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	<title>Keefe, Campbell &#38; Associates, LLC &#187; Blagojevich</title>
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	<description>KCA&#039;s Workers Compensation &#38; Employment Law Blog</description>
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		<title>In our humble opinion, this week we will finally see the end of career of the worst Governor in the history of all “governors” of any kind anywhere. Hopefully, this embarrassing chapter in Illinois politics will finally come to a close.</title>
		<link>http://keefe-law.com/blog/2009/01/26/in-our-humble-opinion-this-week-we-will-finally-see-the-end-of-career-of-the-worst-governor-in-the-history-of-all-%e2%80%9cgovernors%e2%80%9d-of-any-kind-anywhere-hopefully-this-embarrassing-chapte/</link>
		<comments>http://keefe-law.com/blog/2009/01/26/in-our-humble-opinion-this-week-we-will-finally-see-the-end-of-career-of-the-worst-governor-in-the-history-of-all-%e2%80%9cgovernors%e2%80%9d-of-any-kind-anywhere-hopefully-this-embarrassing-chapte/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Jan 2009 16:42:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Eugene Keefe</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Illinois]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Blagojevich]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Corruption]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://keefe-law.com/blog/?p=247</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Editor’s  comment: We want our readers  to understand our view Mr. Blagojevich was the worst “governor” to include  governors of universities, school boards, governors on furnaces or golf-cart  engines; any “governor” you ever heard of. As we approach the end of the road  for Milorad “Rod” Blagojevich’s political career this [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Editor’s  comment:</strong> We want our readers  to understand our view Mr. Blagojevich was the worst “governor” to include  governors of universities, school boards, governors on furnaces or golf-cart  engines; any “governor” you ever heard of. As we approach the end of the road  for Milorad “Rod” Blagojevich’s political career this week, we have had a number  of readers respond to his many public diatribes to ask if he is being treated  fairly and whether the Senate trial is unfair. We want to provide you this short  reminder of all the many, many, many things this man did that led him to being  (hopefully) removed from all  public  office.</p>
<p>The  impeachment resolution pending for hearing tomorrow cites abuses of power that  included</p>
<ul>
<li>He conducted allegedly  completely political hiring at all levels of state  government—much of it in exchange for campaign contributions the Gov then got to  keep. An individual named Ali Ata testified under oath in federal court in the  Rezko trial, that he  provided $50K in campaign cash to  be appointed by this  Governor to a job paying about $125K per year. With deference to Mr. Ata, his  qualifications to get the important state post were giving the $50K. If it was a  crime from Mr. Ata to pay for the job, it should also be a crime for the Gov to  appoint him to the job.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>To those of us who laughed to hear  an individual named Stuart Levine repeatedly admit during the Rezko trial that  for several decades he used and abused most forms of illegal drugs/narcotics  including horse tranquilizers, please remember this admitted drug addict was  quickly anointed by the Gov to the Illinois Hospital Planning Board and  effectively put in charge of planning for  institutional medical care across our state. Mr. Levine’s  qualifications for the post were his orchestration of contributions to the Gov  and his then-fundraiser, Tony Rezko.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>Soon-to-be citizen Blagojevich  allegedly took $50K from a company that later got $500K in state business to do,  among other things, spray-cleaning of the state’s road salt domes. If you think  about it, there is no discernable reason to clean road salt containment  facilities, as we take road salt and throw it under cars, cabs and buses—who  cares if they are clean?</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>This Governor allegedly  acted on his own to illegally purchase  and attempt to import foreign flu vaccines with your state tax dollars in the  amount of several million dollars. He was  supposedly told <strong>before</strong> he made the purchase  the vaccines could not legally be imported into the U.S.  and anyone who tried would be arrested and charged with a crime under federal  law. The Gov went forward to purchase on his own authority. Those vaccines sat  during discussions/negotiations that went nowhere; they don’t “bend” federal law  because you are a Governor. The Gov then donated the vaccines you paid for to  Pakistan—however, the negotiations  and tomfoolery took so long the vaccines became outdated and had to be  destroyed. No, he didn’t offer to pay the state or you back.