Congressman
Jackson for Obama’s Seat
The SouthtownStar
Chicago,
November
10, 2008
The Issue: Barack Obama’s
soon-to-be open U.S. Senate seat is creating a stampede of, “Me,
me, me!”
We Say: No one is better
suited to fill the seat than U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr.
The SouthtownStar newspaper
office sits at 159th
Street and Harlem Avenue
in Tinley Park. We hold
a unique vantage point straddled between Cook and Will counties,
between the gated communities of Homer Glen and the abandoned bungalows
of Harvey. Our readers include Chicago
city workers, Homewood teachers and the union
households of Oak Lawn, Orland Park and Country
Club Hills.
We know the farmers of Elwood.
The stay-at-home moms of Mokena.
We know the members of the mosques,
the Catholic churches, the Baptist congregations.
Our perch in the Southland gives
us an authoritative voice and a rounded view of Illinois.
We’ve got it all, right here.
And so, with that perspective,
we offer our strong recommendation of U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr.
(D-2nd), of Chicago, to fill the vacancy of President-elect Barack Obama’s U.S.
Senate seat.
Here’s why:
For 13 years, we’ve watched
Jackson up close. He is one of Congress’ most reliable advocates for
the middle class while supporting economic development for large
and small businesses alike. Of the $600 million in federal appropriations
he has secured for the 2nd District, nearly every cent has gone
toward infrastructure projects, colleges and universities, housing
and health care programs, and police and firefighter grants.
There
are no bridges to nowhere. There are no statues, no stained-glass
windows. He uses his position on the House Appropriations Committee
to fund programs in his district that help working families. He
is not afraid to call out wasteful spending when he sees it.
He has been a lonely voice -
a fearless voice - on corruption, from abuses in Chicago’s
minority set-aside program to the Hired Truck scandal to voting
rights violations nationwide and an inept police department in Harvey.
He endorses and supports candidates
for office regardless of color or political expediency. He has backed
reformers such as Forrest Claypool on the Cook County Board and
clashed with the entrenched interests of former Chicago Ald. William
Beavers and Dolton Mayor Bill Shaw, two Southland officials stuck
in the model of old-school, unresponsive, patronage-laden government.
These
are issues that impact us all.
Gov. Rod Blagojevich said championing
health care will be a prerequisite for any candidate he considers
- not just talking the talk, but walking the walk, as Blagojevich
has done.
Jackson
fits the bill. He has been a consistent voice on Capitol Hill for
health care accessibility, backing a more progressive agenda, in
fact, than Obama himself. Jackson supports a constitutional amendment to guarantee health care
for all Americans and was a critical resource to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies when it conducted its groundbreaking
500-page report, “Unequal Treatment,” in 2003, which outlined racial
disparities in health care delivery.
Jackson
voted twice last fall to extend the State Children’s Health Insurance
Program - a program for which Blagojevich’s administration pushed
hard. He would be a key ally for Obama in the U.S. Senate.
Democrats want Blagojevich to
choose someone who can be elected statewide in 2010. Although downstate
voters aren’t shy about their distrust of the Rev. Jesse Jackson,
Jackson Jr. is not his father’s cutout.
Obama’s successful U.S. Senate
strategy in 2004 was to get in front of as many groups as possible
so voters could see and hear him. He spent weeks living out of his
Jeep Cherokee, shaking hands at Lincoln dinners and block parties. The same strategy could work for
Jackson - although we welcome
a hearty challenge from the Republicans as well.
Finally, we are not so naive
as to discount the tension that has bubbled between Blagojevich
and Jackson; Jackson and former Senate President Emil Jones; Jackson
and Chicago Mayor Richard Daley; and Jackson
and newly elected U.S. Rep. Debbie Halvorson (D-11th). Jackson has demonstrated a propensity to flare up and lash out.
However, we hope Blagojevich
will see beyond the narrow disagreements of Illinois’
diverse Democratic Party.
We hope, Governor, that you
will take a wide, holistic view of the contributions Jackson
could make to the state of Illinois,
and to the country, in making this selection.
Poll: Jackson Should
Get Obama’s Seat
UPI.com
Chicago,
November
11, 2008
U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson, Jr.
is a favorite among possible replacements to fill the Senate seat
being vacated by President-elect Barack
Obama, a poll indicates.
A Zogby telephone poll conducted
last week shows that among 10 possible candidates, 21 percent say
they think Democratic Gov. Rod Blagojevich should appoint Jackson to the seat when Obama leaves it vacant in January.
The
only other potential candidate to get double-digit support was Tammy Duckworth, a former Democratic
congresswoman candidate from a Chicago
district. Fourteen percent of respondents said she should be appointed.
In two prospective Senate races,
Jackson would defeat Republican Congressman Ray LaHood by a
50 percent to 31 percent margin, the survey shows.
The poll of 802 likely voters
statewide has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage
points.
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