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Archive for the ‘The Chicago Way’ Category

What pressing issues did the Illinois General Assembly consider among 6,745 bills this past session? They pondered a sticker commission, “end-of-life” carpets, paper grocery coupons, 15-year-old voters and their own beauty sleep.

By Lilly Rossi | Illinois Policy Institute

The Illinois General Assembly had ample opportunity to tackle the state’s massive public pension debt, curb the nation’s top tax burden or fix the state’s finances, but what did they do instead?

They considered 6,745 bills that included creating a voting sticker commission, regulating end-of-life carpets, stopping grocery store coupons from going paperless, registering teens three years before they could vote and making sure they did not lose sleep doing their jobs.

Here are the details on five bills that lawmakers were wise enough to allow to die this year:

  1. Creation of a “sticker commission”

Senate Bill 1576 would have created an “I Voted” Sticker Commission. The commission would have been tasked with developing a contest to finalize 10 designs that would be used in the 2026 General Election. Any spending for this commission would be in addition to the $55.2 billion budget, sticking Illinois taxpayers with the costs.

2. Death carpet seller registry

House Bill 1876 intended to implement a carpet stewardship program. The purpose of the program would be to promote and market for “end-of-life” carpet recovery and reutilization. HB 1876 would not have allowed carpet to be sold in the state of Illinois if the producer were not registered with the program.

Read more here.

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By Ted Dabrowski and John Klingner | Wirepoints

Gov. J.B. Pritzker has pursued some of the nation’s most progressive policies while in office and he now claims Illinois is the “most progressive state” in the country. He’s right. Just look at what he’s managed to get passed in his 6.5 years. No cash bailConstitutionally-enshrined government union powers. The elimination of school choice. An “assault rifle” ban. Utility-bill-busting green energy goals. The “most LGBTQ+ friendly” education policies. The Midwest’s abortion capital.

Pritzker is so confident in his policies that he’s gunning even further left to try and win the Democratic primary for president. Just listen to his speeches at Equality Illinois and in New Hampshire, where he all but announced his candidacy.

But few seem to be biting. At least that’s what the latest Emerson College Polling data says. Among the wide list of potential presidential candidates for Democratic primary voters to choose from, Pritzker ranked near the bottom with only 2% support.

And despite all his efforts and “investment” in diversity, equity and inclusion, his support among black primary voters hit just 1%.

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Blame Pritzker’s numbers on a lack of name recognition, but his near-zero support is not from a lack of trying. He hosted the DNC. He launched the 2028 presidential cycle with his New Hampshire speech. And he’s spent Think Big millions in other states like Ohio and Wisconsin – all in an attempt to garner national attention.

More here.

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Former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan leaves the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse after being sentenced to 7 1/2 years in prison and fined $2.5 million during a hearing on June 13, 2025, in Chicago. | Audrey Richardson/Chicago Tribune

By Matt Paprocki

Former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan was sentenced Friday to 71/2 years in federal prison and fined $2.5 million after being convicted on 10 counts of bribery, conspiracy and wire fraud. While Illinoisans finally see some justice, they also see Madigan’s corrupt political legacy still hurting them.

Madigan was the longest-serving statehouse speaker in U.S. history. Under his reign, Illinois achieved the nation’s lowest credit rating and ranked as the second-most indebted and corrupt state. On average, more than one Illinois public servant per week — for 40 years between 1983 and 2023 — was convicted of corruption just in federal court, not including local prosecutions. High taxes, the pension crisis, massive debt and corruption have driven residents to better-governed states. Much of it can be traced to Madigan and how he pulled the levers.

The structure Madigan built concentrated power in ways exclusive to Illinois. He crafted rules that continue to give Illinois House speakers unparalleled power to control which bills become law, he is responsible for the state’s extreme gerrymandering and he nurtured the culture of corruption that continues to plague Illinois.

Lawmakers must unravel Madigan’s influence and the control he built through little-known rules of procedure. Madigan rewrote these to gather power and co-opt the legislature, effectively silencing voters’ voices when in conflict with leadership’s agenda.

Through these House rules, the speaker wields nearly absolute control over the legislative process. The most troubling of which allows the speaker to effectively control which bills, amendments and motions even make out of the Rules Committee. Madigan designed the process so everything must first pass through this committee, so that the speaker hand-picks the majority and bills opposed by leadership can simply die there through inaction.

