* DuPage County Sheriff James Mendrick’s Facebook page…
Sheriff Mendrick is running for Governor of Illinois!!!
Today I’m announcing that I will not be running for a third term as DuPage County Sheriff in the election cycle of 2026. This was a very hard decision to make. The legislation changes that have been imposed on Illinois from the governors office are state laws that directly conflict with existing federal laws. The safety act stops us from rehabilitating people in our jails and the sanctuary city laws force federal authorities into our neighborhoods because these state laws deny them access to these criminals while they are in custody within a correctional facility. This is not right. My family and I have decided that we want our State back. We don’t like being fearful of crime that is randomly occurring now in our streets, homes and our retail stores due to soft on crime legislation. We don’t want to move out of Illinois like so much of our population. We really don’t. We love this state. That’s why I’ve decided to run for the Office of Governor of Illinois. I will bring safety, security and fairness to the city of Chicago and the rest of our State. I will bring more than 30 years of law enforcement and correctional facility experience in the second largest county in the State of Illinois to a city that desperately needs it. I will bring State laws back into alignment with law enforcement principles that make rational sense and will once again create an environment in our homes that will make all of us feel safe. An environment where citizens will once again apply to be police officers. Our culture is being eliminated by senseless laws created by our current government that persecutes cops and empowers criminals. I’m here to stop the bleed. To do this we must have strong leaders with actual law enforcement experience. That’s why my current Undersheriff, Eddie Moore, has my full support and endorsement to be the next DuPage County Sheriff. Undersheriff Moore has been with me from the beginning and has helped me create what the DuPage County Sheriff’s Office is today. I feel secure in my home County where I can run for Governor and still have a Sheriff that will keep us safe and secure. Eddie Moore is that person. He has no equal in a race for Dupage County Sheriff. I’ve asked a question to thousands of people over the last 6 years and have only received one response, without question; “do you think that DuPage County should be more like Chicago and mimic their attributes or should Chicago be more like DuPage County and assimilate our attributes?”Take a guess at what every single answer was? DuPage!!!We are DuPage strong. Let’s be Illinois strong! What we have done can be done Statewide. Don’t let them put you to sleep with “it’s always been this way” talk. We need a secure future for our State and we will make Chicago and Illinois safe again.
* Sheriff Mendrick went on Ray Stevens’ WLS program today. Core message…
We have two, I’d say, major problems in this state, and it’s going to be the sanctuary city status, and it’s going to be the SAFE-T Act.
I mean, starting with sanctuary city, you know, you have a safety issue there too. But what, I guess I don’t understand, because, you know, we have a very large budget too, and the sheriff’s office is the biggest, second biggest county in the state. But I get audited all the time. I mean, I get audited probably three, four times a year by all kinds of different entities. I don’t see how you could go so over-budget. And whether you agree with the sanctuary state or don’t, I don’t understand the concept of having a policy that enables something that’s going to blow your budget out of the water. I don’t know how you can say, ‘Hey, I’m going to have a policy. I know it’s going to cost a billion dollars more than the budget that I’m given, but I’m going to keep this policy, and I’m going to still cost money.’ And what a billion dollars was last year will probably be more like $3 billion this year.
Please pardon any transcription errors.
* Regarding Gov. Pritzker’s rhetoric about President Donald Trump and whether that has had an impact on DuPage County…
Well, there have been some things that were staged shortly, nothing that was disruptive, though. I think what they’re trying to do is just to make sure there’s a heartbeat behind the budget request. I mean, when you’re that far again over budget and, you know.
I want to talk really quick about the ICE raids too, you know, I get a kick out of this where we’re hearing all these complaints about ICE raids, ICE raids. But then I want to go back to policy. We have a sanctuary state policy that says we cannot speak to the federal government that’s in charge of a nationwide push for illegal immigrants, and they’re saying that they want to get rid of their rapists and murderers. But part of that is you have no access, ICE has no access to our jail system. So you got to feel bad for the federal government in a way, because they’re charged with the job, the only way they can do it now, they’re being forced to not go to a jail, which is a safe environment where you’re going to get your rapist or murder. I don’t have anybody in my jail, neither does Cook County, that is there just for immigration. They’re there for whatever any other citizen would be arrested for. So they’re in this environment, and they don’t allow access to a jail. So then ICE is forced to go into neighborhoods, find them where they are, and then, yeah, there’s collateral damage now, too, because if say there’s two criminal illegal aliens, and then there’s two people who are just here illegally, if they let those people go, they’re technically committing a crime on ICE laws. I mean, these are federal laws. I mean, so you have a policy that defies federal laws, and it’s also causing your budget to blossom billions over what it’s supposed to be.
