Archive

Archive for the ‘In Focus’ Category

Flashback: Cong. Debbie Halverson Shown Flip Flopping On Cap and Trade Bill

September 4th, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off

Courtesy of RedState, the below video shows Illinois Congresswoman explaining her views and reticence over then then proposed Cap and Trade legislation, even go so far as to say she will stand up to the President should it come to it.

On June 26, Congresswoman Halverson voted Yea on Cap and Trade.  Not exactly a new news story, but it continues to be of note to supporters of Adam Kinzinger, candidate for IL-11.

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

Blago Brother Rob Tells Story of Innocence

September 4th, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off
Robert Blagojevich (photo:HuffingtonPost)

Robert Blagojevich (photo:HuffingtonPost)

In the Friday morning Chicago Sun-Times is a compelling story about a man with a famous brother, who together, has been recently wronged by the government.  The story is compelling enough that, at first glance, one might begin to feel a sense of sympathy for the man it is written about.

That is until readers recall the lunacy for which this man and his famous brother brought to the State of Illinois. The man in question is Rob Blagojevich, indicted brother of former governor Rod Blagojevich.

At a cool $12,500 per month, Rob served as campaign chairman for his brother and was named “fundraiser A” in the indictment.  His indictment earlier this year has him on two counts of wire fraud.  Naturally, he claims his innocence and plans to stand trial alongside his brother in June so that he can prove it.

Read the full story here.

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

Where Obama Is Struggling With Independents

September 3rd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off
President Obama has work to do. (photo:vanityfair)

President Obama has work to do. (photo:vanityfair)

This article by Politics Magazine may be entitled “Why Obama Is Struggling With Independents,” it does a good job explaining where not why.  Independent voters make up as little as 8 percent as as much as 20 percent depending on whose measures you trust.  But one thing for sure, they are a prickly bunch.  Check out the article here.

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

Hastert Tells Crowd How Pelosi BLEW IT On Health Care

September 3rd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off
dennis-hastert

Former Speaker Dennis Hastert (photo:ClevelandLeader)

Standing before a crowd of supporters at a fundraiser for Kansas Congressman Todd Tiahrt, former House Speaker Dennis Hastert provided his take on exactly where and how current Speaker Nancy Pelosi has hindered democrats chance of passing a healthcare bill this year.

From the KCStar article:

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi miscalculated by not forcing a House vote on health care reform prior to the summer recess, former House Speaker Dennis Hastert said today.”

“The speaker probably made a strategic mistake by not jamming a health care bill through before they went home for break,” said Hastert, in town to campaign for his former colleague, Congressman Todd Tiahrt who is running for the U.S. Senate in Kansas.”

When you have lawmakers go back home and listen and see what the reactions are and also have an election coming up…I think they get a little cold feet.” Read more…

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

Wanna Know How The Media Operates?

September 3rd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off
Former Governor Rod Blagojevich (photo:myc.com)

Former Governor Rod Blagojevich (photo:myc.com)

Gawker has a terrific article detailing how producers for each of the major networks pitched interviews to Blago in the days after his arrest.

Definitely worth your time to see how media types coerce and prod folks like Blago into telling their story to the interested Nation.  Of particular interest is WLS’s “incredible offer.”  Also of note is (expletive) Andy Shaw’s email.

Thanks to Rich Miller of the Capital Fax for pointing this out.  Story detailed here.

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

Can David Hoffman Overcome Alexi?

September 3rd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off

You decide:

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

ABC7 Report On Businessman Dick Green’s Bid For 10th Congressional

September 3rd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

Report: Bob Schillerstrom Using Push Polls

September 3rd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off
Bob Schillerstrom (photo:huffingtonpost)

Bob Schillerstrom (photo:huffingtonpost)

The McHenry County Blog is reporting on a situation we’ve been hearing about for some time now.  It seems that gubernatorial candidate Bob Schillerstrom is using controversial push polls to measure support among known Republican voters in northern Illinois.