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>The Governor was invited to speak at  a fund-raiser for a foundation for the arts—he got a standing ovation for boldly  promising $1 million in state monies to boost their fund-raising efforts.  We were told he  then completely refused to answer calls  or take any actions to back up his braggadocio in front of the audience.  No, we were advised  they never got the money.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>During his initial campaign, the  Governor promised not to randomly replace state workers with his political pals.  Blagojevich was then sued by several former state employees who thought that he  was sincere in his campaign promises. Specifically, they noted his pledge good  workers need not fear losing their state jobs only to have them filled with  lackeys. Yet some prison officials, Republicans and Democrats alike, found  themselves suddenly unemployed. When they sued, the governor&#8217;s lawyers made an  astonishingly candid argument and noted Blagojevich&#8217;s promise was nothing more  than &#8220;classic political puffery.&#8221; Where we grew up, the priest and nuns taught  us puffery = lying.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>The Gov keeps bragging he was  elected twice to the  position by Illinois voters.  Please remember the monies he “raised” for his campaigns didn’t come from Oprah  or you and me. During his second election, he raised $27 million dollars and  outspent his opponent by a three-to-one margin. We argue when you  allegedly break just about every campaign and  ethics law to raise that huge war chest, it is hard to say you were fairly and  freely elected.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>Probably the most despicable thing  he will be remembered for is trying to intentionally stall millions due in state  funds for <strong>Children’s  Memorial Hospital</strong>. The partners of this firm have  donated money to this charitable institution that doesn’t turn away  infants/babies who need major surgery like heart transplants and other  emergency, life-threatening problems. Milorad tried to “hold up” the  CEO/President for $50K in exchange for releasing monies already due the  facility. When the Gov didn’t get the $50K in his coffers, we are told he tried  to find a way to get the state payments back.</li>
</ul>
<p>Please  don’t think this is a complete list—it goes on and on and on. We laugh to hear  he is now seriously  comparing himself to  <strong>Nelson  Mandela</strong><strong>,  Martin Luther King and Mahatma Gandhi</strong>, as political  prisoners. While  we haven’t researched  it, we don’t remember any of those folks trying to extort monies from children’s  hospitals. We agree with the characterization by <strong>Mayor  Richard M. Daley</strong> who referred to the  Gov as “cuckoo.” We salute  <strong>Republican  State Sen. <a title="http://www.newsdaily.com/news/matt_murphy/ Matt Murphy" href="http://www.newsdaily.com/news/matt_murphy/">Matt  Murphy</a></strong> who  drafted the rules for the impeachment hearings and his statement that  Blagojevich was creating &#8220;a little bit more of the theater of the absurd.&#8221; Mr.  Blagojevich was first sworn in as Gov on January 13, 2003 and won’t make it to  the end of January 2009. One of these days, we hope he understands his wife  Patti’s voice is on the tapes and she is at risk to also be indicted, leaving  their young children without a parent to care for them. He might be better  served to stop the public relations “puffery” and plead guilty and quietly move  along to enjoying delicious prison food.</p>
<p>We  promise to stop writing about him when the Senate reaches its verdict and will  move on to other things of more importance  to you, as our readers. We look forward to the administration of  <strong>Lieutenant  Governor Pat Quinn </strong>who actually is a  reformer; he worked to cut the size of the Illinois legislature. <strong>Pat  Quinn</strong> isn’t a main-stream  political back-slapper. Please don’t hesitate to send your thoughts and  comments.</p>
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		<title>Will honesty, fairness and ethics ever hit Illinois government as it relates to workers’ compensation?</title>
		<link>http://keefe-law.com/blog/2009/01/19/will-honesty-fairness-and-ethics-ever-hit-illinois-government-as-it-relates-to-workers%e2%80%99-compensation/</link>