* SAFE-T Act…
I gotta go back to the SAFE-T Act, and why it bothers me so bad is it actually promulgates long term incarceration. So you take, before the SAFE-T Act, you take a burglar, you come in. We used to classify like a burglar. We call them low hanging fruit. It’s usually a substance driven crime. We do full detoxification stabilization of your personnel through psychiatric services. We have 200 classes, courses taught by 80 counselors and educators per week. And then we start vocational training. We have welding, tiling, dry walling, horticulture, indoor and outdoor, small engine repair, the tattoo removal, suits for success, they get suits. And then we have a re-entry program, so we bring our recidivism rates down from a 75 percentile level down to more closer to 20%, so that is because we’re stabilizing a personality and getting them a job. And what the SAFE-T Act does is they let them go. They believe they’re just getting a ticket, but that still qualifies as an arrest. So when you get three more of them and finally wind up in front of a judge, you’re a multiple offender, and you can do 15 years in IDOC, so the SAFE-T Act actually pumps them out temporarily, until they go to court, then they’re getting the big charges. So the SAFE-T Act fails. And we have so many people on warrants, we haven’t reduced our population. Nothing in the SAFE-T Act worked, other than demoralizing the police being soft on crime and, you know, taking away, I would say, just the protections from the police and giving those protections to criminals.
* Asked whether he has campaign donors…
So you know, I’ve been an elected official for six years, and we actually ran pretty hard. We ran for preparatory about two, three years prior to that to first get elected. So through the course of my political career, I’ve have thousands of donors. So I do have donors en masse, and I have been starting getting calls just yesterday without announcing, people are hearing rumblings. And these are from some of the bigger guys that are saying that first they want to make sure that a) that I’m Republican. I think a lot of these people don’t want another, and I mean no offense to Democrats, it’s just that the Democrat policies that have led to what I think, the dismantling destruction of Illinois, aren’t popular anymore. I think they want to see conservative values. And when I say I’m a Republican, that means, yes, I am conservative. It doesn’t mean that I’m hardcore and, you know, extremist, no, not at all. In fact, you know, I understand the value of the real business.
In ten years, he’s raised $854K. As of the end of the last quarter, he had $87K in the bank. He had one race, in 2018, which he won. He was unopposed in 2022.
* You’ll likely hear this question a lot from him…
Obviously, I want to protect the police. I want to see police empowered again. I want to see us be tough on crime again. You know, I always ask this question every forum I go. Thousands of people, I’ve never had an adverse reaction to this question other than one answer. Now you’ll see clearly what question this is? So, I would say, so do you think that DuPage County, second biggest county in the state, right next to Chicago, do you think that they would do better by absorbing the attributes and being more like Chicago? Or do you think Chicago could benefit from absorbing the attributes of DuPage County and being more like us?
…Adding… From DuPage County Board Chair Deb Conroy…
MAGA Jim Mendrick’s brand does not match the majority of voters in DuPage County. This is a great day for JB Pritzker, Illinois and DuPage Democrats.
* Related…
* Capitol News Illinois | Audit finds Illinois’ noncitizen health care programs far outstripped original cost estimates: The audit, which lawmakers requested in late 2023, comes one week after Pritzker delivered his annual budget proposal to the General Assembly. The governor’s plan would defund the newer of the two programs, which is aimed at noncitizens aged 44 to 64, while leaving in place the smaller program for noncitizen seniors aged 65 and older.
* Tribune | Audit finds many were improperly enrolled in state health care program for noncitizens, while costs were vastly underestimated: The cost overruns were particularly pronounced in the program meant for recipients ages 42 to 64, with the actual expenditure of $485 million through the three years ending June 30, 2023, the period covered by the audit, coming in at nearly four times the initially estimated cost of $126 million, according to the report. During the same period, the actual cost of the program for those 65 and older was $412 million, nearly double the original projection of $224 million.
* Crain’s | Illinois’ immigrant health plans cost taxpayers much more than projected, audit finds: Auditors found 6,098 enrollees designated as “undocumented” who had Social Security numbers. When that information was presented to the Illinois Department of Healthcare & Family Services, or HFS, the agency provided responses for a sample of 94 enrollees. Auditors determined that 19 of those 94 should have been designated as lawfully present or as being a legal permanent resident — an important distinction because legal permanent residents become eligible for Medicaid after five years in the U.S.
* Sun-Times | Pritzker team vastly underestimated health care costs for adults who lack legal status, state audit finds: At a news briefing in Chicago Wednesday, Pritzker bypassed some of the errors spotlighted in the audit and focused on the fleeting nature of immigration status. He also spoke of his support for universal health care. “I think the thing that is missing from the reporting, and what I would point out to you, is that number one, people’s immigration status changes during the course of a year. You’ve got people who were eligible for the program, who became ineligible for the program,” Pritzker said.
