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Q5echo
asymetrical scepticism

Registered: Feb 2004
Location: Dallas
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DCCC chair Rahm Emanuel on "This Week" after the scandal broke on September. Below that, excerpts from pages 45-46 of the ethics committee's report.
| quote: | GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS (ABC NEWS)
(OC) All week long there have been suggestions by - on talk radio and by Republicans and their allies that this was perhaps a Democratic dirty trick. And I just want to ask you plainly, did you or your staff know anything...
REP RAHM EMANUEL (CHAIR DEMOCRATIC CONGRESSIONAL CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE)
No.
GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS (ABC NEWS)
(OC) About these e-mails or instant messages before they came out?
REP RAHM EMANUEL (CHAIR DEMOCRATIC CONGRESSIONAL CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE)
George, never saw them. And I'm going to say one thing, let's go through the facts right here. . . |
from the report:
| quote: | Upon receiving the e-mails, Halliwell fowarded them to her boyfriend, Justin Field, who then worked for the House Democratic Caucus, and also to her boss, Mike Grisso, a registered lobbyist. Field was disturbed by the nature of the e-mails, and shortly after he received them, he shared them with his friend and colleague, Matt Miller, who was then the communications director for the Democratic Caucus. The two discussed the nature of the e-mails and possible actions. Miller believed that the e-mails were inappropriate, and suggested that they be given to the press. Miller testified that he considered providing the e-mails to the Committee on Standards or to the Page Board, but feared that "nothing would come" of such action. He says that he also considered providing them to law enforcement, but believed that the e-mails, though inappropriate, did not evidence the commission of a crime.
Miller testified that in approximately November 2005, he redacted Savoy's email address and Field's name from the top of a printed copy of the emails and faxed them to reporters that he knew at both the Miami Herald and the St. Petersburg Times. Miller said that later in November or in December, he also provided the emails to a reporter from Roll Call. Both Field and Miller testified that neither then Rep. Menendez, who was then the chairman of the Democratic Caucus, nor any other person in the office of the Democratic Caucus, was provided with the emails or was involved in the decision to provide them to the press. Miller testified that also during the fall of 2005, in part as a "gut check" regarding his impression of the emails, he provided the emails to the communications director of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee ("DCCC"). Miller testified that he was not aware of what actions his DCCC counterpart may have taken with respect to the emails, but he expected that he would share them with the press. Miller testified:
I think I game them to him not with any direct expectation, but with the understanding that [the DCCC communications director] is someone that talks to reporters all day. If there's something that I'm missing, maybe - maybe there's a way that he could get the - you know, that he could give them to a reporter; you know, in the course of talking to reporters that he might find a way. I didn't have any direct expectation, but in general.
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Dec-10-2006 22:54
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MisterOpus1
Grumpy Old Fart

Registered: Dec 2001
Location: Kansas City
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Someone mentioned in another thread about the corruption of politics in Chicago and Illinois, if I remember right.
Looks like there might be something behind that, especially in reference to Emanuel.
| quote: | Emanuel makes a point of airing peeve
Published November 22, 2006
Powerful U.S. Rep. Rahm Emanuel (D-Tomczak) just hates it when I use the D-Tomczak reference in my column.
He made that clear the other day, after another round of post-election interviews, in which no one offended him by invoking D-Tomczak. Other subjects were discussed, including the congressional Democrats pushing a much-needed ethics policy through Congress, and naturally, Emanuel's vast political cunning and acumen.
But no D-Tomczak.
"And you're the one who's going to bring it up, right?" Emanuel told me on Tuesday, bringing it up before I could.
Then he whipped out his index finger, pointing it at my chest as we stood in the middle of the Tribune newsroom. Emanuel wasn't yelling and his finger wasn't jabbing me--much. It was a theatrical gesture to let colleagues who were watching know just how much he hates it when I identify him as U.S. Rep. Rahm Emanuel (D-Tomczak).
"So, you're going to bring it up?" he said, feisty.