Getting a bill out of the Rules Committee requires either unanimous consent — virtually impossible — or three-fifths support from both parties’ caucuses, with each supporter required to sponsor the bill. That’s an extraordinarily high barrier found in no other state. The Rules Committee has rarely voted contrary to the speaker’s wishes.

Madigan’s successor, Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch, has adopted a similar rule by which only bills with 60 Democratic sponsors get called for a vote on the House floor. That makes it very difficult for bills without a large, progressive-leaning caucus to emerge.

Additionally, Madigan championed the state’s extreme gerrymandering by drawing the maps during the 1980s, 2000s and 2010s, plus influenced the 2020s effort. It was how he first started gathering power, saving Chicago Democrats’ seats in the state legislature by nipping off just enough of the growing suburbs to dilute their voting power. By doing so, he exacerbated Illinois’ uncompetitive elections in the following decades, leaving voters without choices and little reason to go to the polls.

When more than 560,000 registered voters in 2016 tried to stop him and ensure legislative maps were independently drawn, he used one of his ComEd cronies to sue and kill the effort. That decision still thwarts any reforms unless state lawmakers initiate them.

Illinois lawmakers should make that break with Madigan’s corruption by adopting an independent political mapmaking process for the people’s representatives in Springfield and in Washington, D.C. There’s little they could do of greater significance than giving voters back their power.

In addition to the elimination of Madigan’s rules and creating independently drawn political maps, the state needs comprehensive ethics reforms. Those reforms must go beyond the toothless package the legislature passed after his indictment. They include:

  • Implementing a one- or two-year idle period before former lawmakers can perform any lobbying, closing loopholes that currently let them game the system.
  • Providing the legislative inspector general with full investigative powers, including subpoena authority and the ability to publish findings without permission from the lawmakers on the Legislative Ethics Commission.
  • Requiring lawmakers to provide complete financial disclosures for their immediate families, not just joint accounts.
  • Giving the Legislative Ethics Commission independent oversight by requiring some number of members who are not current or former lawmakers. The current system of lawmakers policing themselves represents an obvious conflict of interest that undermines accountability.
  • Preventing sitting public leaders from controlling party campaign funds. As chairman of the Democratic Party of Illinois and speaker of the Illinois House, Madigan was able to control millions in party campaign funds and thus the fealty of lawmakers. Fifty-seven current members of the Illinois General Assembly benefited from and would not have been elected without funding controlled by Madigan, an Illinois Policy Institute analysis found.

Until Illinois reforms gerrymandering, ethics laws and House rules to better reflect democratic principles seen in other state legislatures, Madigan will continue controlling us. The power to make law will remain concentrated in the hands of a few.

Madigan’s punishment should include sitting in his cell knowing his machine is being dismantled. That would be full justice for Illinoisans.

Matt Paprocki is president and CEO of the Illinois Policy Institute 

Published June 17, 2025 in the Chicago Tribune

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By Ted Dabrowski and John Klingner | Wirepoints 

The economic consequences of Illinois’ spending on illegal immigrants are real. Everyone gets hurt by the higher taxes that spending billions more imposes. But there’s much more to the migrant problem than that.

Our schools are being overwhelmed. Unemployment will likely jump. And so will poverty. Our streets have become less safe. And our economy will suffer.

If Wirepoints had been at Gov. Pritzker’s congressional testimony, here are six questions we would have asked him to answer:

1. How do you justify spending more than $1.5 billion of Illinois taxpayers’ dollars on healthcare for illegal immigrants when Chicago has the highest black poverty rate in the country among the nation’s biggest cities?

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2. How do you justify spending hundreds of millions, if not billions, on illegal, non-English-speaking children at Chicago Public Schools when the school district is already junk-rated, faces a billion-dollar deficit and has just 21% of black students able to read at grade level?

3. How can you justify allowing illegals with violent criminal histories to come to our state when Chicago has led the country in total murders for 13 years in a row and had the highest murder rate among the nation’s 20 biggest cities in 2024?

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Read more here.

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Signs proclaiming environmental hazards are posted on a fence as the tent encampment for migrants in constructed in the Brighton Park neighborhood, Nov. 29, 2023. | E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune

By Dan Petrella | Chicago Tribune

Despite assurances from Gov. JB Pritzker that state taxpayers would not end up footing the bill for a migrant tent encampment in Chicago that was never built, the state recently agreed to pay $1.3 million to the project’s contractor.

