Posted on 01/24/2011 3:04:58 PM PST by Graybeard58
Rahm Emanuel was thrown off the ballot for mayor of Chicago Monday by an appellate court panel. But Emanuel who has led the other candidates in fund-raising and in public opinion polls cautioned he wont get off the ballot without a fight.
I have no doubt, at the end we will prevail at this effort, Emanuel told reporters at the Berghoff Restaurant.
The Chicago Board of Elections planned to start printing ballots without Emanuels name unless Emanuels lawyers can get a stay of the appellate court ruling. Emanuels lawyers filed their request for a stay just before 5 p.m. Monday.
We ... order that the candidates name be excluded (or if, necessary, be removed) from the ballot, Judge Thomas Hoffman wrote in the opinion upholding the requirement under the states municipal code that candidates for mayor in Illinois must have resided in the two where they are running for a year before Election Day -- in this case Feb. 22. Hoffman was joined by Justice Shelvin Marie Louise Hall.
Judge Bertina Lampkin wrote a muscular dissent, saying, An opinion of such wide-ranging import and not based on established law but, rather, on the whims of two judges, should not be allowed to stand.
Emanuel attorney Mike Kasper said he plans to use that dissent to try to convince the state Supreme Court to take the case and reinstate Emanuel to the ballot. He expects to file the appeal on Tuesday.
The Emanuel campaign sent out a text to its supporters asking them to assemble at 5 p.m. at Dearborn and Washington to rally for Rahms right to be on the ballot and let Chicagoans choose.
When he ran for Congress, Emanuel used some of the same attorneys he is using now to try to knock his opponents off the ballot.
Emanuel argued that leaving Chicago to serve the president as chief of staff counts as business of the United States and so he should not lose his residency status.
Lampkin agreed.
But Hoffman and Hall agreed with attorney Burt Odelson that the business of the United States exemption applies to Emanuels right to vote not his right to run for mayor.
Chicagos bar associations have always rated Justice Hoffman as one of the most knowledgeable judges on the appellate court. He has published numerous books, and other judges often cite his opinions.
He dominated the questioning at oral arguments Wednesday, pressing Emanuels attorneys hard on whether Emanuel could really dwell conceptually in a house he could not enter because he had rented it out. Emanuels tenants refused to end the lease early after Mayor Daley announced he would not seek re-election, and Emanuel decided to move back to Chicago to run for mayor.
The renter, Rob Halpin, briefly ran for mayor himself.
Emanuel had won two previous rulings before the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners and a Cook County judge. The case was appealed to the appellate court, which handed down the ruling before noon Monday.
Emanuels attorneys had argued that state election code, which covers eligibility to vote, should also count toward eligibility to run for mayor. However, Justice Hoffman wrote: neither the [election] board nor the party have, however, referred us to any Supreme Court opinion ratifying, adopting or directly addressing this approach.
Odelson noted that the Supreme Court may decide that Hoffman so thoroughly addressed the legal issues in his opinion, that the Supreme Court may not even take the case.
However, Odelson said he may not oppose Kaspers request to have the Supreme Court hear the case because this is an important enough issue that the states highest court should probably weigh in.
Emanuels opponents in the race including Gery Chico, Carol Moseley Braun and Patricia Van Pelt-Watkins quickly scheduled afternoon news conferences to react to the news.
Braun appealed to Emanuel supporters and undecided voters to join her little United Nations of a campaign by logging onto her website and either by donating their money or volunteering their time.
In other words, she expects the Appellate Court ruling to stand.
I can only go with what the Court of Appeals said, Braun said. Im a great believer in the rule of law. I believe the Court has spoken, and unless and until they change their mind, thats the law of the land,
Braun was joined at her news conference by the Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. and U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush (D-Ill.)
Im hoping that supporters of Mr. Emanuel [and] people who are undecided will choose to join our coalition of conscience, will choose to embrace the message that we have been consistently trying to bring to this city, she said.
After raising just over $450,000 to Emanuels $11.7 million and Chicos $2.5 million, Braun has cut two campaign commercials she cannot afford to air. Shes hoping Mondays ruling will trigger a cash infusion.
Weve always had a poor campaign with a rich message, she said. While we hope that it will be less poor [with Emanuel out of the race], our message is consistent and the same that I have the ability to deliver for all the people of Chicago to help move our city in the right direction.
If Emanuel remains off the ballot, Braun was asked whether shes concerned that the citys business establishment would flock to Chico, who has served Mayor Daley as chief of staff, school board president, park board president and City Colleges board chairman.
Im hopeful that the business community will recognize how hard I worked for them when I was United States senator and the relationships that I can bring that I can continue to move this city in the direction of being a world-class city, she said. Its not like Im a stranger to these people. Ive worked for them and Ive delivered for them as senator and I look forward to the opportunity to work with them again.
