Bruce Rauner: A Fortiori
Here are a couple of important dates coming up quickly:
Wednesday, October 8th: Judge Belz in Sangamon County will rule on
the request for judgment on the
pleadings to the affirmative defense; that is, a decision whether to find the defendant
Attorney General’s argument for “necessary police powers” as inadmissible or unconstitutional. This motion, brought last month by ISEA,
RSEA, WAO, and IRTA, may be settled once and for all; but that’s unlikely. More likely, the magistrate may decide to issue
a continuance, provide a partial judgment, select for inclusion only specific
arguments or parties, avoid a holistic decision on the request – opting for the
Supreme Court to handle the issue in its entirety. Whatever, it will be optimistically one more
critical footstep on a legal path to an affirmation of pension security. Mark the calendar.
Wednesday, October 15th: One week later. Any extensions in the filings of federal and
Illinois income taxes will be due, unless one is in a war zone like Afghanistan
or a federally declared disaster area like flood-blanketed Colorado…or one is maybe
a clever fund manager, like Bruce Rauner.
You might remember Bruce Rauner chose to not to release his
2013 tax returns, leaving opponents Quinn and Vallas to generate commercials
criticizing his wealth in general terms.
In fact, one persistent reporter cornered Vallas until finally getting a
growling bark that Rauner was just too rich to be a governor.
Rauner promised to release his tax returns before the next
important date: Tuesday, November 4th:
Election Day. But, of course he did,
because the usual six-month extension on federal taxes ends just 20 days before
the election. And his mandatory
allowance to maintain fiscal secrecy for the current year will end and become
public/press record. But not all of it.
While the Democrats
finger-wagging attacks have been concentrating on the mathematical aspect of
Rauner’s wealth – somewhere between over-opulence and obscenity – it may very
well be Rauner’s charitable contributions that would provide an argument a fiorati (for still a stronger reason) to
vote for Quinn to diminish Rauner’s chances.
If the eventual release of Rauner’s 2013 income taxes
reveals anything worth furrowing eyebrows, it will very likely be the political
charitable contributions he provided to various PAC’s and “shadow” groups which
tirelessly promote the far right wind agenda of a particular cabal in our post
Citizens United America.
A cursory review of his available past records indicate that
Bruce Rauner has invested heavily in the far-right agenda, and they in turn
have become quite ready to invest in his rise from hedge fund manager to
governor of the State of Illinois.
When you think of Rauner, think also of a four-letter word: Koch.
One of Rauner’s most ardent supporters in Illinois is the
Illinois Policy Institute; CEO John Tillman was in the front of the line to
tender $5000 for Rauner’s initial exploratory committee considering his run for
governor.
Of course, Tillman might have been expected to give at least
that much as records indicate that Rauner has provided over $1/2 million to the
I.P.I. over the last several years (http://www.sj-r.com/article/20131107/News/311079879).
And the I.P.I. is one of 30 state level ALEC (American
Legislative Exchange Council) groups, receiving copious sums of money from
shadow groups like the State Policy Network , which itself collects some $83
million annually from major corporate donors like Koch Industries, Philip
Morris, Kraft, etc. (http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/dec/05/state-conservative-groups-assault-education-health-tax) Interestingly, the donors can only suggest
where their donation might be used or most helpful; therefore, the specifics of
amounts and identities are washed from the donation. All legal, all under the table.
As a recipient of money from the State Policy Network, the
I.P.I. is able to shield its supporters and even those they decide in turn to
support politically – like Rahm Emanuel, a politician considered malleable in
the I.P.I.’s free-market argument to morph pensions into 401k’s (Guardian). As a member of ALEC and a recipient of CATO
Fund directives/funds; I.P.I.’s consistent mantra is to replace all defined
benefit programs with defined contributions, a position first taken and then
recanted by the challenger Rauner in the spring of 2014. (http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Illinois_Policy_Institute)
Other beneficiaries of Rauner’s right-wing largesse include
political groups and PAC’s which unnervingly flesh out much of his meager and
skeletal descriptions of political fixes and future behaviors. When Rauner
first blundered into the minimum wage fray, questioning whether there should be
any minimum wage at all; he was simply parroting the position of his political
colleague Ted Dabrowski, spokesperson for the I.P.I., which would deny any set
wage for any work performed in a free market.
