Tuesday, March 18, 2014
Liz Gorman sails to 4th term victory
Cook County Commissioner Elizabeth "Liz" Doody Gorman sailed to a 4th term election victory representing the 17th Cook County district over rightwing Tea Party challenger Barbara Bellar.
Gorman, who has played an instrumental role in building the candidacy of Bruce Rauner as the Republican Party's choice for governor, was projected to win with a heavy landslide margin of 60 percent, based on early voter returns. The Rauner race was still close, as early numbers showed him leading State Sen. Kirk Dillard by about 3 to 5 percent, although the numbers were still early for the governor's race when Gorman claimed victory.
A champion of taxpayer rights, Gorman attributed a part of her victory to the "sloppy, garbled robocall" that former Cook County Commissioner Tony Peraica made on Bellar's behalf Sunday night. Some voters said that hearing Peraica's voice reminded them of everything that is wrong with politics, and pushed them to vote for Gorman, giving her the extra voter boost.
Voter turnout was projected as being extremely low statewide, but Gorman said that she appreciated all the support she received from voters.
Gorman made a name for herself as a champion of taxpayers when she singlehandedly led the fight to repeal the repressive Todd Stroger 1 Cent Cook County Sales Tax increase. Stroger won the tax hike with a large majority of support from the county board, despite Gorman's opposition. But Gorman continued to push for a repeal of the tax introducing several resolutions to demand it be withdrawn.
While most commissioner simply fell in line with Stroger, Gorman showed voters that it was possible to repeal the tax which cost taxpayers hundreds of thousands in added sales taxes each year. And as public opposition to the sales tax hike grew as a result of Gorman's efforts, other commissioners joined in untilt he sales tax was removed in two steps.
"I want to thank all of the voters for the mandate they have given me," Gorman said early Tuesday night. "I promise to continue to fight to represent the rights of the taxpayers."
Gorman also credited her victory over Bellar and Tea Party extremists to her refusal to respond to Peraica's and Bellar's campaign mud-slinging.
"Their robocall showed how desperate they really were. Voters don't want to listen to candidates who throw mud. They want their candidates to talk about the programs they plan to implemented when elected and that's what I focused on," Gorman said.
Gorman had received endorsements from every major newspaper, including one from the Chicago Tribune that acknowledged her role in repealing Stroger's hated sales tax increase. Click to read that story.
The night before on Monday, Gorman organized a huge rally at the Lexington House on 95th Street for Rauner that drew more than 500 attendees. Click her to view that story and video.
(Ray Hanania is an award winning former Chicago City Hall reporter an columnist. He is the editor of the Illinois News Network www.IllinoisNewsNetwork.com.)
Monday, March 17, 2014
Rauner ignites crowd at Gorman organized rally
Rauner ignites crowd at Gorman organized rally
By Ray Hanania
More than 500 supporters attended a rally at the Lexington House banquet Hall on 95th Street Monday night, St. Patrick's Day, organized by Cook County Commissioner Elizabeth "Liz" Doody Gorman on behalf of gubernatorial candidate Bruce Rauner.
Supporters packed the room as Gorman introduced leading members of the Cook County Republican Organizations including Cook County GOP Chairman Aaron Del Mar, Palos Republican Committeeman Sean Morrison, and other Republican officials from the region. Rauner had the crowd on their feet as he walked in like a rock star at a Rolling Stone's concert to music, lights, and a crowd of television news media reporters.
He continued his pummeling of Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn, who many are saying is losing momentum and will have a tough fight on his hands to hold his office in November. Rauner has surfaced above a crowded field of qualified Republican rivals including State Treasurer Dan Rutherford, State Sen.Kirk Dillard and State Senator Bill Brady.
Gorman was duking it out with rival Barbara Bellar during the past few days as Bellar turned to controversial former Cook County Commissioner Tony Peraica, who did a robocall blasting Gorman in a mumbled voice that many described as laughable. And Bellar, the darling of the Tea Party extremists, claimed in her own robocall that she was the "Republican" endorsed candidate for the Cook County Board seat which Gorman has held form 12 years. Gorman pounded Peraica in her own robocall and brushed off Bellar as "nothing more than nun-sense," alluding to Bellar's false claims that she was a former nun.
