Judge rips Blagojevich’s ‘publicity stunt’ bid to get court’s approval
to run for office again
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[March 23, 2024]
By HANNAH MEISEL
Capitol News Illinois
hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com
A federal judge this week channeled one of the most famous children’s
authors of the last century in telling off ex-Illinois Gov. Rod
Blagojevich for his efforts to regain the right to run for office after
his 2009 impeachment.
“The time has come. The time is now. Just Go. Go. GO! I don’t care how,”
U.S. District Judge Steven Seeger wrote, quoting Dr. Seuss’ 1972 book
“Marvin K. Mooney Will You Please Go Now!”
In his 10-page opinion, Seeger dismissed Blagojevich’s 2021 lawsuit
seeking relief from the Illinois Senate’s post-impeachment vote to bar
him from ever again holding state or local office.
In dismissing the case, Seeger noted the former governor had chosen the
wrong venue to file his case, writing that the federal court – where
Blagojevich’s first criminal case ended in a mistrial but he was
ultimately convicted on 17 corruption charges in 2011 – had no
jurisdiction over state legislatures.
But more than that, Seeger said, Blagojevich didn’t adequately make the
case that any court has the right to review impeachment proceedings in
Illinois, noting there isn’t any legal precedent because the former
governor is an anomaly.
“In its 205-year history, the Illinois General Assembly has impeached,
convicted, and removed one public official: Blagojevich,” Seeger wrote.
The judge’s decision, he said, came down to the centuries-old doctrine
of separation of powers.
“The bottom line is that the judiciary has no power to unimpeach,
unconvict, and unremove a public official,” Seeger wrote. “The
legislature taketh away, and the judiciary cannot giveth back.”
In a video posted Friday afternoon from Blagojevich’s account on X,
formerly Twitter, the ex-governor said Seeger should “stop reading
children's books and start reading grown-up books,” referring to the
judge’s quoting of Dr. Seuss.
“How about the constitution?” Blagojevich said in the video. “Or how
about Lincoln, who defined government of the people, by the people, and
for the people? This is how we’re supposed to do things in America. It’s
your decision, not his. So the fight continues.”
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Dr. Seuss is quoted in a section from U.S. District Judge Steven
Seeger’s 10-page opinion dismissing ex-Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s
lawsuit to regain the ability to hold state or local office in
Illinois. (Capitol News Illinois Illustration by Andrew Adams)
Blagojevich was removed from office in January 2009, the month after his
infamous early morning arrest by federal agents at his home. He was
indicted later that spring on two dozen charges ranging from shaking
down a children’s hospital for campaign donations to trying to sell
then-President-Elect Barack Obama’s U.S. Senate seat, for which the
governor held appointment power.
After two separate criminal trials in 2010 and 2011, Blagojevich was
sentenced to 14 years in federal prison, but only served eight when
then-President Donald Trump commuted his sentence in February 2020.
In the summer of 2021, Blagojevich summoned TV cameras to the Dirksen
Federal Courthouse to announce his lawsuit to regain the right to run
for office, though at the time he said he didn’t “have any particular
plans” to do so and “the very thought of doing all that again makes me
groan.”
Seeger took aim at that waffling and his taking “the unusual step of
calling a press conference to let the world know that he was filing a
complaint.” The judge said “the book is closed” on Blagojevich’s public
life, and that “the case never should have been filed.”
“The case started with a megaphone, but it ends with a whimper,” Seeger
wrote. “Sometimes cases in the federal courthouse attract publicity. But
the courthouse is no place for a publicity stunt. He wants back. But
he’s already gone. Case dismissed.”
Editor’s note: This story has been updated with a quote from
Blagojevich’s social media video, which replaced a statement from the
former governor’s spokesperson.
Capitol News Illinois is
a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state government. It is
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It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert
R. McCormick Foundation, along with major contributions from the
Illinois Broadcasters Foundation and Southern Illinois Editorial
Association.
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