Rahm, you really can't stand the D-Tomczak thing, eh?
"You're right," Emanuel said, with a sort of grin. "You keep mentioning him [Tomczak] in connection with me in your column. That bothers me, because I'm more than that."
Perhaps.
Emanuel is the political operative being credited these days with the Democratic takeover of Congress. He's ruthless and hardworking and, in victory, deserving of post-election applause.
But if City Hall had not sent Don Tomczak, the corrupt city water department boss, to Emanuel's congressional campaign in 2002--and Tomczak's political army of hundreds of city workers who stumped the precincts with the promise of overtime--then Emanuel wouldn't have narrowly defeated a local grass-roots Democrat.
And Emanuel wouldn't have been in a position to bask in all the national media love.
The national media narratives involving Emanuel and another Chicago Democrat, U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-Rezko), have already been approved and written.
They're scripts to congeal the national mind, not to be deviated from in polite society. So you're not supposed to mention the soon-to-be imprisoned Tomczak around Emanuel. And never, ever mention the indicted Chicago political Real Estate Fairy, Tony Rezko, to Obama, or ask if Rezko sprinkled magic fairy dust just as Obama purchased his fine home for hundreds of thousands of dollars less than the asking price.
So, the national story lines have been completed, and uttering "Tomczak" or "Real Estate Fairy" is considered almost rude.
But in federal court the day before, I watched four of Mayor Richard Daley's underlings sentenced to federal prison for their roles in amassing giant and illegal patronage armies of city workers who pounded the precincts for the mayor's candidates, including Emanuel.
The four underlings were sentenced for their roles in circumventing federal anti-patronage court orders and rigging thousands of tests and job applications to build those armies of city workers, the salaries and overtime paid for by Chicago taxpayers. That investigation continues reaching up the political ladder.
Two are said to be cooperating with the FBI. Two others are playing the tough guy for now, including Robert Sorich, the mayor's behind-the-scenes No. 2 at Daley's Office of Intergovernmental Affairs.
"I stand before the court and my friends and family to let them know I am not a broken man," said Sorich, defiant, though he was given a 46-month prison sentence. "As I stand before them, I am a lucky man because I have their support. I have tried to do my best and I have tried to be fair."
If the FBI has time on its hands, it might want to look at the Chicago Transit Authority. The CTA has a huge payroll, with political hacks retiring from City Hall with full city pensions, only to get second jobs at the CTA, also with full CTA pensions.
Weepy mayoral apologists argue that Daley underlings shouldn't be sent away to the Club Fed in Oxford, Wis. But patronage armies are political guns, projecting power and control. They provide leverage for the friends of City Hall, men who've made fortunes hauling in taxpayer money in deals involving trucking, insurance, real estate, waste, wrought iron fencing, development and on and on.
And all I wanted to know from political operative Emanuel was this: Who sent Tomczak's army?
"Who?"
Yes, was it Mayor Daley? Or Billy Daley, or [mayoral brain] Tim Degnan? Who?
"I don't know."
Of course you do.
"That's your question?"
Yes, that's the question, I said.
"No, that's your question," Emanuel said, repeatedly declining to answer. "That isn't `the' question. That's `a' question, it's your question, not my question."
If he's more than (D-Tomczak), it's quite possible that he's (D-Philosopher).
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/...ack=1&cset=true |
Interesting. Also note the Obama reference in there as well. Like I said, I've got a problem with this guy for lying in public about his involvement with the Foley ordeal. But it only adds more fuel to my resentment with him knocking out a grassroots Dem. with dirty $.
And Obama pulling a Cunningham with a purchase of a house at hundreds of thousands under the going price? Better hope there's a good excuse for him on that one, otherwise this is some lovely dirt that will most assuredly show up again come '08.
___________________
Whence September dusk grows crisper still,
with leaves all crimson conquered,
I yearn to shout,
and dance about,
and stick pickles in my honker...
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Dec-12-2006 03:27
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