Widget Image
Follow PPD Social Media
Tuesday, March 4, 2025
HomeStandard Blog Whole Post (Page 819)

The Labor Department said weekly jobless claims rose less than expected for the week ended April, bring the the four-week moving average to its lowest level since 2000. But considering last week the government changed its method for calculating the closely-watched survey, it is far from clear whether the data suggest the slowdown in job growth in March was a fluke.

First-time claims for state unemployment benefits rose by 14,000 to a seasonally adjusted 281,000 last week, but without the method change it is likely the number would not have remained below 300,000, a threshold that is associated with a strengthening labor market.

Economists polled by Reuters had forecast claims rising to 285,000 last week.

Job growth slowed sharply in March, with Labor’s own Bureau of Labor Statistics jobs report showing nonfarm payrolls increasing by just 126,000. The end to a 12-month stretch of employment gains above 200,000 was far from surprising, as the ADP National Employment Report and multiple sector surveys telegraphed the slowdown.

Last week’s abysmal employment numbers were also accompanied by weak consumer and business spending data, as well as industrial production and housing starts data, all of which culminated into a picture of the economy growing at a less-than 1 percent annual rate in the first quarter.

A Labor Department analyst said there was nothing unusual in the state-level data, but the department refused to comment on the impact the survey’s changes may have had on the number. However, it is true that weekly jobless claims tend to be volatile around Easter and holidays, in general.

The four-week moving average of claims — which is widely considered a better measure of labor market trends as it irons out week-to-week volatility — fell 3,000 to 282,250 last week. It is the lowest level since June 2000, but due to the aforementioned method changes prior weeks were revised down far more than economists anticipated.

The Federal Reserve is watching the jobs market as it decides when to raise interest rates this year, but FOMC minutes released Wednesday revealed the policy-making committee wants to keep flexible.

The claims report also showed the number of people still receiving benefits after an initial week of aid fell 23,000 to 2.30 million in the week ended March 28. Though that was the lowest level since December 2000, the number of ineligible long-term unemployed has simply helped to shrink the pool. Further, historical highs of otherwise able-bodied Americans on Social Security Disability Insurance offers another element to the economic story.

Considering last week the government changed its

Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Building

IRS building, Internal Revenue Service HQ, Washington, D.C.

With tax day looming, let’s wallow in misery by contemplating the burden on America’s taxpayers.

But we’ll ignore the angst caused be dealing with an indecipherable tax code and an oppressive IRS and simply focus on the amount of money that gets extracted from our income each year.

The bad news is that the federal government is collecting a record amount of money, even after adjusting for inflation. Here’s a chart, based on the latest numbers from the Office of Management and Budget.

Federal-Tax-Revenue-FY2009-Dollars

Source: Office of Management and Budget.

But there is some good news. This isn’t a record tax burden when measured as a share of economic output.

Federal taxes are projected to consume 17.7 percent of GDP this year. That’s higher than the post-WWII average of 17.2 percent of GDP, but there have been several years in which the federal tax burden has been higher than 17.7 percent, most recently in 2007, when it reached 17.9 percent of economic output.

So while it’s bad news that the IRS is collecting a record amount of revenue in inflation-adjusted dollars, I guess we should consider ourselves lucky that it’s not a record share of GDP.

I discuss the growing federal tax burden in this CNBC debate with Jared Bernstein.

A few points are worth emphasizing from the interview, two of which deal with corporate taxation.

First, it’s silly to talk to compare “taxes by individuals” to “taxes paid by corporations.” That’s because all taxes on business ultimately are paid by individuals, whether as workers, consumers, or shareholders. To be blunt, corporations may collect taxes, but the burden inevitably falls on people.

Second, the fact that corporate tax receipts are lagging is a sign that tax rates are too high rather than too low. In other words, there’s a Laffer Curve effect, and there’s lots of evidence that a lower corporate rate will generate more revenue. Which is precisely what happened when personal tax rates were reduced on the “rich” in the 1980s.

