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Election 2012
Quick Hit
by Matthew Blake
6:03pm
Mon Nov 12, 2012

Despite Ballot Measures, Action Not Expected On Addressing Money In Politics

The financing of political campaigns is one area where the gap between what voter’s want and what the law of the land is appears vast.

In last week’s election, there were referenda in Illinois and across the country calling for nothing less than an amendment to the U.S. Constitution in order to overturn the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision. Yet U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Illinois) pretty much acknowledged to Crain’s Chicago Business that Congress has no interest in passing campaign finance reform laws. Read more »

Quick Hit
by Aricka Flowers
12:10am
Fri Nov 9, 2012

Freeport Sensata Employees Rally For Job Creation, Full Severance

Freeport workers at the Bain Capital-owned Sensata Technologies rallied today as part of a national movement calling on politicians to focus on job creation, not cuts to social services and education. The workers say the outcome of the election, which saw Democrat Cheri Bustos beat incumbent, Tea Party-backed Republican Bobby Schilling in the 17th congressional district where the Sensata factory lies, shows that voters are ready to see their elected officials work for them, not against them.

For months, the Sensata workers called on U.S. Rep. Schilling and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney to address the issue of the 170 U.S. jobs being outsourced to China. But their calls fell on deaf ears, with neither Schilling nor Romney ever taking the time to meet with the workers or address the issue. 

“Politicians who turned their back on workers, like Bobby Schilling and Mitt Romney, were rejected by voters,” said Tom Gaulrapp, who has worked at the plant for 33 years. “Our elected leaders need to stand up for good jobs, not job-killing budget cuts.”

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Quick Hit
by Matthew Blake
6:31pm
Thu Nov 8, 2012

Why Republican Super PAC, Dark Money Funds Fell Flat

If the Republican Party was the big election-day loser, maybe the second biggest loser was outside spending groups such as Super Political Action Committees and so-called “dark money” non-profits that need not disclose their donors. In the presidential race and majority of the close races for Congress, there was an inverse relationship between who won and who got the most outside money.

Nowhere was this more apparent than in Illinois. In six hotly-contested congressional contests, Republican candidates received drastically more outside cash than Democrats. Yet the Democrat won five of these races.

Only in the 13th congressional district did the GOP prevail. And even there, Republican Rodney Davis is ahead just 1,287 votes over Democrat David Gill, who will not concede until the provisional ballots are counted.

After the 2010 U.S. Supreme Court Citizens United decision, these outside spending groups could suddenly spend unlimited sums of money so long as they did not directly coordinate with political campaigns.

So why were Super PACs and dark money groups not the difference makers that campaign finance watchdogs feared and an array of political observers anticipated?  Read more »

PI Original
by Bob Skolnik
9:17pm
Wed Nov 7, 2012

The Golden Ticket: One Audience Member's Experience At Obama's Election Night Party

PI Reporter Bob Skolnik scored a coveted ticket to Obama's election night event at McCormick Place. He paints a picture of what it was like to be in the crowd for the historical night.

Quick Hit
by Michael Sandler
5:23pm
Wed Nov 7, 2012

Thompson Center Viewing Party Attendees Detail What They Want To See In Obama's Second Term (VIDEO)

The chilly November weather didn’t keep about 75 people from gathering at the Thompson Center in what would turn out to be an election night victory party for President Barack Obama.

As part of CNN’s nationwide “Election Night in America” promotion, a jumbo TV screen was erected just outside the building, and the pro-Obama crowd cheered every time it was announced the president won another state.

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