But while Brady, Dillard and Rutherford concentrated their punches against Rauner, Rauner focused his powerful right hooks at Quinn, even though the General Election is seven months away. Here's the video. Ray Hanania, http://www.OrlandParker.com, http://www.SuburbanChicagoland.com, http://www.IllinoisNewsNetwork.com
Here's the video:
(Ray Hanania is an award winning for Chicago City Hall reporter and columnist. He is the managing editor of the Illinois News Network at www.IllinoisNewsNetwork.com.)
Sunday, March 16, 2014
Bellar throws mud with her “nun-sense” and phony sainthood
Bellar throws mud with her “nun-sense” and phony sainthood
By Ray Hanania
Barbara Bellar
sent a letter to my home the other day, but I didn’t know if she was asking for
prayers as a former Nun (as we all know, she never was a nun), or just making a pitch for Obamacare as a Medical Doctor.
Turned out the letter was just a huge mud ball Bellar is throwing at taxpayer champion Liz Gorman, the
Orland Township Republican Committeewoman and the Republican Cook County
Commissioner who almost singlehandedly overturned the oppressive 1 percent
sales tax imposed by ousted Democratic County Board President Todd Stroger.
It was a
single page with text on both sides of the page, like one of those legal pitch letters from a credit card company filled with empty promises and exaggerated service claims.
All Bellar did in the letter was attack Liz Gorman and claim that she is too cozy with the Democrats. Are
you kidding me?
The truth is
that if anyone was sucking up to the extremists in the Democratic Party, it is
Bellar.
RuthBaderGinsburg (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
In a letter to
the Chicago tribune, Bellar praised Obama. And when she met with Justice Ruth
Bader Ginsburg, the left wing Democratic liberal and former president of the
ACLU, Bellar praised Ginsburg saying she admired her. Maybe that’s when she was hoping the
Democrats would give her a job.
Bellar is
attacking Gorman for hanging around Democrats? Are you kidding me. It’s all
more “nun-sense.”
By bashing
Gorman, Bellar wants you to believe she is a Republican Messiah of sorts,
although honestly like most of you, I’ve never heard of her before. And that is
a testament unto itself, considering I have been covering Chicagoland politics
for more than 35 years. Where was she and what did she ever do for the
taxpayers?
She’s done
nothing for the Republican Party or for Cook County taxpayers. But she sure
wants that public government job. The letter she sent reflects the kind of
disrespect false Messiahs show when they don’t know anything about what it means
to be a struggling taxpayer. It’s just a desperate attempt hoping you’ll put
her on the public payroll for doing nothing.
Bellar says
she cares about you because you are overtaxed. Well, at least she knows what
the problem is for most residents in Chicagoland. But when she assaults Liz
Gorman she reveals her true lack of knowledge and exposes herself as another
self-righteous false prophet.
In a prior
failed race for the 18th Senate District (she is working overtime
trying to put herself at the banks of the public trough) in 2012, she claimed
in her literature that she was a Catholic Nun. But many columnists and
journalists who covered that race point out that in fact, that’s not true.
Which is quite a quagmire since Nuns are supposed to not lie. But then, she
isn’t a nun so maybe a lie is in character?
Her campaign slogan
was “there is ‘nun’ better.” Well, at least the first part of that sentence was
true. There is none! It was all
“nun-sense.” Turns out Bellar, the wealthy medical doctor, was never a nun.
Just a wannabe nun like the wannabe elected government official she desperately
wants to be.
As I read
through the blah, blah, blah of her letter, and all the mudslinging she is
throwing at Gorman, it reminded me about how much Liz Gorman has actually done
for the taxpayers.