Pritzker made the highly publicized decision to halt construction of the shelter encampment in Chicago’s Brighton Park neighborhood in December 2023, saying “serious environmental concerns” were still present at the city-selected site. The governor’s decision caused the Brighton Park project to be scrapped, and it signaled an early political rift between the governor and Mayor Brandon Johnson, who was pushing for the shelter to be built as winter arrived and the migrant crisis in the city continued.

Pritzker that month also made public assurances that the project’s state contractor, GardaWorld Federal Services, would absorb the costs of the work that it had already put into constructing the camp.

“The understanding with GardaWorld is that they will do other work with us,” Pritzker told reporters at an unrelated event in December 2023. “And they knew, as they were building this shelter, before the environmental report came in, that it was possible that the environmental report wouldn’t allow the building — the completion, rather — of the shelter. And so they understood that, and they were willing to take that liability on through the state’s contract.”

Officials with Pritzker’s office also said the company had agreed not to charge the state if the land was deemed unsafe.

But a $1.3 million payment to GardaWorld was tucked into the recently approved $55 billion state spending plan being sent to Pritzker’s desk. And Pritzker’s Illinois Department of Human Services, which spearheaded the state’s portion of the migrant response, agreed this April to settle a dispute with GardaWorld over payment for its work at the site, other state records show.

Read more here.

Related: “More than 1,200 beds from McCormick Place COVID-19 temporary hospital go unused amid immigrant housing crisis,” “McCormick Place hospital’s cost to taxpayers?” “Now-closed McCormick Place COVID-19 hospital cost taxpayers $15M to staff, run

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Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson during a news conference in Chicago June 3, 2025 | Chicago Mayor’s Office / Facebook

By Jim Talamonti | The Center Square

The mayor of Chicago has followed the lead of some Illinois state lawmakers by connecting state and local budget challenges with potential moves by the Trump administration.

Mayor Brandon Johnson spoke with members of the media Tuesday about Illinois’ record-high $55 billion-dollar spending plan passed by the General Assembly over the weekend.

“This budget was austere. There are budgetary challenges all over the country, and we’re faced with that because we do have a great deal of uncertainty, quite frankly, animosity that’s coming from the federal government,” the mayor said.

Johnson called President Donald Trump’s administration “tyrannical.”

State Sen. Chapin Rose, R-Mahomet, called out Illinois Democrats for blaming the state’s fiscal woes on the president.

“Hang on, I bet Donald Trump called the mayor of Chicago and asked him to tax everybody in Illinois,” Rose said during final budget debates over the weekend.

“This sinister man, orange man bad, made you put the $20 million in for the South Side Organizing Project,” Rose said in another speech on the Illinois Senate floor.

More including video here.

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REUTERS/Jonathan Drake

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal Newsline

The U.S. Supreme Court will step into a fight over whether Illinois’ mail-in balloting regime is legal, as the high court has agreed to allow a Republican Illinois congressman to attempt to revive his lawsuit asserting Democratic lawmakers violated the Constitution and federal law by allowing mail-in ballots to be counted up to two weeks after Election Day.

On June 2, the Supreme Court granted a so-called writ of certiorari to U.S. Rep. Michael Bost in his dispute with Illinois’ Democrat-dominated state government, which gives Bost the chance to argue before the court on the question of whether lower courts wrongly determined he lacked the ability to sue to challenge the state’s controversial election law.

“It is an injustice that the courts would deny a federal candidate the ability to challenge an election provision that could lead to illegal votes being cast and counted for two weeks after Election Day,” said Tom Fitton, president of Judicial Watch, a Washington, D.C.-based conservative political organization providing attorneys to represent Bost in the action.

“The Supreme Court’s decision to hear this case is a critical opportunity to uphold federal law, protect voter rights, and ensure election integrity. Illinois’ 14-day extension of Election Day thwarts federal law, violates the civil rights of voters, and invites fraud.”

Bost, of downstate Jackson County, had turned to the U.S. Supreme Court for relief in November 2024, about five months after a divided appeals court had sided with the state in shutting down Bost’s lawsuit.

Bost and two other Illinois Republicans had filed suit in 2022, just before that year’s November general election. The lawsuit at the time sought a court order blocking Illinois from counting mail-in ballots received after Election Day, if those ballots included votes for federal offices, including U.S. House of Representatives, Senate or President.

