389 million in the final compromise. Blagojevich also has said he wants to raise per-pupil support for each student in the state by $1,000 during his four-year term. He needed $250 per student to stay on pace this year, but the actual figure was $154 per student.

The governor touted his “Opportunity Returns” program as “regionally focused ideas, ideas that play to the strengths and address the weaknesses of each part of our state.” His administration sought $50 million in new general fund money for the program, but it wasn’t part of the final budget compromise.
That jeopardizes some already-announced initiatives – though no program has yet been announced in four of the 10 areas into which the state has been divided by this program. Springfield is in one of the areas where opportunity has not yet returned.

The governor did tout a memorandum of understanding he signed with legislative leaders to advance the program, but Madigan said the agreement is merely to study the program. And the governor has yet to get a state-sponsored venture capital program going, despite pushing the idea heavily during his campaign.

He wanted to move the Department of Agriculture’s land division into the Department of Natural Resources.
“The savings from this move will help us pay the damages we now owe Mongo,” the governor joked about last year’s disqualified junior steer champion. The move didn’t happen, and the joke has turned into a lawsuit against the state by the family of the teenage girl who showed the steer at last year’s state fair.

Besides the speech itself, the governor’s office put out supporting documents with other proposals. Among them:

His administration wanted a long-standing tax exemption on farm chemicals eliminated for farms with revenue (not necessarily profit) of more than $1 million a year. Only later did it come out that the term “farm chemicals” covered, among other things, seed for crops and feed for animals. The legislature turned thumbs down on the idea, and a compromise reached with farm groups wasn’t enacted either.

The administration also wanted to eliminate the motor fuel tax exemption for non-farm non-highway vehicles, such as railroad locomotives. Blagojevich said it would save $74 million. It didn’t happen.

A proposed 75-cent-per-ride fee on taxi rides to and from major Chicago airports was to raise $6 million. No go.

Blagojevich wanted to take a “holiday” from two state programs totaling more than $30 million a year: the Open Space Land Acquisition and Development Fund, and the Natural Areas Acquisition Fund. Conservationists were up in arms, and the funding stayed.

Twit.

The Economist Chimes In

Unfortunately, the Economist saved its biting humor, but offer up a serious indictment of the whole farce:

To make matters even worse for the Republicans, Mr Keyes’s numerous defects as a candidate are only magnified by the comparison with Mr Obama. Mr Obama has spent almost 20 years in Illinois?seven as a state senator?and is married to a woman from the South Side of Chicago. He won an impressive 53% of the Democratic primary vote against six strong opponents. He is optimistic where Mr Keyes preaches Sodom and Gomorrah, and moderate where Mr Keyes is intemperate. He is also a rising national star, with unrivalled support from the national party, while Mr Keyes is a serial failure.

The Republicans’ fatal mistake was to think that the best way to counter a black man was with another black man. The point about Mr Obama?as the Republicans might have realised if they had paid greater attention to his speech in Boston?is that he is a post-racial candidate. Mr Obama is the son of a black man from Kenya and a white woman from Kansas who was brought up by his white mother and grandparents in Hawaii and South-East Asia. He appeals just as strongly to white suburban voters as he does to blacks.

He Writes Songs

It gets better and better

?I touch the world with hands too weak, frail as the words that I speak. I hear the sounds, dragging with pain?Nothing to gain, nothing to lose, why should I bother to choose? Mind cannot know, lips shake to spare, but when I sing with my heart you are there..?.-Alan Keyes in a self-written song, ?You Are There?

Assignment Desk: Get me this tape

He went on the Tonight Show and sang. While Bill Clinton played the sax in 1992, and John Kerry played the guitar this campaign season, those were merely cases of showing off. When Keyes went on the Tonight Show, he sang a song he wrote, expressing his own heart about issues of justice and truth. Few political leaders would make themselves so vulnerable in that venue.

Jackson Taunts the Republicans

In the Mooney Times:

“He represents the party that recruited him,” Jackson told a conference call Thursday. “There are two parties and two candidates. Let’s see which party is the most committed to supporting their guy.”

Jackson said Bush challenged black Democrats to leverage their vote by supporting Republicans when he addressed the National Urban League in Detroit. He said the president now has the opportunity to campaign for a black Republican in Illinois.

“Mr. Keyes should be the standard-bearer for the Republican Party,” he said. “It’s a great opportunity for Republicans to show their commitment to expanding their base and competing for the vote.”

Calling Karl!

Louisiana Updates

Rodney Alexander’s cheap attempt to avoid a challenger just got funnier with this. I mean, never write the attack ads for your opponents.

Better yet, the DCCC wants its money back. I hear the Steelworkers took back $5000 too.

Changing parties happens. Soon, we’ll be seeing more in the suburbs and in the Northeast as reallignment rolls along, but doing it where you take money and specifically try and avoid a challenger is slimy.

Republicans Have Parkinsons Too

While no one expected Andrea Zinga to get close to the uber gerrymandered 17th, she has shown herself to have no shame in a losing effort.

“People who are on the medications he is on may have trouble with judgment, which can be worsened by excitement or stress,” she said in an interview. “It concerns me and I think voters should be aware of it.”

Even nastier:

Zinga, for her part, makes a point of reminding voters that Evans would have medical insurance coverage, even if he were voted out of office.

“I don’t think they want to throw someone out, just because he’s had the (misfortune) of being sick,” she said. “It’s important to tell them that he’ll be cared for.”