I won’t lie. I
like Liz Gorman. It’s pretty hard to top what Gorman did, almost singlehandedly
repealing the Stroger 1 Cent Sales Tax increase that was a true burden on the
taxpayers that Sister Bellar doesn’t seem to think is important. In fact, this
past week, the Chicago Tribune endorsed Gorman spotlighting how Gorman led that
battle almost by herself to succeed in repealing the Stroger Sales Tax.
Wealthy
doctors don’t know much about how the average person has to deal with taxes.
But they love to talk about how much they would do if you would just give her
your vote.
Well, Liz
Gorman doesn’t have to tell us what she “plans” to do if elected because what
she has done is more than most others have done.
The Stroger
Sales Tax was the most repressive tax ever imposed on Cook County residents.
Instead of fighting it, other county commissioners shockingly tried to increase
the tax to 2 cents. When Stroger was finally tossed out of office by angry
taxpayers, a lot of the commissioners who supported the tax increase reversed
and jumped on the Gorman bandwagon to reluctantly repeal the Stroger Sales Tax.
Gorman wasn’t
reluctant. She was persistent. She introduced the resolution three times to
repeal the Stroger Sales Tax. Most other commissioners would have given up when
the first effort failed. But not Gorman. She just kept on going.
And that makes
Bellar’s letter look even more stupid, especially when Bellar writes, “Liz
Gorman was close with the Todd Stroger team.”
You’re no Nun,
Doctor Bellar. Instead wasting the time trying to win public office, you should
go back to Church and ask for forgiveness. Forgiveness for lying. Forgiveness
for never lifting a finger to help the over-taxed homeowners of Cook County.
And, forgiveness for mailing out a sleazy campaign letter that spends every
drop of ink slandering a good person like Liz Gorman but never once offering a
single fresh idea on what you would if you ever happen to stumble into public
office.
Someone needs
to rap your knuckles with a ruler, Sister Bellar. But I think that slam is
coming in the Republican Primary Tuesday, March 18.
End
Related articles
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
Tribune endorses Liz Gorman in 17th Cook County District Race
Tribune endorses Liz Gorman in 17th Cook County District Race
The Chicago Tribune has given Cook County Commissioner Liz Gorman an enthusiastic endorsement in the March 18 Republican Primary election.
Gorman, who was first elected to the Cook County Board in 2002 and has been re-elected with overwhelming district support two more times in 2006 and 2010, seeks her 4th term in office in the General Elections, to be held November 4, 2014.
Gorman has received widespread support for standing up the extremists not just in the Republican Party, but the extremists it he Democratic Party, too, embracing a "centrist" approach to regional government that focuses on defending the rights of taxpayers, homeowners, senior citizens and fighting unnecessary tax increases.
Gorman led the fight in 2008 to repeal the 1 cent sales tax increase imposed by then Cook County Board President Todd Stroger. Although today many commissioner claims that the "led" the repeal fight, Gorman was the only commission to support the repeal each of the three times it was introduced. It was the final, third repeal motion that received majority support from the county board. But Gorman refused to drop the issue when initial efforts failed to win board majority votes. That persistence is recognized by the Chicago Tribune in their editorial March 12, 2014, in which the editors wrote:
17th District (Southwest, west and northwest suburbs): The lone GOP board race pits Barbara Bellar, a physician and attorney, against incumbent Elizabeth Doody Gorman. The Tribune has endorsed Gorman often and does so again here. Unlike board members who see taxpayers as the handy solution to Cook County's problems, Gorman has focused on keeping metropolitan Chicago attractive to employers. Proof: She worked tirelessly to exterminate Stroger's sales tax increase.
Although extremists in both parties have targeted Gorman over the years, her signled-minded focus on fighting for taxpayers' rights have earned her enormous support and election victories.
Recently, Gorman was instrumental in leading a group of centrist Republicans in Illinois to endorse the candidacy of Bruce Rauner in his battle for governor against challengers Bill Brady, Kirk Dillard and Dan Rutherford. The winner of the March 18 Gubernatorial Republican Primary is expected to face Democratic governor Pat Quinn.
end
Tuesday, March 11, 2014
Rauner plans pre-election Night/St. Patricks Day Rally March 17
Rauner plans pre-election Night/St. Patricks Day Rally March 17
Bruce Rauner, the Republican candidate for governor of Illinois, has scheduled a pre-election night, St. Patrick’s Day celebration for Monday March 17 at the Lexington House banquet hall, 7717 W. 95th Street in Hickery Hills in Chicagoland’s Southwest Suburbs.