		<comments>http://keefe-law.com/blog/2009/01/19/will-honesty-fairness-and-ethics-ever-hit-illinois-government-as-it-relates-to-workers%e2%80%99-compensation/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 19 Jan 2009 16:46:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Eugene Keefe</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Illinois]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Blagojevich]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Corruption]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[IWCC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Legislation]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://keefe-law.com/blog/?p=253</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Editor’s  comment: As we prepare for  tomorrow’s historic inauguration, we are amazed to see Governor Blagojevich  continue to mishandle the affairs of government for about two-three more weeks  from the “ivory tower” of his north side home. He clearly is dug in and not  listening to anyone. Having blown off [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Editor’s  comment:</strong> As we prepare for  tomorrow’s historic inauguration, we are amazed to see Governor Blagojevich  continue to mishandle the affairs of government for about two-three more weeks  from the “ivory tower” of his north side home. He clearly is dug in and not  listening to anyone. Having blown off his first patron in a scandal over a  garbage dump two years ago, the Gov’s last patron, Emil Jones is now out of the  Illinois  senate and can’t directly support or protect him.</p>
<p>We are  similarly fascinated to see his defense lawyer effectively drop the case in the  Illinois Senate and potentially leave the Governor both unrepresented and not  even present to hear the charges and evidence against him. He has already  indicated he is taking the protection of the Fifth Amendment and will not  testify. This may be the shortest trial to oust a Governor in U.S.  history—all the state senators have to do is to read and present the evidence  from the bill of Impeachment and vote. As things currently sit if the Gov isn’t  going to fight other than his occasional ramblings to the media, why the heck  not simply resign?</p>
<p>We want  all of our readers to know the Governor heralded in the low era of workers’  compensation as it relates to government in Illinois. We hope soon-to-be citizen  Blagojevich’s doings can be undone. We remain chagrined to see  “Senator-by-Humiliation” Roland Burris take office last week, after having  mortified himself to beg the recently-arrested Blagojevich for the appointment  and then embarrassed the U.S. Senate into approving him after the Democrat  leaders all initially vowed not to accept anyone appointed by the disgraced  Governor. We salute Secretary of State Jesse White for sticking to his guns and  staying above all of it.</p>
<p>What most  of our readers don’t know or remember is from memory lane. If you look it up, in  2002, then-gubernatorial hopeful Milorad Blagojevich was in a three-way primary  against now-Senator Roland Burris and former Chicago Schools superintendent Paul  Vallas. What put Blagojevich over the top was financial and related primary  support from the big Plaintiff firms in southern Illinois—the men and women who  brought you fun things like the World’s Largest Asbestos docket or about 5,000  pending asbestos filings in a tiny rural county of 260,000  folks.</p>
<p>The  zillionaire lawyers in that area aren’t shy about making as much money as they  can off of their political contributions. As we reported, a judge from  Madison  County awarded a Plaintiff  legal fee of $1.17 billion dollars or what we were certain was over $100,000 per  hour as part of the verdict against the tobacco companies; later wiped out by  the Illinois Supreme Court. From that shining example, understand the Plaintiff  bar in that area isn’t bashful about wanting a return-on-investment with  hand-picked hearing officers. Some of those lawyers have claims before the  IWCC.</p>
<p>Similarly,  in dealing with Mr. Pay-to-Play, the big-money southern Illinois Plaintiff firms  got almost-complete control of the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission.  They immediately picked a Plaintiff lawyer to be the Chairman they wanted,  switched funding of the Commission out of general tax revenues onto a new fee  levied exclusively on Illinois business, more than doubled the budget, changed  the name of the joint and starting adding Arbitrators who would tow the new line  of their political patrons. Most of the new Arbitrators were former Plaintiff  lawyers; some of them would seemingly rule only for one side of the bar—what we  started to call 99.44% Petitioner-pure. We are happy to report many of them are  now into the high 80’s but the place still remains wildly imbalanced toward  Illinois  labor.</p>
<p>What then  started to happen were all sorts of hi-jinks. First, we saw one of Illinois’ largest defense  firms strangely get a Commission post from the pro-labor Democrat Governor. Then  almost as fast as she got the appointment, rumors and investigations of  “pay-to-play” began and she quietly resigned from the position. It is  fascinating to see this “puzzle wrapped in a  conundrum surrounded by an enigma” has never again been  investigated or mentioned by either the U.S. Attorney or the media. We also  later saw another Commission appointment and her political patron hit the “Rezko  list” which was an Excel spreadsheet faxed to the Governor with a listing of who  got what jobs and who their political sponsors were. Trust us; the only thing  that surprised anyone is they were stupid enough to write it all down; this  again emphasized the Commission remained highly  politicized.</p>