Third, if we want a balanced budget, the only responsible approach is spending restraint. As I’ve noted before, our long-run fiscal challenge is because of a rising burden of spending. Indeed, spending is more than 100 percent of the long-run problem.

By the way, let’s not forget about the role of state and local governments. WalletHub just released a report on state and local tax burdens.

Here are the 10 best states.

Wallet-Hub-Top-10

10 Best States For Federal & State Tax Burdens (Source: WalletHub)

I’m mystified to see California in the top 10.

Though maybe this is a Laffer Curve-based result. In other words, perhaps taxes are so high that people are paying less?

Moreover, the Golden State drops to 30 if you adjust for the cost of living (see column on far right).

Now here are the 10 worst states.

Wallet-Hub-Bottom-10-

10 Worst States For Federal & State Tax Burdens (Source: WalletHub)

I’m not surprised to see Illinois in last place, but who knew that Nebraska was a hotbed of taxaholism?

And if you look at the right-most column, you’ll see that New York and Connecticut could be considered the worst states. Both jurisdictions are richly deserving of that designation.

P.S. Don’t forget that Puerto Rico is a secret tax haven for American citizens, particularly when considering federal taxes, so it deserves honorary first place recognition.

P.P.S. The best (i.e., least worst or least destructive) approach to taxation is the flat tax.

P.P.P.S. Though the ideal scenario is to have a very small federal government so that there’s no need for any broad-based tax whatsoever. Our nation enjoyed strong growth before that dark day in 1913 when the income tax was imposed.

Based on the latest numbers from the

Catherine-Cortez-Masto-NV

Nevada’s Democratic Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto delivers her acceptance speech after she won re-election at the Nevada State Democratic Party’s election results party at the Aria Resort & Casino at CityCenter November 2, 2010 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Catherine Cortez Masto, the hand-picked successor of Sen. Minority Leader Harry Reid, will run for the open Nevada Senate seat in 2016. Sen. Reid, the former majority leader, announced he would retire from the U.S. Senate in late March.

“Catherine Cortez Masto fights to protect Nevada’s seniors, children, women, consumers, and homeowners,” a statement on her new website read. “She did it as a prosecutor. She did it as Nevada’s Attorney General. Now she wants to bring her fight to the U.S. Senate.”

The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC) endorsed Masto, the former Nevada attorney general, soon after her announcement on Wednesday, calling her “the strongest candidate to keep this Senate seat in Democratic hands.”

Reid, hoping to avoid a messy and contested Democratic primary, endorsed Masto within hours of his retirement announcement.

“She’s a great candidate,” he said on KNPR.

The minority leader has received widespread criticism in recent weeks for lying about 2012 GOP nominee not paying his taxes. Reid to took the Senate floor during the presidential election to claim he had heard from “sources” that Romney hadn’t paid taxes in 10 years. The claim was false, but politicians are protected from slander on the floor of the Senate.

“I have no regrets,” Reid said. “Romney didn’t win, did he?”

Masto may still have to defeat Rep. Dina Titus, a sitting representative with an organization who said she is considering a bid. On the Republican side, the field is not yet close to being set.

Masto’s successor Attorney General Adam P. Laxalt — the grandson of one of President Ronald W. Reagan’s “First Friend,” the long-serving Nevada senator Paul D. Laxalt — trails Masto 44 percent to 39 percent, according to recent polling from Gravis Marketing. Laxalt trails Titus by just 46 percent to 44 percent.

However, if he decides to run, the open seat is Gov. Brian Sandoval’s race to lose.

“Laxalt is close against Titus and Masto, but in the first look at this Senate race, Sandoval is the one with real separation,” said Gravis President Doug Kaplan. “Sandoval is a very strong candidate and being of Mexican descent gives him inroads to the minority voters.”

Because of the early uncertainty, the Nevada Senate race is rated a Toss-Up on the PPD 2016 Senate Election Projection Map, which was hands down the most accurate election projection model in 2014.

