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More session stuff

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* Proponents of allowing undocumented immigrants to obtain limited drivers licenses thought Monday night that they were short of passage by a vote or two. Others thought it wasn’t even that close. So, why did the bill get 66 House votes yesterday? Well, some support came from unlikely quarters. And some folks were turned off by the debate. A sample

Other opponents, including several South Side Democrats, pointed out the unfairness in depriving someone in the U.S. legally of driving privileges for not paying child support but allowing those here illegally a pathway to a drivers license.

“I believe that all of these provisions in the state of Illinois denying an Illinois citizen from a drivers license should darn well be considered, whose background we know, before we give a drivers license to those we don’t know,” said Rep. Monique Davis (D-Chicago), who voted against the bill.

Three South Siders voted against the bill. Rep. Bill Cunningham stuck with the cops, who opposed it. Reps. Monique Davis and Mary Flowers voted “No” as well. Both ended up losing bids for leadership.

* Another sample

Debate in the House lasted nearly 90 minutes, with critics arguing the new immigrant drivers licenses put the state on record as condoning illegal entry into the country, set up a system that can be exploited by fraud and ignore the fact immigration policy is a federal responsibility, not a state one.

“There will be fraud, abuse. All I have to say is people have called me a hater, a racist,” said Rep. Randy Ramey (R-Carol Stream), who voted against the plan. “All I’m doing is standing by what the Constitution of the United States of America says. If the fed government wants to change the rules, I’d stand by that.”

But, if it’s supposedly “in the Constitution,” then how can the feds “change the rules”?

As I noted yesterday on the live blog, Ramey also made a fruitless attempt to stall the bill by asking for some pretty ridiculous impact notes. That likely didn’t go over well, either.

* Meanwhile, from the Sun-Times

A dormant gambling expansion bill that would bring a casino to Chicago moved to Gov. Pat Quinn’s desk Tuesday after the state Senate’s top Democrat quietly lifted a parliamentary paperweight that he’d placed on the plan nearly two years ago.

The likelihood that the governor would affix his signature to the package seemed remote since Quinn once belittled the effort as “top heavy” and “excessive,” and the top state gambling regulator whom the governor appointed called it a “pile of garbage.”

Before the close of the lame-duck legislative session Tuesday, Senate President John Cullerton (D-Chicago) removed a parliamentary hold he’d put on the bill immediately after it passed the Senate in May 2011.

By releasing the hold, Cullerton now puts Quinn in a position where he could, should he choose to, use the legislation as a bargaining chip in his stalled pursuit of cuts to state pension benefits. The Senate president has been an active supporter of gambling expansion, and Mayor Rahm Emanuel has pushed hard for a city casino.

The state Constitution gives Quinn 60 calendar days to act on the gambling bill - two months into the spring legislative session when presumably finding a way to solve the state’s $95 billion pension crisis will remain on the frontburner after lawmakers whiffed at efforts to pass a pension bill this week.

* Steve Rhodes is skeptical

I don’t see how the governor has any leverage, though; with Democratic supermajorities in the new legislature, he’s not really at the table anymore. Why would legislative leaders and/or Rahm - who really, really, really, really wants a casino - give up anything to Quinn to get pension reform in exchange for getting a gambling bill signed when they can now pass a veto-proof gambling bill on their own?

Quinn is now about as relevant as Squeezy.

I suppose it could be used as a chip, but it would be pretty darned irresponsible to do that and I don’t see Cullerton making that sort of move. I hope I’m right.

* More…

* Feds say expanding Medicaid in Illinois could bring in billions, but lawmakers are wary

* Editorial: Don’t trim at-risk kids out of state budgets

* Retiring Sen. Cultra unhappy with direction Illinois is going

posted by Rich Miller
Wednesday, Jan 9, 13 @ 12:07 pm

Comments

  1. Will revenue realities result in a gaming bill? Watch this space…

    Comment by Cincinnatus Wednesday, Jan 9, 13 @ 12:11 pm

  2. I think Ramey was saying that it’s “in the Constitution” that the Federal government gets to make the rules, not that the rules themselves are in the Constitution.

    Comment by Anon Wednesday, Jan 9, 13 @ 12:34 pm

  3. just because there are super majorities that doesnt mean they can shove a gaming bill down the govs throat. You have to remember that all 10 existing riverboat areas have democrats for their reps and senators and they won’t ever be put on a expansion bill. Any gaming bill will always have to be a bipartisan vote. Combined with the anti gaming legislators there will probably always keep the gov in play.

    Comment by Been There Wednesday, Jan 9, 13 @ 12:43 pm

  4. Ramey’s career might be continuing had he not bitterly alienated the Latino Caucus with his anti-immigrant rhetoric and bills. The fact is that Madigan drew Ramey’s House district out of existence, all but forcing him to run for the Senate against an incumbent Republican.

    Comment by reformer Wednesday, Jan 9, 13 @ 1:29 pm

  5. “denying a license to those whose background we know”

    That background being someone who has committed a crime heinous enough to deserve prison time that interferes with the ability to care for their children…

    Comment by Anon Wednesday, Jan 9, 13 @ 1:58 pm

  6. The license issue is a snapshot of what is wrong with our state. This costs money. If you are entitled to a license, but can’t pay for it, the taxpayers will pick up the tab. We are broke so lets let thousands more people who can’t pay for licenses get them on the taxpayer dime. It is not about whether it is fair or not to give people a license. Sooner or later you have to learn to say NO!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Comment by the Patriot Wednesday, Jan 9, 13 @ 2:34 pm

  7. Actually Pat, it makes people pay for their own insurance.

    Would you prefer to be in an accident with an insured driver or an uninsured?

    Comment by Skeeter Wednesday, Jan 9, 13 @ 3:19 pm

  8. In a session which included a Senator charged with felony gun possession in comparison I guess it could have been much worse:

    http://blog.tsa.gov/

    Comment by Quinn T. Sential Wednesday, Jan 9, 13 @ 5:00 pm

  9. –The license issue is a snapshot of what is wrong with our state. This costs money. If you are entitled to a license, but can’t pay for it, the taxpayers will pick up the tab.–

    Where do you get that?

    It will require 250,000 drivers to pass a drivers test and produce proof of insurance.

    That would seem more a matter of public safety and fiscal responsibility, not federal immigration policy.

    Comment by wordslinger Wednesday, Jan 9, 13 @ 5:33 pm

  10. Are they allowed to work if they are illegal? If you don’t enforce one law, just don’t enforce any.

    Comment by Wumpus Wednesday, Jan 9, 13 @ 9:27 pm

  11. The same Monique Davis who owes like 100,000 in back rent — and a certain piece of art work? How is she not in jail?

    Comment by Anonymous Thursday, Jan 10, 13 @ 7:52 pm

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