Monday, March 24, 2008

The "new era" of Cook County government

This is the dawning of a new era!
Woke up and thought "This ain't exactly heaven"

"(Dawning Of) A New Era," The Specials, 1979.

Earlier this month, the Cook County Board of Commissioners voted to add one percent to the sales tax rate, giving suburbanites like myself one of the highest sales tax rates in the nation, while Chicagoans will be paying what is believed to be the highest, 10.25 percent. The new rates kick in on November 1.

Two years ago, the president of the Cook County Board, John Stroger, suffered a massive stroke. He was never seen in public again; he won a close primary election a week after the stroke. After an exhaustive search, Cook County Democrats chose Stroger's son, Todd, to take his father's place on the ballot. Republican Tony Peraica gave Stroger the younger a tough challenge, but a last minute push by prominent Dems put "Toddler" over the top. John Stroger died in January.

In a Sunday editorial calling for the repeal of the "Stroger tax," and the "repeal" of the nine pols who voted for it, the Chicago Tribune writes:

Stroger, too, will be up for re-election in 2010. He is a humiliation to many of the politicians who endorsed him in 2006. They can apply pressure most citizens can't. So when you encounter a Democratic pol—a member of Congress, a state or county official, an alderman—be sure to ask: Did you endorse Todd Stroger? How's that working for you?

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The Trib in the editorial calls Cook County government a "fetid swamp."

Well, how about Barack Obama and Dick Durbin:

As I've done before in other posts about the tax, here is what the Chicago Tribune's Eric Zorn wrote two years ago:

Obama's staff released a profoundly disheartening letter to voters this week in which Obama, joined by Sen. Dick Durbin, endorsed Cook County Board presidential candidate Todd Stroger.

The letter, which puffs lots of hot air into the saggy balloon of Stroger's legislative resume, refers to him as "a good progressive Democrat" who will "lead us into a new era of Cook County government."

Todd Stroger was a "strong voice" in Springfield, the letter says. He has "worked assiduously" for the poor as an alderman. Yet, of course, the record reveals that Stroger is an unimaginative legislative drone whose reform credentials are wholly imaginary--an unlikely trailblazer to a new era.

The Chicago Sun-Times today writes about that "new era."

Last fall, after an undoubtedly exhaustive search, Stroger hired his cousin, Donna Dunnings, to be the county's new chief financial officer. The hiring was touted by Stroger as a savings to the worn-out taxpayers, because "Cuz" would be earning less than her predecessor. But the Sun-Times reports that Dunnings gets a big raise in the upcoming, new-tax fueled budget. She'll now be earning more than her predecessor, and her salary increase is more than that of any Cook County employee.

This is the new era, even though it ain't exactly heaven. Unless you're a boss of a public-service employee union, that is. The unions supported the tax increase.

For "the little guy," the tax is bad news. The regressive levy will hurt poor people the hardest, and businesses on the other side of the Cook County line are already advertising the advantages of shopping outside Cook.

Related posts:

Hey Obama! Speak out on proposal to impose nation's highest sales tax in your hometown: UDPATED
Palatine wants to secede from Cook County
Something else for Obama to be silent on: Chicago will have the nation's highest sales tax
Say no to higher Cook County taxes
No fat in Cook County budget?
Beavers leaves it to the race card as America's worst governmental body gets worse
Your Cook County tax dollars at work
Stop the proposed Cook County phone tax
"Is anyone watching out for Chicago taxpayers?"
Time for me to shop...outside Cook County?
Marathon Pundit Chicago River dumping follow up
Obama and Chicago's "We Don't Want Nobody Nobody Sent" culture
Cook County sues Cook County
My day as a Cook County juror
Cook County treasurer's office working against taxpayers

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