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Governor
Quick Hit
by Micah Maidenberg
11:44am
Thu Oct 21, 2010

Defender Backs Quinn, Brady And Cohen Are "Wholly Unqualified"

The Chicago Defender, a historic voice in the city's black community, is endorsing Pat Quinn for governor. The newspaper's editorial board lauded what they said was Quinn's "close relationship" with African-Americans: "He has made a point of stepping up and considering African Americans for positions and he alone has promulgated a plan – even if it means a higher income tax – to help get Illinois out of debt and bring jobs back to the state."

The Defender offered some harsh words for the others seeking the top job in Springfield. State Sen. Bill Brady, the Republican candidate for governor, "has persistently ignored the Black community – staying away from the debates at Black venues and offering no evidence that he even knows the Black community exists."

Interestingly, the endorsement spends more words warning readers against voting for independent candidate Scott Lee Cohen than it does criticizing Brady. Cohen, the former Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor, is trying to make inroads with black voters in Chicagoland. Sun-Times columnist Carol Marin recently watched as Cohen, "in the mode of a Bible-thumping revivalist, declared that minorities are not getting their fair share of state contracts" at a South Suburban luncheon attended by some 30 black pastors. But the Defender writes, "A vote for Cohen sends the message that the Black electorate is easily duped."

In other gubernatorial endorsement news, the Rockford Register-Star's editorial board recently backed Brady in "a contentious compromise." "This is not," the paper wrote of Brady, "a ringing endorsement."

PI Original
by Adam Doster
10:24am
Thu Oct 21, 2010

Brady's Blago Bagmen (VIDEO)

If Bill Brady represents a clean break from the past, why is he attending fundraisers thrown by former Blagojevich insiders?

PI Original
by Micah Maidenberg
2:54pm
Wed Oct 20, 2010

Losing "Put Illinois To Work" Puts Illinoisans In Peril (VIDEO)

An initial analysis of the Put Illinois To Work program reveals that more than 27,000 Illinoisians have worked for 4,280 employers in 71 counties across the state. Funding for the program will dry up at the end of November, meaning job cuts for thousands. Is this the right move with the state's unemployment rate still so high?

Quick Hit
by Adam Doster
1:26pm
Wed Oct 20, 2010

Brady: The Anti-Green Nominee

The creation of Illinois' Renewable Energy Standard (RES) is one of the General Assembly's most encouraging legislative achievements of the past decade. The standard, established in 2007, stipulates that 25 percent of the electricity sold in Illinois by 2025 must be generated by renewable energy sources like wind and solar power. Experts predict that the law will create over 68,000 construction jobs and over 2,500 permanent operations and maintenance jobs over its duration -- not to mention help wean Illinois off of dirty fuel sources like coal. GOP gubernatorial nominee Bill Brady, however, isn't a fan.

Back in 2007, Brady cast one of just 13 dissenting votes against the bill (PDF) in the State Senate. (It decisively passed the House 80-33.) It's not surprising; Brady doesn't even believe that global warming is caused by human activities. Still, it should be alarming for Illinois voters who want to move the state's energy economy into the 21st century.

While it's unlikely Brady could convince the General Assembly to toss out the RES entirely, he could very well veto improvements to the underlying law. Just this past session, Gov. Pat Quinn signed a bill that speeds up the date by which utilities will have to procure solar power under the RES. (The Illinois Environmental Council, which made the bill one of their top priorities this past year, thinks the legislation will create 5,000 green energy jobs and will position Illinois as a regional leader in solar production.) Brady could also scuttle a series of reforms to increase energy efficiency or even move to pull the state out of the Midwestern Greenhouse Gas Reduction Accord Advisory Group, a promising consortium of six states and one Canadian province looking to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Four years is a long time to live under an anti-environmental chief executive.