* WTVO | Audit finds Illinois vastly underestimated cost of noncitizen heathcare on taxpayers: Republicans have been critical of the program since its inception. “We’re the only state that puts this burden on Illinois tax on their own state taxpayers taking this on and to not run it properly and to have these large cost overruns, that’s how you end up with a budget deficit,” Senate Minority Leader John Curran (R-Downers Grove) said Wednesday. “That’s what’s crowding out spending on education. That’s what’s crowding out spending on other components of the state budget. That’s why we need an audit.”
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* Tribune reporters Jeremy Gorner and Dan Petrella…
Gov. JB Pritzker’s administration vastly underestimated the cost and popularity of a pair of health insurance programs for immigrants who are not citizens that has ended up costing the state $1.6 billion since the initiative began in 2020, according to an audit report released Wednesday.
Aside from inaccurate projections of the programs’ cost and the number of people who would enroll, the audit uncovered more than 6,000 people enrolled in the programs who were listed as “undocumented” despite having Social Security numbers, and nearly 700 who were enrolled in the program for people 65 and older despite being younger than that. In addition, almost 400 people were enrolled in the programs but appeared to have been in the country long enough to qualify for Medicaid, which is jointly funded by the federal government.
The report from Illinois Auditor General Frank Mautino’s office was published a week after Pritzker proposed eliminating funding for the program that provides Medicaid-style insurance coverage for people younger than 65 who are in the country without legal permission or are in the U.S. legally but have not yet qualified for a green card. The cut, estimated to save $330 million, was part of Pritzker’s plan to close a budget hole once pegged at more than $3 billion.
The cost overruns were particularly pronounced in the program for younger recipients, with the actual expenditure of $485 million through the three years ending June 30, 2023, coming in at nearly four times the estimated cost of $126 million, according to the audit.
* From the Auditor General’s Health Benefits for Immigrant Seniors and Adults audit…
Key Findings:
Actual enrollment and actual costs exceeded the initial program estimates for both the HBIS and HBIA programs. Regarding estimated number of enrollees, in FY23:
- for HBIS (65+), the initial estimated number of enrollees was 6,700,
while the actual number enrolled was 15,831;
- for HBIA (55-64), the initial estimated number of enrollees was 8,000, while the actual number enrolled was 17,024; and
- for HBIA (42-54), the initial estimated number of enrollees was 18,800, while the actual number enrolled was 36,912.
Regarding the initial cost estimates for all three fiscal years 2021, 2022, and 2023:
- for HBIS (65+) the total estimate was $224.0 million, while the actual total cost was $412.3 million or 84 percent higher;
- for HBIA (55-64) the total estimate was $58.4 million, while the actual total cost was $223.1 million or 282 percent higher; and
- for HBIA (42-54) the total estimate was $68.0 million, while the actual total cost was $262.2 million or 286 percent higher.
In FY21, 6,884 individuals were enrolled in HBIS (65+). HBIS (65+) enrollment increased to 11,362 in FY22, 15,831 in FY23, and decreased to 11,464 in FY24. The HBIA (55-64) enrollment increased from 6,675 in FY22, to 17,024 in FY23, before decreasing to 13,596 in FY24. The HBIA (42-54) enrollment increased from 5,823 in FY22, to 36,912 in FY23, before decreasing to 27,941 in FY24. According to HFS officials, the FY24 numbers exclude those who have been removed from the
program due to redetermination or due to the change in eligibility that removed legal permanent residents from the program.
Click here for the full report.
…Adding… Governor Pritzker was asked about the audit during an unrelated press conference…
Reporter: Governor, there was an audit released this morning that showed that your administration underestimated the cost and the popularity of the immigrant healthcare programs that have been discussed in recents years. I’m wondering what happened to cause those estimates off, particularly for program for people under 65?
Pritzker: So I think the thing that is missing from the reporting, and what I would point out to you, is that number one people’s immigration status changes during the course of a year. You’ve got people who were eligible for the program, who became uneligible for the program. So even though you expect that people will move on because, well, it may be their immigration status, it may be because they got a job that has health care coverage associated with it. But you expect them to move on, and maybe they didn’t move on either because they didn’t know they could, should. But that happens, I hate to tell you, on Medicaid as well.
It’s why we do every year redeterminations, and we did it with this program as well. One of the reasons that we even know about some of those people is because of the redeterminations. So people get removed from the program as a result of the redeterminations. But before they got redetermined to not be eligible, they were still on the program and that cost taxpayers money. So that’s a lot of I think what I would say about that.
But the broader context is people need to get healthcare. I am in favor of universal healthcare however that comes together. And we can talk about the myriad ways that we could do that. But people don’t go get healthcare [or] get treated when they don’t have a problem. And so it’s some evidence that there are an awful lot of people out there who need coverage, who aren’t getting it, or who will do anything to get it. And I think that’s a sad state of affairs in our society.
Reporter: For redeterminations, the issue is on the cost estimates?
