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Durbin on Blagojevich, Burris

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ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-04-09 12:36 PM
Original message
Durbin on Blagojevich, Burris
STEPHANOPOULOS: OK, let me turn to the situation in your own state. Governor Blagojevich, of course, as you know, appointed Roland Burris to fill the Senate seat this week. Mr. Burris said last night he is flying to Washington tomorrow. He says he is ready to serve the people of Illinois. Have you spoken to him about what will happen when he comes to Washington this week to claim the seat he thinks is his?

DURBIN: Well, I've spoken to him repeatedly, and I've known Roland for over 30 years. And George, if you listen to the commentary of those of us in Illinois, who know Roland Burris, no one has raised any questions about his integrity or his personal background.

DURBIN: It's a question about the process. This governor, Rod Blagojevich, has taken the appointment of a Senate vacancy to a level no one even imagined. I mean, to think, in these words out of his own mouth, from the wiretaps, verified, to think that he believed this was some sort of an auction process, that he could find some political advantage, even some resources and money coming his way if he picked the right person, has really raised a lot of questions with (inaudible)...

(CROSSTALK)

STEPHANOPOULOS: But Senator, there's no evidence -- there's no evidence that the appointment of Burris himself was corrupt, and Blagojevich is the governor right now, so isn't this a legal appointment?

DURBIN: It is -- I have to look at it in this fashion. The governor of Illinois has the state constitutional authority to fill the vacancy. The Senate of the United States has the U.S. constitutional responsibility to decide if Mr. Burris was chosen in a proper manner, and that is what we're going to do.

Senator Reid has said from the beginning, and I agree with him, we have to look at this carefully, because Rod Blagojevich has brought questions -- raised questions by his conduct as to how this process unfolded. Not reflecting personally on Roland Burris, but to make sure that in the end, the person representing the state of Illinois, serving with me in the United States Senate, was brought to that position properly.

STEPHANOPOULOS: Back in 1996, Senator Mary Landrieu of Louisiana was elected under contested circumstances. There was an investigation of the election, but she was seated provisionally by the Republican leader of Congress at that time. Will the Democrats seat Mr. Burris provisionally, as this investigation goes forward?

DURBIN: I don't believe that is the intention. And there's a real difference between what happened with Senator Landrieu. In her case, it was a matter of counting the votes. And that has traditionally been the reason for any election contests and recounts, as we have in Minnesota.

In Illinois, sadly, because of the allegations against Governor Blagojevich, there's a question of corruption, as to whether or not something was done which was entirely improper. Not a question of counting the votes. So I think that's the distinction, and why we're looking at this differently. There is no precedent. Nothing like this has occurred, at least in modern memory, in the U.S. Senate.

STEPHANOPOULOS: There is also the question of race. Congressman Bobby Rush, an African-American congressman from Chicago, has compared the Senate blocking Mr. Burris to some of the most notorious segregationists of the 1950s. Take a listen.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

REP. BOBBY L. RUSH, D-ILL.: I'm talking about George Wallace, Bull Connors. And I'm sure that the U.S. Senate do not want to see themselves placed in the same position.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

STEPHANOPOULOS: On top of this, you have reports in the Chicago Sun-Times that your leader in the Senate, Harry Reid, advised Governor Blagojevich not to pick African-American members of Congress, like Jesse Jackson Jr., like Danny Davis. Are you concerned about a racial backlash here?

DURBIN: First, let me say this about the allegations against Senator Reid. It's an outrage, that the Blagojevich people, in the last days of their administration, facing impeachment in Springfield, are now flailing in every direction, trying to show defiance in the appointment of Roland Burris and attacking everybody in sight.

Harry Reid did in this circumstance what anyone would have done as majority leader of the Senate. He called the governor to discuss filling the vacancy. He's done that, of course, in the states of New York, in Colorado, and in Delaware. It is the normal thing. I did the same. I announced at a press conference I was going to speak with the governor.

