The
war of words between state Senator Dan Kotowski (D-Park Ridge), a
fierce gun control advocate, and the Illinois State Rifle Association
has apparently escalated to the point where the nutballs are coming
out of the woodwork.
Governor
Rod Blagojevich made a last-minute attempt last week to at least show
he was trying to get the hopelessly stalled budget negotiations back
on track. Blagojevich, who has tried harder to avoid blame for the
current overtime session than to actually negotiate in good faith,
walked into House Speaker Michael Madigan's office unannounced last
week in what was supposed to be a dramatic gesture of goodwill and
harmony among Democrats.
Governor
Rod Blagojevich has flatly ruled out an income- or sales-tax hike in
exchange for a property-tax cut and more money for education. House
Speaker Michael Madigan has said that there isn't sufficient
support in his Democratic caucus to pass an income- or sales-tax
hike.
I
never really wanted an intern. I'm sort of a lone wolf who prefers
to work alone. But a longtime friend of mine, Jim Nowlan, pretty much
demanded that I take on one of his prized students, Paul Richardson,
as an intern this legislative session. I resisted at first, but
eventually met with Paul and was impressed.
Federal
prosecutors have recently been handed a couple of big setbacks in
their ceaseless pursuit of government corruption. But you would
hardly know it considering the lack of press coverage the cases have
received here.
It
may be no surprise to some, but new polling shows Barack Obama is
doing better with hardcore Illinois primary voters than Hillary
Clinton is doing with voters in her own home state of New York. Also,
voters are split over whether Obama should be more critical of
Chicago corruption, and the Republican presidential primary appears
wide-open here.
The
real electoral surprise last week was not in Chicago, where five
tired, old incumbent hack aldermen went down to defeat. The big
shocker was the Carbondale mayor's race, in which Sheila Simon -
the daughter of the late U.S. Senator Paul Simon - was trounced by
Republican incumbent Brad Cole.
I was
probably more surprised than anyone when I was invited to tag along
on Governor Rod Blagojevich's road trip last week. The governor
toured the state to push his universal-health-insurance plan and his
gross-receipts tax on business. I was on the bus with him for three
days, and we talked for hours.
There
are two major tax-increase proposals competing for support in the
Illinois General Assembly. You've probably read about both, but you
may not know the whole story.
The
governor has a huge tax-hike proposal on the agenda. It's called a
"gross receipts" tax, and it basically means that every dollar a
business brings in the door is subject to taxation without regard for
whether the business is actually profitable. (See cover story in this
issue.)
Illinois
House Majority Leader Barbara Flynn Currie usually hangs back and
lets others make news. Since getting the number-two job in the House
Democratic caucus in 1997, she hasn't been known for being way out
front on major issues. And as far as I can remember, she's never
once publicly criticized Governor Rod Blagojevich.
1. Subscribe to free weekly e-mail content updates.
You'll get both the current official narrative challenge and What's Happenin' in the Quad Cities. (Did you know we publish a new Real Astrology and RCR Crossword every week?)
2. Get 12 monthly issues mailed first class for $48
Get the printed Reader edition mailed to you (or anyone you want) first-class for 12 months for $48. $24 goes to postage and handling, $24 goes to keeping the doors open!