Chicago Sun-Times

PRITZKER, RAUNER IN LOCKSTEP: KEEP BLAGO IN PRISON

- BY TINA SFONDELES, POLITICAL REPORTER tsfondeles@ suntimes. com | @ TinaSfon

They may be bitter political rivals, but Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner and Democrat J. B. Pritzker have one thing in common: They don’t believe imprisoned former Gov. Rod Blagojevic­h should get a shorter sentence.

Pritzker’s campaign said he believes “the former governor is where he belongs.” And Rauner on WLS- TVsaid experts have concluded “Blagojevic­h is exactly where he deserves to be.”

There are, of course, many different reasons both may agree on the controvers­ial topic.

Rauner has been trying to link Pritzker to Blagojevic­h for months in ads featuring FBI wiretapped conversati­ons. And Pritzker is trying to steer clear of the disgraced former governor. He spent weeks this year apologizin­g to the African- American community for comments he’s heard making on the tape recordings.

Pritzker was recorded discussing potential African- American politician­s to fill the U. S. Senate seat vacated by then- President- elect Barack Obama, with Pritzker referring to Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White as “the “least offensive” who would cover the governor on “the African- American thing.” Pritzker also dismissed former state Senate President Emil Jones as too “crass” for the appointmen­t.

Pritzker acknowledg­ed he made a mistake, saying his “intentions were good” but that he “didn’t use the rightwords.”

Still, Rauner’s campaign isn’t giving up on the tapes. Rauner on Tuesday kicked off theTV air war with a new ad featuring audio of Blagojevic­h joking about appointing the Rev. JeremiahWr­ight— Obama’s controvers­ial former pastor— to fill Obama’s formerU. S. Senate seat.

The Pritzker campaign, in turn, released the first in a “Rauner Failed Me” series of TV ads aimed at documentin­g “how Bruce Rauner has failed Illinoisan­s across the state.”

Rauner’s support for a Blagojevic­h commutatio­n could put him in lockstep with the president, whom he has been careful about publicly pledging support.

Speaking on WLS, Rauner was asked about the commutatio­n: “I can say that many judges, many legal experts, attorneys have reviewed that case and the facts around Blagojevic­h, and they all came to the conclusion that Blagojevic­h is exactlywhe­re he deserves to be.”

The Pritzker campaign also told the SunTimes on Tuesday that “JBthinks there’s plenty of other things that Donald Trump should be focusing on,” while acknowledg­ing that it’s up to Trump whether to pardon or commute his sentence.

Trump last week said he might commute the former governor’s prison sentence, possibly springing the controvers­ial former governor as many as six years early. A commutatio­n would reduce his sentence but would not wipe out his conviction­s.

The U. S. Supreme Court in April said it would not hear an appeal from Blagojevic­h. Since then, clemency has been his only chance at being released early.

Blagojevic­h, 61, is not due out of prison until May 2024. Although an appellate court tossed five of his conviction­s in 2015, federal prosecutor­s say he remains convicted “of the same three charged shakedowns” for which he was first sentenced in 2011.

 ??  ?? Gov. Bruce Rauner
Gov. Bruce Rauner
 ??  ?? J. B. Pritzker
J. B. Pritzker

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States