<p>Finally,  we saw the silly PR battle of the 2004 and later 2005 Amendments to the Workers’  Compensation Act in which Illinois’ already sky-high rates and benefits  were again raised and new benefits instituted. As part of the strange bargain,  Illinois  business got</p>
<ul>
<li>A  clunky and partial medical fee schedule,</li>
<li>Non-mandatory utilization review the  Commission sometimes considers and most times ignores and</li>
<li>A  workers’ comp fraud provision that has no real “teeth” in the face of  wide-spread prosecutorial indifference.</li>
</ul>
<p>We remain  particularly troubled to hear:</p>
<ol>
<li>While we assure you the vast  majority of current Arbitrators are intelligent, honest and professional hearing  officers, our readers remain infuriated to see so many former claimant attorneys  acting as Arbitrators in this state. We still feel the Commission remains  completely out of kilter on a simple issue of locating and appointing actual  “civil servants” in these positions by employing a secret political selection  and retention system. We feel such systems lead directly to the “pay-to-play”  mentality that is the current sewer of Illinois politics. While police and fire  testing for open positions is posted on the web in this state, you and I and the  man-in-the-moon can’t find the results of civil service testing for the  Arbitration posts. We assure you the best candidates get selected only if they  have the political pull to get the appointments—that is not what civil service  is supposed to be.</li>
</ol>
<p>Some of our top hearing  officers also continue to work under the continued threat of immediate removal  from office if they simply do their jobs but issue rulings or conduct their  calls/hearings in a fashion not considered favorable to the politically  connected attorneys across the state. We are told the former Chairman would  routinely call Arbitrators at home to threaten them with immediate removal if  they conducted too many pre-trial hearings, rather than try claims. Again, that  is not how civil service is supposed to work. If the jobs are going to be  political, make them openly political appointments. If not, they should be  available to the best possible candidates who match the requisite  qualifications. And when we great solid hearing officers their jobs should come  with civil service protections and not be subject to the whim of the  administration of the moment. We hope the continued politicization of these  posts gets media attention and is reformed.</p>
<ol>
<li>Many Illinois government entities, including some departments  of the State of Illinois, refuse to provide light work or  institute mandatory light duty return to work programs. Outside Illinois, lots of states, counties and municipalities have  their modified duty programs on the web—you will not find such programs listed  for the State of Illinois, County of Cook or City of Chicago. It is not a coincidence such  government entities are now taxing Illinoisans at record rates. The lack of  modified work programs leaves hundreds of state and local government workers off  all work and collecting Illinois’ generous and tax-free TTD rates paid  for by you and me, when they could otherwise be working. If you don’t know and  understand how critical modified duty and return to work programs are to cutting  WC costs, please send a reply. We feel we need leadership in the various  government entities who will actually start to understand running good  government and avoiding truly unnecessary waste means running aggressive  workers’ compensation programs.</li>
<li>We are also told and infuriated to  hear there are state, county and municipal risk managers who quietly turn over  lists of non-litigated but accepted work injury claims for their employees with  addresses of potential claimants to Plaintiff law firms. The law firms then send  letters to the injured workers to seek to initiate attorney-client relationships  and file Applications. To our knowledge, if no money or other “favors” are  changing hands, there is nothing specifically “illegal” about such practices but  the ethics of it are deplorable. We truly feel there should be a law passed to  make such referrals illegal—it is completely contradictory to every concept of  good government and sound business practices for this to  occur.</li>
</ol>
