From the Tribune (Editorial)
Now it's the Senate's turn
April 9, 2008
With the Illinois House voting to let citizens add a recall amendment to the state
constitution, Senate President Emil Jones and his fellow Democrats have a choice:
Will they, too, let the rest of us vote a recall amendment up or down on Nov.
4?
Or will they be just the kind of arrogant and unresponsive public officials who
make citizens yearn for the power to recall them?
The betting of some Springfield prognosticators is that, with House members voting
75-33 Tuesday to permit a November vote, Jones won't dare give senators a chance
to agree. To do so would imperil Gov. Rod Blagojevich, the other member of what
must be the world's tiniest mutual admiration society.
We're not so sure, though, that Jones is that bent on humiliating his fellow Democratic
senators.
Yes, Illinois Dems reasonably can expect a good day come Nov. 4, especially if
local talent Barack Obama heads their ticket. But not every Democrat is a sure
bet.
Example: State Sen. Debbie Halvorson of Crete wants to pick up what's been Republican
Jerry Weller's congressional seat. She's already stuck explaining to voters—many
of whom don't know her—that they shouldn't hold against her the serial antics
of Blagojevich. Does Halvorson also want to spend seven months explaining why
a senator with her supposed stature in Springfield couldn't even get her leader
to let voters decide whether to amend their constitution? We'd love to hear her
excuse—but not as much as her Nov. 4 opponent would love to hear it.
And imagine the embarrassment to Obama—not great, perhaps, but delicious—if
Jones, the U.S. senator's political patron back in Illinois, flat-out prohibits
voters from having an option to recall inept pols. The national political writers
would have a grand reason to start writing again about the Illinois culture of
political sleaze—not a topic Obama is eager for them to revisit.
Jones tried to wave off questions Tuesday, claiming he hadn't yet read the bill—it's
not "War and Peace"—but quipping that he'd support the idea of
recall "as long as they include the House members." In light of the
Democratic dysfunction in Springfield, our guess is that not so many Illinois
citizens are guffawing.
That said, Jones and his Democrats have so many ways to game this: They can bury
recall legislation in a dead-end committee, they can change it in ways the House
won't accept, they can ignore it.
Or Jones and his fellow Democratic senators can give Illinois citizens a voice.
If the senators, or the citizens, don't want this amendment, they're free to vote
against it.
What Jones and Co. aren't free to do is ignore the overwhelming majority of Illinois
voters who expect to see a recall amendment on the ballot when they go to the
polls Nov. 4.