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Posted on 12.16.08 by dancurry @ 8:05 am
Illinois Democrats are laughingly trying to say they didn’t know Governor Rod Blagojevich was under intense federal scrutiny in 2006 when they lined up behind him during his re-election bid. At the time, the Chicago Tribune called the corruption probe “a five-alarm fire.” Speaker of the House Mike Madigan said this yesterday: “I can’t say I knew he was under intense scrutiny at the time.” Lt. Gov. Pat Quinn has ducked the question as best he could and suggested there was not a problem in 2006. Madigan was Blago’s campaign co-chairman and Quinn ran on his ticket and called him honest and someone who always does the right thing. Both are not telling the truth. Here are what newspaper editorials said during that campaign:
The campaign ads also tell the story. Illinois Democrats can’t escape their past. They had a choice in 2006 to dump Blagojevich and they chose corruption. Technorati Tags: |
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Posted on 12.10.08 by dancurry @ 11:04 pm
These campaign commercials from 2002 and 2006 attacking Il. Gov. Rod Blagojevich for corruption pinpoint what was known in Illinois at crucial junctures. The 2006 ads are first and show the mature nature of the federal investigations against Blagojevich. Despite this, many Illinois Democrats endorsed him, including President-Elect Barack Obama. They will have to answer for putting their party before the citizens of Illinois. All the ads were produced by one of the top Republican ad makers in the country, Rick Reed. The 2006 ads were for Republican Judy Baar Topinka, and the last two ads, from 2002, were made for Republican Jim Ryan. Technorati Tags: |
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Posted on 05.23.07 by dancurry @ 8:41 am
This morning’s revelation by Chicago Tribune reporters Jeff Coen and Ray Long that the feds have subpoenaed Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich’s campaign records should come as no surprise to anyone following this story closely. Nonetheless, it is a devastating blow to the campaign’s future ability to raise money, and thus the governor’s remaining sliver of credibility. Savvy businessmen gave Blagojevich money because they expected a future return. With the feds truly crawling all over campaign records, that’s no longer such a wise investment. Anyone who gives Blagojevich a campaign contribution from here on out is essentially paying his legal defense fund. Without a massive campaign treasury, Blagojevich simply isn’t a viable politician. He was only able to overcome his feeble legislative and congressional records with a $55 million fundraising operation that dwarfed all others in Illinois history. That allowed him to defeat three consecutive opponents—Paul Vallas, Jim Ryan and Judy Baar Topinka—who all had accomplished much more in public life than he.
Even with inflation figured in, these numbers are staggering. It never smelled right—a politician with a mediocre public record who was able to raise rock star-like money. There’s only one logical explanation: the fundraising was being fueled by expectations of state contracts and appointments. There’s already plenty of evidence in the indictments of Tony Rezko, Stuart Levine and Joe Cari that the promises were being made and the goods delivered. And there’s billowing smoke in the archives of newspapers across the state of many more deals. Finding examples of corruption within Blagojevich’s $55 million campaign fund will be like finding cicadas on old trees in metropolitan Chicago—they’re everywhere. Unlike the cicadas in Illinois, however, corruption in the governor’s office happens every four years, instead of every 17.