Push polling can be very helpful tactic to any campaign.  By calling voters on the phone and asking if they would be likely to support several platforms, a campaign can be informed of what issues that voter may support and how enthusiastic that support may be.  The push poll continues when the callers use that info to re-phrase the questions in a way that suggests a particular candidate is supportive or not supportive of the issues important to the respondent.  Hence, a campaign can use a single push poll call to 1) learn voter preferences, 2) paint their candidate as supportive of those preferences, 3) inform the caller that other candidates are not supportive of those preferences.

The information gleaned from these calls can be used to further brand candidates, either positive or negative, and can inform the eventual GOTV list on election day. Read more…

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

Gov Candidate Matt Murphy Profiled in Central IL Newspaper

September 3rd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off
GOP gubernatorial candidate says voters seeking a ‘break from the past’
By DAVE FOPAY – H&R Staff Writer
MATTOON – Being a relatively young, second-term state senator isn’t something Matt Murphy believes will hold him back in his bid to be elected Illinois’ next governor.
The 39-year-old Republican from Palatine said he’s been involved in state politics long enough to recognize the problems. Some years, it’s better to go with experience, and other years “it’s better to be new,” he said.
“One of the overarching themes of this campaign is people are tired of being embarrassed by their state leaders,” Murphy said during a stop at the Mattoon Golf & Country Club on Wednesday. “I think they’re looking to make a break from the past.”
Murphy said he thinks he can distinguish himself from politicians from both parties who’ve been the subject of scandals and controversies.
He said he’s “never met George Ryan,” the imprisoned former Republican governor whom he called the “figure of our fatal past.” Current Gov. Pat Quinn can thank “his last two elections to Rod Blagojevich’s coattails,” he said, referring to the recently indicted Democrat who was ousted from the governor’s office.
Murphy said some of the ideas he’s proposed in bills during his three years in the state legislature would become his goals if elected governor. Those include limiting how much time lawmakers can spend in leadership positions and requiring a vote on bills that have a majority of lawmakers sponsoring them, he said.
He also said he thinks Illinois’ “number one priority” should be job creation, starting with eliminating one of the state’s two corporate income taxes. The state budget has to be stabilized by increasing spending no more than the rate of inflation, he also said.
Murphy also addressed the state’s current budget shortfalls and said raising taxes now would “lengthen the pain” of the current recession. His idea for the budget is to eliminate new spending and not increase any current spending levels, and he thinks Illinois residents “are ready for some tough medicine” when it comes to the state budget.
Improving the state’s economy will depend on overcoming the “hurdles” the state puts up and discourage business, Murphy also said.
“That perception and the extent our policies have encouraged it are keeping people from succeeding,” he said.
Murphy is an attorney who’s lived in the Chicago area his entire life. He said he thinks his perception with downstate voters will get a boost because his ideas will help people succeed, and they will no longer be embarrassed by their state government.
“I’ve spent a lot of time in rural areas, and I deeply appreciate them,” he said.
St. Sen. Matt Murphy (photo:McHenryCountyBlog.com)

St. Sen. Matt Murphy (photo:McHenryCountyBlog.com)

GOP gubernatorial candidate says voters seeking a ‘break from the past’

By DAVE FOPAY – H&R Staff Writer

MATTOON – Being a relatively young, second-term state senator isn’t something Matt Murphy believes will hold him back in his bid to be elected Illinois’ next governor.

The 39-year-old Republican from Palatine said he’s been involved in state politics long enough to recognize the problems. Some years, it’s better to go with experience, and other years “it’s better to be new,” he said.

“One of the overarching themes of this campaign is people are tired of being embarrassed by their state leaders,” Murphy said during a stop at the Mattoon Golf & Country Club on Wednesday. “I think they’re looking to make a break from the past.” Read more…

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

Matt Murphy Candidate With Most Web Traffic

September 3rd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off

On Thursday, the Illinois Observer released results on which statewide candidates are recieving the most action on the web.  Using Alexa’s traffic monitoring tool, the Illinois Observer found State Senator Matt Murphy leading in the “eyeballs” race among gubernatorial candidates.

Illinois 2010 Governor Candidate July 2009 Web Traffic Rank:

Brady, Bill 5,387,593

Dillard, Kirk 7,209,347

Hynes, Dan 9,777,962

Murphy, Matt 10,221,637

Proft, Dan 3,815,627

Quinn, Pat 4,626,269

The full report is found here.