<p>We will  never forget the joke from the comedians at <strong>Saturday  Night Live</strong> where they told our  Governor, “if you are too corrupt for Illinois politics, you are too corrupt.” We  want all parts of Illinois government, particularly the Workers’  Compensation Commission, to learn the lesson from the past administration and  start to move to being a place where honesty, fairness and an aversion to fraud  are the name of the game. Please do not hesitate to reply with your thoughts and  comments.</p>
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		<title>Saturday Night Live from New York: “When Illinois politicians think you&#8217;re too corrupt, you&#8217;re too corrupt.&#8221;</title>
		<link>http://keefe-law.com/blog/2008/12/15/saturday-night-live-from-new-york-%e2%80%9cwhen-illinois-politicians-think-youre-too-corrupt-youre-too-corrupt/</link>
		<comments>http://keefe-law.com/blog/2008/12/15/saturday-night-live-from-new-york-%e2%80%9cwhen-illinois-politicians-think-youre-too-corrupt-youre-too-corrupt/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Dec 2008 13:37:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Eugene Keefe</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Illinois]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Blagojevich]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Corruption]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Secrecy]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://keefe-law.com/blog/?p=453</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Editor’s  comment: It was painful to  watch our current Governor get lambasted and buffooned on Saturday Night Live this past weekend. And  we were even more pained to watch our state get pilloried by the comedians. It  is hard to say we don’t deserve it. The challenge may be whether Illinoisans [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Editor’s  comment:</strong> It was painful to  watch our current Governor get lambasted and buffooned on <strong>Saturday Night Live</strong> this past weekend. And  we were even more pained to watch our state get pilloried by the comedians. It  is hard to say we don’t deserve it. The challenge may be whether Illinoisans can  wake up and smell the coffee and do something about it. Trust us, this isn’t  just one more troubled official going down—there are still lots of kinky deals  and secret stuff everywhere in this state. The corrupt culture of Illinois politics didn’t  start overnight and it won’t end when this guy gets his  due.</p>
<p>What may  be hard for Illinois voters to do is to weed out the  worst, or perhaps the best, liars in the world. Our former Republican Governor,  who is now enjoying delicious prison food, came to the electorate with an  enormous cloud over his head from prior bad dealings in lower offices. But if  you asked him before and during his terms of public office, he was an updated  version of Honest Abe. We are chagrined to see he has now apologized publicly to  the electorate and the Willis family who lost their children due, in some part,  to his actions. Please note his apology doesn’t bring those children back nor  will it change the face of Illinois politics. While he was in lower state  office, the other Republican state leaders blindly followed the “ladder” which  allowed him to climb to the Governor’s office, despite substantial questions  over his honesty.</p>
<p>While in  high office, he committed trivial crimes that would make a carnival huckster  blush. He then had another former Republican Governor literally throw away $25  million in a failed legal defense—please note the level of the financial crimes  this “Great Apologizer” committed was less than a tenth, maybe even a 20th of  the amount spent to defend him. But stealing is stealing. They are now begging  our President for a pardon. Apology or not, if you read the blogs, we and  thousands of Illinoisans will spit on the ground at the mention of our current  President’s name if he gives that crook a pardon. His actions directly led to  the mess we currently have in this state and any pardon won’t undo  it.</p>
<p>As to our  current Gov, we have told our readers for more than six years he is someone who  cannot be trusted. We have told all of you over and over his claims to be a  “reformer” were high comedy. One leading Republican has pointed out how none of  the other Democrats outlined what a slippery guy he was during the last  election. Many of our readers replied to complain we had taken a political  position against a Democrat—we assure you our political position is any side of  the Illinois  political spectrum which stands for truth, justice and the American way. With a  few exceptions, looking from Waukegan to  Carbondale, we still don’t see many honest and  open Illinois  politicians you can readily trust in any meaningful  fashion.</p>