But to think that this governor, on his way out, is now flailing in every direction, trying to attack everyone, is just plain wrong, and the people of Illinois see through it.

Now, the bottom line is this -- this is not about race. We are so proud in our state to have elected great African-Americans. The first in our history was Roland Burris, elected statewide, and then Jesse White, our secretary of state, and of course Barack Obama as the United States senator. We have a proud record in the land of Lincoln of electing African-American candidates to statewide office. There is no question about race. When we said at the beginning, Democratic senators said we are not going to seat an appointment of Governor Blagojevich, it was before he'd chosen anyone, black, white or brown. So it has nothing to do with race.

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ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-04-09 12:56 PM
Response to Original message
1. No comment? This is interesting:
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ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-04-09 01:51 PM
Response to Original message
2. Denial? "Ill gov allies vanish as impeachment vote nears"

Ill gov allies vanish as impeachment vote nears

By CHRISTOPHER WILLS – 33 minutes ago

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) — Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich doesn't have many friends these days, particularly among the lawmakers who will decide whether to throw him out of office.

The vote to begin impeachment proceedings was unanimous. Former allies have fallen silent since his Dec. 9 arrest on federal corruption charges. Members of a special impeachment committee are uniformly negative in their comments and questions.

"Isn't anyone here going to stand up for the governor?" Blagojevich attorney Ed Genson asked the committee last week.

The response was silence.

Blagojevich even has trouble finding support closer to home. His circle of aides and informal advisers has fallen apart due to arrests, resignations and the pressure of a federal investigation that dates back six years. His chief legislative ally is retiring next month.

<...>

His closest ally in the House, state Rep. Jay Hoffman, a fellow Democrat from Collinsville, said nothing to support Blagojevich when the House voted to establish an impeachment committee. Instead, Hoffman said at a news conference that he would resign if he were in Blagojevich's position.

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ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-04-09 04:10 PM
Response to Original message
3. State government grinds to standstill

State government grinds to standstill

By Rick Pearson and Ray Long | Tribune reporters
January 4, 2009

The governor was arrested by the FBI and faces impeachment proceedings, his appointee to a U.S. Senate seat is in limbo and the state treasury is in shambles—a combination that has turned Illinois into a national punch line.

But who's laughing around here?

The state owes billions of dollars to day-care providers, hospitals and physicians treating the poor. Lawmakers have shelved ambitious agendas, such as fixing health care and reforming the state's method of financing public schools.

The tortuous saga of Gov. Rod Blagojevich has put Illinois government on hold.

"Absolutely, we're in a mess," state Rep. Frank Mautino (D-Spring Valley) said of the state of the state. "This is the reason that Barnum & Bailey has three rings. The Senate appointment is on one side, the federal prosecutors and the criminal charges are on the other, and those of us dealing with impeachment are in the center ring."

The focus of Illinois' political circus shifts to the legislature Sunday, with members of a special House panel considering Blagojevich's fate scheduled to begin drafting a report that could lead to a recommendation of articles of impeachment. The full House returns to Springfield on Wednesday for a possible vote on the panel's recommendation within days.

Top Illinois politicians say the acceleration toward impeachment symbolizes the realization that any attempts to move the state forward—such as dealing with a severe budget crisis and developing job-growing economic plans—cannot progress while Blagojevich is still in office.

<...>

A few months before Blagojevich's Dec. 9 arrest on allegations that he sought to use his office to enrich himself and his political fund, the governor's job approval rating was a dismal 13 percent. Now, despite proclaiming his innocence, Blagojevich's credibility is in tatters and his administration is unraveling from resignations. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has even revoked his access to classified security information. An already marginalized governor has become even more isolated.

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WillowTree Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-04-09 04:18 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. And yet...
....he claims that he won't resign because he somehow owes it to the State to remain in office and do his job.......which he can't do because nobody trusts him.
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ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-04-09 10:46 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. It's called arrogance, denial
and belligerence. Blagojevich is like any corrupt asshole: he believes he the most clever person around.

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