Saturday, September 26, 2009

March is possible trial date for hit and run suspect Eric James Hunter




Left: Joan LeVasseur a hit & run victim and Right: Eric James Hunter's mugshot
By Rach Eggert, Rach’s Political Report

September 26, 2009

Possible trial date for Eric James Hunter who is suspect in Joan LeVasseur’s hit and run accident death is set for March 16, 2010. They are trying to move trial date back to sometimes in January, 2010 but not certain when due to court calendar being full.

Eric James Hunter made an initial appearance at Dakota County Court in Hastings on Monday, September 21st. He chose trial instead of going to jail immediately.

Once information become more available at later date, it will be updated.

Connecticut company unveils Michele Bachmann action figure

by Madeleine Baran, Minnesota Public Radio

September 25, 2009


St. Paul, Minn. — Rep. Michele Bachmann has attracted national media attention for her denunciation of ACORN and for suggesting that President Obama might be "anti-American," but on Friday she achieved a new level of celebrity status -- in the form of her own action figure.

The Connecticut-based toy company Herobuilders plans to release the doll today on its website.

The $39.95 Bachmann action figure will share the catalog with Rod Blagojevich, (a $149.95 limited edition figure), Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (sporting a t-shirt that reads "Let them eat yellow cake"), Joe the Plumber (with his own custom-made crow bar), and a talking Joe Wilson, among others.

Emil Vicale, CEO of Herobuilders, said that choosing who gets to be an action figure can be difficult.

"There's a lot of thought that goes into that," he said. "Sometimes it's just very easy, like Joe Wilson when he called Obama a liar. I mean you have to be an action figure then. Sarah Palin, that was pretty obvious."

"I think you just have to strike my fancy, I guess."


When asked what aspects of Bachmann "struck his fancy," Vicale said, "She's hot. Did I say that out loud? Yeah, I guess I did."

Bachmann will be dressed in a business suit. Vicale said he originally thought about having her hold a gun, "but I'm thinking 'no' this time."

"We're not going to do anything over the top," he said. "I think she'll look good in a nice tailored business suit."

Dave Dziok, a spokesperson for Bachmann, said the Congresswoman hadn't heard about the action figure. "That's pretty cool," he said.

Herobuilders started in 2002, when it released a President George Bush action figure, after Vicale was inspired by President Bush's appearance at Ground Zero.

But Vicale said that Sarah Palin and Mohammed Saeed al-Sahhaf, the former Iraqi Information Minister, have been the most popular.

He declined to provide specific sales figures, other than to say that he once sold 20,000 al-Sahhaf action figures in 24 hours, when the minister gained the nickname "Baghdad Bob" for his bizarre statements during the Iraq War.

Vicale has considered and rejected several action figure candidates, including Rep. Ron Paul, whose denunciation of the Federal Reserve has attracted national attention.

"I've been asked that before," he said, speaking about Paul. "He doesn't look like an action figure at all, does he?"

Vicale said his company, despite designing sometimes outrageous figures, is a business like any other.

"We're really trying to sell product," he said. "So you really have to look at the broad base and the appeal of the person first, and then what it would look like as an action figure second, and will someone buy it. Will an adult actually want this as a collectible?"

The Bachmann action figure, manufactured in Oxford, Connecticut, will be limited to 250 figures, although Vicale said more could be produced if demand is high.

Teamsters unit backs Rybak for governor

Source: Star Tribune

September 26, 2009

Teamsters Local 120, the largest Teamsters unit in Minnesota, has endorsed Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak for governor.

Local President Brad A. Slawson Jr. said in a statement issued Saturday that the union is "most confident in Rybak's prospects for winning statewide election and moving forward."

Rybak, who has been Minneapolis' mayor since 2001 and is running for reelection in November, hasn't declared his intentions but has said it is "very likely" he will run for governor next year. DFLers who have already declared they will run include House Speaker Margaret Anderson Kelliher, Sen. Tom Bakk, former U.S. Sen. Mark Dayton, former House Minority Leader Matt Entenza, Ramsey County Attorney Susan Gaertner, Rep. Tom Rukavina, Rep. Paul Thissen, Sen. John Marty and former Sen. Steve Kelley. St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman also has indicated he may run.

