-
Website
http://capitolfax.com/ -
Original page
http://capitolfax.com/2009/06/11/how-can-we-miss-you-if-you-wont-go-away/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
wordslinger
96 comments · 42 points
-
Rich Miller
147 comments · 56 points
-
LoopLady
16 comments · 6 points
-
theoriginallynns
16 comments · 2 points
-
dupage dan
28 comments · 2 points
-
-
Popular Threads
Of course, they will. They can't not.
I guess Quinn thinks keeping his word with the speaker is optional, you just have to look for a loophole to avoid the spirit of the deal.
So Quinn leads more by scare tactics and press release, his word carries no weight, and he does not honor his promises to the legslaive leaders.
Deja vu anyone.
The Speaker just punted on the biggest budgetary and operational government crisis we have ever seen. He did absolutely nothing to involve himself in any type of solution, nor did he do anything to advocate for an effective strategy to manage the current crisis. The speakers strategy can be described in three words: "duck and cover"
He just dropped it in Quinn's lap and said "deal with it"
If that's his position, then he should let Quinn deal with it however he likes.
Until Madigan can actually prove he cares about the effective management and delivery of state programs, and starting offering some potential ways out of the mess he helped to create, then he needs be quiet when it comes to executive branch operations.
Can anyone provide any insight into Quinn's strategy? Why is he keeping this information a secret? His only hope of getting a tax increase is to convince the taxpayers that the cuts that will be made without one will impact their daily lives. How are they supposed to know that if no one tells them what will be cut?
He's not. The info is out there. I found it with little trouble. But he hasn't issued a press release yet, which is why there hasn't been much news coverage.
As for Filan, good for him. Despite his God-complex, Speaker Madigan cannot control the man's marketability.
The Madigans' (including Lisa Madigan) desire to destroy all things Blagojevich may backfire in the end!
http://www.ilga.gov/legislation/BillStatus.asp?...
He just dropped it in Quinn’s lap and said “deal with itâ€==
deja vu, anyone?
Nothing could get done because the Speaker wouldn't let anything get done.
Hail to the Obstructionist in Chief!
Um, if Filan is so "marketable", why does he need a handout from Pat Quinn?
Set aside the reaction from The Speaker and other lawmakers for a minute.
Handing a FAT, NO-BID contract to one of Rod Blagojevich's top henchmen is a campaign ad that writes itself.
If Lisa Madigan doesn't, the GOP surely will.
So Madigan attempted to give Quinn some beer muscles by introducing the fumigation bill. The Senate dropped the ball...
Quinn had the authority to terminate the appointed blago hacks when he became Governor. Quinn had the authority to terminate the Blago hacks when Madigan tried to assist and Quinn HAS the authority to rid the agencies of the unqualified hacks as I write this note ....
Governor Quinn and your big tuff rhetoric, come out, come out where ever you are and live up to your own promises. Otherwise we will have yet another liar as an ex Governor. Still waiting
Bring me two Excedrin, Mabel. I think that I have another headache coming on.
He should have moved Filan, the architect of our Blago's disastrous state financial planning, out of state government the day he took office.
However, a four month contract doesn't seem that egregious to me, if it makes sense to have Filan finish up projects already in process rather than have somebody else start over. And I've never heard that he was stupid or lazy. I'm reasonably certain the state will get its money's worth.
Quinn promised to rid the agencies of blago hacks wasting our $$. Quinn failed to fulfill his promises.
===
Many of those so-called "hacks" are quietly resigning. They're getting the picture. There's no need for legislative action.
When I first met him, I thought he was using a reform gig as a wy to scuffle out a living, funded by the goo-goos. Then I started to believe in him as a man who could make a difference. Now, the emperor is shedding his clothes.
Several months before the 2006 elections, when I was still working for a newspaper, I went to a luncheon event at which a couple of area GOP legislators were speaking. They went on at length about the "pension raid" that had taken place during the previous session, and how Blago and his GA friends had cleverly scheduled low pension payments for the next couple of years or so but the amount was supposed to spike way up in 2010 and beyond.
From their description I got the distinct impression that this was a fiscal time bomb set to go off around the time Blago would leave office if he did not run for a third term. He was basically just pushing the problem down the road for his successor(s) to deal with. (Perhaps Blago in 2006 was assuming that by 2010 he would be safely outta Dodge and ensconced in a Cabinet post, or perhaps even in the White House.)
Of course the pension raids of the past were not the fault of Blago alone; previous GOP administrations and members of the GA from both parties share the blame also. Still, I remember the GOP State House candidate from my area sounding the alarm repeatedly about this approaching fiscal train wreck, and it seemed like no one listened. He lost the election. (After the past 2 years he's probably glad he did.)