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The Chicago Way, On Tape - Wall Street Journal

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http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122886924808193177.html?mod=djemEditorialPage
Wall Street Journal
December 09, 2008
The Wiretap was golden
The list of crooked politicians is long, and the list of stupid
politicians even longer. But if the criminal allegations made yesterday
against Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich are proven in court, rarely
will a politician have combined the two qualities with such
efflorescence.
The second-term Democrat knew that a grand jury probe was under way
into corruption in Illinois politics, and that one of his fund raisers,
Tony Rezko, had been convicted and is cooperating with prosecutors. Yet
according to those prosecutors, Mr. Blagojevich talked openly in recent
weeks about selling a U.S. Senate seat, trading government favors for
campaign cash, and punishing the owner of the Chicago Tribune if it
didn't fire members of the newspaper's editorial board.
The Governor's comments were taped in court-approved wiretaps and
include such self-incriminating classics as: "I've got this thing [the
power to appoint Barack Obama's Senate replacement] and it's
[expletive] golden, and, uh, uh, I'm just not giving it up for
[expletive] nothing. I'm not gonna do it. And, and I can always use it.
I can parachute me there." We recommend the entire 76-page FBI
affidavit for every high school civics course as proof of the need for
political checks and balances.
If convicted, Mr. Blagojevich would be the second consecutive Illinois
Governor to be found guilty of a felony, and the fourth in 35 years.
We'd ask if it's something in the water, but that would be unfair to
the Chicago River. It is certainly something in the Chicago political
culture, where money and government power seem especially fungible.
Among the remarkable facts of the recent Presidential election is that
Barack Obama emerged from this political culture virtually untainted --
and with Chicago's political mores all but unexamined by the press.
Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald said yesterday there is no evidence that
Mr. Obama knew about the Governor's allegedly crooked ambitions.
However, as a Chicago-area pol himself, Mr. Obama did help Mr.
Blagojevich plot his first statehouse victory in 2002.
Now would be a good time for the President-elect to say that Mr.
Blagojevich and his cronies should have nothing to do with naming Mr.
Obama's successor. And that, given the taint of corruption that now
hangs over any choice, the state should hold a special Senate election.