illinois lottery - When Gov. Rod Blagojevich gives his budget address Wednesday, he’s going to elicit a combination of emotions – boredom and anger.
Legislators, lobbyists and other Statehouse Scene observers are going to struggle to stay awake due to the governor’s whiny voice and less-than-exciting public speaking skills. But those same people are going to enter the Illinois House chambers for the speech totally upset.
Blagojevich, in his desire to exert complete oversight of the process of presenting a budget proposal for the upcoming Illinois government fiscal year, is showing himself to be a control freak.
That kind of attitude is going to mess with the attitudes of the people the governor will ultimately need to approve a state budget. So we can forget about any notion that lawmakers will “play nice” this year and not do anything as embarrassing as last year’s behavior – where a funding resolution for Chicago mass transit dragged into the early weeks of this year.
What has Statehouse people upset is the idea that Blagojevich is being extra secretive about the details of the government spending plan he will present Wednesday at noon.
Gubernatorial aides, particularly those who work with the Bureau of the Budget, have spent the past few months putting together a spending plan for the upcoming fiscal year that would in theory allow Illinois government to not be deeper in debt on June 30, 2009.
Their work culminates with the governor’s budget address, which is one of the ceremonial rituals that defines the Statehouse Scene. After Wednesday, the budget process gets handed off to the General Assembly, which will spend the next few months reviewing and amending a budget plan until taking a final vote before adjourning for the summer.
The governor’s budget address is one of the ceremonial moments of the state government academic year. It’s almost like Homecoming at a college campus, where a lot of people come out of the woodwork to see what the old place looks like. Wednesday in Springfield will be a madhouse with politicos and their observers all making sure to be at the Statehouse so they can see for themselves just what Blagojevich has in mind.
To accommodate those people with differing interests, the governor’s staff usually conducts briefings the day before the budget address to provide a summary of what is in the spending plan.
The General Assembly’s leaders and the state constitutional officers (attorney general, secretary of state, etc.) all are given a presentation, and they in turn provide a review for their key aides.
In the case of the state Legislature’s members, they receive briefings from their respective partisan leaders, which means Republican senators and representatives are told of all the budget’s shortcomings, and the Democrats in theory are told of its strengths.
Even reporters who work regularly at the Stat
Source: illinois lottery - Blagojevich a control freak with state budget
Releted News:
- california election results - GOPUSA ILLINOIS Daily Clips - February 7, 2008
- hoosier lottery - A Few Minutes with Becky Skillman
- Senate Rejects Durbin’s Radical Plan to Reward Illegals with Taxpayer Subsidies
- Thompson Launches 11-Day S.C. Campaign Blitz
- Sen. Trent Lott To Announce Retirement, Effective At the End of December
- walter dalton - How I’m Voting — May 6 edition
- big 12 tournament bracket - Bracketology 101’s Field of 65 - March 10
- shannon miller - Those Courageous Dems; Like Cockroaches, They Hate The Light

0 responses so far ↓
There are no comments yet...Kick things off by filling out the form below.
Leave a Comment