Technorati Tags: corruption, Illinois, Rod Blagojevich, Tony Rezko |
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Posted on 10.31.06 by dancurry @ 9:24 pm
Tribune columnist Eric Zorn notices his disdain for Judy Baar Topinka and realizes that it was manufactured from the blitz of TV commercials from Rod Blagojevich. He is realizing the attacks are largely made up and that Topinka has been an honest, effective state Treasurer. Zorn is in the minority, according to polls. Blagojevich is headed for re-election, if the trends continue. Zorn needs to take his column a step further. He needs to ask why Blagojevich has the money to air so many TV commercials. The answer is that he cheated. His fundraising operation is under multiple federal investigations and when all the federal smoke has cleared, it is highly likely that he and most of his fundraisers will have been indicted. Unless they are media superstars like Barack Obama, lackluster congressmen like Rod Blagojevich do not suddenly raise $52 million without breaking the rules. If Rod pulls off a victory next week, it will mean Illinois has selected the following two governors: George Ryan and Rod Blagojevich, both who padded their campaign treasury with ill-gotten funds. Rejected along the way were four people who raised far less cash but according to the rules: Glenn Poshard, Paul Vallas, Jim Ryan and Topinka. Each would have been a far better governor and would have stayed out of prison. Illinois loves its cheaters. Technorati Tags: Chicago media, Chris Kelly, Illinois, Stu Levine, Tony Rezko |
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Posted on 10.09.06 by dancurry @ 10:34 pm
Amazingly, there’s still a question whether the sitting governor will show up tomorrow before the editorial board of the state’s largest newspaper. Rod Blagojevich seemed to be testing out arguments today he would use if he decides at the last minute to duck the appearance.
Why would Rod duck the joint appearance with Judy Baar Topinka? The main reason is this. He can’t duck and dodge questions about the $1,500 check in front of the newspaper that broke the story. He’ll have to explain why he laundered the money using his seven-year-old daughter. He’ll also have to explain to the Tribune editorial board why he used the Tribune to launder a lie in his TV commercial. Here’s what he did:
The paper already noticed the stunt.
I have a feeling Rod is going to call in sick tomorrow.
Technorati Tags: corruption, Illinois |
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Posted on 04.27.06 by dancurry @ 1:35 am
Rod Blagojevich is running “guilt by association” ads linking Judy Baar Topinka to George W. Bush and now, George Ryan. Here’s what the governor said a few short weeks ago:
And, his senior advisor four years ago:
Maybe lobbyist-bond expert Doug Scofield can explain the sudden change in position. |
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Posted on 04.25.06 by dancurry @ 1:06 pm
Get ready for a new round of demagoguery from Rod Blagojevich on gas. He was busy demogogueing on stem cells and his Republican opponent beat him to the punch Monday on expressing concern for rising gas prices. That led to this funny spot of film at the end of CBS-2 Chicago's report yesterday where Rod turned mute when asked about gas prices. He wasn't mute four years ago when he had two press conferences complaining that Illinois Governor George Ryan and state Attorney General Jim Ryan were to blame when gas prices went to nearly $2 a gallon. Rod was a congressman at the time and he did not blame President Bush or the federal government. He said the Ryans were:
Now that he's governor and Lisa Madigan is attorney general, it's the federal government's fault! But, hey Rod, gas is now more than $3 a gallon and you said four years ago you were going to do more to keep prices down. |
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Posted on 04.17.06 by dancurry @ 7:51 pm
The immediate speculation of the media seems mixed on whether the George Ryan jury hurts Judy Baar Topinka or Rod Blagojevich most. I think they are misreading this badly. As Eric Krol points out today in an article that quotes yours truly, the George Ryan damage to the GOP peaked years ago. Not it's Rod who is under multiple federal investigations and the last thing the public wants is George Ryan II. And this frees up Pat Collins and other personnel to move forward on those investigations. Don't underestimate the extra confidence this will give Patrick Fitzgerald's office to pursue circumstantial cases of corruption. Bad, bad news for Rod. UPDATE: The Trib just said this in an editorial: UPDATE: RCP agrees. |
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Posted on 04.03.06 by dancurry @ 2:04 pm
One of the principles of political PR: say it fast. Especially when your argument is weak. Judy Baar Topinka yesterday issued a “Dirty Dozen” list of corruption in the Rod Blagojevich administration. It included hundreds of millions of dollars in no-bid contracts given to campaign contributors. Some of the instances have prompted state and federal investigations. Rod shot back quickly and the best he could come up with was that Judy took $7,000 in contributions from banks doing business with her Treasurer’s office. Never mind the business is competitively bid — he said it fast and it made the stories. I hope the news media puts this in perspective. |
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Posted on 04.01.06 by dancurry @ 6:00 pm
Bet Rod's people aren't too happy with this poll. |
