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Democratic operatives aim to bar SEP from Illinois ballot
Who are Jim Rogal and Liz Brown?
By Jerome White
30 June 2006
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Staffers for the Illinois Democratic Party, with close connections
to two of the states most powerful machine politicians,
have copied and reviewed nominating petitions submitted by the
Socialist Equality Party in apparent preparation for a challenge
aimed at barring SEP candidate Joe Parnarauskis from the ballot.
Parnarauskis, who is running for State Senate in Illinois
52nd Legislative District, which includes the twin cities of Champaign-Urbana,
submitted petitions bearing the names of 4,991 voters on Monday,
June 26.
In 2004, the Democratic Party filed an objection to the petitions
of SEP state legislative candidate Tom Mackaman, claiming that
more than half of the signatures were invalid. This contention
was proven false in the course of a month-long legal and political
battle, in which it became clear that the majority of signatures
challenged by the Democrats belonged to legally registered voters
and that their bad faith effort had been conducted to disrupt
the SEP campaign and force the party to incur large legal fees.
It is becoming clear the Democrats are likely preparing to
employ such a dirty tricks operation to once again deprive voters
of an opportunity to vote for a socialist candidate who opposes
the war and pro-business policies of both major parties. While
the Democrats have continuously collaborated with the Bush administration,
they will stop at nothing to prevent the emergence of a political
party that gives voice to the interests of the mass of working
class people and challenges the two-party monopoly and the capitalist
system it defends.
Less than 24 hours after the SEP submitted its petitions, Jim
Rogal of Springfield, Illinois, copied hundreds of sheets, according
to the web site of the State Board of Elections. The following
day, June 28 at 8:54 a.m., Liz Brown, also of Springfield, copied
the petitions as well. At 9:56 a.m. on June 28, Rogal returned
to the board of elections offices to again view the SEP petitions.
Rogal and Brown were also involved in checking the petitions submitted
by candidates from the Green Party in Illinois.
Searches for the two on the directory of Illinois state employees
http://www.illinois.gov/teledirectory/
list Rogal as Assistant Chief of Staff for the State
Senate and Elizabeth Brown as House Democrat Staff
member at the Illinois House of Representatives. Rogal works for
Emil Jones, the Chicago-based president of the State Senate who
is one of the most influential power brokers in the Illinois Democratic
Party. Known as US Senator Barack Obamas political
godfather, an April 2005 article in Ebony magazine
noted that Jones has mastered the art of the wheeler-dealer
over the past 40 years to firmly take the helm of his current
post. His motto: Know your opponent and be solidly prepared.
For years Liz Brown has worked for Democratic Speaker of the
House Michael Madigan, another one of the Four Tops
of Illinois politics, who include Jones and the two Republican
leaders of the State Senate and House of Representatives. A Chicago-based
Democrat, Madigan led the effort to keep independent presidential
candidate Ralph Nader off the Illinois ballot in 2004, while members
of his staff, including Liz Brown, carried out the effort against
SEP candidate Tom Mackaman in Champaign-Urbana.
In the efforts against Nader and the SEP, paid state employees,
including Brown, were used to challenge petitions. This is an
explicit violation of the states Election Code and the State
Employees Ethics in Government Act, which states: State
employees shall not intentionally perform any prohibited political
activity during any compensated time. Prohibited political
activity includes circulating, reviewing, or filing
any petition on behalf of a candidate for elective office or for
or against any referendum in question. Madigan refused requests
to release the time sheets of staff members and the states
Attorney General, his daughter Lisa Madigan, never pursued
the matter.
In an apparent effort to skirt these restrictions this time,
Democratic Party staffers are evidently being granted leave
as state employees and are being hired by various Political
Action Committees set up by the Democrats, enabling them
to continue to collect a pay check while doing the dirty work
of their political bosses. A reporter who covers Springfield politics
and who asked not to be identified said, Brown has been
on Madigans staff at least since 2000. A lot of them go
on leave and receive the same pay through some campaign organization.
They get the same salary and technically they are not working
for the state.
When this reporter called Illinois Senate President Emil Joness
office the receptionist confirmed that Rogal was indeed a staff
member. After I explained I wanted to talk to Rogal about his
role in checking the SEP petitions, I was put on hold. Soon thereafter,
the receptionist said she had made a mistake and that
Rogal did not work there after all. She directed me to a spokesperson
who claimed Rogal had not been employed on Joness staff
for nearly three years and didnt I know there was a state
ethics law prohibiting state employees from such activities.
