Open Meetings Law, errr..enforced

Being a bit behind, I haven’t had time to link to Lisa Madigan’s shocking enforcement of the open meetings law.

Within the past week, both Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan and Cook County State’s Attorney Richard Devine have told the CTA board it violated the Illinois Open Meetings Act on Aug. 6.

Apparently she was serious,

Madigan, the daughter of state Democratic Party chief and Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan, fired the first shot across the CTA’s bow.

She announced last week that attorneys for her office had told the CTA board to either void the pension fund hikes or she would file a lawsuit to nullify its Aug. 6 action.

I asked Sean Denny, a former assistant Illinois attorney general, who for nearly two decades was in charge of enforcing the Open Meetings Act, if he could ever recall the attorney general filing a lawsuit against Chicago or one of its agencies.

His answer was, "No."

Lisa Madigan ran for the office of attorney general vowing to aggressively enforce the state’s sunshine laws, and eight months into her first term she’s been good to her word.

Who knew?

Kudes to Dick Devine too…

Rich Miller’s Photos from Iraq

For those not aware, Rich Miller is reporting from Iraq. I’ll post some links to the stories which are good when I see them appear in the papers. They capture a very basic level of what is going on in Iraq more than most of the mega picture diddling about the President’s, ahem, ‘plan’. He has some pics posted at the Capitol Fax.

In his weekly column, he has a good piece on the Republican Senate candidates. Most notably, he has nice things to say about Kathuria.

Sawicky on a Tear

First, he thanks Ted Kennedy for keeping Bork off the bench. Why?

Judge Bork’s last point is that the new rule of judges is international. "Judicial imperialists" made a crucial start at the Nuremberg Trials of Nazi leaders. The trials established a bad habit of confusing moral justification (Goering deserved what he got) with legal justification for retroactive lawmaking. It would have been better simply to execute the big Nazis, as Britain proposed at the time. Nuremberg established the idea that legal busy bodies can run the world according to their own notion of virtue, and it was only a few short steps to the World Court and the International Criminal Court. This argument is so sweeping as to sound paranoid — but paranoids are not always wrong . . . "

That’s just amazing.

Even more amazing, Sawicky even thinks the deficit is going to be too bigh. I now stand corrected if I teased him about never seeing a deficit he didn’t like.

What If My Dissent Is for More Troops

Rumsfeld pulls a hell of a number today, playing the dissent is emboldening our enemies.

Mr. Rumsfeld did not mention any of the domestic critics by name. But he suggested that those who have been critical of the administration?s handling of the war in Iraq and its aftermath might be encouraging American foes to believe that the United States might one day walk away from the effort, as it has in past conflicts.

Ted (Thank God He’s Back) Barlow then gives us the appropriate reference to Peter Pan.

The problem I have is that I don’t know how I’d be emboldening our enemies when I’m calling on the Friggen’ President to actually go after them in both Afghanistan and Iraq with more troops–foreign or domestic. Funny, but it would seem that I’m calling for a stronger response, as are most of the Democratic candidates, and a real commitment. How does that criticism encourage our foes? By pointing out the twit in the White House is a paper tiger?

Dude, That’s Your Base

Saint Louis has been blessed with a visit from Al Sharpton who has taken the side of supporters of a boycott against the Saint Louis Public Schools. He came into town last night for a church rally and joined a group of protesters carrying a child in coffin on a route to City Hall this morning. That’s gonna cost someone a whole lot of therapy.

The boycott was unsuccessful with about 4.5% more students attending the first day of school this year over last. While not as strong of a day as school management had hoped for, it is improvement. It’s important to note that nearly 10% of students are in transitional housing or homeless in the SLPS and beyond that, nearly many schools have 25% mobility rates during the year, so moving around during the summer is a challenge to many families.

The boycott supporters include local radio show host and obnoxious twit, Lizz Brown. She attempted a stand down campaign in 2002 against Jean Carnahan to no noticeable affect in the ward vote totals. She is generally disliked by most black political leaders with the exception of a couple Northside alderman.

But the important news for Al is that he is lashing out at his base. He attacked St. Louis’ black leadership that generally opposed the boycott by calling them rented negros and Uncle Tom’s. While such language might buy him a few votes amongst the nihilist faction of St. Louis Black Politics, he isn’t going to win a majority of the black vote who he is calling, well, rented negros.

Taking on your base ala Sister Souljah is a useful technique. Pissing on your base’s leg is generally just unproductive.

What’s Al’s strategy then? Get on Tv?

Abortion Polls

Polling is poorly understood by most and, believe it or not, it is best understood in horse races. It is worst understood when discussing public policy because all too often the issues are skewed by poorly formed questions and especially in abortion, those polls ask questions that try to draw conclusions about political questions from questions that elicit moral responses.

It shouldn’t be surprising that people differentiate between what should be good public policy and what is moral behavior. While people often hold inconsistent or even silly beliefs, when you probe people can differentiate between the two spheres. The problem is most polls are limited by money and thus, limited in what they can probe. Even beyond that, depending on what comes to mind to an individual will influence their response to a specific question.

Eric Zorn takes Dennis Byrne to task over misusing public opinion polls on abortion.

Yes, but they also show that most people–consistently about 60 percent — feel the abortion decision should be between the woman and her doctor, and that the percentage of people who feel that abortion should legal under any circumstances is always higher than the percentage of people who feel it should always be illegal.

Many people who are for abortion rights are uncomfortable with abortions. That isn’t inconsistent, it is a recognition of living in a complicated world. For a group that wants limited government, conservatives often miss that people place higher barriers to government intervention in their personal lives than in other areas.

Novak Confused that Lugar isn’t a Hack

While I’m sure if I go back and refight the 1980s Dick Lugar and I would have many disagreements over Latin American policy, but today, I view him as a very reasonable voice on foreign affairs. Not surprisingly, the administration is scared of him and his sober assessments of the situation in Iraq.

Novak sounds the alarm that Lugar is off the reservation and suggests that something dark is happening. Actually nothing dark is happening, Lugar is just serious and thinks the President should level with the public and put together a serious plan. Lugar has had to shame the President to do the right thing on Russian non-proliferation and now he has to do it again. And he’ll probably do it on Afghanistan. Will the administration listen? Probably not. That’s too bad, Lugar would be Secretary of State in a sane Republican world. Of course, there is a sane SoS now and it doesn’t matter.

Rauschenberger’s Not Normal

And that is probably a good thing. He wants a series of debates against Barack Obama.

Rauschenberger is a smart guy and that would be a good debate. For a variety of reasons, it probably doesn’t help Obama and so it won’t happen. Instead we’ll probably see a bunch of priviliged nitwits debate Rauschenberger in a very tight format that sheds no light on just how vacuous most of the Republican candidates are.

An interesting end note to the article is Rauschenberger’s comments on trade,

As a U.S. senator, Rauschenberger would lobby the White House for fairer trade. The quid pro quo for free trade is that everybody does better when lanes are open, he says, but we are now confronted by ”central governments like China, where they control currency valuation.” That is not a free market system, he says. ”It’s costing good Illinois jobs, and we’ve had too much of it.”

Its also good for consumers, but what the hell. China will open its markets when it has to and the way to do that is be open as possible to them.