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2019年2月4日 星期一

Trump pays Winston & Strawn after all | Elon Musk and the mayor's race | Lauren Underwood's SOTU guest

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Chicago Tribune

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February 4, 2019

chicagotribune.com

The Spin by Lisa Donovan

Last year, President Donald Trump wanted to say "You're hired!" to two powerful attorneys at Chicago-based Winston & Strawn, including former U.S. Attorney Dan K. Webb. They politely declined, citing business conflicts. But the firm ended up being paid late last year for "legal consulting" for Trump's campaign, which remains in the white hot spotlight as special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation continues.

Guests who members of Congress invite to attend the State of the Union address is often a statement on the issues of the day. So we're taking a look at who freshman U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood and other members of the Illinois delegation have asked to be their "plus one" on Tuesday night. U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush's staff says the Democrat will go solo because "he can't find anyone who wants the ticket."

And at City Hall, it sounds like nerves are frayed and civility is hanging by a thread over the federal pay-to-play investigation that prompted Ald. Danny Solis to wear a wire on Ald. Edward Burke, who's now charged with attempted extortion.

Welcome to The Spin.

1

How the Burke, Solis federal investigation has infected City Hall

From the Tribune's John Byrne: "In the days since his federal cooperation came to light, rumors about whom City Council Ald. Daniel Solis may have caught saying something stupid on tape have created a parlor game of whispering among aldermen. With more cliques than a high school cafeteria, the fractious 50-member body is always fertile ground for internecine squabbling. And with little solid information to go on, the City Hall telephone game is filling in the gaps, rumors begetting rumors and creating what one alderman termed 'a toxic atmosphere' in the body." Read the full story here.

Off the list: Several Chicago mayoral candidates are ticked off that they've been left off the invite list for this Thursday's candidate debate hosted by WFLD-FOX 32 Chicago at the Union League Club. The candidates scheduled to appear in the live 6 p.m. broadcast include City Hall veteran Gery Chico, former Obama chief of staff Bill Daley, state Comptroller Susana Mendoza, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle, and businessman and philanthropist Willie Wilson. Public policy consultant Amara Enyia and former Chicago Public Schools CEO Paul Vallas are calling on the station to open the event up to all 14 candidates.

2

Amara Enyia's financial problems: Underreporting income, tax lien, lawsuits

A candidate's money woes: From the Tribune's David Heinzmann: "Chicago mayoral hopeful Amara Enyia omitted one-third of her income on her 2017 federal tax return, the latest in a series of money missteps for a candidate who is campaigning as a public finance expert, a Tribune investigation has found." Read the full story here.

3

Time running out for Elon Musk's high-speed tunnel to O'Hare?

From the Tribune's Mary Wisniewski: "With the mayoral election looming at the end of the month, time is running out for the Emanuel administration to reach a contract with Elon Musk to build a high-tech rapid transit system between the Loop and O'Hare International Airport. Most candidates to replace Emanuel for mayor are either lukewarm about the project or hostile to it. If the city does not get a contract with the billionaire entrepreneur soon and elects a mayor who does not support the project, plans for the transit system are unlikely to move forward." Read the story here.

Put the brakes on 78 project? From Byrne: "A candidate (Alex Acevedo) seeking to succeed Ald. Danny Solis in the City Council says Solis' cooperation with federal investigators means the city should pump the brakes on a public subsidy to support a massive project south of the Loop that's at the top of Mayor Rahm Emanuel's to-do list before he leaves office." Read the full story here.

4

Trump campaign paid Winston & Strawn law firm nearly $100K late last year for 'legal consulting,' records show

March 2018: Two prominent attorneys with the Chicago-headquartered Winston & Strawn law firm, including former U.S. Attorney Dan K. Webb, declined to represent President Donald Trump, citing "business conflicts."

December 2018: Winston & Strawn provided "legal consulting," to the tune of nearly $100,000, to Trump's presidential campaign late last year, according to a Federal Election Commission filing. The Trump campaign paid $55,330.50 and $42,574.29 — for a total of $97,904.79 — on Dec. 11 and Dec. 28, respectively, to the law firm's Washington, D.C., office for "legal consulting," according to the FEC report.

All of this comes as special counsel Robert Mueller winds down his investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential campaign, with the Trump camp worked with Russian officials and whether the president interfered in the resulting investigation. To date, 34 people have been charged in the probe, including several people who are or once were in the president's inner circle. Read my story here.

