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“We haven’t had population loss.” It’s a claim Gov. JB Pritzker and his allies have made before, and it’s preposterous. Unfortunately, they get away with it because the media and many of our supposed watchdogs let them.

By Mark Glennon and John Klingner | Wirepoints

Deputy Illinois Governor Andy Manar said this last week:

We haven’t had population loss. There have never been more people living in the State of Illinois than there is today. In the census there’s a thing called the post enumeration survey (PES) that shows that Illinois gained population. It’s a correction. and it’s a real correction from the Census Bureau…. Illinois is not losing people, it is gaining people.

It’s a claim Gov. JB Pritzker and his allies have made before.

It’s preposterous.

Manar has no basis for his claims and overwhelming evidence says, instead, that Illinois has lost population year after year, probably a decade. Making matters worse, Manar’s claim was blindly accepted by Better Government Association President David Greising who moderated the panel where Manar made the claim.

Here are the facts:

For starters, the ten-year census on which Manar relied is four years old now. Not only does he ignore what’s happened since April 1, 2020, the census effective date, but his claim of “never been more people living in the State of Illinois” isn’t true either. The decennial census showed a small loss of 18,124 people over the decade, but the flight problem did not become apparent until about 2014. That’s when annual census estimates, as well as other evidence, began to show the downturn, continuing every year thereafter. Illinois population therefore probably peaked about then, not now as Manar claims.

Further, April 2020 is about when violent crime skyrocketed, including the 2020 riots in Chicago that summer, which one can reasonably assume contributed to flight from the state. Direct evidence of what has happened since April 2020 indicates accelerating flight. For that, we can start with the Census Bureau’s annual estimates, which show further decline each year since 2020. We lost a net 100,016 people in 2021, and another 107,826 in 2022 and a further loss of 32,826 people in 2023.

As for the Post Enumerations Survey (PES) Manar focused on, no, it does not officially alter the results of the 2020 decennial census, which showed the small 18,124 loss. The PES is a survey conducted after every census to attempt to identify potential errors. It’s based on answers from just 0.1% of American households, which the census says is too small to make any official changes with.

Finally, the Census Bureau recently announced it would do a one-time adjustment of Illinois’ population based on an undercount identified by the Post-Census Group Quarters Review (PCGQR). The change adds 46,400 Illinoisans, which the census says it will use to adjust future, annual estimates. That tiny adjustment hardly dents the far bigger losses since 2020.

Beyond Census Bureau numbers, we can look at IRS migration data. The IRS numbers are precise because they know exactly how many people file returns and where they are moving to and from. We’ve documented those numbers year after year. For 2022, the most recent year reported by the IRS, Illinois netted a loss of 87,000 residents, with 175,000 moving into Illinois from other states and 262,000 moving out. Since 2000, Illinois has lost a net 1.6 million people to net out-migration, according to the IRS data.

How about moving van numbers? Headlines have been routine for years about numbers from moving companies showing Illinois among the nation’s biggest losers. The most recent annual study from United Van Lines, for example, says Illinois had the highest percentage of moves being outbound: 61%.

When Manar made his population claims, Greising’s response was “Oh, okay, sorry…. Okay, Okay.” Shame on Greising. The facts laid out above have been long published by many sources and it’s inexcusable for him to kowtow to conflicting government propaganda, which he is supposed to be challenging.

Read more here.

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By: Ted Dabrowski and John Klingner | Wirepoints

Fresh estimate data released by the Census Bureau Thursday shows the continued loss of Illinoisans due to domestic out-migration: Illinois netted a loss of 93,247 residents to other states in 2023. Those losses are on top of the net 116,000 and 141,000 Illinoisans who fled in 2022 and 2021, respectively.

203,758 residents moved into Illinois from other states, while 297,005 Illinoisans left for other states, resulting in the net loss of the 93,247 residents.

Illinois’ losses were the nation’s third-worst, only behind California and New York with net losses of 268,052 and 178,709, respectively.

Unsurprisingly, Texas and Florida were the two big net winners, gaining 133,372 and 126,008, respectively.

Illinois’ out-migration numbers compare poorly to its neighbors. Indiana had a net gain of nearly 30,000 residents in 2023, the 7th-best intake in the country. Wisconsin and Kentucky both had a net intake of about 14,000 residents. Missouri gained 8,100 net domestic migrants, while Iowa ended up with a net decline of about 1,900 people.