Catherine Cortez Masto, the the hand-picked successor

mike-pence-signing-religious-freedom-restoration-act

The turmoil over the efforts by the State of Indiana to make lawful the decisions by operators of public accommodations to decline their services based on their stated religious views has died down because the legislature amended the offending parts of its legislation so that the new law prohibits denying services based on sexual orientation, yet its affirmations of religious liberty are meaningless.

The statute as amended last week basically states that in Indiana all persons have the right to the free exercise of their religion, and if that right clashes with any other claimed right, the courts must take both claims into account and analyze the free exercise of religion claim by using legal standards intended to recognize that it is fundamental

That is already the law of the land everywhere in the United States by virtue of the Free Exercise Clause of the Constitution, which may not be expanded by any state legislature without offending the Establishment Clause. The free exercise of religion is a fundamental liberty; it is fundamental because it is a natural right and is expressly protected by the Constitution. It is intentionally juxtaposed to be at tension with the Establishment Clause. The two clauses together mean that government may not aid religion, may not harm it, may not advance it and may not interfere with it.

The Indiana firestorm was the consequence of a governmental solution for no problem. It is absurd for a state to pronounce in its positive law the truism that rights guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution shall be honored in that state. I say “absurd” because that already is the law of the land and any effort to restate it is superfluous and no doubt intended to mislead the people into believing that somehow, in Indiana, there is more religious freedom than elsewhere in the U.S. There isn’t, and there cannot be.

This misrepresentation occurred when Indiana’s original Religious Freedom Restoration Act stated that religious beliefs can trump legal obligations when the operator of a public accommodation is deciding whether to deliver his goods or services to a person whose status, past behavior or contemplated behavior runs counter to the operator’s religious beliefs.

By permitting the rejection of services because of sexual orientation, so long as that rejection was based on a religious belief, Indiana was effectively making discrimination based on sexual orientation lawful. No other state had done that.

When the owner of a northern Indiana pizza restaurant said she would decline to deliver pizza to a same-sex wedding reception because her religious views prohibit same-sex weddings, it was a lawful statement, and if she had carried through on her promise, her behavior in Indiana at the time the original statute was in force would have been lawful.

Should the pizza restaurant owner have been able to make that promise and carry through with it?

Before you answer, consider where this could have gone. Suppose the couple seeking the pizza at their wedding was not only same sex, but also of two different races, and the pizza shop owner claimed a religious aversion to mixed-race marriages. Could she have followed through on her promise to deny the pizza? Or suppose she objected on religious grounds to weddings of those who had been previously married? Could she lawfully have denied pizza to them? Or suppose she claimed a religious view that prohibited her from serving pizza to anyone whose skin color was darker than hers? Is there no limit to her ability to refuse service so long as she claims a religious basis for doing so?

One can see the slippery slope that the original Indiana statute could have begun by offering state legal protection to the refusal to deal based on religion, even when it is contrary to federal law. Under the law, no one needs to prove the prior existence of a religious creed or decree in order to claim it for one’s own, and the courts may not inquire of the origin, centrality, rationality or sincerity of one’s religious beliefs. Hence, the Indiana law on its face could be used to claim the right to deny any person any service in any public accommodation, so long as the denial was based on the denier’s stated religious views.

But the statute runs counter to standard First Amendment jurisprudence. The U.S. Supreme Court has addressed this twice in recent years and both times ruled that religious beliefs cannot trump the obligation to comply with the general law of the land. The Indiana legislature should have known this.

Before 1964, all public accommodations could refuse service to anyone for any reason. But the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and its amendments put an end to that for all immutable characteristics of birth, except sexual orientation. If the Indiana legislature wanted to bring back the bad old days with respect to sexual orientation and public accommodations, one can understand the firestorm it got. If it was just trying to boast that it was defending the same religious liberties the Constitution already requires it to defend, its efforts were clumsy, unnecessary and wasteful.

Why do politicians support legislation and not concern themselves with whether it is constitutional? Why do they trick innocent voters into thinking they are getting something unique? Why do we return them to office when they shoot themselves in the foot?