The lawsuit took aim at a law enacted by Illinois’ Democratic legislative supermajority in Springfield and Gov. JB Pritzker in 2020. That law had used the Covid pandemic to justify rewriting the state’s election laws to greatly expand mail-in voting in Illinois.

Read more here.

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In an interview with WBEZ, Sen. Dick Durbin said that he has spoken to more than a dozen people who are exploring runs for his Senate seat. | Jim Vondruska/For Sun-Times

Reporting by Tina Sfondeles and Dave McKinney | WBEZ

Durbin derby: One of the most competitive Senate primary races Illinois has seen in decades kicked into gear following Sen. Dick Durbin’s announcement that he will not seek reelection for the seat he has held since 1996. Durbin said more than a dozen people have expressed interest in the role.

Stratton steps in: Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton on Thursday became the first prominent Democrat to launch a bid for Durbin’s Senate seat, painting herself as a new leader who can speak for the “working people” and stand up to President Donald Trump.

Who else to watch: Expect Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi and Rep. Lauren Underwood to launch bids soon. U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly and State Treasurer Michael Frerichs are also expected to jump into the race. Former Mayor Rahm Emanuel has said he’d be open to running for a local post, though he’s got his eye on the governor’s race should Gov. JB Pritzker opt out.

Money matters: The question for Stratton is whether she can compete with Krishnamoorthi’s $19 million and counting campaign war chest — and whether Pritzker will pour in a little or a lot to support her. Should she lose the Senate bid, Stratton is also in a position to run for governor in the future.

GOP push: Republican donors, party officials and elected officials are encouraging U.S. Rep. Darin LaHood to run in the Republican primary race to succeed Durbin — and he’s interested.

The stakes: Kelly, Krishnamoorthi and Underwood could lose their House seats if they go all in on the Senate race and lose. For now, the three could circulate petitions for both positions, then make a game time decision before a deadline later this year. With polling in full force, they would be able to decide whether to hold onto their House posts.

Read more here.

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By John Kass | John Kass News

When we were young raising our family, pinching pennies to pay the mortgage and take care of the children, we’d see news stories about rising violent crime in my hometown of Chicago.

We’d breathe a sigh of relief, thankful that we were no longer in the street gang neighborhoods where murders were commonplace.

Yeah, we paid high property taxes in the suburbs—too high because the Chicago Teachers Union dictated the state’s politics—but at least we thought we were safer.

We thought we’d escaped. That lasted until it didn’t.  Now we’re gone.

And I see Illinois residents running as fast as they can for the exits, not only retirees and geezers like me fleeing to Texas, Florida, Arizona, Georgia, North Carolina, and Tennessee.

But young people with good incomes—the kind a place can’t afford to lose—are fleeing Illinois as if from the plague.

“We couldn’t have planned it this way,” write Ed Dabrowski and John Klingner of wirepoints.org. “But our seven most-read stories in 2024 each captured a different facet of what’s wrong with Illinois.

“Failing schools. Murders. Closing businesses. A bloated, overpaid government sector. Election interference. Population-loss denial. And Chicago’s twisted equity priorities.”

Read more here.

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Just over 5% of the average state income tax return supports economic development and public safety, while almost 28% goes to government worker pensions and benefits. Here’s a breakdown of how Illinois will spend your state income taxes.

By Lauren Zuar and FJ Hilgart | Illinois Policy Institute 

With the highest combined state and local tax burden in the nation, Illinoisans are right to ask: What are we paying for?

The average Illinois personal income tax return was about $4,030 for fiscal year 2024. About half of that is split between public education and state worker pensions and other employee and operating costs.

The state taxes income at a flat rate of 4.95%. The number of returns has held roughly steady at 6.2 million, but the total tax collections have jumped from $17.3 billion in 2017 to $25.6 billion in 2024. Collections this year are projected to hit $27.75 billion and then $28.73 billion in 2026.

The amount per return has grown by $1,589 from 2017 to 2024.

Individual income taxes are just part of the load placed on Illinois families. When you consider Illinois’ combined state and local sales, excise, income and property taxes, the average household this year will pay $13,099, costing more than 16.5% of a family’s income.

The state distributes income tax dollars through the general funds budget to support everything from pensions to prisons to public health. How this money is allocated reveals the state’s financial priorities and whether taxpayers are getting value in return.

Here’s a breakdown of how Springfield spends Illinoisans’ income tax dollars:

Read on here.

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