The only neighbor to suffer major losses was Michigan, with net out-migration totaling over 20,000 in 2023.

The new Census data also shows which states Illinoisans moved to, and from, across the country.

Illinois was a net loser of residents to 36 different states in 2023, resulting in a net out-migration of 103,000 residents. On the flip side, Illinois was a net winner of residents from just 13 states, with a net in-migration totaling just 8,600 residents.

Read more here.

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Former Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn discusses property taxes during a news conference in the Loop in 2022. Illinois voters will consider a nonbinding referendum Nov. 5 suggesting that millionaires get taxed more to fund property tax relief. | Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times

By Dave McKinney | WBEZ

Helping homeowners: A 3% tax on individual income over $1 million would flood Illinois’ coffers with at least $4.5 billion in new revenues annually, a new state estimate shows, weeks ahead of an advisory referendum on earmarking that money for property tax relief.

Key context: The estimate, obtained by WBEZ through a state open-records request, marks the first time Gov. JB Pritzker’s Revenue Department has weighed in on the proposal’s effects on the state’s wealthiest citizens. Its goal is to ease what is a daunting financial issue for the middle class.

On your ballot: The exact wording of the ballot question reads, “Should the Illinois Constitution be amended to create an additional 3% tax on income greater than $1,000,000 for the purpose of dedicating funds raised to property tax relief?

Bottom line: The results of the referendum won’t be binding, but the outcome could arm policymakers in the General Assembly seeking a constitutional amendment in 2026 — the year Pritzker himself may be on the ballot — to impose the millionaire tax for property tax relief.

Read on here.

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Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed over 275 bills into law recently. Here is what you need to know about changes to taxes, hotel shampoo, light bulbs and virtual health care.

By Joe Tabor | Illinois Policy Institute

llinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker just signed over 275 bills into law on subjects ranging from occupational licensing to taxes to hotel shampoo bottles.

Here’s what you should know about some of the bills signed into law during August.

Taxes

Pritzker signed a bill that would eliminate the grocery tax, two property tax bills that fail to promise real relief and one bill that expands sales taxes to out-of-state business shipping products to Illinois.

House Bill 3144 ends the statewide 1% grocery tax, joining the 37 states that do not impose a tax on groceries. However, municipalities will be able to impose a local grocery tax by ordinance without first asking voters. Some cities are already doing so.

Senate Bill 2936 would allow municipal governments to reduce property taxes for newly remodeled single-family residences up to the value of the alteration.

Senate Bill 3455 commissions the Illinois Department of Revenue to study the entire property tax system in the state, including a comprehensive review of assessments, collections, exemptions and the tax levies themselves.

Neither SB 2936 nor SB 3455 would actually reduce the overall property tax burden. Neither deals with the No. 1 driver of property taxes: overpromised public pensions.

Senate Bill 3362 expands the reach of local retail taxes by requiring businesses outside of Illinois that ship tangible personal property to customers in Illinois to collect the local sales tax in addition to the state tax.

Employment

Pritzker signed two bills addressing jobs programs in the state.

Senate Bill 2907 requires the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity to publish a report on all state and federally funded job training and workforce development programs to “identify successful programs, areas for improvement, and potential areas of duplication or overlap in order to optimize the efficiency and effectiveness of State and federally funded job training and workforce development efforts.”

Senate Bill 3155 gives DCEO discretion not to require businesses that failed to maintain the minimum employment numbers from March 2020 to the beginning of 2024 to repay tax credits. This bill is likely meant to allow some latitude to employers affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, but giving the final decision to DCEO means the department will be picking the winners and losers.

Read more here.

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By Alicia Fabbre | Daily Herald

It took more than 30 years, but the Longmeadow Parkway project is finally complete and the northern Kane County Fox River bridge opened to traffic Thursday afternoon.

The long-awaited opening was celebrated with a ribbon cutting featuring Gov. JB Pritzker and a list of county and state officials who have, through the last three decades, had a hand in bringing the bridge to fruition.

Pritzker noted Rebuild Illinois has helped bring long-overdue projects to completion, adding that the state has been able to build or improve nearly 7,000 miles of roadway and 700 bridges. The state contributed $30 million to the project, helping eliminate a planned toll bridge to cover some construction costs.

