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Me: [Long pause] Don't change a thing. You make me too much money.
I've never turned my back since, and rue that day.
Classic
Pretty funny.
Don't get me wrong. I couldn't stand the guy, but the guts it took to do that the way he did was impressive to me.
And the GOP just stood by and took it over and over. What were they thinking?
That was one thing that I found amazing about him.
So yeah, the self-deprecation was charming. So was the fact that, though we were never close, he always remembered me.
More recently prior to the impeachment and after the "Senate Seat" business I saw him jogging nearby. I just looked at the State Trooper in the lead SUV and shook my head and the Trooper kinda laughed.
Read an excerpt from "One Hundred Percent Guilty," @ http://consulthammer.com/page8.html
I asked him about the campaign; and I specifically asked him about the breadth and scope of his support and political activity in Madison and St. Clair Counties. He told me " I've spent a lot of time down there and I've got people there as well, and I think I've got that pretty well covered"
The margin of victory there; and Vallas' reluctance to fly and campaign there, could arguably be cited as the difference in the outcome of that election.
After negotiating his very first budget in '03 but before the final vote was taken, he was talking to me about some things that were in it. In doing so, he lied to my face about a relatively important aspect of the agreement, and one in which he assuredly knew the truth. Quite literally seconds later, Tusk came over to me, said he overheard the conversation and wanted to set the record straight.
I'm proud to say I never voted for him, either in a primary or a general election, but I did give him a chance and I really did hope he would succeed with what he said he wanted to do. That episode, however, confirmed my worst fears and I never trusted a thing he said again.
He was smart enough to operate state government with 13,000 fewer state employees than Governors Thompson, Edgar and Ryan, but not engaged enough to care about efficiently managing the 57,000 state employee enterprise. Taxpayers will pay billions to fund bloated AFSCME contracts while citizens remain short changed in public education and infrastructure improvements.
I've spent a lot of time with him, and he is one of the funniest, most light hearted people I ever met. I also believe that while he had the capacity to be narcissistic, he also had a very genuine love for people who didn't have it easy in life. I think he saw his parents in those people and they had his instant admiration.
I rushed quickly downtown and barely made it to the drop site before the Gov. got there. I tried to hide my hangover behind some sunglasses, but as soon as Rod arrived, the TV cameras had surrounded us, and without missing a beat, he shook my hand, gave me a wink and said on air "I hope you're not driving today."
He didn’t raise taxes.
I didn't write that, btw.
Maybe any governor in this time frame would have done it. (and with fewer kick backs)
But it needed doing.
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I would agree with Vanilla Man save for the fact that one dollar of debt is more than one dollar of tax increase.