Pritzker: No, I’m saying, I think when you look at who’s covered, how much it costs to cover them. Some of those people become ineligible mid-year, and you’re still paying for them because we don’t know and maybe they don’t know that they’re no longer eligible for that program. We find out when we do redeterminations. We did that for the larger Medicaid population, as you know, in the state of Illinois, which we were kept from doing for three years because of COVID, but we also did it in this program to determine who’s no longer eligible for it. So the program is became a lot less expensive as a result of the work that we did and and as you know, you know we’re no longer operating, or we will no longer operate that earlier the 42-63 cohort, and instead focus on the most vulnerable, who are the seniors that are covered by that program.
Please pardon all transcription errors.
…Adding… House Minority Leader Tony McCombie…
“House Republicans warned about the costly expansion of this program when it was first exposed last year. We could not afford it then, and we cannot afford it now. Yet, Democratic leadership forced taxpayers to shoulder the burden of this reckless spending for non-citizens, pushing our state’s finances to the brink.
“Beyond the overwhelming cost, reports of fraud and abuse make it even clearer that this program must end. There is no need to wait until the next fiscal year—immediately shut it down and protect Illinois taxpayers.”
…Adding… Senate Republicans…
A new report from the Illinois Auditor General confirms significant mismanagement in Gov. Pritzker’s taxpayer-funded free healthcare program for noncitizens, revealing thousands of potentially ineligible enrollees and costs far exceeding initial projections. At a capitol press conference, Illinois Senate Republican Leader John Curran (R-Downers Grove) and Senator Chapin Rose (R-Mahomet) highlighted the audit’s findings, calling for more financial transparency from the Pritzker Administration and stronger oversight to prevent further misuse of taxpayers.
“The audit’s findings show the shocking misuse and mismanagement of taxpayer dollars by the Pritzker Administration,” said Curran. “The governor’s overspend on his free healthcare for non-citizens program and gross mismanagement increases costs on all Illinois taxpayers and crowds spending on education and other core services.”
Auditors found that more than 6,000 enrollees classified as “undocumented” actually had Social Security Numbers, raising serious concerns about the integrity of the enrollment process and failure to properly verify eligibility. Senate Republicans voiced concerns that the lack of oversight not only erodes public trust but also leaves taxpayers on the hook for the Pritzker Administration’s failure to manage the program responsibly. Curran and Rose said that Illinoisans deserve transparency and accountability—not more bureaucratic incompetence.
The audit also exposed massive cost overruns, with spending on some age groups running nearly 300 percent over budget. The most extreme overrun came in the 42-54 age group, where costs surged to nearly triple what was projected.
These staggering miscalculations highlight a complete failure of fiscal planning, forcing taxpayers to cover the shortfall, Senators explained.
“Once again, the governor has proven himself unreliable, and we’re finding out after the fact that his estimates weren’t even in the ballpark,” said Senator Rose (R-Mahomet). “If it were up to me, we’d get rid of these programs entirely. Illinois taxpayers shouldn’t be footing the bill for illegal immigrants.”
Senate Republicans have long criticized Gov. Pritzker’s decision to spend billions of taxpayer dollars on non-citizen programs while Illinois families struggle with skyrocketing property taxes, grocery bills, and healthcare costs. Instead of prioritizing hardworking citizens, the Democratic Majority have funneled taxpayer dollars into a program riddled with waste, mismanagement, and a lack of transparency.
The audit’s findings have renewed calls for accountability. Leader Curran reintroduced Senate Bill 1699, which requires detailed annual reports on a range of taxpayer-funded programs for noncitizens—not just healthcare, but also housing, legal aid, and other services. The reports would include total expenditures, specific appropriations, the number of recipients, funding sources, and awarded contracts. To ensure transparency and prevent further misuse of taxpayer dollars, this information would be made publicly available online.
Illinois taxpayers deserve transparency and fiscal responsibility. This audit confirms that mismanagement in Gov. Pritzker’s program has resulted in massive cost overruns and wasted taxpayer dollars. With accountability long overdue, Senate Republicans will continue fighting for reforms that put hardworking families first, demand transparency, and end reckless spending.
The full press conference can be viewed at this link: https://youtu.be/VEL04XfYoGE
* Related…
* Sun-Times | Pritzker’s $55.2 billion budget has no new taxes, cuts health care for adults lacking legal status: Pritzker’s budget plan excludes funding for health care for immigrant adults who lack legal status and are between the ages of 42 and 64. Last year, the Democratic governor included $629 million to provide health care benefits to immigrants without legal status 42 and up, and seniors who would otherwise qualify for Medicaid. The governor’s office called that intentional omission a reflection of difficult decisions being made to bring the proposal into balance. The office, however, said funding for health care for seniors who lack legal status will be maintained. The program for adults will end June 30, the end of the fiscal year.
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