Illinois 2010 Governor Candidate July 2009 Web Traffic Rank:
Brady, Bill 5,387,593
Dillard, Kirk 7,209,347
Hynes, Dan 9,777,962
Murphy, Matt 10,221637
Proft, Dan 3,815,627
Quinn, Pat 4,626,269
To put these rankings in context, the following are the site rankings for the Chicago Tribune and Rich Miller’s The Capitol Fax Blog:
Chicago Tribune 1,111
Capitol Fax Blog 206,748Illinois 2010 Governor Candidate July 2009 Web Traffic Rank:
Brady, Bill 5,387,593
Dillard, Kirk 7,209,347
Hynes, Dan 9,777,962
Murphy, Matt 10,221637
Proft, Dan 3,815,627
Quinn, Pat 4,626,269
To put these rankings in context, the following are the site rankings for the Chicago Tribune and Rich Miller’s The Capitol Fax Blog:
Chicago Tribune 1,111
Capitol Fax Blog 206,748
  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

Proft Makes Key Campaign Hire

September 3rd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off

LFHS graduate excited to help Illinois gubernatorial candidate

September 3, 2009

Dan Proft

Dan Proft

By LINDA BLASER lblaser@pioneerlocal.com

Republican gubernatorial hopeful Dan Proft pledges to clean up Illinois government and thinks Blake Dvorak, a 1998 graduate of Lake Forest High School, can help him achieve the top leadership role in the state.

Running a “policy-oriented” campaign, Proft said one of the positions that he knew would be important to his run for governor would be policy director. Proft chose Dvorak as the person to communicate policies to voters and the media.

“I take writing and communication of ideas very seriously,” said Proft, a Northwestern University graduate. “I needed a person who took that equally seriously and had the requisite skills.”

Formerly an editorial writer for The Washington Times and a reporter for RealClearPolitics.com, Dvorak said he never thought he would be working on a campaign rather than reporting on it. But Proft’s ideology struck a chord with the conservative journalist. Read more…

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

Why Giannoulias Favors Gay Marriage

September 3rd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off
Alexi Giannoulias (photo:phantis.com)

Alexi Giannoulias (photo:phantis.com)

The Sun Times reported Thursday that U.S. Senate candidate and current IL Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias said he favors legalization of same-sex marriage and, if elected, would seek to repeal a federal law that defines marriage as being between one man and one woman.  In the interview, Giannoulias went on to say that individual states should be able to decide for themselves whether they allow same-sex couples to marry, but that all states should be required to afford legal recognition to same-sex marriages performed in states where thy are sanctioned.

Giannoulias would also vote to repeal the U.S. military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy and the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act.

Since IL Attorney General Lisa Madigan opted out, Giannoulias has become the democrat’s front runner for the U.S. Senate seat once held by Barack Obama.  His support for same-sex marriages and the like are typical northern democrats running for statewide office.  In fact, as nationwide statistics show roughly half the country now supports same sex marriage rights and support likely to be higher in Illinois, Giannoulias cannot as a democrat over look this important issue.

