Michele Clark Prep students plan walk out over tasing of student

I headed over to Michele Clark Academic Prep Magnet School to see if there were more issues at the school which may have lead up to Monday’s tasing of student.

Jennifer Matthew, mother of Keaira Matthews, said she and a few community organizers and members of her church would be at the school protesting school administration’s handling of her daughter’s incident. About 2:30 p.m. Mark Carter, a member of VOTE (Voice of the Ex-Offender) arrived with several protesters. But Matthews never came. As students were dismissed at 2:45 p.m., Paul Johnson, another member of VOTE, spoke to released students on a bullhorn. Johnson singled out Officer Brown who is reportedly stationed at the school. He asked the students to stage a walkout on Friday to protest Keaira’s tasing.

In front of the school, an unnamed protester began to taunt the police and school security as he videotaped them. Read the rest of this entry →

Slideshow: Chicago youths ‘undocumented, unafraid’

Youths begin a march from Chicago’s Union Park to Federal Plaza. (Photo by Peter Holderness)

There’s a new rallying cry for young immigrants who lack authorization to be in the United States: “Undocumented and unafraid.” Their front lines include youths who “came out” last week in Chicago’s Federal Plaza, publicly disclosing their undocumented status. Photographer Peter Holderness documents that event with this slideshow.

Your viewing/listening guide to Governor Quinn’s budget address

It’s Quinn’s second budget speech. He will lay out his proposal around noon today before the General Assembly.

Governor Pat Quinn (AP/file)

First things first: We’ll have the speech live here on 91.5 FM and WBEZ.org, along with post-speech analysis featuring John Tillman from the Illinois Policy Institute and Ralph Martire from the Center for Tax and Budget Accountability. While listening, head over to blogs.vocalo.org, where Justin Kaufmann hosts the second week of The Lunchbox. His all-star panel of guests will live-blog the governor’s speech.

Do your homework: Read the rest of this entry →

Whatever Happened to THAT Politician? The Phil Rock edition.

Phil Rock loves his retirement. I guess, it’s sort of a retirement.

Rock is “of counsel” at his law form, Rock Fusco. Before I interviewed him last week for a story on the Democratic State Central Committee, he walked over to the window of his beautiful corner office towering 22 floors above the Chicago River, staring down and pointing out where the river turns south toward Chinatown. Not a bad gig.

Rock on retirement

Rock left the Illinois Senate in 1993, more than two decades after arriving. For a few years in the early 80s, he chaired the Democratic State Central Committee, and he held his committee seat in the Cook County Democratic Party until about ten years ago. I asked him to try to sum up what he’s been doing since his name stopped appearing on the ballot.

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Read the rest of this entry →

Lt. Gov. Applicants: These guys are serious. But is the Democratic Party?

The applications went live Tuesday. And I mean the complete applications. If you applied through the Democratic Party of Illinois’ website to fill the vacancy left by Scott Lee Cohen on the party’s ticket, your internet presence just grew. We’re talking resumes, phone numbers (cell, home and work) and email addresses – along with, in a few cases, the phone numbers and email addresses of your professional references.

AP/file

AP/file

And who are the 46 brave souls (the number as of Tuesday night) who put this information out there? Forty-one appear to be men, five women. Occupations vary, including retired, unemployed, teacher, engineer and police officer. Home towns range from Plainfield to Chicago, Springfield to Hillside, Lake Forest to Lisle. None of the applications were submitted by politicians mentioned recently as potential picks. Absent at this point are the five candidates who lost to Scott Lee Cohen. There was no Raja Krishnamoorthi, no Julie Hamos. Read the rest of this entry →

Where’s the governor? Pat Quinn takes rare escape from the press.

In the two weeks before the primary election, Illinois Governor Pat Quinn held about 40 campaign events and – by my count – 18 government events, according to a review of his public campaign and official schedules.

Quinn

Governor Pat Quinn, the Saturday before the primary, giving a pep talk to precinct workers from the 31st Ward.


In the two weeks after primary day, Quinn has held four campaign events. The most recent was Monday, February 8th, when Quinn held a press conference at the Hotel Allegro in Chicago to take questions in the aftermath of Scott Lee Cohen’s decision to drop out. The governor has held zero public government events since the primary. Read the rest of this entry →

Closed doors for Illinois senators: bipartisan meeting, or illegal party?

In a meeting legislators are describing as a first of its kind in the Illinois Senate, Republicans and Democrats got together to hear a presentation on state budgets from the National Conference of State Legislatures. And they didn’t let the public or reporters inside, calling it a “joint caucus” (see the Trib’s coverage), rather than a session of the Senate. Why is that distinction important? We turn to Article IV, Section 5(c) of the Illinois Constitution, which doesn’t say anything about caucus meetings:

Sessions of each house of the General Assembly and meetings of committees, joint committees and legislative commissions shall be open to the public. Sessions and committee meetings of a house may be closed to the public if two-thirds of the members elected to that house determine that the public interest so requires; and meetings of joint committees and legislative commissions may be so closed if two-thirds of the members elected to each house so determine. Read the rest of this entry →

So, you want a recount? The first-ever instructional video for the IL GOP gubernatorial primary

We went over to the Cook County Clerk David Orr’s office to ask him about what the next steps are for a potential recount in the GOP gubernatorial primary. Steve Edwards led the way interviewing Mr. Orr. We went with a 50’s instructional film motif. If you were confused about the recount process in IL, this video is for you! The 50’s music is worth a view…

17

02 2010

Tape from the archives: Birch Bayh on Evan Bayh

The news today, reported by numerous sources, that Indiana U.S. Senator Evan Bayh has decided not to seek a third term, reminded me of some archival tape I had stored away.

In early 2007, I was freelance reporting in Washington, DC, and ran into Evan’s father, Birch Bayh, himself a former U.S. senator. I asked him about his son’s decision, just a few weeks earlier, to not seek the Democratic nomination for president. (Evan Bayh had opened a presidential exploratory committee in late 2006.)

Birch Bayh told me he didn’t play a part in his son’s decision on whether or not to run for president. And he said he wouldn’t play a part in the decision if his son considered a future presidential run.

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FATHER & SON RETIREMENTS: Evan Bayh is 54 years old now, and will be 55 when he leaves the Senate in January. His father’s Senate career ended in 1981, after he was defeated by Dan Quayle, then a congressman and later the vice president. At the time, Birch Bayh was 52 years old.

Bill Brady Speaks at the Union League Club; Defends Jason Plummer’s Resume

Even though we weren’t allowed into the fundraiser Rob Wildeboer got a lot of great audio at the Union League Club afterwards . Since Rob can only fit so much into a news spot, here’s more from Brady. I grabbed a few clips that pertained to the two following topics.

Regarding Jason Plummer in the Lieutenant Governor Race.

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Regarding the Constitutionality of a Lieutenant Governor

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Bill Brady addresses a question from Rob Wildeboer