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Auditioning at the State GOP Convention to be Illinois’ Scott Walker

June 09, 2012 By: Cal Skinner Category: Aaron Schock, Adam Kinzinger, Bill Brady, Bobby Schilling, Jackson County, Jo Davies County, Joe Walsh, Kane County, Mike Bost, Pat Brady, Randy Hultgren, Scott Walker, Tom Cross

John Kass lamented the lack of an Illinois Scott Walker last Thursday.

This is the top of the Thursday column by John Kass. The graphic suggests trading Illilnois Governor Pat Quinn for Wisconsin Scott Walker.

He certainly is asking the right question:

“Where is Illinois’ Scott Walker?”

I was tempted to prepare a sign to affix to me chest asking.

“Are you the Illinois Scott Walker?”

but didn’t get around to it.

That thought pretty much left my mind until Illinois Republican Party Chairman Pat Brady started throwing red meat to the audience at the Tinley Park Convention.

Illinois Republican Party Chairman Pat Brady revs up the Convention crowd.

“Isn’t it nice to see courage rewarded?” Brady asked after explaining his joy at watching Walker beat back the Democrats’ recall effort.

He noted with irony and derision Pat Quinn’s reaction, “Illinois is different.”

“We are under the thumb of a controlling, vindictive, ethically challenged, self-serving leprechaun, and I mean no disrespect to leprechauns, Speaker Mike Madigan,” Brady said, setting the tone of the gathering.

Brady pointed out that a mere 5,000 votes in the right House districts could have made Tom Cross Speaker.

And just 31,000 votes would have meant Bill Brady would have been elected Governor, instead of Quinn.

A pick of six seats in the Senate and six in the House would turn control over to the GOP.

Aaron Schock

Next came speeches by elected officials.

First up was Peoria’s Aaron Schock, first elected in 2008.

He told of passing federal free trade legislation for Columbia and having received a call from the CEO of Caterpillar Corporation, based in his home town. He was congratulated and told the a new plant would be built that would create 1,400 new jobs.

But, that the plant would not be build in Illinois because of our Workers’ Comp and tort liability laws.

“If we keep the same boneheads in Springfield, we won’t get the benefits,” Schock said.

House Minority Leader Tom Cross was next.

State Rep. Mike Bost was greeting with a standing ovation. Click to enlarge.

Signaling a line of attack against Democrats outside of Chicago, he pledged opposition to Mike Madigan’s and John Cullerton’s proposal to transfer $20 billion of teacher pension burden from state taxpayers to property taxpayers.

The man whose rant against Madigan’s one-man rule spread throughout television and the internet was introduced next.

“We want Mike! We want Mike!” spread throughout the room.

Randy Hultgren

“If you take one thing out of this, other states don’t have one person that has total power,” Bost emphasized. “That’s a dictatorship!”

Former State Rep. and State Senator Randy Hultgren, elected to Congress in 2010 followed former colleague Bost.

“Illinois is broke.

“Illinois is broken.

“Reduced to a punchline.”

He told of being in Indiana and talked to its Governor, Mitch Daniels.

“Being Governor in the state next to Illinois is like living next to Homer Simpson.  Anything you do looks good.

“If Wisconsin can do it, Illinois can do it,” Hultgren concluded.

Adam Kinzinger

Adam Kinzinger, also elected in 2010, was next up.

“America is the greatest hope for civilization,” the Air Force pilot, now in the Illinois National Guard, started out.

He observed that young folks signing up for the Armed Forces today at age 18 were only 7 on 9-11.

“America is worth defending and I will defend it,” he said movingly.

“The American DNA is a winning DNA.

“The defense of this country also extends here at home.

“We have to beat Mike Madigan.

“We have to build a brick wall in Illinois” so Nancy Pelosi’s prediction that “the route to the [Democratic Party congressional] majority goes through Illinois.,”Kinzinger concluded.

Senate Republican leader Christine Radogno  stepped to the podium.

“We need reinforcements.

“We can’t do it without you.

“You are the grass roots.

“The wave is coming and we’re going to ride it.”

Brady then introduced Congressman Joe Walsh, also in his first term.

Joe Wash looking pleased at the standing ovation he got prior to his speech to the GOP State Convention.

He noted that Walsh got no help from the Republican Party in his narrow victory over Democrat Melissa Bean, but “that won’t happen again.”

“There is no person they want to beat more than Joe Walsh.”

Walsh entered to a standing ovation.

He began his speech by relating that he was a naturally smiling Irish Catholic guy.

Then there was the “but.”

“I did not go to Washington last year to smile.

“There’s very little subtle about Joe Walsh.

“When I say the President has not freaking clue what he is doing, I mean every word of it.”

Then Walsh took after Mike Madigan.

“No one person should run a state.

“He is a king.

“He is a dictator.

“He is corrupt.

“He symbolizes everything that is wrong in Illinois.

“Shame on us for not having the courage and the fortitude to say that.”

