Progress Illinois, the political and issue oriented website partially sponsored by the SEIU Illinois State Council, reports that Cook Co. Democratic Party Chair, and Democratic Nominee for Cook Co. Assessor, Joe Berrios, and his campaign will not challenge the 90,000 some odd petition signatures filed by the Forrest Claypool campaign, in it's attempt to get him on the November ballot as an independent candidate For Assesor.
From a press release of the Berrios campaign, posted on 'PI':
"It would be irresponsible to subject either the public authorities or our opponent to the cost, time and effort of litigation, perhaps all the way to the Illinois Supreme Court," said campaign spokesman Manuel Galvan. "Instead, the campaign asks Mr. Claypool to set aside the insults and empty rhetoric, and pledge to conduct a spirited, fair and clean campaign. The public deserves nothing less."
If Forrest gets on the ballot, as he seems likely to do at this point, this situation is going to present a delicate balancing act by progressive, reform-minded Democrats as to who to support in that race.
Should make for interesting going in the General this November.
Carol Marin's Sunday column in the Chicago Sun-Times reports that Democratic Cook County Commissioner Forrest Claypool will run as an independent for Cook County Assessor, should he get enough signatures to qualify to get on the November ballot.
"I didn't expect to be a candidate," Claypool said by phone Thursday. "But I was angered and surprised someone like Joe Berrios with record low turnout could slip in with 39 percent of the vote . . . carried over the finish line by ward bosses."
Why does this matter to progressives, and people trying to change the Democratic Party in Northern Illinois?
At the same time, as a commissioner on the county Board of Review, Berrios hears tax appeal cases brought by Madigan and Cullerton's law firms, which specialize in reducing assessments for big-ticket clients.
Berrios, Madigan, Cullerton. What a perfect storm of personal and political self-interest.
Longtime progressive activist Andrea Raila has folded her campaign for Cook County assessor. In a letter to friends and supporters last night, Andrea said, "This decision was made for personal reasons, with the understanding of the challenges and expense of pending legal objections to our petitions." Raila thus joins Oak Park Ali ElSaffar in the ranks of the fallen aspirants for this quiet but powerful post.
An article in the Reader a couple weeks ago quoted the slated candidate, tax appeals commissioner and Democratic county chairman Joe Berrios, as saying, with "a little chuckle," "If you look at my career, you know I have a lawyer who looks at petitions." The expense of defending a challenge to countywide petitions is daunting since it involves looking at thousands of facts, i.e., signatures. Berrios's petition challenge to Jay Paul Deratany, while unsuccessful, reportedly threw a major cramp into Deratany's campaign, robbing it of time and a lot of money.
Raila needed over 8,000 signatures to get on the ballot; rule of thumb is that a candidate should have at least 2x the minimum to ward off a challenge, especially if the signatures are gathered in public places as opposed to door-to-door. Raila had thousands more than the minimum but, I understand, less than 2x.
The episode highlights the advantage that a slate has over an independent solo candidate. Berrios benefited from being on petitions that also featured, e.g., David Orr and Maria Pappas. Good-government progressives historically "wait to see who's running" and vet their choices through endorsement processes with various degress of rigor; by the time they do that it's too late to run as a team.
It also shows the importance of seizing electoral opportunities when they arise. I am reminded of the George Harrison lyric: "Everyone has choice / When to and not to raise their voices / It's you that decides." Andrea thanked her "more than 100" circulators and is still planning to fete them on the 13th. But 100 just wasn't enough, and now Democratic voters in Cook County will have a little less choice on the ballot come Feb. 2.
As many here know, I ran against Berrios a number of years ago. I bear him no ill will whatsoever and coincidentally had a nice chat with him last night at a downtown event. But Andrea Raila has been an unsung asset to reform candidates for many years and would have been a breath of fresh air to Cook County government. Her candidacy would have brought a spirited debate and some sunshine to assessment practices in the county. Let's hope we get more government in place that can find a place for people like Andrea.
Two people I think highly of are running for elected office. These are not the offices that attract a lot of attention. They are not glitzy but they are two of the offices that affect each and every one of our lives. Both of these individuals are solid, progressive Democrats. Both have asked for help with gathering signatures.
Andrea Raila is running for Cook County Assessor. She's a tax geek in the best sense of the word and is running against several candidates, most notably Joe Berrios, who is chairman of the county's Democratic Party and commissioner of the Cook County Board of Review.
Clint Krislov is running for State Comptroller. Clint is an attorney and is representing the IVI-IPO in its parking meter lease lawsuit. An experienced and savvy advocate, Clint is competing with Raja Krishnamoorthi and David E. Miller for the seat.
On Thursday, August 6, Cook County Assessor Jim Houlihan announced her would not seek re-election. See Sun-Times (Abdon M. Pallasch). Josesph Berrios, chairman of the Cook County Dems and one of the three commissioners of the Board of Review, is expected to be a candidate. Houlihan has feuded with Berrios and is not expected to support his candidacy.
One possible candidate for Cook County Assessor is the Oak Park Township Assessor Ali ElSaffar. ElSaffar has innovated by using software to allow Oak Park Township to more efficiently prepare property tax appeals. ElSaffar is the president of the association of Cook County township assessors.
* He owns a business that manages properties and does some legal work
* His father emigrated from Iraq and taught physics at DePaul.
* His mother was a professor of Spanish literature, originally from El Paso, Texas.
* ElSaffar speaks Spanish fluently; he's studied Arabic at DePaul.
* When the Berwyn assessor died ElSaffar served as both the assessor in Oak Park and in Berwyn. He continues to coordinate and assist both the Berwyn and River Forest assessors in implementing practices developed in Oak Park.