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Restored Faith in the Chicago Democrats

I will admit; over the last several weeks my faith in the ability of Chicago Democrats to run Illinois state government had been shaken.

I have always tried to be a "Yes We Can" kind of guy like, say, Tony Rezko? But I had started to give in to the cynics.

I began to believe that maybe Illinois truly was little more than a feudal kleptocracy where absolute primogeniture had replaced popular elections as the pathway to public office. I actually started to think Illinois that the problems with Illinois' political culture might extend beyond Blagojevich. Can you fathom such a thing?

My mind careened from one unhealthy notion to another. Could corruption be driving businesses and jobs from our state? I wonder if the Chicago Public Schools could be performing better.

I am not proud of succumbing to these doubts. I was weak.

Perhaps we are overtaxed?

I couldn't stop myself.

Is it possible that Todd Stroger is not the best person to be put in charge of $3 billion worth of government?

My nerves were frayed. I was nearing breakdown. And then...it happened.

On Friday, the Illinois House voted to impeach Rod Blagojevich.

Two words: political courage.

Faced with a governor slightly less popular than rectal cancer, Chicago Democrats up and down the political food chain who twice supported Blagojevich's election moved with righteous urgency to try and salvage their careers.

It was the kind of inspired, fairy-tale bravery the likes of which I have not seen since Barack Obama renounced Jeremiah Wright as his spiritual North Star.

So rest easy, Illinois. Normalcy is right around the corner. From Zion in the north to Cairo in the south, the Blagojevich curtain that had descended across Illinois is about to be lifted.

With Blagojevich gone, the innovative, low-tax, job-creating, puritanical Chicago Democrats who have so beautifully handled the Roland Burris affair and other matters of state during their long-running tenure are poised to usher in a period of untold prosperity for Illinoisans.

And if you believe any of what I've just said, I've got a reasonably priced U.S. Senate seat to sell you.
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Seat Roland Burris

Is Rod Blagojevich an idiot or an idiot savant?

That is not a trick question. It turns out he is mostly an idiot. But Blagojevich's selection of Roland Burris to fill the Obama senate seat was a shrewd tactical move legally and politically.

Arrested for allegedly conspiring to sell the seat to the highest bidder, Blagojevich's lawyers can now argue he did nothing of the sort by pointing to who he actually appointed.

Burris is the rarest of all Chicago Democrats (his Centralia, IL roots notwithstanding): one who is heretofore untainted by scandal. That in itself is an accomplishment for any four-time statewide office holder in Illinois.

Politically, Burris is a twofer as was telegraphed at the announcement by an almost giggly Blagojevich.

One, presenting Burris provided the Governor with the platform to give those in his party allied against him and against a special election--Democrat leaders in the Illinois House and U.S. Senate--the old one-finger salute. Like the citizens of Illinois, I wanted a special election, said Blagojevich, but since the General Assembly failed to act, I had to make this appointment.

Two, as an African-American, Burris brings significant political pressure to bear on Democrats in Illinois and in Washington to seat him.

And Roland Burris should be seated, not for those political reasons but because that is what is called for by law.

Look, my preference was and is for a special election. But, to be honest, that's largely because I am a Republican and I think a Republican like Congressman Mark Kirk or Congressman Peter Roskam would have an excellent shot to win the Senate seat in a special election.

However, that is not the process set forth by Illinois state statute, which clearly states,
When a vacancy shall occur in the office of United States Senator from this state, the Governor shall make (emphasis added) temporary appointment to fill such vacancy until the next election of representatives in Congress, at which time such vacancy shall be filled by election... (10 ILCS 5/25-8)
The Chicago Democrats in charge had the opportunity to change this statute but did not do so because they fear the same thing I anticipate--namely, losing the seat. That fear should not be rewarded by deferring to their desired appointer (Pat Quinn); their fear should be spotlighted.

Roland Burris is the beneficiary of a cynical political maneuver by a soon-to-be impeached and indicted Governor. But Blagojevich has not yet been impeached and he still enjoys the presumption of innocence. And guess what? Every political appointment of this sort is at least in part a cynical political maneuver by the appointer.

