Incoming Illinois Governor Puts Ethics Reform on Agenda
Feb 2nd, 2009 • Posted in: NewsBlagojevich is out, with state Senate voting unanimously to remove him as governor after ethics scandal
CHICAGO
Immediately after Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich’s was impeached and removed from office late last week, his replacement vowed to put ethics reforms atop his political agenda.
The Chicago Sun-Times reports that one of Gov. Pat Quinn’s first moves after being elevated from the office of lieutenant governor was to re-establish an ethics commission.
Blagojevich was removed from office on a 59-0 vote in the Illinois state Senate, a week after the state House voted 114-1 to impeach him, National Public Radio reports.
While Blagojevich mounted a lengthy and vociferous campaign to depict himself as a victim of political railroading, his protests were unable to overcome the taped conversations referring to, among other things, selling Barack Obama’s vacated U.S. Senate seat to the highest bidder, notes NPR.
Blagojevich remained defiant, according to the Chicago Tribune, saying of the unanimous vote to oust him: “It was a fixed deal, and it was a fixed deal from the very beginning.”
Sources: Chicago Sun-Times, Jan. 31 — New York Times, Jan. 29 — Wall Street Journal, Jan. 29 — NPR, Jan. 29 — Chicago Tribune, Jan. 29 — TIME, Jan. 29 — Congressional Quarterly, Jan. 29.
For more information, see: Related Newsline story, Jan. 12 — Related Newsline story, Jan. 5 — Related Newsline story, Dec. 22, 2008 — Related Newsline story, Dec. 15, 2008 — Related Newsline Commentary, Dec. 15, 2008.
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