"I'm gong to ask you to be responsible for your own life," Joe Walsh charged the Republican activists.

Moving on to his re-election race against Tammy Duckworth, whose name he did not mention, Walsh said, “This White House and the entire Demcoratic Party has a target on my back.

He explained that he “just goe[es] and say[s] what [he] mean[s].

“Amazing things begin to happen.”

Walsh referenced John Kass’ column:

“Where is Illinois’ Scott Walker?”

[At this point I began wondering if he was standing on the stage.]

“The Republican Party has been compliant.

“We’ve lost our way.

“Every nine minutes somebody move out of this state,” he said emphasizing it was taxpayers moving elsewhere.

“That’s terrible.

“We can’t let that happen.”

Ratcheting up the rhetoric Walsh proclaimed Illinois Republicans “must stand for everything that the Mike Madigans don’t.

“We don’t stand for making everybody dependent on government.

“We stand for the opposite.

“We’re the party of everything else.

“I’m gong to ask you to be responsible for your own life.”

[Hear Joe Walsh's speech, posted by The Prairie State Review, here.]

Joe Walsh received another standing ovation as he left the stage.

Another standing ovation occurred after Walsh finished his speech.

Bobby Shilling

Freshman Congressman Bobby Shilling spoke next.

I didn’t get a chance to take notes, but I did get a decent close-up.

After him State Treasurer Dan Rutherford, head of the Mitt Romney effort in Illinois in 2008 and 2012, spoke.

He is widely thought to be laying the groundwork for a campaign for Governor in 2014.

A video greeting from State Comptroller Judy Baar Topinka completed the speeches.

The Chicago Tribune article by Rick Pearson failed to mention that Walsh even spoke, not to mention that he was greeted with a standing ovation and another one after he finished his speech.

He did note the attacks on Mike Madigan.

= = = = =

In the John Kass piece, the columnist mentions Walsh, but not favorably.

“I’m not talking about a Republican who’d scream with veins popping out of his or her neck and a wild angry look in the eye.  If you want someone in your face, you’ve got Republican U.S. Rep. Joe Walsh, and you can have him.  What was compelling about Walker wasn’t his in-you-face personality.  It was his ideas.”

But, as Party Chairman Pat Brady reporting Demcoratic Party Governor as saying, Illinois is different.”

From the crowd’s reaction to Walsh, I think Kass’ take on Walsh was not shared by a large proportion of the Republicans in attendance.

How to Solve the Sun City Property Tax Inequities

June 20, 2011 By: Cal Skinner Category: Assessments, Bill Ottley, Cal Skinner, Cal Skinner Jr., Cook County, Eagle Ridge Resort, Farm Bureau, Galena Territory, Grafton Township, Illinois Ariculture Association, Janet Siers, Jo Davies County, Kane County, McHenry County, Mike Tryon, Rutland Township, Sales Ratio Study, Sun City

As the sponsor of the overlapping tax district bill in 1973, I think there may be a way to tweak it to make sure what happened in Sun City won’t happen again.

A weighted average is now used.

That works, except on the Cook County overlapping districts.

And with the exception of the Huntley situation this year.

[I figured out how to fix the Cook County inequity, but no one has the will to take it on and it's not your concern.

[To fix the overlapping tax district problem between Cook County and the collar counties, each class of property has to be equalized. Now, a raw weighed average is used. That results in homeowners in Cook County still being assessed lower than homeowners in the collar county portions of overlapping schools, municipalities, etc. No legislator has the courage to fix this problem.]

A Sun City sign on the Kane County side of the line.

Pete Gonigan of the First Electric Newspaper has nailed what caused the inequity in real estate taxation in Sun City.

Grafton Township Assessor Bill Ottley used a one-year average comparing assessments to sales prices (called a “sales ratio study”), while Rutland Township Assessor Janet Siers used the three-year average mandated by state law.

[The three-year average was an ill-conceived concession I made back in the 1970's at the behest of the Illinois Agriculture Association. Farmland then was assessed according to fair market value, the same way homes and businesses are. But, developers were buying property for Galena Territory where Eagle Ridge Resort is located in Jo Davies County. The price per acre was apparently well above the price being paid for farm land to be used for farming. The Farm Bureau argued that a three-year average should be used so such price spikes would not drive up the assessment of all farmland in such situations.

[I was on the committee figuring out how to draft the law to define assessments. My preference was a one-year average, but the three-year average idea carried the day. Ironically, that was not good enough for the Farm Bureau. In short order, a law was passed which mandating assessing farmland based on productivity. That resulted in homeowners now paying much higher taxes on their houses than farmers pay on their land, which is worth substantially more.]

In 1973, I sponsored of the original bill to implement the overlapping tax district equalization authority of the 1970 State Constitution in 1973.

