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The [Big-Box Veto] PapersWho says Mayor Daley has lost control of the City Council? His veto of the big-box ordinance has turned at least a few aldermen back into the quivering cowards we always knew they were. Pay The Man, Shirley Coleman, who is also a reverend, suddenly saw the light. It was almost as if God spoke to her. Coleman is now among several aldermen who will change their vote in order for the mayor's veto to survive a council override. The council's original vote in favor of the ordinance was an overwhelming 35-14. What Would A Real Alderman Do? Apparently, she's acting on faith. What Would Daley Do? "[C]ardenas, who voted in favor of the measure but signaled a possible switch shortly afterward, said he also would join with Daley," the Tribune reports. "He said he changed sides on the issue after the mayor spoke to him about the ordinance. "'My decision is based on Mayor Daley's track record,' Cardenas said in a statement. 'Chicago has never looked better.' "Cardenas, a freshman alderman elected with the backing of the pro-Daley Hispanic Democratic Organization, said the ordinance would harm 'the very people unions are trying to help.'" So let's get this straight: George Cardenas is basing his vote on a wage ordinance on how pretty the mayor's flowers are? And will he defer all future votes to Daley as well due to the mayor's "track record"? And at just what point in the debate did Cardenas realize that he thought the ordinance would hurt working people? The point where Daley pointed out to Cardenas that the person whose employment was most in jeopardy was Cardenas? What Would Danny Do? Will the council also, then, repeal the salary increases they voted for themselves along with the cover of the big-box ordinance? Or perhaps they think they deserve a raise for all the extra work they do now that they research issues and decide where they stand after voting on them, as well as before. After all, their workload seems to have doubled. Or maybe the fix was in from the start. What Will Voters Do? Instead, Daley wants to hang a lot of aldermen out to dry. What Do Voters Want? What Will Jackie Say Next? The paper did not report whether she said this with a straight face, or whether she went from directly making that statement to picking up this week's share of her taxpayer-funded $135,516 annual salary. That's What The Sun-Times Would Say The paper conveniently ignored a recent U.S. House committee report that found that each Wal-Mart store costs taxpayers on average $420,750 annually in public social services sought by workers whose low wages and lack of adequate health insurance land them in the ranks of the working poor. What Will The Council Do Next? "Since everybody was complaining that this would only attack (big-box retailers), maybe we will go ahead and go after everybody this time and say everybody has to pay (a higher minimum wage)," Lyle said. Maybe that's what the City Council should have done in the first place. Posted on September 12, 2006 |
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