Less than 90 Days: Another Reminder
Near the checkout at a retail store the other day, I overheard
the seller behind the counter remark to the buyer on the opposite side, “Anything
will be better than Quinn, you know.”
The prospective purchaser nodded seriously and replied, “Tell me about
it.”
With little more than that message as the salient reason to
be governor, and sans any fleshed out or specific-laden examples of fiscal corrections
for the state of Illinois, Rauner’s attack ads seem to be working well
enough. Now 12 points ahead of Quinn, he might just
be able to sail on safely in commercial currents rather than actually explicate
his positions regarding property taxes, pension issues, infrastructure needs, Medicare,
poverty, education, etc.
In fact, the identical Bruce Rauner is described quite adequately
by one of my favorite “union ‘thug’ bosses” in a much earlier piece before
Rauner’s win in the primary. In case you
haven’t read it, it is worth your while.
And it’s worth your concern.
Bruce Rauner's big lie
Henry Bayer
Executive Director
|
January-February 2014
“When
the Illinois legislature audaciously looted the retirement savings of the
state’s public employees, many lawmakers dissented because the bill was clearly
unconstitutional and immoral.
But
a smaller group voted “no” because they felt the cuts weren’t deep enough. They
were taking their cues from the leading Republican candidate for governor,
Bruce Rauner, who wants to eliminate defined benefit pension plans and force
public employees into 401(k)-style plans, left to the vagaries of the stock
market.
How
did someone who was a political unknown until recently gain such influence?
It’s easy if you’ve got millions of your own money to spend promoting yourself.
Rauner has been “introducing” himself to voters in phony, folksy TV ads seeking
to disguise his status as a venture capitalist who made a good part of his
immense fortune feeding off of those very public pension funds he purports to
despise.
Rauner
says he’s an “outsider” to public service, but he’s spent decades soliciting
public pension fund dollars for his hedge funds to invest for a handsome fee. A
few years ago, he received millions in Pennsylvania pension dollars to invest –
after a $300,000 campaign contribution to that state’s Democratic governor.
Here
in Illinois, a company owned by Rauner paid a member of the Teachers’
Retirement System Board more than $25,000 a month. Not coincidentally, his firm
was selected to handle TRS pension dollars. The TRS member, Stuart Levine, is
now doing time in federal prison for public malfeasance.
Despite,
or perhaps because of, his sordid record of “paying to play,” Rauner is
attempting to pedal a large load of hooey about “union bosses” being in
“control” in Springfield.
One
only has to look at the passage of pension-slashing SB 1, which legislators
enacted in violation of the state’s constitution and over the vocal opposition
of thousands of union members, to know who’s really calling the shots in
Springfield. AFSCME and other public sector unions are important lobbying
forces at the state capitol, but our influence (and financial contributions)
can’t begin to compare to that of the corporate elite Bruce Rauner represents.
Of
course, Rauner’s real target isn’t a handful of union leaders, but the hundreds
of thousands of union members whose pay, pensions and workplace rights he wants
to diminish.
He’s
out to wipe out unions in the public sector because in his view they’ve raised
the salaries of public workers too high. It’s more than ironic that a man who
reported $52 million in income in 2012 claims employees who earn their
relatively modest salaries through hard work are overly compensated.
His
claim that AFSCME’s contracts with the state are the result of campaign
contributions to the governors with whom we negotiated is a flat-out falsehood.
Yes, we’ve negotiated contracts with the past five governors of Illinois that
improved the standard of living of union members. But in most of those cases
the union did not even endorse them in their runs for office. And, even when we
did, the agreements often were only won after intensive member mobilizations
all across the state.
In
Rauner’s world, the truth doesn’t matter – but money most certainly does. His
campaign is about whether the big money can sell the big lie.
The
regular guy Rauner plays on TV couldn’t be more divorced from who he really is.
He doesn’t want voters to know he owns nine homes and has claimed tax breaks on
three, even though he’s entitled to just one such exemption. He doesn’t want
them to know that while he lives in a fancy suburb, he falsely claimed
residency in the City of Chicago, placed a call to a top schools official, and
got his daughter ‘clouted in’ to a highly-regarded public high school.
Rubbing
elbows and scratching backs is what Rauner has done to amass his fortune. He’s
done it not only with Republicans, but also with Democrats like Rahm Emanuel,
who benefit from Rauner’s largesse and are quick to return the favor.
Bruce
Rauner wants to be governor to wipe out labor unions and destroy what little
remains of the middle class in our state – all while steering more money to him
and his friends. He’s trying to prey on the resentments of those who’ve already
lost jobs and income – turning their anger away from the Wall Street wolves who
robbed them and onto struggling public employees.
We
can’t let Rauner make us the punching bag of this election season. There’s
little more than 60 days left until the primary, and we are not about to spend
them hanging from the ceiling in the gym. Let’s step into the ring and start
fighting back before it’s too late. “
Nothing in this state will improve as long as Madigan is in power. The candidate that will get my vote is the one that comes up with a plan to rid the state of the scourge of Madigan.
ReplyDelete