That section of the Revenue article was inserted by Barrington Con-Con Delegate Jeanette Mullin. She, with Jeff Ladd, served a two-township deep district above the southern boundary of McHenry and Lake County running from Lake Michigan to the western edge of Grafton and Dorr Townships.

Mullin had a special interest in the problem because she lived west of the Barrington High School just north of the Cook-Lake County. That meant she and her Cuba Township neighbors paid far higher tax bills tn homeowners living in Barrington Township.

That they still do testifies to the inadequacy of my 1973 legislation.

The Sun City inequities can be rectified by putting into law a definition of the years to be used in the sales ratio study.

Obviously real estate taxes will not be fairly apportioned if one county uses a 3-year average and another a 1-year average.

Although Governor Pat Quinn has not yet signed the reapportionment bill crafted by Illinois Democratic Party leaders, it appears that both the Kane and McHenry County parts of Sun City will be in the same state representative and senate districts.

Mike Tryon, who has announced his candidacy in the state rep. district and faces no opposition, and whoever is elected state senator (no announced candidate yet) will not be able to please both parts of Sun City.

If Kane County homeowners in Sun City see their taxes go down, the difference will be picked up by those in McHenry County.

About all the legislators will be able to say is they are trying to make things fair.

How Social Conservatives Won the McHenry County Board Video Slot Machine Fight

December 17, 2009 By: Cal Skinner Category: Barbara Wheeler, Cal Skinner Sr, Dan Ryan, Dave Smith, David Smith, Ed Dvorak, Gambling, Gambling Expansion, Illinois Church Action on Alcoholism and Addiction Problems, Illinois Family Institute, Jack Franks, James Blue, Jim Heisler, Jim Kennedy, Jo Davies County, John Hammerand, Ken Koehler, License and Liquor Committee, McHenry County Board., Methodist Church, Mike Tryon, Pam Althoff, Patroits United, Riverboat, Robo-Calls, Slot Machine, Slot Machines, Stop Predatory Gambling, Sue Draffkorn, Sun City, TEA Party, Tom Grey, Video Gambling, Video Poker, Yvonne Barnes

It’s been a couple of weeks since the McHenry County Board bucked Chairman Ken Koehler, State Senator Pam Althoff, State Rep. Mike Tryon and those who stand to gain financially from placement of video poker machines in local taverns and restaurants.

It’s time to tell the tale of how McHenry County Establishment got narrowly beaten in that fight.

The vote was close (13-10-1) and my guess is that video poker proponents will try to reverse that vote after new county board members are sworn in, if the people they back defeat anti-gambling incumbents like District 2′s Barbara Wheeler.

Video gambling was the first local issue taken on by Patriots United, the folks who coordinated the Independence Day TEA Party, picketed State Rep. Jack Franks’ office on a cold spring day about his sponsorship of a bill considered pro-abortion and gun control, held a well-attended forum on the Democrats’ health care reform, and co-sponsored with the McHenry County Young Republicans a candidates’ night for 8th congressional district GOP aspirants.

Members attended John Hammerand’s License and Liquor Committee meetings and sponsored a debate between proponents and opponents.

PU Panel Gambling Pro and Con

Here are Patriots United video slot machine debate panels, ban proponents on the right, opponents on the left. Opponents, from left to right, are Tom Grey, David Smith and James Blue.

Then, Patriots United had a forum in Woodstock during which video poker machine salesmen debated three social conservatives:

They urged their members to contact county board members, but that was not what did the trick.

They used this robo call technique I first saw tobacco companies us in lobbying against cigarette tax hikes maybe ten years ago.

Call people, explain the issue and ask if they would like to speak to their county board member.

Since there are four county board members per district, how would that work?

The Illinois Family Institute selected six county board members considered to be approachable on the issue.

They were

  • Yvonne Barnes in District 1
  • Jim Heisler in District 2
  • Ed Dvorak in District 3
  • Sue Draffkorn in District 4
  • Jim Kennedy in District 5
  • Dan Ryan in District 6

From 1,334 to 1,453 calls were made in each district.

From to 649 to 774 of the calls were answered by voters. After the recorded pitch, voters were asked to push a phone button if they wished to be transferred to their county board member.

There were over fifty transfers for all but one district.

From the time my father served on the county board, I can tell you that he never got that many calls on any subject. On some zoning matters, especially the landfill ones, he might have gotten fifty letters. One phone call on a subject was a big number back in the 1980′s.

Getting dozens of calls must have sounded like a tidal wave.

And it was. You can’t find an issue where that many constituents have contacted county board members by phone. Undoubtedly, some of them were friends and supporters of each member.

A little over half of the calls were answered in person; the rest went to answering machines.

Of the six county board members receiving calls, only Huntley’s Ryan, a Sun City resident, voted in favor of allowing video slot machines in establishments serving liquor in unincorporated McHenry County.

Barnes, Kennedy and Ryan are up for election this year. District 6′s Ryan is the only one with GOP primary opposition.

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Check out possible targets for the pro-gambling forces in this post.