A Google search for Jim Rogal reveals information
that suggests that Rogal was still employed by Jones last year.
During a July 3, 2005 session of the State Senate, Democratic
Senator George Shadid speaks of a successful college football
player from his district named James Boomer Grigsby.
Introducing the athletes family to Senate President Jones,
Shadid says, [Joining] Boomer today is his sister and brother-in-law
Jim and Jenni Grisby-Rogal. Which Im sure you know Jim Rogal,
Mr. President. He works for you on your staff.
Rogal told this reporter that he is no longer employed on Joness
staff but has been employed by the Illinois Democrat Senate Fund
for several years. The fund is a political action
committee set up by the Illinois Democrats to finance state election
campaigns. According to the Center for Public Integrity, Rogal
was paid thousands of dollars by the Illinois Democrat Senate
fund in 2003-2004, a period during which it raised $4,243,471
for its candidates from law firms, labor unions, electric power
utilities, telecommunications companies, banks, casino interests
and food and tobacco companies.
It is hard to determine the exact status of Rogal in the shadowy
network of Democratic Party politics. Nevertheless, it is clear
that both Rogal and Brown are working to prevent any political
challenge to the Democrats right-wing policies. In addition
to the SEP and the Greens, the Democrats are apparently also targeting
Bill Scheurer, a former Democrat, who is running as an independent
antiwar candidate for US Congress in Illinois 8th Congressional
District, challenging Democratic incumbent Melissa Bean.
In May, Scheurer was contacted by a man named Anthony Constantine
of AR Consulting, who offered his services to help collect signatures
for Scheurer. In turns out that Constantine works in the Chicago
office of Democratic Congressman Dan Lipinski. With the July 3
deadline approaching to submit petitions, the thousands of signatures
the man said he had been collecting never materialized. Constantine
denies he ever contacted Scheurer.
The Democrats campaign in 2004 to remove SEP candidate
Tom Mackaman from the ballot revealed the modus operandi it employs
against political opponents. Madigans office slandered the
SEP with the false accusation that Mackaman had submitted phony
petitions. In fact, their objection had no basis in reality
and had been made in bad faith. This was underscored by the comments
of Mark Shelden, the Champaign county clerk, whose office supervised
the process of verifying signatures that were challenged by the
Democrats.
Writing on a blog on the Illinipundit.com web site, Shelden
wrote on June 28, If you were involved at all in the Mackaman
case two years ago, you would have seen that the challenge was
purely a harassment challenge. Fewer than half the signatures
challenged by Democratic Party Chairman Gerrie Parr were actually
tossed. Those of us who reviewed them would have awarded attorneys
fees to Mackaman if there had been a legal provision to do so.
For months activists in Chicago and other cities have reported
that Michael Madigan has been training a small army
of campaign workers on how to challenge third-party petitions
for the 2006 elections. The State of Illinois already has among
the worst ballot access laws in the nation, with onerous signature
requirements and some of the earliest filing deadlines in the
US. Even after overcoming these undemocratic obstacles, challengers
face a continued conspiracy by the two parties to keep them off
the ballot.
According to the Illinois State Constitution, All elections
shall be free and equal. The filing of an objection which
the Illinois Democrats know is without merit is a violation of
the Illinois Election Code, which prohibits the use of deception,
forgery or bribery to carry out activities whereby another
is deprived of having or exercising any right, privilege
or immunity secured by the Constitution or laws of the US or state
of Illinois relating to the conduct of elections, voting, or nomination
or election of candidates for public or political party office.
It is furthermore a violation of federal voting rights laws that
prohibit anyone acting under color of state law from
interfering with constitutional rights.
The Socialist Equality Party calls on the readers of the World
Socialist Web Site and all those who defend democratic rights
to oppose this travesty of democracy and email letters of protest
to the Illinois State Board of Elections at webmaster@elections.state.il.us.
Please
send copies of all messages to the WSWS.
See Also:
SEP candidate in Illinois holds press
conference to announce petition filing for November ballot
[28 June 2006]
Illinois Democrats prepare challenge
against petitions to place SEP candidate on ballot
[28 June 2006]
Democrats conspire
against voters in bid to remove SEP from ballot
[16 July 2004]
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