Judge Andrew Napolitano has written nine books on the U.S. Constitution. The most recent is Suicide Pact: The Radical Expansion of Presidential Powers and the Lethal Threat to American Liberty.

One can see the slippery slope that

uva_phi_kappa_psi_frat_house

The Phi Kappa Psi fraternity house at University of Virginia did not host a party on the night of the alleged attack, according to fraternity officials. (Photo: AP)

There’s no tap dance in my shoes over Columbia Journalism Review’s epic takedown this week of the Rolling Stone story that never should have seen the light of day.

That may strike you as an odd confession, but that just means you’re probably not a journalist. We’ve got a lot of bad habits.

I’ve read so many accounts of the post-mortem coverage on the CJR report that I worry that my mentioning it here will only tax your patience. But rule No. 1 of column writing is that you must never assume everyone shares your current preoccupation.

On Nov. 19, Rolling Stone published a story about a gang rape of a woman, named Jackie, at a fraternity house at the University of Virginia. It was a gruesome tale of men behaving like animals and a university that wanted nothing to do with the aftermath. The story attracted more than 2.7 million online viewers and an almost immediate onslaught of critics insisting that something — a lot, actually — wasn’t right about the reporting.

The story quickly began to unravel, in real time. Less than three weeks after it posted the story, Rolling Stone retracted it and asked Columbia Journalism Review to conduct an independent investigation on what had gone wrong.

The answer: Pretty much everything.

To quote from CJR’s findings:

“The failure encompassed reporting, editing, editorial supervision and fact-checking. The magazine set aside or rationalized as unnecessary essential practices of reporting that, if pursued, would likely have led the magazine’s editors to reconsider publishing Jackie’s narrative so prominently, if at all. …

“The story’s blowup comes as another shock to journalism’s credibility amid head-swiveling change in the media industry. The particulars of Rolling Stone’s failure make clear the need for a revitalized consensus in newsrooms old and new about what best journalistic practices entail, at an operating-manual-level of detail.”

There’s not a journalist still working in this business who doesn’t recognize the truth in that last sentence. No matter where we work, we’re all seeing the fraying edges: Too many editors pressuring reporters to post early and often. Too many single-source stories later rewritten with “updates” rather than corrections. Too many reporters agreeing to submit questions in writing to people who should have to answer unscheduled calls. Public officials, for example. Hospital administrators, for another.

Thousands of veteran reporters have been laid off or fired or pushed so far into irrelevance that they feel forced to resign. So many young reporters are taking their place, but not really. I do not mean to disparage young journalists. We were them, once upon a time, but we were allowed to grow into those jobs. In the best newsrooms, most of our mistakes never made it past the first edit.

When the news broke about CJR’s findings, I noticed little of the celebratory tone of old. There was a time when that was our habit. A fellow journalist would go down for the count, and we’d marvel for days, if not weeks, over how the wretched sap ever could have thought he or she would get away with it. We are, at our core, professional gossips, and no news traveled faster than the demise of a competitor, which was anyone whose stories got bigger play than ours. In the dark, cramped space of our competitive hearts, the practice of journalism has always been a zero-sum game. Your Page One is my bad day.

Those days seem so over, as is our self-congratulatory tone of due diligence when we lower the ax of self-scrutiny. With this latest CJR report, what I once would have championed as a stellar example of how we police our own now just feels like another withering blow to our collective credibility.

I am grateful to CJR’s Sheila Coronel, Steve Coll and Derek Kravitz for their investigation into everything that went wrong and to Rolling Stone for its willingness to make the whole ugly thing public.

My gratitude ends there.

Connie Schultz is a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist and an essayist for Parade magazine. She is the author of two books, including “…and His Lovely Wife,” which chronicled the successful race of her husband, Sherrod Brown, for the U.S. Senate.

There's no tap dance in my shoes

Dzhokhar-Tsarnaev-guilty

A court artist’s rendering of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, the last surviving Boston Marathon bomber, as the verdict was read aloud.

