James L. Merriner, author of Grafters and Goo Goos: Corruption and Reform in Chicago, 1833-2003:
Larry J. Sabato, a professor at the University of Virginia, is a kind of all-purpose political commentator. He told me, “The unholy trinity of politically corrupt states are New Jersey, Illinois andLouisiana.” . . .
I asked Sabato, assuming that Illinois and New Jersey are among the most corrupt states, why is that? What is different about them?
“Corruption is nurtured by the political culture . . .” he said. “Through the generations, corruption has become strongly associated with politics [and] people just expect the two to go together like love and marriage.”
Let’s hear from a real insider. Richard Juliano, former deputy chief of staff for Ryan, spoke at the Minneapolis ethics conference.
If not the unsung hero of the Operation Safe Road probe of Ryan’s terms as secretary of state and governor, Juliano comes off looking better than most of the other 75 people who were convicted or pleaded guilty in that investigation. He cooperated with the prosecution even before being indicted and was sentenced to four years’ probation and a $10,000 fine.
Juliano said Ryan’s operatives were “conditioned” to “consider all of these [corrupt acts] to be minimaltransgressions . . . as long as the media didn’t find out about it, in which case we would have a political problem, it would beOK . . . the goal was to win the election. As long as we win the election, everything else will take care of itself.”
To quote Sabato once more on the culture of corruption: it “depends heavily on what average voters will tolerate from their elected officials.”
The feds are vigorously investigating the administrations of Gov. Blagojevich and Mayor Daley. We just re-elected them by landslide margins.
If only Illinois had a Republican
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