Local 120, which has 14,000 members, based its endorsement on the relationships it has with politicians, a spokesman said. No candidates appeared before the union to request endorsement.

MARY JANE SMETANKA

DFL moves party convention from June to April

Source: KARE 11

MINNEAPOLIS -- The Minnesota DFL Party says it will hold next year's state convention two months earlier than previously scheduled, moving it to the week before the state GOP convention.

The DFL said Saturday its convention will be in Duluth from April 23-25, instead of in June as previously planned.

The state Republican convention is slated to run from April 29 to May 1 in Minneapolis.

DFL Chair Brian Melendez says the party's decision to move its convention up two months will make its endorsed candidate even more competitive.

He says DFLers will have more time to rally behind their candidate, which will help the party build momentum for the general election.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Obama to appear at Target Center

By BOB VON STERNBERG, Star Tribune

Last update: September 9, 2009


President Obama will bring his campaign to overhaul the nation's health care system to the Twin Cities on Saturday with what's being billed as a "health care reform rally" at Target Center.

The event will begin at 12:30 p.m. Doors open at 9:30 a.m. with airport-style security, and seating will be on a first-come, first-seated basis.

No bags, no sharp objects, no umbrellas, no liquids, no strollers, and no signs will be allowed into the venue. Cameras are permitted.

Obama's arrival and departure on Air Force One will not be open to the public.

Sen. Amy Klobuchar said late Tuesday night that she had heard that the president might be in Minnesota but hadn't received confirmation of the trip from White House officials.

But a trip to Minnesota would make sense, she said, because Obama has used Minnesota as a "shining example" of health care services. Specifically, Obama has cited the Mayo Clinic in Rochester as a system that works, praising its integrated system as an example of efficient, coordinated care.

However, Mayo officials have at time been at loggerheads with both the White House and Democratic congressional leaders over health care reform plans being considered.

Earlier this summer, the clinic blasted House Democrats' bill, saying "the proposed legislation misses the opportunity to help create higher quality, more affordable health care for patients."

Nonetheless, a Mayo official was scheduled to be in the audience tonight when Obama makes his case for health care reform before a joint session of Congress.

Jeffrey Korsmo of Mayo's Health Policy Center was invited to the speech by Rep. Tim Walz, D-Minn., who represents the clinic.

Also attending the speech will be Peter Olsen, a University of Minnesota medical student.

He was invited by Klobuchar after he spoke during a recent roundtable she held to stress the need for more primary care physicians, particularly in rural areas.

He was invited by Klobuchar after he spoke during a recent roundtable she held to stress the need for more primary care physicians, particularly in rural areas.

Obama may pay visit to Twin Cities for health care talk

By MARY LYNN SMITH, Star Tribune

Last update: September 9, 2009

A presidential visit may be in the works for the Twin Cities.

President Obama reportedly will be in Minnesota on Saturday, most likely to deliver a speech on health care reform at either the Target Center in Minneapolis or the Xcel Center in St. Paul.

White House officials haven't disclosed details about the trip, and on Tuesday local Democratic officials said they hadn't received any official word about a visit.

Sen. Amy Klobuchar said late Tuesday night that she had heard that the president might be in Minnesota but hadn't received confirmation of the trip from White House officials.

But a trip to Minnesota would make sense, she said, because Obama has used Minnesota as a "shining example" of health care services. Specifically, Obama has cited the Mayo Clinic in Rochester as a system that works, praising its integrated system as an example of efficient, coordinated care.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Ousted Illinois Gov. Blagojevich explains himself, pick for Obama's Senate seat in new book


Source: Star Tribune

By DEANNA BELLANDI, Associated Press

Last update: September 1, 2009

CHICAGO - Ousted Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich says in a new book that White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel wanted his help in arranging to leave the Obama administration after two years to reclaim his seat in Congress.

Blagojevich writes in "The Governor" that Emanuel spoke with him about whether it was possible to appoint a "placeholder" to the congressional seat Emanuel was giving up so that he could win back the seat in 2010 and continue his efforts to become speaker some day.

"As we have done for many months, we will continue to decline comment," Emanuel spokeswoman Sarah Feinberg said in an e-mail Monday.

Blagojevich also admits that he wanted something in exchange for appointing President Barack Obama's replacement in the Senate, but it wasn't the deal described in federal corruption charges against him.