As long as Burris did nothing improper, why should he be held to a different standard than, say, Caroline Kennedy?

To not seat Burris is to do what Blagojevich has routinely done as governor which is to simply ignore the rule of law when you do not like the outcome because you do not feel like putting in the work to change the law by the appropriate means and methods.

It is in times like these when, to paraphrase John Adams, we need to decide in Illinois if our government is one of laws or of men.

To that end, I offer Illinois voters the following long-term remedy: seat Roland Burris until 2010 and then use that election, as provided by law, to unseat every single Chicago Democrat associated with this running catastrophe.
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Second Chances for the ILGOP

Six months ago, the conviction of Tony Rezko on federal corruption charges was met with unrestrained glee by those with leadership titles in the Illinois Republican Party.

On November 4, Illinois Republicans lost two longtime GOP Congressional seats (those vacated by Hastert, Weller), a net three State Representative seats, and witnessed the incursion of Democrats on to county boards in what were once the hallowed Republican collar counties of Will, DuPage and McHenry.

Last week, the arrest of Rod Blagojevich on federal corruption charges was met with unrestrained glee by those with leadership titles in the Illinois Republican Party.

They love that hamster wheel.

There is virtual unanimity that Blagojevich should be removed from office. If he declines to take the stairs, he will be exited out the window. Either way, he is done.

What is less clear is whether Republicans can make contact with the spinning curve ball that has been lobbed in their direction or if they will remain content to boo the pitcher from the stands.

Early indications are not encouraging as the state Republican Party just released a television commercial in support of a special election for Obama's U.S. Senate seat that attacks Lt. Governor Pat Quinn while referencing Lisa Madigan, Mike Madigan and Dick Durbin as "leaders".

Putting Pat Quinn in the crosshairs on corruption while promoting the Madigans and Durbin as part of the solution is like attempting to take down a Colombian drug cartel by targeting the teenage drug mule while lauding the kingpins as job-creating small businessmen.

So before those in charge of the Illinois Republican Party endorse Lisa Madigan for Governor or make some other such counter-intuitive offering, let me suggest in vain what I have suggested party leaders do since the Rezko conviction.

Two things.

First, make the "Chicago 9" wear the jacket for what has occurred on their watch. It is not just Blagojevich. It is also Rich Daley, Emil Jones, Mike & Lisa Madigan, Jesse White, Dan Hynes, Alexi Giannoulias and Todd Stroger. These nine Chicago Democrats control $70 billion worth of government and 125,000 public sector jobs in Illinois. They operate the levers of power in this state. They should all be held to account.

Second, instead of exhibiting unbridled jubilation, Republicans should display humility and contrition. Apologize to Illinois citizens for past bad acts and bad actors (particularly with George Ryan inconveniently in the news again). Explain to Illinoisans that the party as it existed a decade ago is not the party that it is today, that there are new leaders emerging with fresh ideas that substantively address the salient concerns of Illinois families. Petition for their renewed consideration in the wake of what the Chicago 9 have wrought.

If Republicans cannot distinguish themselves in this environment, then we will deserve our irrelevant status.
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Jesse Jackson Jr.'s Loss of Innocence

Is there nothing sadder than the loss of innocence?

Some of us lose it upon learning there is no Santa Claus. For others it accompanies the death of a close friend or forlorn love.

For 43-year-old Congressman Jesse Jackson, Jr., aka "Senate Candidate 5", loss of innocence came earlier this week when he discovered that there is something called "pay-to-play" politics going on in Illinois.

Watching his press conference on Wednesday was difficult. Something in me died that day as I watched a plucky, young, silly heart thrust in front of the callous media glare that had served him so well up until that point.

In his closing on Wednesday, Jesse Jr. recounted a poignant story. It was a story of a Cocker Spaniel named "Checkers". No, wait, that was Nixon. Jesse Jr.'s story was about his "little sister" who had texted him that very morning, and that text read, "Jesse Jr., I'm proud of you." That came from his baby sister. She is only 33-years old. How do you begin to explain something like this to a frightened 33-year-old. I only hope Jesse Jr. can find the words when she asks him if there is still going to be a Christmas this year.

