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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…

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Micro-management Has Obama White House in Complete Disarray

August 28th, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off

barack_obama2RealClearPolitics: ”

August 28, 2009
Obama’s Carrousel of Incompetence

By Emmett Tyrrell
WASHINGTON — According to the Gallup Poll, the Prophet Obama’s job approval is now at its lowest since his coronation. It began at 70%. Now it is at 51%. Equally glum, his disapproval rating has climbed from 11% to 42%. So what about his golf game up there at Martha’s Vineyard? From all I have been able to ascertain it is mediocre. In other words, Mr. Obama, you are no Dan Quayle. Vice President Quayle was a really superb golfer. Moreover, he ran a competent staff. Naturally it was smaller than Mr. Obama’s, but it was competently run. Read more…

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American Thinker: Chicago, Obama, and Health Care Reform

August 26th, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off

Barack and RahmAmerican Thinker: Chicago, Obama, and
Health Care Reform
: ”

August 26, 2009
Chicago, Obama, and Health Care Reform
By Abraham H. Miller of the American Thinker

There has been no lack of writing about the influence of Marxist Saul Alinsky on Barack Obama’s political ideology.  But what appears to have escaped notice is the influence of the political culture of Chicago on Barack Obama.  These influences, of course, are not the same.  Alinsky was a formidable opponent of the Chicago Democratic Machine.  Obama was, when necessary, a consummate machine insider.

Alinsky for all his flaws would never have gotten into bed with the likes of Tony Rezko or joined a law firm that represented slum lords.

If you want to understand the political agenda of Barack Obama, forget Alinsky, stop calling Obama a ’socialist,’ and start thinking of Barack Obama as a guy who received his political baptism, not from the Reverend Jeremiah Wright”but from the Chicago machine.

Chicago politics is not about ideology. It is about, “Who Gets What, When, and How,” to quote the inimitable Harold D. Laswell, one of the outstanding political theorists of the last century.

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The Skyrocketing Deficit: How Scared Should We Be? — Politics Daily

August 25th, 2009 Polikipedia Comments off
President Obama Has A Lot To Balance These Days

President Obama Has A Lot To Balance These Days

We’ve come a long way from the days when Bill Clinton fumed over his new role as an “Eisenhower Republican,” driven to sacrifice his 1992 campaign pledges on the altar of deficit reduction. Nobody’s an Eisenhower Republican now, and it’s a little scary.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office and the White House’s Office of Management and Budget are releasing new deficit projections Tuesday morning. The good news expected from OMB: Apparently the federal deficit will be $1.58 trillion, instead of $1.8 trillion, for the fiscal year that ends Sept. 30.

The bad news: That’s still really, really terrible. The worse news: Over the next 10 years, we thought the government was on track to spend $7.1 trillion more than it takes in. But now OMB thinks it’s looking more like $9 trillion.

via The Skyrocketing Deficit: How Scared Should We Be? — Politics Daily.

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