View Full Version : Chicago election
Rahm Emanuel was elected mayor of the largest city in Illinois.
IMO, this demonstrates:
There is one party rule in Chicago, and for the most, part in the rest of the state.
The state of Illinois will continue to slide downhill.
The state has not "hit bottom" yet, and no serious attempt to deal with the problems will be made until it does.
Footnote: the problems here are as bad or worse than those in Wisconsin, but Governor and Legislature don't have the sense/fortitude/inclination to deal with them, so they merely postpone the crisis.
Bubblehead1980
02-23-11, 04:39 PM
Rahm Emanuel was elected mayor of the largest city in Illinois.
IMO, this demonstrates:
There is one party rule in Chicago, and for the most, part in the rest of the state.
The state of Illinois will continue to slide downhill.
The state has not "hit bottom" yet, and no serious attempt to deal with the problems will be made until it does.
Footnote: the problems here are as bad or worse than those in Wisconsin, but Governor and Legislature don't have the sense/fortitude/inclination to deal with them, so they merely postpone the crisis.
Expect anything less from a Democratic controlled state?
AVGWarhawk
02-23-11, 04:43 PM
It was fixed man. Real simple. First the courts said he can not run. No residency. Within 12 hours he was able to run. Within a few weeks he wins. It is a crock of crap really. One phone call from good old DC took care of that.
nikimcbee
02-23-11, 04:51 PM
You get what you vote for....oh wait:haha:.
We need 1480 back here:hmmm:
CaptainHaplo
02-23-11, 07:23 PM
I disagree with the man's politics, but there were PLENTY of people found on the street who readily admitted to voting for him. I haven't seen anything that showed the election was stolen. The people of Chicago will get what they voted for. Simple enough. Thats the way our system works. Sometimes the people want something I disagree with - but it would be hypocritical to just jump to "its fixed" because someone I didn't like politically won.
The people spoke, Rahm gets the gig. Let us hope for the sake of all chicago that he is successful in making the city safer and more law abiding. If so, fine.
Going off about this is no better than the 14 dems who left Wisconsin so that government couldn't do business. They are wrong because the people spoke, and the people spoke in chicago to, whether we like the result or not, we have to respect it.
I disagree with the man's politics, but there were PLENTY of people found on the street who readily admitted to voting for him. I haven't seen anything that showed the election was stolen. The people of Chicago will get what they voted for. Simple enough. Thats the way our system works. Sometimes the people want something I disagree with - but it would be hypocritical to just jump to "its fixed" because someone I didn't like politically won. .
I didn't say the vote was "fixed", but I will say that the courts wanted to set aside the residency requirements for him. If he hadn't had a defacto endorsement from Obama and Daley, and been the ruling party canidate, I doubt this would have happened in this state.
The people spoke, Rahm gets the gig. Let us hope for the sake of all chicago that he is successful in making the city safer and more law abiding. If so, fine. .
Hope is fine but will not solve the cities problems. Rahm has not put forth any plan or idea for dealing with the mess. The notion that he will cut the budget, eliminate waste/corruption, and change the culture in Chicago is laughable. As White House chief of staff, he has shown himself to be a liberal idealogue. Many in these parts consider him to be a political gangster. I should also point out that there was not a conservative or Republican running. Though there were 4 "major" canidates running, all were liberal Democrats. There really wasn't much of a choice.
Going off about this is no better than the 14 dems who left Wisconsin so that government couldn't do business. They are wrong because the people spoke, and the people spoke in chicago to, whether we like the result or not, we have to respect it.
How is expressing an opinion the same as a state legislator fleeing his state? I find this view odd.
nikimcbee
02-24-11, 03:15 AM
So are you from Chicago?
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