For what does Jesse Jr. know of the evil that lies in the heart of men like Rod Blagojevich?

It is not as if, I don't know, Jackson's father had spent a lifetime accruing personal wealth running shakedown rackets like those the governor is alleged to have run.

Just as his brothers acquired Chicago's River North Budweiser distributorship based on merit, Jesse Jr. thought he might become a U.S. Senator because of his credentials.

Jesse Jr. is about public service. How do I know this? Because he said so. How was he to know his "hard work" meant nothing to this governor?

After 13 years as a congressman from Illinois, how could he be unaware of this state's political culture, some might ask.

To those who would ask such questions, I say simply, Jesse Jr. is not taking questions at this time so please refer your inquiries to his criminal defense attorney.
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Blagojevich: Getting Things Done for People

Getting Things Done for People.

That was the slogan of Rod Blagojevich's 2006 re-election campaign. Who would have thought a phrase so utterly devoid of meaning would foretell such truth?

Governor Blagojevich was certainly getting things done for people--for himself, for his wife, for his campaign contributors, and for just about anyone who was willing to pay sticker price for government spoils.

Given the starkness of the schemes as recorded in Blagojevich's own words, flabbergasted Illinoisans are wondering how a Governor could be so brazen. After all, in what undiscovered dimension lives a man who conceptualizes a run for the Presidency in 2016 while strategizing about an indictment he seemed to fully anticipate?

The French philosopher Baudelaire once wrote, "True genius is the ability to hold two contradictory thoughts simultaneously without losing your mind." Blagojevich's contradictions proved instead that the simultaneous exercise of stupidity and arrogance loses one his freedom.

And so over the next several months Blagojevich's fate will wind to its inexorable end, beginning next week when the Illinois General Assembly moves to impeach him.

As this occurs, I have a humble request of my fellow Illinoisans.

Don't get fooled again. Don't get suckered by the contrived and self-righteous hand-wringing by the very people who twice shepherded Blagojevich to the Governor's mansion.

Those Chicago Democrats that are lining up to spit on his political grave because they covet his office are the same Chicago Democrats who brought you the last six sordid years of Blagojevich rule.

Those Chicago Democrats didn't walk away from Blagojevich (for those that ever did) over policy concerns or ethical pangs of conscience; they walked away because Blagojevich didn't do what they wanted him to do when they wanted him to do it.

He committed the mortal sin of cooking up his own illicit schemes instead of executing theirs--and he turned out to not be nearly as adept at it as they are.

Who are the "they"? They are the eight members of the "Chicago 9" (the 9 Chicago Democrats who control $70B worth of government and 125,000 public sector jobs in Illinois) not arrested yesterday. Their names are Rich Daley, Mike Madigan, Lisa Madigan, Jesse White, Dan Hynes, Alexi Giannoulias, Todd Stroger, and Emil Jones.

Remember those names. Write them down. And remember the outrage you feel now when the next opportunity you have to vote against them presents itself.
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Everything You Need to Know About Illinois Politics

"Durbin may ask Bush to commute Ryan sentence"

In eight words this Chicago Tribune headline (Nov. 26) summed up everything you need to know about Illinois politics.

Yes, that is "Durbin" as in Dick Durbin, Illinois' senior U.S. Senator, a 25-year Democrat member of Congress, and the national co-chairman of the Obama presidential campaign. And the Ryan is none other than George Ryan, the disgraced former Republican governor sentenced to 6.5 years of breaking big rocks into little ones for operating a taxpayer-funded den of thieves as Secretary of State and then as Governor.

Durbin has all but said that Ryan's remaining prison sentence of more than five years should be commuted; now it is simply a matter of whether Durbin is willing to endure the political heat for taking action.

He certainly need not worry about heat from Republicans. Former Republican Governor Jim Thompson, Ryan's defense attorney (pro bono, because, hey, we're all friends here), was quick to lavish praise on Durbin. Former Republican Governor Jim Edgar also leaned that way saying, "George Ryan's paid a pretty big price...I'm not sure that a few more years (in prison) is all that much more punishment to him."