5

Who U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood, others are inviting to State of the Union address

On Tuesday, President Donald Trump will address the nation in the State of the Union address — this year following the record government shutdown and a pitched partisan battle between the president and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Each member of Congress is allowed a guest, and very often those guests underscore the issues of the day — from immigration to the government shutdown. We reached out to the Illinois congressional delegation to find out who will be with them as the president holds forth. Here's what we know so far:

U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth, a Hoffman Estates Democrat, will be accompanied by Lily Wu, a Chicago resident and first generation American — her parents emigrated from China according to the senator's staff. Wu is currently an International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers apprentice, "trying to break into a male dominated field and live the American Dream."

U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, a Springfield Democrat, will take air traffic controller Toby Hauck as a way to highlight the effects of the recent government shutdown.

U.S. Rep. Sean Casten, a Downers Grove Democrat representing the 6th District, who like Garcia is a freshman lawmaker has asked Judie Caribeaux, executive director of Family Shelter Services, to attend the State of the Union address. A Naperville resident, she has spoken openly about how the recent government shutdown hurt domestic abuse victims who depend on Family Shelter Service, which receives federal aid, according to Casten's office. Read the full story in our sister paper the Naperville Sun here.

U.S. Rep. Jesus "Chuy" Garcia, a Chicago Democrat representing the 4th Congressional District and a freshman lawmaker in the U.S. House of Representatives, will be accompanied by his spouse, Evelyn.

U.S. Rep. Bill Foster, a Naperville Democrat representing the 11th District, asked Marilyn Weisner, the executive director of the suburban Aurora Food Pantry, to be his guest. In addition to her own work, Weisner was married to former Aurora Mayor Tom Weisner, who died in December after a long cancer battle.

U.S. Rep. Adam Kinzinger, the Channahon Republican representing the 16th District, will bring Officer Mark Dallas, the School Resource Officer at Dixon High School who intervened last May when a former student showed up with a gun near the school gym where students were gathered for a graduation rehearsal. Dallas shot and injured the gunman after the suspect fired at the officer while trying to flee. The president has previously lauded Dallas.

U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, a Schaumburg Democrat representing the 8th District, has invited Joe Podlasek, a local advocate for the Native American community with a focus on veterans, will be the congressman's guest. A citizen of the LCO Ojibwe Tribe in northern Wisconsin and of Polish descent, he operates the Trickster Art Gallery of native art in Schaumburg.

U.S. Rep. Dan Lipinski will be accompanied by Chicago police Officer Gino Garcia, a constituent whose mother — also a Chicago police officer — died at the hands of an abusive boyfriend. The Tribune reported on the tragic 2000 killing. Read here. Gino Garcia is now an advocate for domestic violence victims.

U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood, the Democrat representing the 14th District, has invited 7-year-old Naperville resident Allie Bland after the congresswoman — also from Naperville — learned the girl had left domestic violence survivors and their families handwritten notes and drawings of support at a DuPage County shelter. Read the story in our sister paper, the Naperville Sun, here. U.S. Rep. Mike Quigley, a Chicago Democrat representing the 6th District, has invited Chante Copeland-Smith, an Individual Tax Advisory Specialist who works in one of the IRS's Taxpayer Assistance Centers, which were closed during the partial government shutdown. Quigley, chair of the Financial Services Appropriations Subcommittee, pushed legislation to reopen the IRS and other key agencies to aid taxpayers.

U.S. Rep. Brad Schneider, a Deerfield Democrat representing the 10th District invited Ivan Hernandez, 26, of Waukegan, to be the congressman's guest. Hernandez came to the United States from Mexico at age 12 and under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy, he eventually gained a work permit, graduated from College of Lake County and Columbia College and is now employed at a Waukegan bank.

U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush, a 1st District Democrat from Chicago, says he won't bring a guest because he can't find anyone who wants to attend. He'll wear white "to acknowledge the historic 106 women serving in the House of Representatives and to stand in solidarity with women across the country," said spokesman Ryan Johnson.

6

Gov. Pritzker, the Rev. Jesse Jackson join prominent Democrats calling on Virginia's governor to resign over yearbook photo

llinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker has joined the chorus of lawmakers calling on Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam to resign following the discovery of a photo of a person in blackface standing next to someone dressed in a Ku Klux Klan robe on Northam's medical school yearbook page. And the Rev. Jesse Jackson also has called for him to step down. Read the story here.

ldonovan@chicagotribune.com

Twitter @byldonovan

 

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