So why is Giannoulias’ statement yesterday noteworthy? Read more…

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags: ,

STL Post Dispatch Illustrates Rocky History of IL Senate Seat

September 3rd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off
Illinois Class III Senate seat has provided some Class I headlines
By Pat Guaen of the ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH
Illinois will soon elect another Class III U.S. senator.
It’s not a rating but the way politicos track a seat’s lineage. It’s how we
know that Sen. Barack Obama had Sen. Everett Dirksen’s old spot, or that Sen. Dick Durbin holds the seat for which debater Stephen Douglas defeated Abraham Lincoln.
Durbin’s a Class II, by the way. Each state has two of three possible classes.  There is no official distinction among them. Yet there is something odd about the history of Illinois’ Class III spot. Sometimes even bizarre.
Take William Lorimer, a Republican elected in 1909. Legislatures elected the senators back then, and a state lawmaker claimed Lorimer paid $1,000 for his vote. Fellow senators deplored Lorimer’s “corrupt methods” and in 1913 kicked him out.
In 1926, Frank Smith defeated Sen. William McKinley (namesake of the St.
Louis-Venice bridge) for the GOP nomination and won the seat. Lame duck
McKinley expired before his term, so the governor logically named Smith. But the Senate refused Smith’s appointive credentials, accusing him of campaign fraud. The chamber later refused his elective credentials, too. He resigned in 1928, never having really taken office.
If that Smith was elected without serving, Ralph Smith, of Granite City, served without election. The Republican was named after Dirksen died but failed to hold the seat in a 1970 special election.
For the successor, Sen. Adlai E. Stevenson III, the weird spell began shortly after he stepped down. His 1982 loss to James R. Thompson for governor was by just one-seventh of 1 percent of the vote. In the men’s 1986 rematch, a follower of political extremist Lyndon LaRouche was unexpectedly nominated for lieutenant governor, forcing Stevenson to abandon the Democratic ticket to escape this most-unwelcome running mate. Stevenson’s desperation third-party run fizzled.
Back at the Senate, Belleville’s Alan Dixon seemed safely bound for a third
term in 1992 when his support of Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas
backfired. Dixon stood by Thomas despite an allegation of sexual harassment.
That gave primary challenger Carol Moseley Braun a platform while a rich third contender for the Democrats’ nomination, Al Hofeld, used his millions to pummel Dixon on TV. Moseley Braun emerged from nowhere as the nation’s first black female senator.
But her hubris and unapologetic friendship with the brutal dictator of Nigeria soon left even supportive Dems wondering if she was re-electable. She wasn’t.
Enter rich guy Peter Fitzgerald, whose enthusiasm for the job never seemed to match the bankroll he threw at sending Moseley Braun home in 1998. By term’s end, Fitzgerald seemed tired of his Class III toy and simply walked away.
Dashing and monied, Jack Ryan easily won the 2004 GOP nomination. But reporters pried the lid off an old divorce file in which ex-wife (and actress) Jeri Ryan disdained his overtures for public sex in kinky nightclubs. Seared by the improbable ignition of a sex scandal within his marriage, Ryan bolted. Bewildered Republicans turned to a polarizing national figure, Alan Keyes, who brought the odd credential of living in Maryland, not Illinois.
The Democrat who beat Keyes, Barack Obama, left the Senate seat early to become president last year. But what should have been an Illinois triumph became its political nadir, after feds claimed that Gov. Rod Blagojevich tried to sell his appointment of Obama’s Senate replacement and plenty of other favors. The charges, still pending, prompted the General Assembly to boot Blagojevich out of office.
One of his final acts was to ignore universal admonitions that he just leave without naming anyone to the Senate spot. He spitefully chose the
near-forgotten Roland Burris, whose critics regarded him as rather clueless in past roles as comptroller and attorney general. During inquisitions about how he got the Senate appointment, Burris behaved, well, cluelessly. A prosecutor considered perjury charges over his testimony about it. Senators hinted of rejecting Burris at the door but instead mostly ignored his presence.
Burris, who had listed less than $1,000 in his campaign fund and more than
$100,000 in debts — and showed 37 percent support in the polls — surprised
nobody in announcing he would not seek election next year.
I’m not entirely sure yet who will. But experience suggests that anyone
connected to that Class III seat will be worth watching.
Illinois

(photo:WikiCommons)

Illinois Class III Senate seat has provided some Class I headlines

By Pat Guaen of the ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH

Illinois will soon elect another Class III U.S. senator.

It’s not a rating but the way politicos track a seat’s lineage. It’s how we know that Sen. Barack Obama had Sen. Everett Dirksen’s old spot, or that Sen. Dick Durbin holds the seat for which debater Stephen Douglas defeated Abraham Lincoln.

Durbin’s a Class II, by the way. Each state has two of three possible classes.  There is no official distinction among them. Yet there is something odd about the history of Illinois’ Class III spot. Sometimes even bizarre.