The Heartland Institute, a right-wing group that worked
endlessly to blunt or deny any scientific evidence for climate change, is
another targeted benefactor of Rauner’s giving.
Indeed, Heartland Institute has used money – like the $50,000 from
Rauner in 2012 – to suggest (seriously?) that drilling for oil in places like
Lake Michigan is totally acceptable. “It
makes perfect sense to drill in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, the Gulf
of Mexico, and, yes, the Great Lakes, too…” (http://illinoisfreedom.com/news/follow-money-rauners-2-million-tea-party-groups-undermines-moderate-pose/
).
Nearly another $1/2 million of Rauner’s assistance went to
an organization devoted to the opposition to marriage equality, and while
Rauner recently suggested he might have vetoed the Illinois bill that was
passed, he has carefully avoided informing the public he has been spending
widely to prevent any such bill from getting onto the floor of the General
Assembly. In fact, he has given Jack
Rosen, the head of the Family Taxpayers Association, all the support he can,
and Rosen has expressed clearly what he thinks of the LGBT platform: “We all
know that it (a gay lifestyle) is a kind of death sentence.” (Illinois Freedom)
As for pensions for workers?
Rauner is nothing if not constantly vacillating. Yet, if pensions fall under the aegis of
security for those who worked their lives in hope of a somewhat comfortable and
independent end, knowing the Rauner in 2012 provided another nearly $1/2
million to the Cato Institute, the Club for Growth, and Americans for
Prosperity should clarify his position on pensions and Social Security and
Medicare. Each of these Koch-supported
groups have strongly worked behind the scenes on the federal and local level to
eradicate Social Security and Medicare as overly costly entitlements given to
working class people.
The lists go on…and on.
FreedomWorks, another conservative PAC that works to deny climate change
theory and any manifestations of government healthcare (Medicare, Affordable
Care Act) received another $25,000 in 2012.
Sourcewatch describes FreedomWorks as a significant tea-party group that
in turn funds groups like the I.P.I.
(Sourcewatch)
In education, ironically, Rauner and at least one of the
Democratics on the gubernatorial ticket
can agree: on their perception of what’s best for education. Vallas and Rauner are clearly on the same
page when it comes to supporting/promoting the privatization of public
education, one of the last cash cows abruptly under the long, narrow eye of
Wall Street investors interested in managing all that public money. In this arena, Rauner’s beneficence is
mammoth indeed: Noble Network of Charter
Schools received $2 million on 2012; Stand for Children, $600,000; Teach for
American Chicago, $1,100,000 (and Payton Prep, $200,000)
Just as hedge fund manager Bruce
Rauner considers these chosen targets of his wealth and fiscal favoritism good
business sense – they will if successful return money to him as and if they can
change the nature of the business environment – so too do they consider Rauner
and other politicians investments to get this done. Quid
pro quo.
Now, Illinois’ public unions and
educational groups inflict self-injury
and bitterness by urging members of one organization to support Quinn, unlike
the other group…
and…
ludicrously laud Quinn for positions
inconceivable to anyone remotely aware of what the current Governor has done in
his “earthly” tenure.
Endorsements like “Gov. Quinn
supports a continuation of our defined benefits pension plan that guarantees
benefits for life” is so off-the-mark that its use to dissuade a reluctance to
vote this year is dissembling and manipulative.
(IEA-R letter urging vote for Quinn)
Honesty would have forced a poignant
and perhaps more uncomfortable rationale:
“While current Gov. Quinn has not been an ally nor an advocate for
public workers’ defined pension benefits, our union name here encourages our members to vote for Quinn rather than
Bruce Rauner, and then become active in the efforts to make significant changes
in the leaderships in Springfield to assure the respect given to those who
toiled for the State and seek some sense of security –as promised – in their
later years.”
A winning Rauner promises a spate of
Koch’s money and right wing influence in my state of Illinois that I cannot
accept: I will vote to defeat him. On
the other hand, Quinn represents the worst kind of politician, a populist who
plays to the people but who has no regard for the Illinois Constitution he
swore to uphold and the promises to the workers in Article XIII, Section 5. After November 4th, I will work to find an alternative to him and those
who would knowingly accept or compromise with his duplicity.