Gee, Governor Edgar, you know who else paid a "pretty big price"? The nine people, including six children, killed by drivers who obtained their licenses illegally from George Ryan's office. I would love to get their input on those "few more years" but, well, they are dead.

For it is the views of the victims--not those of George Ryan and his apologists--that are relevant here. Those victims include the taxpayers of Illinois, all of whom were defrauded.

What statement of contrition do these men of letters from Illinois' ruling party present to the victims for consideration? "His conscience is as clear as his mind," Ryan's wife told the Chicago Sun-Times. "If he had it to do over--and I've heard him say this--he would govern the same way as he did before."

If George Ryan's conscience is clear, than he is not asking himself the right questions. I for one think his current residence is the ideal place for further introspection. He can take all the time he needs.

The federal government's Operation Safe Road investigation in which Ryan was ultimately snared also produced corruption convictions against some 75 other individuals.

75 federal felony convictions of associates and subordinates. Nine individuals in the ground, an unintended but very real consequence of the corruption that took place on his watch. And George Ryan is a man with no regrets. Not a single lesson learned. Yet, Durbin, Thompson, and Edgar are all ready to sign Ryan's walking papers.

In Illinois, it's not that establishment Republicans and Democrats are too cozy; it's that they are indistinguishable--and unrepentant.
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On Tuesday, Change Wins 275 - 263

On Tuesday, I predict that the nation, suffering from George W. Bush fatigue, will reject a third Bush term and vote for a change.

Yes, that's right, Americans will renounce the "failed economic philosophy of the Bush administration" and seize upon the opportunity to reform our government.

Dispatched to that of a footnote in history will be the career politician who spent his time in public office supporting Bush's demand-side, domestic gambits.

Gone will be the candidate who reviewed Bush's half-baked 2002 intervention into public education with his No Child Left Behind federal cookie-cutter and saw only the need for more money to sweeten the federal force-feeding.

Gone will be the candidate who argued that the problem with Bush's 2003 Medicare Part-D prescription drug benefit disaster is that it didn't have enough federal entanglements and that federal price controls were needed to compliment the new entitlement.

Rejected will be the candidate who talks about green energy, but who voted for Bush's pork-laden energy bill that did nothing to move the needle towards energy independence, the one with all those tax breaks for Big Oil.

Cast aside will be the candidate who speaks of the "middle class" but is so tethered to Bush that he voted for the $700 billion bailout of Wall Street vultures and federal dimwits advanced by Bush's economic overlord.

Forget the rhetoric of both Bush and his corporate welfare-big government apostle; neither is who they say they are or who they have been portrayed to be.

Voters have figured out that Bush is no free market conservative and that there is a candidate in this race for President who is not who he claims to be either.

That is why I boldly predict that my fellow Americans in Ohio, Virginia, Colorado and Nevada will vote for change, they will vote for reform and they will make John McCain the 44th President of the United States.

Obama is no agent of change from the last 8 years. Like Bush, Obama is a political alchemist who views the federal government as the sovereign remedy for anything and everything that ails the world.

When it comes to matters economic, Barack Obama is to George W. Bush what V.I. Lenin was to John Maynard Keynes. In other words, Obama is a socialist in a hurry. Same failed philosophy, different pace.

While John McCain has not distinguished himself as a visionary on these matters, his more modest plans are likely to mean less social engineering from the Presidency. That alone would be welcome change.

I think a lot of common-sense, play-by-the-rules Americans have begun to sense this difference as the Presidential campaign drama has moved towards its resolution in the last few weeks. And I believe those Americans will deliver an electoral victory of 275-263 for John McCain.

If I'm wrong, I don't want to be right.
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People Who Play By The Rules Party

During this Presidential cycle, America has truly become the land of short term memory.

Both political parties embrace socialism as if the ravages of that failed ideology were never visited upon the 20th Century.

On the campus of the University of Chicago, the legacy of Milton Friedman is protested while the presence of Bill Ayers across town at the University of Illinois-Chicago (UIC) is heralded.