Take William Lorimer, a Republican elected in 1909. Legislatures elected the senators back then, and a state lawmaker claimed Lorimer paid $1,000 for his vote. Fellow senators deplored Lorimer’s “corrupt methods” and in 1913 kicked him out. Read more…

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags: ,

GOP Candidates Flood Du Quoin State Fair

September 2nd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off
Republican Party rallies at Du Quoin State Fair
By Adam Testa, The Southern
DU QUOIN – Nineteen Republican candidates for statewide political officers presented abbreviated platforms to a crowd of hundreds at the Du Quoin State Fair Tuesday.
Speaking as part of Republican Day ceremonies, the candidates – as well as other local and state Republican officials – called for participation from the public in a mission of dethroning Democrats in control of Illinois and federal government branches.
“I’ve been in this business 14 years, and I’ve never seen a better opportunity than we have, but you cannot let it slip by,” said state Sen. Dave Luechtefeld of Okawville. He called on voters to back whoever wins February’s primary election, even if it’s not their early choice.
Luechtefeld’s state senate counterpart, John O. Jones of Mount Vernon, shared the sentiment.
“Whoever wins the primary, we’ve got to get behind that person 110 percent and make sure they get across the finish line,” Jones said.
Bruce Morgenstern, the Perry County Republican Party chairman, praised the work of the Southern Illinois Republican Caucus, which has worked on supporting candidates in downstate Illinois. In last year’s general election, the organization provided funding and support for a county assessor and county board election.
The organization has been “changing the face of downstate Illinois,” he said.
Among the other speakers were state Reps. Mike Bost of Murphysboro and John Cavaletto of Centralia.
Candidates for statewide office who spoke included gubernatorial candidates Adam Andrzejewski of Herscher; Bill Brady of Bloomington; Kirk Dillard of Hinsdale; Matt Murphy of Palatine; Dan Proft of Chicago and Bob Schillerstrom of Naperville.
U.S. Senate candidates included John Arrington of Chicago; Tom Kuna of Jerseyville; Pat Hughes of Hinsdale; Don Lowery of Golconda; Kathleen Thomas of Springfield; Eric Wallace of Matteson; and Robert Zadek of Loves Park.
Lieutenant governor candidates included Mayor Brad Cole of Carbondale; Don Tracy of Springfield; Randy White of Hamilton; and Dave Winters of Shirland.
Secretary of State candidate Robert Enriquez of Aurora also spoke.
DuQuoin

(photo:DuQuoin, IL)

Republican Party rallies at Du Quoin State Fair

By Adam Testa, The Southern

DU QUOIN – Nineteen Republican candidates for statewide political officers presented abbreviated platforms to a crowd of hundreds at the Du Quoin State Fair Tuesday.

Speaking as part of Republican Day ceremonies, the candidates – as well as other local and state Republican officials – called for participation from the public in a mission of dethroning Democrats in control of Illinois and federal government branches.

“I’ve been in this business 14 years, and I’ve never seen a better opportunity than we have, but you cannot let it slip by,” said state Sen. Dave Luechtefeld of Okawville. He called on voters to back whoever wins February’s primary election, even if it’s not their early choice. Read more…