“All across Illinois, projects like this one are helping to revitalize our communities, unleash our economic potential and make life better for our residents,” Pritzker said.

Crews prepare for a ribbon cutting for the Longmeadow Parkway bridge over the Fox River on Thursday. | Brian Hill/bhill@dailyherald.com

The 5.6-mile stretch of roadway, which spans from Huntley/Boyer Road to the west and Route 62 to the east, stretches through portions of Algonquin, Carpentersville, Barrington Hills and unincorporated Kane County.

The $205 million project gives motorists and cyclists in northern Kane County another way to get across the Fox River and ease congestion on nearby bridges on Route 62 in Algonquin, Route 72 in East and West Dundee and Main Street in Carpentersville.

Read more here.

Related: “Recordings reveal 2006 Duda Property / Longmeadow Parkway ‘deal’

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Consumers have been hammered with inflation on groceries during the past four years. Illinois was heading in the right direction by eliminating the tax on them, but now communities are faced with either imposing a new grocery tax or losing the money.

By Ravi Mishra | Illinois Policy Institute

Grocery prices ballooned by nearly $3,000 in just the past four years in the U.S., a massive increase considering prices only increased by about half that amount in the 10 years before 2020.

Illinois prices were similar, but Illinois has been one of only 13 states that taxed those groceries. It seemed as if Gov. J.B. Pritzker was eliminating that 1% grocery tax starting in 2026, but now local communities are faced with an ugly choice: reimpose the 1% tax on residents or give up the grocery tax revenue.

Consider the impact on a family of four buying what the U.S. Department of Agriculture defines as a “low-budget meal plan.” In January 2020 they would have spent an average of $858 a month on groceries. Inflation by May 2024 boosted that to $1,064 – $2,473 more per year. That same shopping list only rose $1,164 a year between 2010 and 2020.

The USDA’s  “moderate cost” meal plan went from an annual increase of $1,429 from 2010-2020 to $2,940 a year more from 2020-2024.

Illinois will eliminate the grocery tax Jan. 1, 2026 – sort of. State lawmakers and Gov. J.B. Pritzker killed the tax as part of the current state budget, but they gave up nothing by doing so. Grocery tax revenue does not go to the state, it stays with local municipalities.

More here.

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By Ted Dabrowski and John Klingner | Wirepoints

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker has spent the last several days hyping up Illinois to the attendees of the DNC and a national audience. “Of everywhere in this great country, there’s not a better place to see the change possible under Democratic leadership than here in Illinois…Democrats deliver,” he said in his opening video.

He reached a crescendo last night during prime time, making the case for the national Democrats’ policies, with Illinois and Illinois-like policies at the forefront, of course.

But how real is Illinois’ success story really? Pritzker claims that Democrats are champions of jobs, small businesses and the middle class, yet when you look at the direct impact his own policies have had on Illinoisans, things look very different from the governor’s rhetoric.

Illinoisans aren’t better off than they were five years ago. They’re worse-off. And in the most important metrics, Illinois is actually a national outlier.

It’s important to note that Gov. Pritzker didn’t put Illinois in that position on his own. Democrats have had a near-monopoly hold* on Illinois for more than two decades and for nearly 100 years in Chicago. Pritzker is just the next in line.

But for the record, here are the key facts on Illinois’ performance since the governor took office in January of 2019.

Economic growth – nation’s 4th worst.

Gov. Pritzker owns the 4th-worst economic growth in the country. Illinois’ real GDP growth has totaled just 3.1% over his 5.5-year tenure. Indiana’s economy (+10.8%) grew three times more, while Florida’s economy (+22.8%) grew seven times more during the same period.

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Employment – nation’s 3rd worst.

85,000 fewer Illinoisans are employed today than when Gov. Pritzker took office in 2019 – the nation’s 3rd-worst performance. Compare that to top-ranked Texas, which has added 1.4 million to its employment rolls over the same period.

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Illinois’ lack of good jobs is reflected in its current jobless rate. The state has the nation’s 2nd-highest unemployment rate at 5.2% – behind only Nevada. Illinois has consistently ranked among the worst states for unemployment since Gov. Pritzker took office.

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Read more here.

