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He has often ordered legislators to meet in special session day after day without any clear purpose, disrupting their private lives while he stayed home. Most famously, he enjoyed a Chicago Blackhawks hockey game while legislators voted on a transportation measure he wanted badly. The measure failed. Eventually, legislators decided to ignore the governor and pass a version of the transportation bill over his objections. Blagojevich was forced to capitulate, but he declared victory after sticking in a provision giving free public-transit rides to senior citizens. "What I will do is essentially take what I believe to be a lemon and turn it into lemonade," Blagojevich said. Voters gave Blagojevich a second term in 2006 despite signs that his administration was corrupt. U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald said he was investigating evidence of "endemic hiring fraud" and a river of news stories raised questions. Blagojevich won partly because he's a good campaigner and partly because he raised huge amounts of money, much of it from people and groups that do business with the state. He spent $16 million, compared with $6 million for his Republican opponent, whom he portrayed as a corrupt extension of the previous GOP governor. Blagojevich had plenty going for him when he took office. He enjoyed a Democratic majority in the Legislature. The public was eager for change, particularly when it came to his top priorities, education and health care. He can be charming, both one-on-one and speaking to the public at large. But Blagojevich's combative approach to the Legislature produced a long list of spectacular failures and relatively few successes. On health care, he was able to make government insurance available to every child in Illinois who needs it. But an effort to provide access to health care for everyone was soundly rejected, despite his attempt to claim the moral high ground. "It will be Armageddon, but we are on the side of the Lord and we will prevail," he said. Blagojevich then tried to launch part of the program without legislative approval, angering lawmakers and triggering a long court battle. Even before Blagojevich was arrested, his public approval had melted away, hitting just 13 percent in one recent poll. "Rod Blagojevich had a chance to be one of the great governors in America. He had a chance to be a hero," said state Rep. Lou Lang, D-Skokie. "This is truly a guy who has stuck it to himself."
[Associated
Press;
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