DEVELOPING: Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was convicted Wednesday in the Boston Marathon bombing by a federal jury that will now decide whether the 21-year-old should be executed. The verdict came nearly two years was to the day that three people were killed and more than 260 injured in the April 15, 2013, Boston Marathon bombings.

Tsarnaev showed no visible emotion as he listened to the verdict being read aloud after a day and a half of deliberations. He was found guilty on all 30 counts that included conspiracy and use of a weapon of mass destruction.

Both offenses are punishable by death.

His conviction comes as no surprise after his lawyer admitted during opening statements that Tsarnaev carried out the attack with his now-dead older brother, Tamerlan Tsarnaev. Tamerlan was killed in a shoot out with the Boston Police Department and the FBI, which ended in Dzhokhar escaping as he ran over his brother’s body.

The defense argued that the younger Dzhokhar was influenced by his older brother, whom he idolized along with Allah and the Prophet Muhammed.

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was convicted Wednesday in the

ashton-carter-japan

Defense Secretary Ashton Carter during a news conference in Tokyo, Japan, on Wednesday. (Photo: Thomas Peter/Reuters)

The United States is expediting shipments of arms to the Saudi coalition intervening in Yemen to halt the strategic gains of the Iran-backed Shiite Houthi rebels. The Houthis, whose official slogan is “Death to Israel, Death to America,” seized control of the capital and forced the resignation of U.S. and Saudi-backed former President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi in January.

The United States, which was forced to hastily evacuate its embassy from the country once cited as the administration’s anti-terror model, said it will increase support operations based on logistics and intelligence currently being provided to the coalition. But Pentagon officials tell PPD that the U.S. involvement had been rather significant prior to the decision, including already-utilized rescue assets provided for downed Saudi pilots.

Speaking in Japan, U.S. Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter said that the latest round of fighting in Yemen has benefited al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, the terror group responsible for the attack on Charlie Hebdo in early Jan. and one thought to have both the most capability and “ambition to strike Western targets including the United States.”

“AQAP has seized the opportunity of the disorder there and the collapse of the central government,” Carter said. “Obviously it’s always easier to conduct counterterrorism when there’s a stable government in place. That circumstance obviously doesn’t exist in Yemen.”

But, ultimately, it is Iran that benefits the most from their proxy’s success in Yemen, as control of the Arab world’s poorest country would allow them to make good on the oft-made threat to close the Bab el Mandeb and Hormuz straits.

iran-yemen-straits

The Strait of Bab el Mandeb (West Operations Area) and Strait of Hormuz (South Operations Area) sandwiches the currently embattled and disputed country of Yemen.

Iran has long sought to isolate the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, their Sunni-dominated arch nemesis across the Gulf. However, control of both the West Operations Area (Bab el Mandeb) and South Operations Area (Hormuz) through proxy states or directly would not only achieve that goal, but also allow them to gain significant control over the Middle East oil supply and global oil markets.

Though officials would not immediately comment on the potential impact this decision may have on the ongoing Iran talks, what is clear is that the developments are playing out behind a backdrop of one previously failed agreement, and another that is far from certain.

PPD previously reported in Feb. that Obama’s State Department believed they had negotiated an arraignment with the Houthis through Iran that would’ve allowed the U.S. Embassy in Sanaa to remain open, largely to conduct counter-terrorism operations against AQAP. But State Department officials were caught completely off guard by the rapidly deteriorating situation and Shiite hostility toward U.S. personnel, and even left open a secure communication link with Washington, known as OpenNet.

Feb. 8 email revealed that when it became clear that evacuation was necessary — which, according to sources, is when officials came to grips with the reality that Tehran either couldn’t or didn’t deliver — officials began to panic.

The Obama administration last week announced a framework agreement with Iran over its nuclear program, but now plan to expedite deliveries of weapons to the Saudi Gulf coalition fighting Iran, including precision guided weapons. The United States is also supporting the military action with intelligence support through what is being described as a “joint coordination planning cell” with Saudi military officials.

On Wednesday, fighting continued as Houthi rebels pushed further south, with clashes reported in the port city of Aden.