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

Commissioner Tony Peraica Reacts to Sales Tax Hike On Fox News Chicago

September 2nd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

Chicago Tribune Editorial Blasts Stroger, Longs for Election

September 2nd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off
Bring on the election
September 2, 2009 Chicago Tribune Editorial
“We are as good or as bad as the people who elect us.”
– Earlean Collins, Cook County Commissioner, Sept. 1, 2009
The lesson from Tuesday’s vote of the Cook County Board couldn’t be clearer if Moses hand-delivered it on chiseled tablets: The costly Democratic patronage machine known as Cook County government won’t slim down to a size you can afford while Todd Stroger is board president. The targets of Stroger’s unneeded sales-tax hike — consumers taking their buying elsewhere, employers moving to the collar counties, poor families throttled by this regressive tax — won’t get any relief until Stroger is gone.
Voters, you have to make that happen. The County Board as currently composed cannot override Stroger’s repeated vetoes of measures that would roll back even a part of his tax increase. Owing to an onerous requirement that four-fifths of the board — that’s 14 of the 17 members — needs to agree on an override, Stroger needs only four commissioners on his side to see his vetoes sustained. Tuesday’s vote to override: 13-4.
If you know anybody who wants a part-time job that pays $85,000 a year plus a staff, perks and expenses, suggest that he or she run to unseat one of the four Democrats who sustained Stroger’s veto: William Beavers, Jerry “Iceman” Butler, Joseph Mario Moreno and Deborah Sims.
Sims deserved Tuesday’s award for Most Bizarre Commissioner, a floating distinction for which there often are many qualified candidates. In July, Sims co-sponsored, and voted for, a measure to cut in half the full-percentage-point tax increase that took effect 14 months ago. Sims evidently had enough information to justify casting that July vote. Inexplicably, though, she didn’t have enough information Tuesday to override Stroger’s veto of the very measure she co-sponsored in July.
Her money quote from Tuesday’s debate was an acknowledgment that furious
Cook voters may take revenge against tax-happy county politicians in the Feb. 2 primary: “I don’t know why, when it comes to [Cook] county government, we always take the heat for what we’ve done!”
Gee, Ms. Sims, that’s a mystery, isn’t it?
Stroger and his four accomplices had to feel humiliated by an announcement before Tuesday’s vote: The county’s independent Health and Hospitals System divulged that in 2010 it likely will ask for $74 million less in tax money than it’s receiving this year.
That demolishes the whining from Stroger and his cronies that Cook County needs the roughly $400 million a year it gets from the sales-tax hike in part to . . . keep the health system afloat. Stroger’s warning about threats to health care sounds scary. It just isn’t true.
So, voters, pay heed to Earlean Collins’ words: The politicians are as good or as bad as the people who elect them. You can continue to pour money by the hundreds of millions into the Stroger jobs machine. Or you can show Stroger what it’s like to be unemployed and still paying the high Cook County taxes he adores.
Several people want to replace Stroger. So let’s start hearing: Will you make a firm commitment to repeal the sales-tax increase on Day One?
Once again, the primary is Feb. 2.
Copyright © 2009, Chicago Tribune

Bring on the Election

September 2, 2009 Chicago Tribune Editorial

“We are as good or as bad as the people who elect us.

– Earlean Collins, Cook County Commissioner, Sept. 1, 2009

The lesson from Tuesday’s vote of the Cook County Board couldn’t be clearer if Moses hand-delivered it on chiseled tablets: The costly Democratic patronage machine known as Cook County government won’t slim down to a size you can afford while Todd Stroger is board president. The targets of Stroger’s unneeded sales-tax hike — consumers taking their buying elsewhere, employers moving to the collar counties, poor families throttled by this regressive tax — won’t get any relief until Stroger is gone.

Voters, you have to make that happen. The County Board as currently composed cannot override Stroger’s repeated vetoes of measures that would roll back even a part of his tax increase. Owing to an onerous requirement that four-fifths of the board — that’s 14 of the 17 members — needs to agree on an override, Stroger needs only four commissioners on his side to see his vetoes sustained. Tuesday’s vote to override: 13-4. Read more…

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

Hynes leaves reporters wanting more | DailyHerald.com Blogs

September 2nd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off
Dan Hynes

Dan Hynes

By John Patterson and Joseph Ryan of Animal Farm

Hynes just called to I guess clarify or kinda apologize for the way the news conference ended and see what other questions I had. He said the layout of the room made it difficult to determine if reporters were finished and noted he’s always been known to take time to address media questions.

Enough about my ruffled feathers, here’s a little more detail on his proposed tax brackets that he wants voters to approve via a constitutional amendment in November.

Household income –
under $200,000 would stay at the 3 percent income tax rate.
between $200,000 and $300,000 would be taxed at 3.5 percent
between $300,000 and $500,000 would be taxed at 5.5 percent
between $500,000 and $1 million would be taxed at 7 percent
over $1 million would be taxed at 7.5 percent Read more…

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

MoveOn.org Hosts Hundreds at Grant Park Healthcare Vigil

September 2nd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off

Photo: Illinois Dem Net

enemies

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

Schillerstom’s Response to Hynes

September 2nd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off
Bob Schillerstom released the following statement in response to Dan Hynes’ proposal to raise taxes.
SCHILLERSTROM: ‘INCOME TAX HIKE IS THE WRONG WAY TO GO’
“Dan Hynes’ proposal to increase income taxes in Illinois by $5.5 billion is misguided at best and would only drive jobs from the state, and worsen what is already a disastrous economic climate.  As unemployment soars and families face with difficult economic conditions, the answers put forth by the Illinois Democratic Party’s candidates for Governor are tax increases.
It is the wrong way to go.  As one who has led a government for more than a decade and balanced the budget each and every year, I know well that the answer to our economic challenges is found in making government more efficient and ending runaway spending- not raising income taxes.  The Democrats take a different approach- making the choice clear for Illinois voters in 2010.”
Bob Schillerstrom (photo:Daily Herald)

