Is it just a coincidence that the corrupt governor of Illinois Rod Blagojevich recieved a $1500 check from somebody who was given a patronage job by the Blagojevich administration? Don’t answer that, it was a purely rhetorical question.
For months, Gov. Rod Blagojevich has been fending off accusations he bungled government programs and awarded jobs and contracts to contributors and cronies. But suddenly, one issue has cut through the clutter: a $1,500 gift to one of his daughters.
The check came from a lifelong Blagojevich friend, and it arrived soon after the friend’s wife got a state job.
The governor has said he is unsure whether it was a birthday gift for one daughter or a christening gift for another, but he insisted it had no connection to the job. At the same time, he acknowledged asking his chief of staff to help the woman.
With just weeks to go before Election Day, the $1,500 check has gotten voters’ attention in a way some of the other allegations — involving audits, contracts and bureaucratic procedure — haven’t.
“People think, `My kid never got $1,500; there must be something wrong here,’” said Cindi Canary, executive director of the Illinois Campaign for Political Reform.
Blagojevich, a Democrat running for a second term, got elected four years ago as a reformer promising to clean up state government, but his administration has been mired in controversy for doling out jobs and contracts to the politically connected.
The race is playing out against a backdrop of political corruption, with convictions at Chicago’s City Hall, an FBI raid on Cook County’s government offices and the recent sentencing of Blagojevich’s predecessor, Republican Gov. George Ryan, to more than six years in prison for graft.
Blagojevich’s GOP opponent, Judy Baar Topinka, is using the $1,500 check to paint him as corrupt. She is running an ad that shows Blagojevich fumbling to answer questions about the money. And at a recent debate, her supporters held up huge, fake checks and shouted, “Hooray for birthdays!”
While it is not illegal in itself for Blagojevich’s family to accept a gift from a friend, it would be if the money was a thank-you for the new job.
The governor’s office initially said the check was a gift for his older daughter, Amy, on her seventh birthday in 2003. Blagojevich later told reporters it might have been a gift for his younger daughter, Annie, who was christened about the same time.
Blagojevich said there is nothing odd about his close friend Michael Ascaridis giving such a large gift. At the same time, pleading a faulty memory, he would not say whether Ascaridis has given similar gifts in the past.
The fact that Blagojevich doesn’t remember whether the check was supposedly a birthday gift or confirmation gift for one of his kids strains all credulity. That’s a big gift for either of those, and I would certainly remember quite well if someone gave me a gift that large for one of my children. Just another of the myriad reasons to throw Blago’s sleazy butt out in the street in November.
















The Virginia Progressive » I guess I don’t get it… said,
[...] Unlike how the (R)s handled Foleygate, as partisan as I am, if someone breaks the rules, even Give ‘em Hell Harry, they should pay. That is why I think Rep. William Jefferson (D-LA) should resign and be hauled off to jail for what looks like bribery money in his fridge. And while we are on the subject, I’m not too thrilled with Gov. Rod Blagovich (D-IL) either. [...]
October 16, 2006 at 1:18 pm