More than 500 people, including at least 74 children, have been killed in the fighting since March 19.

The United States is expediting shipments of

sc-cop-michael-slager-shoots-walter-scott

Charleston County, S.C. police officer Michael Slager charged with Walter Scott’s murder after shooting him in back.

Michael Slager, 33, a Charleston County, South Carolina police officer has been charged with murder after a video surfaced showing him shoot a 50-year-old black man in the back following a traffic stop Saturday, officials said.

Records with the Charleston County Sheriff’s Office show Slager was arrested Tuesday and charged for Walter Scott’s death. Authorities had previously said Scott, who had been arrested 10 times previously, mostly for failure to attend court hearings and pay child support, was pulled over for a broken brake light when he fled the officer on foot.

However, a video captured Slager fire eight rounds at Scott after he dropped the as he tried to escape.

Slager’s lawyer claimed that he attempted to use his taser, but said Scott took it during a struggle and that the used lethal force because he “felt threatened.” The Post and Courier reported Scott has a history of violence, as well, and was arrested in 1987 for assault and battery.

North Charleston Mayor Keith Summney addressed the incident during a press conference Tuesday.

“When you’re wrong, you’re wrong,” Summey said, according to The Post and Courier. “When you make a bad decision, don’t care if you’re behind the shield or a citizen on the street, you have to live with that decision.”

Slager had previously served in the military before becoming a member of the North Charleston Police Department more than five years ago, according to the Post and Courier.

Michael Slager, a South Carolina police officer

mike-pence-press-conference

Mike Pence holds a press conference discussing the backMike Pence holds a press conference discussing the backlash against the RFRA bill on March 31, 2015.

Bake me a cake, or go to jail!

Sadly, that is the new message from “inclusive” America. If you don’t want to cater, photograph, preside over, sell pizza at, sell flowers to or otherwise participate in a gay wedding, you will be punished. If you don’t want your business to pay for a kind of birth control that you consider murder, you will pay fines until your business is bankrupt.

Personally, I think both birth control and homosexuality are just fine, and gay marriage is as valid as straight marriage. But forcing everyone to act as if they think that way is just wrong. We have moved from “inclusion” to totalitarianism.

The list of people you must treat carefully keeps getting longer. Protected classes now include sex, race, age, disability, nationality, citizenship status, pregnancy, family status and more. I’m in two of those groups. You better treat me well!

Why force someone who disapproves of your actions to bake you a cake? Lots of other bakers would love the business. This debate has moved from inclusion to demanding that everyone adopt your values.

In a free country, bigots should have the right to be bigots. Americans should also have freedom of association.

American lawyers talk about special protection for religious freedom, and in the Hobby Lobby case the Supreme Court said you could escape onerous parts of ObamaCare by paying lawyers a fortune and convincing judges that you are a closely held corporation with religious objections. But why must you be religious to practice what you believe? This should be about individual freedom.

Of course, government must not discriminate. The worst of American racism and homophobia — slavery, segregation enforced by Jim Crow laws, bans on interracial marriage, anti-sodomy laws, etc. — was government-enforced discrimination. That was wrong, and it was right for the federal government to intervene.

But private actions are different. If I start a business with my own money, I ought to be allowed to serve only libertarians, people who wear blue shirts, whatever. It’s my business!

My customers have choices. If I am racist or anti-gay, the free market will punish me. Enough people would boycott my business that I would probably lose money quickly.

It would actually be useful to see which businesses refuse to serve one group or another. Tolerance is revealed by how people behave when they are free. American law fosters the illusion that everyone is unbiased, while their real feelings remain hidden, making them harder to boycott, shame or debate.

Punishment from the market is enough. The heavy hand of law is not needed here.

However, given America’s history, I accept that there are a few exceptions. In the South, people banned from a lunch counter had few other choices. The Civil Rights Act’s intrusion into private behavior was probably necessary to counter the damage done by Jim Crow laws.