Bob Schillerstrom (photo:Daily Herald)

Bob Schillerstom released the following statement in response to Dan Hynes’ gubernatorial bid and proposal to raise taxes:

SCHILLERSTROM: ‘INCOME TAX HIKE IS THE WRONG WAY TO GO’

“Dan Hynes’ proposal to increase income taxes in Illinois by $5.5 billion is misguided at best and would only drive jobs from the state, and worsen what is already a disastrous economic climate.  As unemployment soars and families face with difficult economic conditions, the answers put forth by the Illinois Democratic Party’s candidates for Governor are tax increases.

It is the wrong way to go.  As one who has led a government for more than a decade and balanced the budget each and every year, I know well that the answer to our economic challenges is found in making government more efficient and ending runaway spending- not raising income taxes.  The Democrats take a different approach- making the choice clear for Illinois voters in 2010.”

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

Brady Slams Hynes’ Tax Increase and Gambling Proposal

September 2nd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off
State Senator Bill Brady

State Senator Bill Brady

Brady Slams Hynes’ Tax Increase and Gambling Proposal

September 2, 2009 by Brady for Illinois

Filed under Press Releases

Leave a comment

Senator Bill Brady, a Republican candidate for Governor, today said the proposal by Comptroller Dan Hynes to increase taxes and expand gambling is just a continuation of the risky and failed policies of Chicago area politicians that threaten Illinois’ economic vitality.

Read more…

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

Dan Proft’s Response to Hynes’ Tax Proposal

September 2nd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off
Dan Proft (photo:Madison Record)

Dan Proft (photo:Madison Record)

From the Proft campaign:

Dan Hynes’ ‘Major Policy Proposal’ a Major Tax Increase

More of the Same From the Chicago Democrats

September 2, 2009

Illinois Comptroller Dan Hynes formerly announced his campaign for governor today by touting a “major policy proposal.” What he introduced was a major tax hike. Mr. Hynes should be more careful with his choice of words, since what we heard from the new entrant into the gubernatorial race are the same failed policy proposals which have destroy Illinois’ economy.

Mr. Hynes wants to distinguish himself from Gov. Pat Quinn. But Mr. Hynes’ biggest problem with his opponent is that the governor hasn’t raised taxes high enough.

Even with the tax rate we currently have, Illinois lost 175,000 private sector jobs last year and ranks 48th in the nation in economic performance. Only Michigan and Ohio rank lower. Raising taxes will only increase the speed at which Illinois’ economy is circling the drain. Read more…

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

Dillard Responds to Hynes Tax Increase

September 2nd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off

Kirk Dillard’s campaign for governor released the following statement regarding IL comptroller Dan Hynes’s campaign pledge to raise taxes:

DILLARD RESPONDS TO HYNES TAX INCREASE

LISLE, Ill. – Earlier today, Democrat Dan Hynes released his plans to raise taxes through a Constitutional Amendment. State Senator Kirk Dillard, Republican gubernatorial candidate, today addressed the Dan Hynes tax increase:

No state has ever taxed and borrowed its way into prosperity – the same way no family has ever spent their way out of a financial bind. It’s more of the Blagojevich-Hynes-Quinn-Chicago “dem-economics” that got us into this problem.

When are Illinois Democrat leaders, who control every statewide office and both chambers of the Illinois General Assembly, going to learn? Just like Illinois families and small businesses, the state must learn to live within its means.

These plans do not represent leadership. Instead, they represent more of the tried and failed. Others are proposing more borrowing–another failed economic concept–to bring about growth and prosperity. Read more…

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

Dan Proft’s Campaign Publishes Letter From Supporter on Website

September 2nd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off
Gubernatorial Candidate Dan Proft (photo:proft2010)

Gubernatorial Candidate Dan Proft (photo:proft2010)

In what his campaign is describing as a letter from a supporter, Dan Proft published a compelling letter that explains why the anonymous writer is contributing the next three years of vacation savings to the Proft Campaign.