The event is co-sponsored by Rauner backer Cook County Commissioner and Orland Township Republican Committeeman Elizabeth “Liz” Doody Gorman.
Gorman has been a major supporter of Rauner’s candidacy, which has picked up major steam over the past few months.
The event is open to Rauner supporters and will run from 7 pm until 9 pm with free beer, wine and food for attendees.
“We’re expecting a strong crowd to send a strong message that Illinois residents are ready for change that will improve the economic situation for families, seniors and young people in our state,” Gorman said.
Last week, Gorman hosted a rally for Rauner in Orland Park that was attended by several hundred voters. (Click here to view that story and video.)
Monday, March 3, 2014
Rauner woos Orland Township residents at meeting Monday
Rauner woos Orland Township residents at meeting Monday
By Ray Hanania
Republican gubernatorial candidate Bruce Rauner wooed a gathering of Orland Township residents and predicted he would win the Republican Primary and go on to remove Democratic incumbent Pat Quinn from office.
Rauner spoke for about 20 minutes detailing the issues he believes need to be addressed in the state, saying that while his critics are attacking him, he is attacking the issues.
After his speech, he took a wide range of questions from members of the audience who quizzed him on his stand on state pensions and Illinois' dire financial circumstances.
"This is our year. This is our election. We are going to sweep Pat Quinn out of office," vowed Rauner who was joined by his lieutenant governor running mate Evelyn Sanguinetti.
"We are going to transform our state government, that's why I am running. I'm sick and tired of these career politicians failing us. They fail us every year. They approve these pension deals. They approve more taxes. They drive businesses out of our state. I am sick and tired of it. I can't sit back and watch businesses leave our state. ... This is my home. This is your home. This is our home. ... This is where I was born and raised and I am not leaving without a fight."
Cook County Commissioner and Orland Township Republican Committeeman Elizabeth "Liz" Gorman introduced Rauner to an audience of nearly 200 taxpayers at a meeting at FOX's Pub at 143rd and Ravinia Drive Monday afternoon.
"One reason I really like Bruce Rauner is that he is not attacking his opponents. He's talking about the issues. He's going after Pat Quinn," Gorman said to audience cheers. Afterwards, Gorman added, "This election should be about the issues that impact voters and taxpayers and no one is better to bring those issues to the public than Bruce Rauner. That's why we are supporting him."
Rauner said his priorities include improving schools and education,
Rauner said he met with his family before deciding to run for office and his greatest concern came from his daughter who said she didn't want him to run. "She said she didn't want me to run because she said she feared I would go to jail," Rauner said, citing the history of Illinois governor's who have been convicted of corruption and have been sentenced to jail terms.
"I am the only person in this race who has never taken a nickel from the union bosses ... they have our political process by the throats and we are going to take it away from the," Rauner vowed.
Rauner said his top issues include creating jobs in Illinois and stemming the flight of big business out of the state; eliminate Gov. Quinn's "67 percent income tax hike" and overhaul the state's tax code; and to reform the pension system to guarantee the pensions earned by average statewide workers, but to end double and triple dipping by politicians and their cronies.
Rauner also repeated his promise to push for term limits if he is elected governor. Term limits would not just limit politicians to "eight years and no more," it would apply to him also.
Rauner, a successful businessman and former radio talk show host, said he had the backing of key Democrats in Chicagoland including Rev. James Meeks and several African American groups and church leaders, and said he was appealing to Hispanics in the state "who belong to the Republican Party."
Video of Rauner's appearance in Orland Township.
(Ray Hanania is an award winning former Chicago City Hall reporter and political columnist. He is the managing editor of Illinois News Network www.IllinoisNewsNetwork.com. This article was originally published in the Illinois News Network website.)
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