Against this backdrop, I am proposing the creation of a new party. Not a party for "working families" or the "middle class", two categories stretched beyond recognition and rendered meaningless by overuse.

I want to be explicit. All successful political parties define their constituencies and defend them. So today I am launching the People Who Play By The Rules Party.

In this country, one has to accomplish three things to virtually guarantee never living in poverty: get a high school diploma; get married after the age of 20; and get married before having a child. The People Who Play the Rules Party is their party.

When you hear that 1 in 9 home mortgages are in foreclosure, the political-media establishment complex pay attention to the 1 in foreclosure and treat the other 8 as if they exist only as a source of spare parts to salvage the 1. The People Who Play By The Rules Party is for the 88% of American homeowners who, without fanfare, budgeted for the home they bought.

The People Who Play By The Rules Party is for the top 40% of income earners in this country--which gets all the way down to $55,000 per year--who pay 99.4% of all federal incomes taxes in the name of "fairness".

The People Who Play By The Rules Party is for the 99.7% of U.S. employers with fewer than 500 employees, the small businesses that don't have lobbyists and that don't get bailed out by their Wall Street friends in government when they make bad strategic decisions. All that these employers do, the true entrepreneurial sector, is create jobs and create wealth.

The People Who Play By The Rules Party is also a compassionate party, a party that recognizes America to be a place of second chances and that desires to help those who veered off course get back on track. What we are not, however, is Party that believes in the woozy, bipartisan la-la land of socializing the consequences of individual, private choices.

If you fit this description, please stand up and be counted. For if the People Who Play By The Rules that made this country great do not, there are those who seek to institute new rules to re-make this country into something it is not and should never be.
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Joe Plumbers of the World Unite

It wasn't exactly a Red Dawn moment but it is as close as John McCain has come to date.

McCain finally put the face paint on and sounded the alarm for America's productive, play-by-the-rules class that Barack Obama and his spread-the-wealth, leftist guerillas are advancing.

McCain's Manifesto in Wednesday night's final Presidential debate: Joe the Plumbers of the World Unite!

McCain capitalized on Comrade Obama's unintentional moment of candor earlier in the week wherein he told Joe the Plumber from Holland, Ohio, an aspiring small business owner, that the Obama plan is to "spread the wealth". In so doing, McCain for the first time framed the choice Americans have in this race between his pro-growth tax policies and Obama's virulent brand of wealth redistribution for its own sake.

Watching Obama sell the need for so-called fairness in our tax system, I was reminded of the infomercial hucksters hawking no money down real estate schemes.

Fairness is the problem when the top 5% of income earners in America pay 60% of the total federal incomes taxes collected and the bottom 35% pay no federal incomes tax at all?

In the name of fairness we should inhibit capital formation by increasing the capital gains tax; we should close markets to American goods by discarding free trade agreements; and we should prevent would-be small business owners like Joe the Plumber from ever getting there by imposing additional tax burdens on businesses that already pay the second highest corporate tax rate in the industrialized world.

McCain effectively stripped away Obama's flowery, Platonic rhetoric and exposed the component parts of the grand Fairness Regime that Senator Government (a well-timed Freudian slip by McCain) seeks to inflict upon our nation.

If McCain ruthlessly prosecutes the fault lines he exposed last evening and defiantly stands up for job-creators and risk-takers, then McCain, and America for that matter, will indeed have been mistakenly written off once again.
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Paying cash for grades cheats education

William Butler Yeats once wrote, "Education is not the filling of a pail but the lighting of a fire."

The city education establishments in Chicago, New York and Washington, D.C., beg to differ. The leaders of these abysmally performing systems believe education is indeed the filling of a pail - with money. For a change, their latest gambit is not aimed at funneling taxpayer dollars into bureaucracies but rather raising private funds to pay students for good grades.

Chicago Public Schools became the latest to adopt the "Green for Grade$" test program whereby a control group of 5,000 freshmen at 20 high schools will get graduated cash payments for academic performance: $50 for an A; $35 for a B; and $20 for a C.