While it is great for the Proft camp to have such an articulate letter from a emphatic supporter delivered to them for publication, the letter touches on several themes very similar to themes the Proft campaign has been using at events on its website postings.  One such example is the supporter’s mention of rival candidate St. Senator Kirk Dillard’s campaign ad for Barack Obama last year.  Several of Proft’s recent blog posts and emails to supports have been critical of Dillard, the perceived front runner, and have featured links to the ad on YouTube.

A long time player on the Illinois political scene, it can be said that Proft is running perhaps the most overtly offensive campaign of the GOP candidates thus far.  Proft has been feverishly traveling the state meeting with party leaders and making appearances on radio.  Obviously aware of his vulnerabilities, Proft also has been working to improve his image among primary voters in recent weeks.  Followers of his twitter page were treated yesterday when they read his tweet about how many sausage links he could eat at a downstate Bob Evans. Read more…

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

Incredibly, Dan Hynes Uses Tax Increase Proposal To Announce Gov Bid

September 2nd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off
Dan Hynes (photo:pjstar.com)

Dan Hynes (photo:pjstar.com)

Supporters of Pat Quinn – You can breathe now.

Dan Hynes announced his campaign to challenge Governor Pat Quinn in the Democratic primary next February by proposing a massive tax increase on people earning over $200,000 per year.  This may not be the first time a politician has campaigned on a tax increase proposal, but in this political environment, it is completely new logic.

Lets take a step back for a second.  Dan Hynes is currently a three term Illinois State Comptroller, a elective position responsible primarily for ensuring that the state’s finances move properly.  This position has provided Hynes a first hand view into each and every state expenditure, both the good and the wasteful.

Politically speaking, Hynes would probably have been better served to lay off the tax increase proposals and highlight that, as an expert in the state’s finances, he is well qualified to eliminate wasteful spending.  Amazingly, he proposed more of what got Pat Quinn into the trouble he is in.

Some democrats have grumbled privately about Hynes bid to unseat Quinn, who see it as unnecessary in a year in which democrats are especially vulnerable.  In fact, many party leaders see Quinn as a leader forced to make unpopular decisions just to get this state on track in the wake of Blagojevich.  Since taking over for the ousted Blagojevich, Quinn’s unpopular 50% tax increase proposal and nationwide democratic woes have his approval rating sinking steadily.

But Quinn and his supporters can breathe a little easier now that Hynes, a statewide democrat with widespread union support, has made it clear that his challenge will be on the left rather than the center or right.  With the economy still stagnating and public expenditure deficits at record highs, voters are unlikely in 2010 to support any candidate whose platform is to increase taxes on anyone.  At least in terms of next year’s primary, that is good news for Pat Quinn.

From the Chicago Tribune’s report of the Hynes announcement: Read more…

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags:

New Poll Released Today Shows Quinn With Large Lead Over Hynes

September 2nd, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off
Governor Pat Quinn (photo:ABCnews)

Governor Pat Quinn (photo:ABCnews)

Just in time for Dan Hynes’s announcement party today, the Governor’s staff released a memo detailing polling results taken from over 700 democrats in Illinois.  The polls show that Quinn has sagnificant leads in each of the major demographic groups and a 54% – 26% overall lead over Hynes.  20% reported to be undecided.

Perhaps more curious, however, was the finding that 73% of democrat voters found “Pat Quinn to be honest and trustworthy.” And 68% agree that “Pat Quinn has restored integrity to the governor’s office.”  Among those polled, just 29% say “Pat Quinn helped get past the scandals of Rod Blagojevich, but he isn’t up to the job of Governor.”

The poll was conducted by polling firm Anzalone Liszt Research of Washington D.C. and Alabama.  ALR’s other area clients include Chris Kennedy, who briefly considered running for statewide office, and Cong. Mike Quigley of the 5th Congressional District.

  • Share/Bookmark
Categories: In Focus Tags: