Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Jim Edgar pats Davis' head, backhands Governor Rauner in op-ed

 

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SPRINGFIELD - Former Governor Jim Edgar wrote in the Springfield Journal Register Monday that he's very pleased that Congressman Rodney Davis voted to pass U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan's negotiated compromise budget before the Christmas break. 

Illinois is into its seventh month without a functioning budget, and that is bugging Edgar.

“I learned I couldn’t get everything I wanted at one time,” Edgar said on WGN 720 in October. “My sense is (Rauner) thinks other things are just as important, and that’s probably where he and I probably have a different point of view. I just think the budget, particularly with the state’s history of the last decade of some real serious financial problems, we need to concentrate first on that.”

Edgar's op-ed Monday was especially interesting because its content could be interpreted as serving two purposes: publicly patting Congressman Davis on the head for playing nice in D.C. and privately back-handing Governor Bruce Rauner for being so stubborn and uncooperative.

Ridiculous? Read carefully Edgar's words

In my experience, you don’t always get everything you want. But it is important to keep making progress and stay focused on solving problems. Davis voted to lead, to govern and to make progress. He did the right thing.
Governing is challenging. Negotiating with divided branches is difficult and success comes slowly. When I was governor, for all but two years, we had a divided government and I often faced situations where I didn’t always get the reform I wanted. But even in divided government, we were able to work together to eliminate a massive backlog of state bill payments, build historic state budget surpluses and reduce the size of government.
We made progress together because we were disciplined, kept lines of communication open between the divided branches of government and recognized the need to compromise for the good of the people.

Think the enjoying-retirement governor wasn't sending a message to Bruce Rauner, whose determination to "Turnaround Illinois" has run him into AFSCME's brick wall and House Speaker Mike Madigan's non-negotiable mine field?

Here's Edgar's public conclusion:

In this time of polarizing politics, our country needs to make progress. I appreciate true leaders who will make the tough decisions to strengthen America and tackle problems. And I count Rodney Davis as one of them.

"Bruce Rauner" wasn't mentioned. 

Above is from:  http://illinoisreview.typepad.com/illinoisreview/2016/01/jim-edgar-pats-davis-head-backhands-governor-rauner-in-op-ed.html

 

 

  • Former Gov. Jim Edgar: Rodney Davis' vote on federal budget was responsible

    •  

      10:06 PM

  • Former Gov. Jim Edgar
    • Posted Jan. 12, 2016 at 10:06 PM

      Elected officials carry the significant responsibility to address problems, meet challenges and make progress for the people they represent. That responsibility includes making tough decisions.
      I learned early in my public service career that most people simply want their elected officials to get the job done. The challenges are hard enough to solve when people work together, so consider how difficult it is when they don’t.
      Regrettably, sometimes in politics, people focus on posturing rather than progress.
      We deserve better.
      That’s why I have a lot of respect for U.S. Rep. Rodney Davis and his recent vote on the federal budget. When faced with the choice to fund the government or face another government shutdown, he voted for progress. It was the responsible vote to cast. The economic losses from a government shutdown would have been astronomical. Continuing dysfunctional government in Washington is not governing and it is not leadership. Unfortunately, some in politics allow the perfect to become the enemy of the good.
      In my experience, you don’t always get everything you want. But it is important to keep making progress and stay focused on solving problems. Davis voted to lead, to govern and to make progress. He did the right thing.
      Governing is challenging. Negotiating with divided branches is difficult and success comes slowly. When I was governor, for all but two years, we had a divided government and I often faced situations where I didn’t always get the reform I wanted. But even in divided government, we were able to work together to eliminate a massive backlog of state bill payments, build historic state budget surpluses and reduce the size of government.
      We made progress together because we were disciplined, kept lines of communication open between the divided branches of government and recognized the need to compromise for the good of the people.
      The process in Washington is far from perfect. But leadership from members like Davis allowed Congress to pass a balanced budget for the first time in nearly a decade, save taxpayers $176 billion, and address one of the true drivers of our nation’s long-term debt by tackling Medicare reform.
      Davis and I don’t agree on everything, but I certainly respect his leadership. He has helped Illinois by helping pass a much-needed transportation bill and he is a strong voice for veterans.
      In this time of polarizing politics, our country needs to make progress. I appreciate true leaders who will make the tough decisions to strengthen America and tackle problems. And I count Rodney Davis as one of them.
      — Jim Edgar served as Illinois governor from 1991-1999. He resides in Springfield.

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