Here’s a quick summary of the allegations:
- He attempted to sell President-elect Barack Obama’s vacant Senate seat for campaign contributions or personal gain.
- He pressured the Tribune Company to fire members of the paper’s editorial staff that had been critical of the governor by threatening to withhold state funding.
- He tried to get campaign contributions for signing a bill into law that would give a percentage of casino profits to the horseracing industry.
- He [CORRECTION] schemed to get $500,000 campaign contribution from a state highway contractor in relation to an upcoming Illinois Tollway expansion.
- He withheld $8 million from Children’s Memorial Hospital in Chicago in an attempt to extort campaign contributions from a hospital executive.
- He appointed Ali Ata as the executive director of the Illinois Finance Authority in return for a $25,000 campaign contribution. Ata has pleaded guilty to criminal charges.
- He awarded multiple government contracts in exchange for campaign contributions.
- He traded state permits and authorizations for campaign contributions.
- He mishandled “efficiency initiatives” that consolidated functions of state agencies and advised them to violate the state Constitution and spending laws in order to comply with the initiatives.
- He expanded the state-sponsored Family Care health insurance program without legislative approval or funding.
- He ordered doses of European flu vaccine that the state didn’t need without federal approval. The doses were never used before they expired.
- He illegally imported prescription drugs from foreign countries through the I-SaveRx program.
- He violated state and federal law when hiring and firing some state employees.
We'll have much more soon. The governor's scheduled to speak in Chicago at 2 p.m., and the special Illinois Senate committee drafting rules for an impeachment trial could release a draft of rules this afternoon.
on the charge that:
ReplyDelete"He tried to get campaign contributions for signing a bill into law that would give a percentage of casino profits to the horseracing industry."
note that:
Tom Cross received $30,000 from the same horse track lobbyist association that Blago was accused of soliciting a bribe from.
Lou Lang: $22,00
Susan Mendoza: $2,000
Jack Franks: $1,250
Al Riley: $1,000
Ken Dunkin: $500
to find more go to the Illinois elections page and do a search of contributions using the term "Racing"
I posted that and am not anonymous
ReplyDeleteGary Klass
gmklass (a) ilstu.edu
Interesting point. And I don't intend to defend those legislators, but they are different from the governor in that they do not have the power to sign bills into law. Nor can they threaten to not sign bills into law if they don't get their desired campaign donations.
ReplyDelete