Created: Thursday, March 26, 2009 1:15 a.m. CST
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Blago: I was ‘hijacked’

By DEANNA BELLANDI - The Associated Press
Former Gov. Rod Blagojevich listens to a caller Wednesday as he guest hosts the Don and Roma radio talk show at the studios of WLS Radio in Chicago. (AP photo)

CHICAGO – Former Gov. Rod Blagojevich filled in as a radio talk show host Wednesday, using the mike to complain he was “hijacked” from office and blasting the new governor’s plans for an income tax increase.

Blagojevich had a two-hour gig on WLS-AM, filling in on the “Don Wade & Roma Morning Show” because the regular hosts are off this week.

Blagojevich, thrown out of office in January and still facing potential criminal charges, is a talk show novice and he acknowledged it, stumbling over his title and quipping that hosting was “harder than being governor.”

But he quickly got more comfortable as the show wore on. Blagojevich talked on the air with CNN’s D. L. Hughley, ABC News’ Ann Compton and Second City performers who do a comedy spoof on him.

Blagojevich used the show as a platform to criticize the lawmakers who kicked him out of office after his arrest on federal corruption charges. He suggested the lawmakers really just wanted him out of the way so they could raise the income tax.

“I was hijacked from office. ... It was a political fix, and I predicted that,” Blagojevich said.

His successor, Gov. Pat Quinn, wants to increase the income tax rate by 50 percent to fix an $11.5 billion deficit. Blagojevich said it was the worst thing Illinois could do because it would hurt small businesses.

Quinn dismissed the comments, calling the former governor “yesterday’s tomatoes.”

Quinn said he tuned in for about 30 minutes of Blagojevich’s show.

Blagojevich took comments from callers who seemed to agree, and wound up the show by thanking listeners “for giving me a chance to have been your governor for six years. ... I wish I was still there so I could fight for you.”

Federal prosecutors have until April 7 to get a grand jury indictment or seek more time.

“I’m going to trust in the truth, and as it says in the Bible, the truth shall set you free,” Blagojevich said.

The former governor also took a moment to plug the book he’s writing, but admitted it isn’t coming easily. He joked about being only a few pages into it.

NWHerald.com Multimedia

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