Chico has taken pains to steer clear of the residency challenge and publicly support Emanuels right to run for mayor. He did the same after Mondays ruling.
After a lunch hour fund-raiser at Moes Cantina in River North, Chico said that the appellate courts decision to boot Emmanuel from the ballot did not change anything about his campaign.
I was as surprised as anyone today to hear about the decision of the appellate court. I have believed in ballot access. I have never challenged anyone before.
We will continue vigorously with our campaign with or without Rahm Emanuel.
Chico said he was agnostic about the courts decision. He sidestepped a question about whether he was not the front runner.
I mean Im running, he said. Im trying to get every vote I can from everybody in this city.
Would you ask Rahm for his support if he doesnt get back on the ballot?
Id love his support.
Mayoral hopeful Miguel Del Valle, in a statement, brought up the $11.7 million that Emanuel has collected to bankroll a mayoral campaign that has now been thrust into legal limbo.
It looked like money was going to decide this election, del Valle said. The voters now have a rare opportunity to shape this citys future.
In an interview, del Valle, the current City Clerk, said he expects the Supreme Court to take the case, overturn the Appellate Court ruling and put Emanuel back on the ballot where he belongs.
But he said, The political effect of this decision is that some of the voters out there who thought this election was a foregone conclusion will now take a first or second look at the other candidates. Thats good for Chicago.
Rahm Emanuel has amassed an obscene amount of money, and its not right. Gery Chicos fund-raising from individuals doing business with the city is not right. ... This election should be decided by people in the neighborhoods, not by multi-millionaires both in Chicago and out of state who thought they had already bought this election.
If Chico inherits much of Emanuels support, pressure would intensify for del Valle to drop out of the race. But the retiring City Clerk bristled at the suggestion that he should throw his support to Chico, the only other Hispanic in the race.
I am a candidate who has a lot to offer. Why should [I]? It never crossed my mind. Not at all, del Valle said. This election is a wonderful opportunity to present voters with real choices. Why would I deny [them] that? Thats why I thought the residency issue was a distraction and that voters should have choices, including Rahm Emanuel.
Ald. Pat OConnor (40th), Daleys City Council floor leader, is among a handful of North Side ward bosses firmly in Emanuels camp. If the Supreme Court affirms Mondays ruling or takes a pass, OConnor would be like a man without a country.
It puts me where Ive always been. Ive supported Rahm since he announced. Ill support him until its determined he can no longer be a mayoral candidate, OConnor said.
Pressed to identify his second choice, OConnor said, I wouldnt even speculate on that. Im hoping hes on the ballot and it works out. If not, well reassess and see wholl have us. If the polls are correct, Gery Chico and Carol Moseley Braun are pretty close. I dont know who would become the frontrunner. But, Im not quite certain Im giving up on our current frontrunner.
Another ward boss, who asked to remain anonymous, predicted that Chico would be the primary beneficiary if Emanuel is knocked off the ballot.
If you were for Rahm, hes kind of a business-like person who can get things done. Gery is a similar personality. Hes more like Rahm than Carol is like Rahm. More people in Rahms camp would default to him than to Carol, the committeeman said.
The news also shocked voters who planned to vote for Emanuel.
I think its absolutely absurd, said Megan Weidenhammer, 27, a paralegal who lives in Uptown. If you are a public servant, and you are in
Washington, and you are supporting the citizens of the country than its outrageous that you would be thrown off of a local election when you come back to do great things for your own city.
Who are you going to vote for now?
I really feel Ill vote for Rahm.
Contributing: Kara Spak
Guess he has to send those judges a dead fish now, eh?
Over at Gretawire, Greta basically says screw the laws and let the people decide...I couldn’t believe it..
The judge did not get his orders. Do not worry, the State Supreme s will set it right for you Rahm after all, you are a beautiful person and the ,”Do you know who I am”, did not work. He does not understand that laws are for the little people, not for you.
It’s only when they open their mouths that they remove all doubt and their pedigree leaks out. One should never forget where this game is being played and the true identity of the players.
Hi might have to move up to decapitated horse heads in this case...
Every now and then people get just exactly what they deserve.
Here we go again. Fly the lawyers in. It won’t be long until the rats will be taking public offices at gun point instead of going through those monotonous qualifications and elections.
Emaunel, a real Smart Ass, isn’t looking so smart now.
But if he was a write-in candidate, and won the election that way, wouldn’t he be ineligible to serve as mayor? Wouldn’t the residency issue bar him from holding the office he’s apparently not eligible to run for?
See if the Illinois Supreme Court rules in his favor and puts Rahm back on the ballot. Wouldn’t be too surprising.
“Rahm? He’s a great ol’ guy! Used to give his mother flowers an’ that!
“We hear that he nailed your head to a coffee table”
“Well, he did that, yeah. He had to, I had transgressed the unwritten law!”
(pulling from memory - sorry too lazy to look up the actual script)
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