U.S. Attorney: Obama, Be Quiet

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<font size="5"><center>
Obama’s team OK’s contacts with Gov.
Blagojevich, but won’t share specifics</font size><font size="4">


U.S. Attorney Ask Obama To Hold Up
Releasing His Internal Investigation For a Week
</font size></center>


Christian Science Monitor
By David Cook
December 15, 2008


President-elect Barack Obama’s team has studied the transition staff’s contacts with Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich and found nothing improper. But at the request of US Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald, the transition office will not share specifics of its inquiry with the public for another week.


<font size="3">The downside of keeping mum</font size>

The result is sure to be continuing press questions about who on the Obama team talked to Blagojevich and what was said. Last week the Governor was arrested on federal fraud and bribery charges. A key allegation is that Blagojevich sought profit from his ability to fill the US Senate seat Obama had held.

Obama Transition Communications Director Dan Pfeiffer released a statement in advance of the President-elect’s Monday afternoon press conference saying, “A review of Transition staff contacts with Governor Blagojevich and his office has been conducted and completed and is ready for release. That review affirmed the public statements of the President-elect that he had no contact with the governor or his staff, and that the President-elect’s staff was not involved in inappropriate discussions with the governor or his staff over the selection of his successor as US Senator.”

Spokesman Pfeiffer noted that, at Mr. Obama’s direction, the counsel to the transition, Gregory Craig, “kept the US Attorney’s office informed of this fact-gathering process in order to ensure our full cooperation with the investigation.”


<font size="3">The feds say keep quiet</font size>

The decision not to release details of the Obama team’s review was made at the request of the US Attorney’s office, Pfeiffer said. “The US Attorney’s office requested the public release of the Transition review be deferred until the week of December 22, in order not to impede their investigation of the governor. The Transition has agreed to this revised timetable for release.”

As President-elect Obama fills out the rest of his cabinet, the questions surrounding staff contacts with Blagojevich are an unwelcome distraction. No wrongdoing by the President-elect or his staff has been charged. In fact, Blagojevich is heard to complain on a court approved wiretap that all the Obama team would offer was “appreciation” for filling the Senate vacancy with someone they liked.


<font size="3">Action by Illinois lawmakers</font size>

Meanwhile, the Reuters news agency reported that Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan has appointed a committee to assemble grounds for an impeachment trial for Blagojevich.

http://features.csmonitor.com/polit...th-gov-blagojevich-but-won’t-share-specifics/
 

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<font size="5"><center>
Blagojevich fished for Obama Cabinet post</font size>
<font size="4">
Blagojevich Wanted to be Secretary of Health and Human Services</font size></center>


McClatchy Newspapers
By David Lightman
Wednesday, December 24, 2008


WASHINGTON — Rod Blagojevich, the secretary of health and human services?

Apparently, the embattled Illinois governor thought it might be a good idea for him to be President-elect Barack Obama's point man for one of the most difficult, highest priority issues the incoming 44th president plans to tackle.

It came up in a conversation between Obama confidante Valerie Jarrett — who thought that the notion of any Cabinet post for Blagojevich was "ridiculous" — and Illinois union official Tom Balanoff, who also was very skeptical, according to the Obama team's review of contacts with the governor.

Federal prosecutors allege that Blagojevich talked about trying to secure a Cabinet appointment or an ambassadorship in return for naming a successor who was acceptable to Obama, who resigned his Senate seat last month.

The four-page Obama report found no inappropriate contact between Obama and his staff and Blagojevich and his staff.

U. S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald has said that Obama, who'd held the seat since January 2005, wasn't involved in the matter, and Obama has said he knew nothing about the schemes.

Jarrett was thought to be a contender for the job, but she took herself out of the running on Nov. 9. Five days later, Obama said she'd be a senior adviser in his White House.

On Nov. 7, the report said, Jarrett, then still a potential Senate contender, spoke with Balanoff, who heads the Services Employees International Union Illinois State Council.

Jarrett said she had "no contact or communication" with Blagojevich or his staff about the vacancy. Balanoff isn't a member of the governor's staff and "did not purport to speak for the governor on that occasion," the report says.

Balanoff said he'd talked to Blagojevich about naming Jarrett to Obama's Senate seat, according to Jarrett, and "told her that the governor had raised with him the question of whether the governor might be considered as a possible candidate to head up the Department of Health and Human Services in the new administration."

According to Jarrett, Balanoff told Blagojevich, "It would never happen."

Balanoff "did not suggest that the governor, in talking about HHS, was linking a position for himself in the Obama Cabinet to the selection of the president-elect's successor in the Senate," the review adds.

A Balanoff spokesman said he'd have no further comment at this time.

In a conference call Tuesday, Obama counsel and report author Greg Craig explained that Jarrett "thought it was ridiculous for the governor of Illinois to be talking about being appointed to Barack Obama's Cabinet at a time when he was under investigation."

Craig also made it clear that Jarrett didn't consider Balanoff a Blagojevich emissary. "She conceived of him as being a union official who had met with the governor," he said. "And this topic came up. But it was not presented to her as a quid pro quo.

Obama has nominated former Senate Democratic leader Thomas Daschle for the HHS job.

http://www.mcclatchydc.com/251/story/58454.html
 
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