In Chambers
The judge will see you now. Step into Springfield Bureau Chief Aaron Chambers’ chambers for an insider’s view on Illinois politics and government. No, Chambers isn’t a real judge. At least not in the sense of wearing a robe, wielding a gavel and issuing orders. But like a good judge, Chambers tells it like it is.

Archive for August 15th, 2008

Emil Jones: Critics Told the ‘Biggest Lie’ Ever

Add comment August 15th, 2008

Senate President Emil Jones Jr., D-Chicago, buckled to mounting political pressure Tuesday and allowed senators to vote on whether to reject pay raises for themselves, House members, constitutional officers and agency directors.

The Senate rejected that pay raise, but not before Jones lashed out at critics for suggesting he had attempted to put the vote off until after the Nov. 4 general election. You see, the Senate had to vote on the pay raises by 30 days from the time an obscure panel recommended it or the raises would have gone into effect automatically.

Jones himself had this to say in May when asked whether he would allow a vote: “I need a pay raise.”

Wednesday was the 30th session day since the panel issued its report. But Jones said that special session days held during the summer don’t count. Only regular session days count, he insisted.

(It’s true that action during special session generally must be confined to the terms of the governor’s order — education funding, for instance. But it’s also true that the Senate may meet in regular session when it happens to be in Springfield for special session. On Tuesday when the Senate was in town for special session, in fact, it convened in regular session to reject the pay raises.)

“To say, ‘The Clock is running. If you don’t act this week, the pay raises will go into effect.’ Biggest lie ever told,” Jones said.

Really? The biggest lie ever told? In the history of the world?

GOP Chief: House More Divided Now Than Over Slavery

Add comment August 15th, 2008

I’ve got to hand it to Andy McKenna, chairman of the Illinois Republican Party, for taking rhetoric to an extraordinary height. When he introduced a news conference at the foot of the Lincoln statue outside the Capitol Thursday, McKenna tied the modern Illinois GOP to Lincoln and compared the divided government of Illinois to no less a struggle than the Civil War.

“I’m here to say that we’re a party that stands together and stands with Abraham Lincoln,” McKenna said. “Abraham Lincoln was famous for his House Divided speech. If he were here today, he would have to tell a story of a house divided that’s even more outrageous than the one that lived in his time.”

When Lincoln spoke of a house divided, he was referring to the division of this nation between slave and free states. The Civil War subsequently ensued, prompting some 500,000 casualties — a conservative estimate.

Yet McKenna saw fit to not only presume what Lincoln might say if he were alive today. He also had the gall to suggest that division in Illinois government – which comes down to a trio of Chicago Democrats in an over-blown ego war – somehow is “even more outrageous” than slavery our nation’s bloody war onto itself.

Amazing.


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