<p>This  current Gov is an amazing pretender—with his trademark bouffant hairdo and grin,  he has told everyone who will listen, right up to eight hours prior to being  arrested he was an innocent, decent and honest public official. While everything  about him seemed slippery, it is hard to listen to flim-flam and not question  whether it might be true. Until you read the criminal complaint, it is hard,  almost impossible, to countenance what we feel is his truly extraordinary level  of deceit. Prior to the shameful international embarrassment of our state last  week, we now find out almost every public official, on both sides of the  spectrum, have pushed this goof away. But the same officials who shunted him to  the curb all maintained a code of silence about how truly crooked and disgusting  a man he is and has been.</p>
<p>The news  reporters missed two aspects of what happened last week in our  state:</p>
<ol>
<li>Someone in high office ratted this  guy out. The FBI didn’t find out with a Ouija board or crystal ball&#8211;we salute  the unknown public official who secretly went to the FBI and said this loser was  selling a U.S. Senate seat. The <strong>New  York Times</strong> points to his former chief of staff  but we may never find out. That person’s affidavit was unquestionably used to  support the warrant  allowed our Governor’s office, phone and home to be bugged.  It led to one of the funniest and most ironic statements we have ever read in my  28 years as an attorney—the Gov told someone in a taped phone conversation to be  careful not to discuss selling the Senate seat <strong>on  the phone!!!</strong><strong></strong></li>
<li>Second, someone in the U.S.  Department of Justice or U.S. Attorney’s office pulled the plug on the  investigation prior to allowing a number of our other political leaders to make  crooked deals with this Governor clearly would have cost them their careers and  their freedom. We will only be left to wonder also why the decision was made to  rein it all in so quickly.</li>
</ol>
<p>Moving  forward, please note the Illinois political system is still wildly  flawed. Pay-to-play bargains, back-door deals and shenanigans may continue  without any real way to find out what is going on. If you or I or anyone wants  to do business with and for the State of Illinois, after January 1, 2009, you may still  be legally asked to donate up but not more than $25,000 to a political candidate  to get the job. We don’t consider that new law a substantial limitation on  pay-to-play politics; it just means you need to find more willing folks with  money who want to make a buck off the state. It may just be a matter of time  before another crook sees and grasps the same self-serving opportunities our  current Gov saw.</p>
<p>We assure  our readers the nuclear-level secrecy in Illinois state personnel matters at the  IWCC and other state agencies  is an Illinois tradition isn’t going to change  any time soon. Please don’t look for open job searches for important positions,  such as the chairmanship or seats on any state board and commission. For  example, you and I and your cousin may be able to apply for a job as an Illinois  Arbitrator but you won’t get it because you did well on a test or had PhD level  background and training in workers’ compensation. We don’t expect test scores to  ever be posted without a Supreme Court level fight. Don’t kid  yourself&#8211;candidates for state jobs are still going to have to have secret  patrons to get the nod and the way to get a political patron is to bring a  political bag-of-tricks to the table.</p>
<p>One hope  for the future is lots of government stuff won’t be “government-run” in the near  future. To raise money, we have seen the Chicago Skyway and their parking meters  moved to private companies with long-term leases in exchange for upfront cash.  Both Chicago Midway and O’Hare Airports may be private concerns soon. This is  going to take some of the snap out of political skullduggery, at least in  privatized venues.</p>
<p>We assure  <strong>Doug  Whitley of the Illinois State Chamber of Commerce</strong> and  <strong>Ed  Murnane of the Illinois Civil Justice League</strong> this state might be  much better off to privatize the courts or find some way to avoid the  political/ethical poison that comes from needing lots of campaign cash. We need  to get our hearing officers out of the same “pay-to-play” concept that comes  with judges/justices who are influenced by the evils of needing substantial  campaign cash to get their posts and then openly or implicitly reward the folks  who paid big money to get them there. If you don’t see how crooked the concept  is, you simply aren’t looking.</p>
<p>Finally,  we want all our readers to again understand anyone around Illinois politics has to  start to view this month, December 2008 as the nadir, the lowest point in the  political history of this state. We may soon have not one but two former  governors sitting in federal prison, begging for pardons. It won’t stop until we  start to dig out corruption and force our politicians to open up the process and  be honest with the electorate and themselves out the tough decisions facing us  in the future. Please reply with your thoughts and  comments.</p>
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