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http://www.sj-r.com/news/statehouse/2007/12/02/statehouse_insider/
Statehouse
Insider
December 02, 2007
State Journal
Register
By Doug Finke
Is there anyone left in Gov. ROD BLAGOJEVICH's inner circle who's willing to
tell him when he's being stupid? Or do they tell him and he ignores it,
convinced in his own skewed sense of reality that he can do no wrong?
There's got to be some explanation for Blagojevich's decision last week to
attend a Chicago Blackhawks hockey game while the Illinois House was voting
down a mass transit funding bill the governor had endorsed. And on the same
night, no less, that a Chicago TV station was airing a long story about
Blagojevich's lousy work habits.
Blagojevich called lawmakers into special session Wednesday to address the
mass transit funding crisis. The funding problem is real, but there was
nothing magical about meeting Wednesday to deal with it. Calling a special
session was just a PR gimmick.
While Blagojevich was reaching into his bag of trick and calling another of
his famous special sessions, the CBS-TV affiliate in Chicago was working on
a story about how the governor seldom shows up in Springfield or his Chicago
office to work. People in Springfield and those who follow state government
have long known Blagojevich isn't exactly a 24/7 kind of guy. It's more like
3/3. But the TV story promised to expose a whole lot more people to the
governor's work ethic.
It wasn't like the TV story was one of those ambush jobs, either. The
station worked on the story for weeks. Blagojevich's security detail knew
the station was monitoring the governor's activities, which means the
governor knew it, too. A couple of days before the story ran, the station
began hyping the fact it would air Wednesday night.
So Wednesday came and lawmakers worked on mass transit funding, and the TV
story was about to air. Blagojevich flew from Chicago to Springfield, met
with legislative leaders for a couple of hours and then flew back to Chicago
so he could go to the hockey game, while lawmakers stayed in session. That's
just stupid.
Blagojevich offered a bunch of excuses. He doesn't have a vote in the
General Assembly. The transit bill was going to fail anyway. He was honoring
a commitment to a friend by attending the game. None of it washes.
The bottom line is Blagojevich ordered lawmakers to Springfield Wednesday to
work on mass transit. They did, he didn't. The episode just reinforces the
belief of his critics (which now number about 70-80 percent of the
electorate) that he's more interested in playing governor than governing.
"The governor has a way of governing that baffles me," said Senate Minority
Leader FRANK WATSON, R-Greenville. Amen.
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