CPS Superintendent Arne Duncan told the Chicago Tribune, "I'm always trying to level the playing field. This is the kind of incentive middle-class families have had for decades."

Duncan, like others in charge of government monopolies, is defiantly unbounded by his own hypocrisy. For it is Mr. Duncan and his friends running the teacher's unions that oppose pay-for-performance reforms such as merit pay for teachers who produce results in the classroom.

Speaking of the incentivized middle class, a more reflective person might contemplate why middle-class families, who make up a significant portion of the 3 million people living in Chicago, have abandoned CPS as Duncan correctly implies.

A system from which only six in 100 students will go on to earn a bachelor's degree by the age of 25 is a system that parents who have the ability to flee will flee.

Some critics of the "Green for Grade$" program have said such payments for grades are getting students to do the right things for the wrong reasons and will fail to cultivate a real interest in learning. Others have been more pointed, saying the payments amount to bribes.

The fundamental problem with cash-for-grades programs is that they are yet another bailing-out-the-Titanic-with-a-teaspoon approach to education reform.

As these programs gain traction in our nation's worst-performing school systems, we must recognize them for the misdirection plays that they are and not allow ourselves to be taken on a tangent that moves us away from a discussion of long-term, systemic school reform.
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McCain's Debate Hurdle #2

On Thursday night, Governor Sarah Palin cleared the credibility hurdle she faced in the estimation of swing voters, even earning some begrudging kudos from Democrats.

On Tuesday night, it's John McCain's turn to do the same.

The Teddy Roosevelt-style populist rhetoric about earmarks and Wall Street greed is an okay warm-up act, but McCain needs a show-stopper.

McCain should speak to Obama in that same father-to-son fashion as to how the world works when it comes to pocketbook issues like he did as to foreign policy in the first debate.

Here's what McCain should say:
Barack Obama wants to make this campaign about Wall Street versus Main Street.

Senator Obama clearly needs directions.

Because this campaign is about K Street versus Pennsylvania Avenue. It's about the lobbyists who've corrupted politicians and compromised our politics. And it's about the need for a President to stand up to those who seek to game the system for personal gain.

Senator Obama says our current financial difficulties result from the failed Bush-McCain economic philosophy. First, Senator Obama, I take great umbrage at the insinuation that I am not my own person. If you think I take my cues from George W. Bush or anyone else, then you are neither familiar with my public record nor my personal sacrifice. And if you care to make such an assertion, Senator, then please be man enough to do it straight away and to my face.

Second, what Senator Obama terms a failed philosophy is nothing more than a common-sense belief that Americans should keep more of what they earn because families make better decisions on how best to spend their earnings than does the political class in Washington.

And what of Senator Obama's economic philosophy?

It is Senator Obama who initially proposed doubling the capital gains tax and has now scaled that back to a 33% increase in that tax. That would be devastating to our economy. At the core of our financial problems is the credit crunch. Senator Obama's tax hike would further restrict credit and inhibit capital formation. This is precisely the opposite of what we should be doing. Senator Obama clearly realizes this since he diminished the magnitude of his own tax increase proposal but still insists upon a massive hike. So who is the ideologue?

Senator Obama decries deregulation but it is Obama's team of economic advisors formerly at the helm of Fannie Mae--Franklin Raines, Tim Howard, and Jim Johnson--who engaged in the reckless lending policies, encouraged by President Clinton at the time, that extended loans to subprime borrowers. (Here McCain could hold up the Sept. 20, 1999 New York Times article entitled, "Fannie Mae Eases Credit To Aid Mortgage Lending" that outlines this policy change in detail).

And since Senator Obama has such newfound concern for windfall profits, perhaps he can start with his campaign's economic advisors, the three of whom parachuted out of the Fannie Mae death spiral with close to $300 million before the corporate jet crashed on the roofs of Main Street homeowners.

Senator Obama carries on about job creation but advocates job-killing protectionism and an antagonistic posture towards our trading partners. He wants to renegotiate trade agreements that will inevitably close markets to American goods.

Senator Obama is selling you a bill of goods, America.