The Chicago Democrat says that the night before his arrest in December, he had launched a plan to appoint Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan to the Senate seat because he hoped to cut a deal on pet projects with her father, powerful Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan.

That plan was ruined by his arrest. Blagojevich writes that he eventually appointed Roland Burris, in part because of Burris' famously big ego. No one else but Burris would accept the appointment and fight to be seated under the circumstances, Blagojevich says.

Burris' office declined to comment.

The ex-governor's 264-page book, published by Phoenix, comes out Sept. 8. It offers a benign picture of events surrounding Blagojevich's arrest in a corruption scandal that U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald said would make Abraham Lincoln "roll over in his grave."

The scandal cost Blagojevich his job when lawmakers impeached and threw him out of office in January. The once-rising political star is scheduled to stand trial next year. Blagojevich, who has pleaded not guilty, repeatedly asserts his innocence in the book.

He says his discussions about Obama's possible successors amounted to "ordinary and routine politicking."

But federal authorities cast it in a much different light, alleging Blagojevich was caught on FBI wiretaps discussing what he could get in exchange for the seat, from jobs to campaign contributions.

Blagojevich says that story is "upside down" and that he never asked for, or raised the subject of, campaign contributions in exchange for the Senate seat.

Others approached his administration with offers of campaign money, he says in "The Governor" without naming names. "If anyone should have been charged with a crime for this, it should have been them and not me," he writes.

When Blagojevich talked to Emanuel after the election about the Senate pick, Obama's right-hand man "did not lobby for anyone in particular," according to the book.

Blagojevich says Emanuel was interested in his own career because he had to give up his congressional seat to work in Obama's White House. Blagojevich writes that Emanuel dreamed of being speaker of the U.S. House and wanted to know if Blagojevich would work with him to name a successor to "hold" his seat until he wanted it back.

Blagojevich says he told Emanuel he didn't think he could do that and the House vacancy would have to be filled by special election. But Emanuel reportedly told him "his lawyers thought there was a way."

Blagojevich writes that he struggled with the idea of appointing Lisa Madigan to the Senate. The prospect "repulsed" him because of bad blood with her father.

But in the end, Blagojevich saw it as a way to entice Michael Madigan to support legislation he wanted, including a long-stalled statewide construction program that he said would create jobs and expand health care access for families.

Blagojevich says he told his chief of staff, John Harris, to begin working on a deal to appoint Lisa Madigan. The deal was halted when both Blagojevich and Harris were arrested the next day, Dec. 9, 2008.

"Mr. Fitzgerald didn't stop a crime spree. He stopped me from doing a lot of good for a lot of people," Blagojevich writes.

Harris has since agreed to testify against Blagojevich after pleading guilty and admitting that he repeatedly talked to the then-governor about ways he could profit from his authority to appoint Obama's successor.

It's unclear if the Madigans were aware of Blagojevich's intentions. Lisa Madigan said last November she thought there was a "less than zero" chance Blagojevich would appoint her.

Madigan's spokeswomen, Robyn Ziegler, said the attorney general hasn't read the book and doesn't intend to.

Madigan was widely seen as a potent challenge to Blagojevich if he ran for a third term in 2010. After he was arrested, Blagojevich writes, he was a "political leper."
He decided to fill the Senate vacancy by appointing Burris, the former state comptroller and attorney general and the first black man to hold a major statewide office in Illinois. Blagojevich said Burris was qualified and had the self-confidence to accept the appointment despite the scandal.

"It was that self-esteem that I was counting on to be able to withstand the storm of protest that was inevitably going to come," he said.

Minnesota Capitol adds Somali to list of languages

Source: Pioneer Press

Associated Press

Updated: 09/01/2009

Somali-speaking visitors to the Minnesota State Capitol can now pick up a brochure in their language to guide them around the building.

The Minnesota Historical Society has added Somali to a list of about two dozen translations for the brochures, which cover the building's history and uses as the seat of state government.

Brochures are available in languages ranging from Spanish and Russian to Slovak, Thai, Swedish and Turkmen. There are also Braille and large-print versions.

The Capitol will mark its 105th birthday in January

Massachusetts AG apparently first to seek Kennedy's seat

By Glen Johnson
Associated Press
Updated: 09/01/2009

BOSTON — Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley appears to be the first candidate in a special election for the Senate seat left open by the death of Edward Kennedy.