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Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s record $53.1 billion state budget imposes $1.1 billion in new taxes on Illinoisans and still manages to underfund public pensions. He’s boosted state spending by $15 billion in six years. Housing, jobs and population are all suffering.

By Patrick Andriesen | Illinois Policy Institute

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker has some big things to tout when the Democratic National Convention comes to the city of big shoulders: big taxes, bigger budgets and the biggest pension deficit in the nation.

His state is also suffering big losses as Illinoisans move out.

Pritzker just set a record for signing the largest budget in state history for fiscal year 2025. It added $1.1 billion in new taxes to spend a record $53.1 billion – $15 billion higher than when Pritzker took office.

Illinois’ newest budget continues the state’s long-standing traditions of underfunding pension payments, adding billions in new spending and hiking taxes on residents to make up the difference.

Among the new taxes Illinoisans will find in Pritzker’s budget are a lower cap on net operating losses for businesses, a massive spike in Illinois’ sports gambling tax and lower fees for businesses collecting sales taxes for government.

As far as new state spending, Illinois taxpayers will be on the hook for about $2.7 billion more in expenditures than last fiscal year.

That includes nearly $182 million more for migrants, $50 million more for homelessness, $12 million more for higher education, $353 million more for pensions and an additional $350 million for K-12 education.

The investment in K-12 education from the General Assembly was approved just months after the same legislators failed to extend Illinois’ largest school-choice program – ending financial assistance for 9,600 low-income students statewide.

Read more here.

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By Ted Dabrowski and John Klingner | Wirepoints

Long-time readers of Wirepoints’ IRS out-migration work will know Illinois is a net loser of households in every single income and age bracket the IRS tracks. The latest 2022 tax year data is no exception, showing Illinois lost thousands of households in each of the 12 brackets.

Now a new cut of the data shows Illinois ranks near-last nationally in almost every one of the brackets, revealing just how repellent the state’s policies are for Illinoisans across the board.

Start with the big money earners. Illinois gained from other states 7,100 households earning $200,000 or more in tax year 2022, but it lost over 16,400 such households to other states. In other words, Illinois gained only 0.43 households for every one it lost – the worst in the country.

Contrast that with the nation’s biggest winner, Florida. Nearly 47,000 households earning more than $200,000 moved into Florida from other states, but it lost only 17,100. The net result was a gain of 2.74 wealthy households for each one that left.

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Below we lay out the gains and losses for each state for the $200,000-plus income bracket.

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It’s the same story for Illinois across all the income brackets – the state’s households-gained-to-households-lost ratio ranked between 46th and 50th nationally.

Read more here.

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Vice President Kamala Harris participates in a rally to support Illinois Democrats with Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker on the campus of University of Illinois Chicago in 2022. | Scott Olson/Getty Images-file

By Ted Dabrowski and John Klingner | Wirepoints

In what’s surely a painful, if only temporary, blow to his political ambitions, polls in the five major swing states show Gov. J.B. Pritzker ranks last as a VP choice for Kamala Harris.

Emerson College Polling/The Hill surveyed likely voters in Arizona, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan on July 22-23, with one of the questions being who should be considered for VP.

First, look at what registered Democrats had to say. In Arizona, Pritzker got just 0.2% of the vote. In Pennsylvania it was only slightly higher, at 0.5%. In Michigan, 1.1% and in Georgia, 2.4%.

Even in Wisconsin, where Gov. Pritzker has a vacation home and has spent millions on political campaigns, he still finished last with just 4.1% of the votes.

The polling outcome is brutal for the Illinois governor.

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When polling results from all registered voters are analyzed, Pritzker fared about the same, though he didn’t finish last in Wisconsin, where North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper did slightly worse. The table for all registered voters in the five swing states is in the appendix.

Of course, national figures like Pete Buttigieg and Bernie Sanders performed well based on name recognition alone. And swing state politicians took the top spots in their home states. Arizona Sen. Mark Kelly scored highest in Arizona, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Sharpiro pulled 57% of Pennsylvania Dems, and Gov. Gretchen Whitmer was most popular in Michigan.

But a lack of home-field advantage doesn’t explain why Pritzker still ended up last in all five states.

Read more here.

Related:Kamala Harris campaign considering J.B. Pritzker for vice presidential candidate

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