He casts himself as a reformer and yet springs from the bosom of political corruption and machine politics, against which he did nothing.

Senator Obama speaks of his fondness for the middle class and yet cannot contain his contempt for middle America when he is at a San Francisco fundraiser or when he is confronted by the strong, conservative female Governor running with me.

I know there is anxiety. I know there is fear because I understand that things are difficult financially for millions of American families. But don't let yourself be ruled by that fear or by the contrived class envy rhetoric that the radical left wing has been trying to sell you since the 1960s. For all his talk of change, Senator Obama is intent on pursuing the very same policies with the very same people that got us into this mess.

We will turn our economy around by pursuing common-sense policies that ease our tax burdens, restrain government spending, incentivize savings and investment, and encourage small business growth.

These will be the first principles of a McCain presidency. This is the way back for America.
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Dan Proft on Palin

John McCain's selection of Alaska Governor Sarah Palin as his vice presidential running mate is not being universally well-received (particularly among Democrats nervous about the attributes she brings to the GOP ticket) but I think it is the best choice McCain could have made and that Palin is likely to be the rare "game-changing" Vice Presidential candidate. I had the opportunity to discuss the reasons for my enthusiasm with the good folks at Fox News Chicago on Sunday and Monday mornings.

Take a look.

--DP

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PirHBVwNnJI

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0UoRkZjIoOA
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Biden Choice Shows Obama Doesn't Believe His Own Rhetoric

Barack Obama learned an important lesson from John Kerry's 2004 Presidential campaign--do not express two contradictory positions in the same sentence. Instead, wait awhile.

Kerry infamously contended in a single statement that he had voted for funding for our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan before he voted against the funding.

Conversely, Obama has smartly spread out his flip-flops. During the primary, Obama asserted that qualification for the Presidency should be measured primarily on the basis of one's judgment not their experience.

During the primary, we were told by Obama that Washington was broken and that Washington insiders were the problem.

During the primary, we were invited to feast on the munificence of Obama's fierce urgency for a new kind of politics marinated in the special sauce of his uplifting rhetoric.

And then on Saturday, it turned out that experience does matter; that being a Washington insider for 35 years is not such a bad thing; and that the trite class envy political rhetoric of the Left should indeed be central to this campaign.

It turned out that those things are also more important than one's personal judgment particularly relative to their public integrity, as Obama's running mate has a troubling tendency of confusing the work and words of others for his own.

Just as we are entering the homestretch of this possibly historic and probably transformational campaign (so we were told), it turns out that Obama is just another craven politician.

Thus, the spectacle of Obama, the great consensus-builder, gleefully presiding over Hacksaw Joe Biden's formulaic pillorying of McCain during what passed for his acceptance speech as Obama's vice presidential nominee on Saturday in Springfield.

"Ladies and gentlemen, your kitchen table is like mine," said Biden. "You talk about how much you are worried about being able to pay the bills. Well, ladies and gentlemen, that's not a worry John McCain has to worry about. It's a pretty hard experience. He'll have to figure out which of the seven kitchen tables to sit at."

Obama and Biden are apparently living paycheck-to-paycheck.

Obama speaks of hope and employs cynicism. Obama speaks of judgment and he abides the lack of it. Obama fancies himself transcendental and yet, other than the telegenic physical packaging, remains mired in the failed conventions of big government liberalism.

So then if Obama doesn't believe his own rhetoric, why should we?
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Obama's Surprise VP Choice?

Joe Biden, Tim Kaine, or Evan Bayh?

Oh, you silly country rubes. There is not an audacious name in that bunch.

On Saturday, Barack Obama will return to the initial scene of his crimes against humanity with his vice presidential choice in tow.

That choice?

Does the phrase, "We're putting the band back together," mean anything to you, Chicago?

That's right, Obama's choice will be a friend to lobbyists big and small, the master of economic disaster, a man of few usually unintelligible words, and the man at whose ample teet Obama suckled for his seven vanilla years in the Illinois State Senate--I am of course talking about retiring State Senate President Emil Jones.

