Dec 31, 2008 4:00 pm US/Eastern
Ill. Senate Appointee Plans To Attend Swearing-in
CHICAGO (AP) ―
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Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich speaks at his first press conference since his recent arrest Dec. 19, 2008, in Chicago, Illinois.
Scott Olson/Getty Images
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Roland Burris, a former attorney general, expressed his desire to fill president-elect Barack Obama's vacant Senate seat.
CBS
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Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich (left) introduces former Illinois Attorney General Roland Burris as his choice to fill the U.S. Senate seat vacated by President-elect Barack Obama during a press conference at the Thompson Center Dec. 30, 2008.
Scott Olson/Getty Images
Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich's choice to take
Barack Obama's
Senate seat plans to be in Washington next week when new senators are
sworn in, but he won't make a scene if he's turned away by Senate
leaders who object to his appointment.
"That
is not my style. I am not seeking to be confrontational," former
Illinois Attorney General Roland Burris told The Associated Press in an
interview Wednesday.
Blagojevich's
decision to tap Burris for the seat thrust the 71-year-old political
veteran back in the spotlight and immediately into a corner.
The Illinois secretary of state refused to certify Burris's appointment, the
lieutenant governor
called the selection an insult and Senate Democrats said they would not
seat him. Even the president-elect was cold to the appointment.
"We believe in clean government, and
Rod Blagojevich has unclean hands," said Lt. Gov. Pat Quinn, who called Blagojevich's actions an "insult to the people of
Illinois."
On
Tuesday, Blagojevich repeatedly sought to distance his surprise
selection from his own woes. "Please don't allow the allegations
against me to taint a good and honest man," the governor said, turning
to the smiling Burris standing by his side.
"This is about
Roland Burris as a
U.S. senator, not about the governor who made the appointment," Blagojevich said.
For
his part, Burris said he was "humbled to have the opportunity" and
promised citizens he would "uphold the integrity of the office and ask
for their continued confidence in me."
Burris
said earlier in December that the charges against Blagojevich describe
"appalling" and "reprehensible" behavior. He told The Associated Press
that he "absolutely" stands by those statements, but that the governor
remains innocent until proven guilty.
Burris would not say whether he thinks Blagojevich should resign.
The
appointment injected race into the drama surrounding the Democratic
governor. Burris, the first African-American elected to major statewide
office in Illinois, would replace Obama, who had been the Senate's only
black member.
Rep. Bobby Rush,
an Illinois Democrat who was invited to speak at Blagojevich's news
conference, urged Senate leaders not to block Burris. He told reporters
that Senate Democrats should not "hang and lynch the appointee as you
try to castigate the appointer."
Burris didn't back away from Rush's assertion Wednesday in an interview on NBC's "Today."
"It is a fact, there are no African-Americans in the
United States Senate," he said. "Is it racism that is taking place? That's a question that someone may raise."
Blagojevich
was arrested Dec. 9 after federal prosecutors allegedly recorded
conversations in which he discussed appointing someone Obama favored in
exchange for a position in the new president's Cabinet or naming
someone favored by a union if he got a high-level union job.
On Wednesday, U.S. Attorney
Patrick Fitzgerald
filed a motion seeking a 90-day extension to return an indictment
against Blagojevich. It says "multiple witnesses" have come forward in
recent weeks and investigators have to review "thousands of intercepted
phone calls."
Federal prosecutors
normally have 30 days to file an indictment against a defendant. That
deadline would have been Jan. 7, and the extension would give
prosecutors until April 7 instead.
A U.S. attorney spokesman says a federal judge is scheduled to review the motion at a Monday hearing.
The governor has faced a flood of calls for his resignation, and the
Illinois House has begun impeachment proceedings. He maintains his
innocence, and has vowed to stay in office.
Illinois law gives the governor sole power to fill a Senate
vacancy. Lawmakers considered stripping Blagojevich of that power after
his arrest, but could not agree on legislation.
In a statement Tuesday, Senate Democrats maintained that
Blagojevich should not make the appointment because doing so would be
unfair to Burris and to the people of
Illinois.
"Under these circumstances, anyone appointed by Gov. Blagojevich cannot
be an effective representative of the people of Illinois and, as we
have said, will not be seated by the Democratic caucus," the statement
said.
Obama struck the same tone.
"
Roland Burris
is a good man and a fine public servant, but the Senate Democrats made
it clear weeks ago that they cannot accept an appointment made by a
governor who is accused of selling this very Senate seat. I agree with
their decision," the president-elect said in a statement.
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