A woman who said she was representing Coakley picked up nomination papers from the Secretary of State today. Coakley aides did not immediately return calls or e-mails seeking confirmation of her candidacy.

Other Democrats said to be weighing a race include a Kennedy nephew, former Rep. Joseph P. Kennedy II; plus U.S. Reps. Stephen Lynch and Michael Capuano. Republicans include former Lt. Gov. Kerry Healey and state Sen. Scott Brown.

The primary is Dec. 8 and the special election Jan. 19.

Kennedy died last week of brain cancer at age 77.

McCollum sounds out health care friends and foes

A polite but passionate town hall crowd has its share of reform critics

By Bill Salisbury

bsalisbury@pioneerpress.com

Updated: 08/31/2009

In sharp contrast to the angry protesters disrupting meetings elsewhere across the land, the people who got into U.S. Rep. Betty McCollum's forum on health reform Monday night in St. Paul kept their cool.

McCollum's 90-minute public meeting at Macalester College was a civil affair. Audience members asked their questions and stated their positions politely and often passionately, but there was no shouting or disruption.

Based on the signs they carried, the crowd packing the Weyerhaeuser Chapel appeared to overwhelmingly support President Barack Obama's health care overhaul plan. An overflow crowd that McCollum's staff estimated at nearly 400 listened to the forum from speakers on the chapel lawn.

While it was largely a friendly crowd, the five-term Democratic congresswoman from St. Paul got an earful from opponents of the Democratic health bills now pending in Congress and from proponents who argued lawmakers aren't going far enough to change the system.

Critics included Democrats and political independents.

A woman who identified herself as Susan from Mendota Heights said she has been an active Democrat, but she opposed the bill because of the enormous debt the nation would incur to pay for it.

"I'm an independent, and I detest this bill," said Bob, of St. Paul, who warned it would add trillions to the national debt.

"We're in an economic crisis," he said. "We need to get our country solvent first."

McCollum didn't address the debt issue directly, but in her opening remarks, she said, "We need to pay for reforms with efficiencies, expanded preventive care that saves money and cutting excessive profits out of the system, not more deficit spending."
Most critics zeroed in on the dangers of government taking control of health care.

"This bill is more government, more cost and less choice," said Todd, a small-business owner from St. Paul. He urged McCollum to change direction and give consumers more freedom to choose their own health insurance.

Joe, who called himself a "loyal, conservative Republican" from White Bear Lake, warned that while corporations providing health care can't take your property, liberty or money, government can.

Small-business owner Dave, of Oakdale, asserted every individual should be responsible for purchasing his or her own insurance.

"This government involvement is driving me wild," he said.

McCollum didn't respond to each anti-government statement, but at the start of the meeting she argued the U.S. health system is broken when 60 million Americans are uninsured or underinsured, when the system costs twice as much per person as any other country but ranks 37th in results and when insurance companies are canceling coverage and "dumping the sick."

She supports a government-run insurance program, called the "public option," that she said would increase competition in the marketplace, hold down premium costs and make insurance affordable for all Americans.

Bonnie said she read the Democratic bill moving through the House and said it "made it look like I couldn't keep my health insurance ... that I'd have to take the public option."

That's not true, McCollum said. The bill would not force anyone onto government-run insurance.

"I will not vote for any bill that requires people to take a public plan," she said.

From the other side of the debate, the congresswoman was told Democrats were not fighting hard enough for health care reform or going far enough in pursuing change.

Lydia, of St. Paul, criticized them for allowing their conservative opponents to take control of the debate.

"I'm disappointed that Democrats are not standing up and being strong," she said.

The opponents are noisier, McCollum acknowledged, "but we're trying to do this in a very thoughtful way."

A man who identified himself as a doctor at a U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs hospital said the VA system is proof government-run health care works well. He got a long round of applause when he encouraged McCollum to "support a system like that for all Americans."

When the forum ended, she thanked the audience for a "thoughtful exchange of ideas."

The tone contrasted sharply with Republican Rep. Michele Bachmann's town hall Thursday in Lake Elmo, where protesters tried to shout her down and the congresswoman's supporters drowned out their disruptions.