The campaign commercials write themselves: Let the Chicago Democrats do for America what they have done to Illinois.

While some may view this as the ultimate patronage hire, that take misses Emil Jones' robust record as an agent of change.

Think of all of the change Illinois has realized during Jones' tenure as Senate President and Governor Rod Blagojevich's BFF.

For example, Illinois has shed 60,000 manufacturing jobs, currently enjoying an unemployment rate 28% higher than the national average.

Not convinced? What if I told you that Illinois is number one in the nation in its unfunded pension liability?

Still not sure Jones is the best choice?

Did I mention that Illinois is 44th in the nation in per capita income growth?

One has to appreciate how difficult it is to rack up numbers like that in a state with the logistical advantages, transportation infrastructure, corporate bases, and post-secondary educational institutions that exist in Illinois.

To achieve these changes, one must have the fortitude to stare down common sense policies and say, "Not on my watch."

Jones has shown this willingness to discard conventional wisdom-and the laws of supply and demand. While other politicians offer up loose talk in support of higher taxes, onerous, job-killing regulations and politically expedient subsidies, Jones has always been a man of action.

So who better than Jones to ride point for Obama's carbon tax and his capital gains tax increase and his income tax hike and…well, you get the idea.

+++++

Proft v. Kurth on WBEZ's "848" talking Veepstakes

I also had the opportunity to square off against a worthy adversary in Democrat (she hates when I say "Democrat" instead of "Democratic") strategist Kitty Kurth, a principal with Kurth Lampe, a strategic communications firm in Chicago on WBEZ-Chicago Public Radio's well-regarded "848" program for a lively discussion about the upcoming vice presidential selections of both Sens. McCain and Obama. Mild-mannered host Richard Steele deftly managed our spirited exchange.

Take a listen.

Click here to listen

--DP
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Illinois School Funding Redux: Lies, Damn Lies, and Al Sharpton

In case anyone thought that we were on the cusp of a thoughtful discussion about education in Illinois, enter Al Sharpton.

Thanks to a confused Chicago press corps that has mistaken him for a "civil rights leader", Sharpton is now enjoying local airplay for piggy-backing onto State Senator James Meeks' Chicago Public Schools (CPS) student boycott scheduled for day one of the school year.

By allowing himself to be cast with Sharpton and other professional liars, Meeks is frittering away his breakthrough opportunity for low income families whose children are unfairly locked into failing schools.

While I disagree with some of Meeks' means and methods, I am tempted to believe he understands the need for system change in CPS and that his advocacy to that end is real.

That is not the case for Sharpton and the other vanguards of ineptitude like CPS Superintendent Arne Duncan.

Duncan, who exercises about as much independence of action from Mayor Richard Daley as does a monkey from its organ grinder, jumps up and down screeching that the problem with the Chicago Public Schools is that Illinois is 49th in the country in school funding.

Duncan's premise is a joke and his reference is misleading.

The state's percentage of the overall dollars spent on education does put Illinois at 49th in the nation. However, when one includes mainly local property taxes, Illinois ranks 18th in the country in total dollars spent on education (source: American Legislative Exchange Council, 2007 Report Card on American Education). Further, in the past 20 years, per pupil expenditures in Illinois have increased 42% in real terms and yet student performance has been virtually static.

There is a reason Duncan and his brethren never quite get around to explaining how school performance would improve if we tinkered with the composition of the individual funding sources that make up the entirety of the dollars spent. It is because school performance would not improve.

Duncan's monkeying around with statistics is a purposeful misdirection play. He wants to argue about system inputs because there is no defense to what the Chicago Public Schools output--namely, children who were not even given an opportunity to acquire the skills they need to find success in our global, digital economy.

Like Duncan, I too can have fun with numbers.

I submit that Illinois ranks last in the nation in political courage. There has not been a serious debate about the needed K-12 reforms in Illinois for decades. Those who suggest system change are greeted either by the chirping of crickets or the disingenuous talking points of obstructionists like Duncan.

The General Assembly is back in session this week. The kids in CPS start school next month. One wonders which group is destined to accomplish the least.
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