But today such coercion is no longer needed. Even in the difficult days of Reconstruction, after the Civil War, business began to bring together whites and blacks who might not always have liked each other but who wanted the best deals. It took several years for racists to get Jim Crow passed so they could put a stop to that erosion of the old racist ways. Government helped keep racism going for several more decades.

Individuals should be allowed to discriminate. I discriminate all the time. I favor people over others when I choose my friends, jobs, hobbies, clubs, religion, etc. So do you.

Elizabeth Taylor married nine times. Had she married again, should the EEOC have ordered her to marry someone from an ethnic minority?

A homophobic baker shouldn’t stop a same-sex couple from getting married. Likewise, a gay couple shouldn’t force a baker to make them a wedding cake. No one should ever force anyone to bake them a cake.

John Stossel is host of “Stossel” on Fox News and author of “No They Can’t! Why Government Fails, but Individuals Succeed.”

Bake me a cake or go to

rahm-emanuel-runoff-election

Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel waves to supporters as he leaves a campaign office Tuesday, April 7, 2015 in Chicago, as he and his opponent, Cook County Commissioner Jesus “Chuy” Garcia, rally supporters on the morning of the city’s mayoral runoff election. It’s the first runoff since Chicago switched to non-partisan elections 20 years ago. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

CHICAGO (AP) — Mayor Rahm Emanuel won a second term Tuesday after a historic Chicago runoff election that may decide the fate and fiscal situation of the nation’s third largest city, which is currently facing serious financial challenges. But it was the management style of the former White House chief of staff that his opponents prosecuted in what is now known to be an unsuccessful campaign to strengthen the unions’ hand in city politics.

Emanuel was forced into a runoff and a heated campaign that made him barnstorm across the city to beat Cook County Commissioner Jesus “Chuy” Garcia, a union darling, former community organizer, alderman and state lawmaker. The mayor failed to capture a majority against four other candidates in the previous election in February. The mayoral runoff was the first since the city changed the way it conducts elections in 1990s.

With nearly 85 voting precincts reporting results, Emanuel was winning comfortably with 56 percent of the vote compared to 44 percent for Garcia.

“Hopefully he (Emanuel) takes heed of the runoff when he should have been a shoo-in,” said Richard Rowe, a 50-year-old, who in the end voted for the incumbent. Emanuel had contended the decision he made were difficult due to the mess left to him by his successor Mayor Richard M. Daley in 2011.

Emanuel out-raised Garcia despite the union money, which he used to flood the airwaves with ads featuring his former boss, President Barack Obama, who cast an early ballot for Emanuel from Washington.

“This is a big election with clear choices. There’s a lot at stake for the city of Chicago …” Emanuel said a day before the election at a campaign office.

Garcia accused the mayor of being out of touch with voters and blamed him for the fiscal problems, though they existed far before his tenure. In reality, it was the mayor’s push to close nearly 50 schools that drew the initial backlash, and opposition money. But Garcia also highlighted an undeniable gang violence problem that spiked during Emanuel’s first term.

He also vowed to end Chicago’s troubled red-light camera system, which some residents believe is discriminatory and focuses more on revenue than safety.

“The people had their say in Chicago,” he told supporters the day ahead of the election. “They want someone to listen to them. They said they wanted their families and their neighborhoods back and they want those things to matter to the leader of Chicago. They said they wanted change. And that’s why we’re in this historic runoff.”

Business groups, business executives and the city’s major newspapers stuck with Emanuel in the end, while Garcia enjoyed support from far-left activists, unions and the Rev. Jesse Jackson.

Polls put Emanuel ahead of Garcia in the weeks leading up to the runoff. But both sides pushed early voting and focused on get-out-the-vote efforts, particularly in minority neighborhoods. Election officials said more than 142,300 Chicago voters cast early ballots for the runoff, far outpacing early voting turnout in February and four years ago.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel won a second term

People's Pundit Daily
You have %%pigeonMeterAvailable%% free %%pigeonCopyPage%% remaining this month. Get unlimited access and support reader-funded, independent data journalism.

Start a 14-day free trial now. Pay later!

Start Trial