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Popular Threads
Negative ads work.
About the only information a candidate can get out to voters is what he or she has money to pay for. Oftentimes that means their own money (eg. Senator Fitzgerald). The Springfield news media, with the exception of WTAX, had virtually no reporting of any campaigns, including the Governor's race.
...and then how this plays out,
Most legislative leaders seem to have put a little money behind each of their candidates. House Republican Leader Tom Cross is the exception: he put two really big bets on challengers ($200K to Steve Haring and $138K to John Cavaletto) rather than give middling amounts to all of the candidates he's been supporting. We'll see tomorrow how that worked for him.
Because it will be part of the GOP picking up the pieces afterwords... assuming worst case on Illinois voters and felons.
5. Slogans: "Had enough?" "What was she thinking?" These two were everywhere.
4. Tony Rezko: Oddly enough, the man with the golden touch became the man with the touch of death. I haven't seen that many people run away from another man since Robert Sorich got indicted.
3: NOT being someone else. Rich Whitney may not be great but he isn't Blago or Judy. Peraica may not be great, but he isn't John Stroger. This is one of the few elections where you are praised for who you AREN'T.
2:
AND THE NUMBER ONE THING THAT WILL BE REMEMBERED ABOUT THIS YEAR'S ELECTION WILL BE:
THE COOK COUNTY BOARD PRESIDENT'S RACE.
Here, you must include the primary. Young, entrenched democrat who worked for the machine turns reformer and launches four-year attack on elderly, life-long Democratic Machine stalwart. Heated, high-profile race takes turn when Dem Machine Loyalist has stroke, but reform versus machine contest goes on, with machine pulling out victory for the old man.
BUT...
Machine crowns lesser known Dem - son of the older politico, no less - to assume father's role in election versus fiery, tough Republican reformer. Reformer isn't loved, but son is reviled on every level, with reformer reaping huge benefits. Rock star politician and local heavy-hitters come to younger machine backed candidates aid at the eleventh hour in a dogfight so hotly contested that no poll seems credible.
SERIOUSLY FOLKS, you couldn't write this stuff as fiction.
Question is, how does the story end. I guess we find out tonight.
VOTE VOTE VOTE EVERYONE!
2: Bean, Duckworth, Roskam, McSweeney. The congressional races have real consequences and the national Dem party is salivating.
While negativity and corruption have dominated this campaign cycle, it's also not unique to this election.
I really think people will remember this election cycle as the one where the Green Party got itself established, and began to be a player in Illinois politics for years to come. Maybe I'm being too optimistic, but Rich Whitney is poised to take more votes than any third party candidate in Illinois history (Perot took around 16% in '92), and the Illinois Green Party as an organization seems to be here to stay.
I really like the Green Party, but for those who don't, it could also signal the rise of several other third parties over the course of the next decade, and other than the paid staff that posts on here, I think everyone agrees that the Dems and Pubs (especially in Illinois) have really failed as leaders in every sense.
The contempt for the voter - that pretty much sums up this election - by pundits, politicians, political activists, and poltroons.
Rich, hit the nail on the head, yesterday with regard to Green spleen-venting. Whine up a storm, but unless you are willing to ascend the gradus of political life, go take up knitting.
Republicans lose when they are corrupt.
Democrats win.
Nixon's corruption led to the country tossing Republicans out of Congress.
George Ryan's corruption brought in Blagojevich.
Blagojevich's corruption is rewarded with Democrat votes and he is re-elected.
With the State House crowd, it will be a suprise at how well Tom Cross did compared to Frank Watson.
Issues appeared to be a non-factor.
[Note the sarcasm.]
I liked it a lot. The thought of helping to prop up the alleged corruption by the "crooks and cronies" of one candidate by voting that way should make everyone embarrassed to cast their votes that way.
Think about it. Part of that campaign war chest was the result of an alleged shakedown operation, regardless of whether someone knew or didn't know what was going on with the cronies.
Hope to see that Editorial up on the site (hint hint).
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tdAjGXFJw3s