Blagojevich: I’m the Victim of Plot to Raise Taxes
By Just Stupid on Jan 25, 2009 in Stupid Politicians
CHICAGO – Launching an all-out media blitz as his impeachment trial draws near, Gov. Rod Blagojevich compared himself Friday to an honest, hardworking cowboy and said he was about to be lynched by a band of black-hatted political insiders eager to raise taxes.
After keeping mostly out of the public eye since his arrest on federal corruption charges, Blagojevich reversed course with a series of interviews and public statements portraying himself as the victim of vengeful lawmakers eager to toss him out of office.
"The heart and soul of this has been a struggle of me against the system," Blagojevich said at a news conference Friday.
Blagojevich denied any wrongdoing but wouldn’t discuss the federal corruption charges filed against him last month. Instead, he focused on his efforts to expand government health care programs without raising taxes.
He has chosen not to mount any defense in the Senate impeachment trial that begins Monday and could remove him from office within days. He may ask the Illinois Supreme Court to block the trial, arguing its rules are hopelessly biased against him.
Blagojevich, a fan of Western movies, drew a long analogy Friday between his situation and that of a cowboy falsely accused of stealing a horse. His story ended with one cowboy suggesting the accused thief be hanged, with the other suggesting he first be tried, then hanged.
"Under these rules, I’m not even getting a fair trial; they’re just hanging me. And when they hang me under these rules that prevent due process, they’re hanging the 12 million people of Illinois who twice have elected a governor," he said.
The Democratic governor told The Associated Press on Thursday night that he’s willing to sacrifice himself for principle by standing up to lawmakers he believes are violating the Illinois Constitution. "The fight will continue," he said.
Blagojevich’s fight would have one fewer supporter as his chief defense attorney, Ed Genson, announced Friday that he would pull out of the federal criminal case. In announcing his withdrawal, Genson insinuated the governor didn’t listen to his advice.
It’s not clear what, if anything, Blagojevich hopes to gain from his strategy of boycotting the impeachment trial and defending himself through the media. He has planned appearances Monday on "Good Morning, America" and "The View."
The FBI arrested Blagojevich on corruption charges, including the allegation he schemed to benefit from his power to name President Barack Obama’s replacement in the U.S. Senate, after years of investigation.
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- Harry Reid on Voluntary Taxes in US
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Mary Lou | Jan 25, 2009 | Reply
Is that a valid excuse to keep from having MY taxes raised too?
Travis S | Feb 3, 2009 | Reply
Politicians dont pay taxes, unless they are caught. And when they are, there arent any penalties!
Tom Daschel…150k and no penalty.
Gibbs…65K. No penalty. Was given money to pay it and STILL didnt pay. He’s running the IRS now!
I think we need to audit ALL politicians. Yes, obama too.
David S. McQueen | Feb 20, 2010 | Reply
Blago is simply keeping the Illinois tradition of ex-governors being sent to prison. I personally applaud him (and the other ex-governors) for using the prison system as a retirement option, instead of feeding off the taxpayers by taking a huge pension for the rest of their lives.