* Brian Mackey of The 21st Show interviewed Senate President Harmon today. Excerpt…
Mackey: What do you see as the most important work outstanding still for Illinois lawmakers between now and the end of the year?
Harmon: The public transportation conversation is one that we need to conclude. This is a real cliff. It’s a real crisis. Busses and trains are going to stop, people are going to be laid off, and people won’t be able to get to work or get to the doctor unless we figure out a solution.
Despite an Illinois law prohibiting data sharing agreements between state law enforcement agencies and federal immigration authorities, the Illinois State Police makes available the names and information of individuals who they deem to be gang members to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Illinois and its leaders have positioned the state as a protector of immigrants’ rights as the Trump administration has sent hundreds of migrants who are said to be gang members, often with limited evidence to support those claims, to a mega-prison in El Salvador.
A 2017 state law, the TRUST ACT, explicitly prohibits Illinois law enforcement agencies from entering into or maintaining agreements that would provide federal immigration authorities direct access to electronic databases. There is an exception if the agency is presented with a federal criminal warrant or if it’s otherwise required by federal law.
But according to agreements obtained by WTTW News, the Illinois State Police has shared data with ICE through a statewide computer system, the Law Enforcement Agencies Data System (LEADS), since 2008, including criminal history data and its gang member file, which could contain citizenship information, according to the LEADS manual.
* Rep. Anna Moeller says she will not run for Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi’s seat…
* In Game | Illinois Lawmakers Pass Additional Tax On Sports Betting Wagers: One year after seeing their tax rate changed from a flat 15% on adjusted gross revenue to a progressive one ranging from 20% to 40% based on revenue thresholds, Illinois sportsbooks must now also pay a $0.25 levy on each of their first 20 million wagers accepted during the fiscal year. For the volume of wagers beyond 20 million, the surcharge will be $0.50.
* Crain’s | Lawmakers OK new perks for manufacturers that stick with Illinois: After adding incentives aimed at attracting new manufacturers in recent years, state legislators approved new tax credits to help existing companies. Legislation passed over the weekend allows the Illinois Department of Commerce & Economic Opportunity to offer a tax credit of 3% to 7% for manufacturers who invest at least $10 million in upgrading or expanding their facilities.
* Crain’s |
Illinois delays implementation of credit card swipe fee law until July 2026: The Illinois General Assembly pushed back by a year implementation of its controversial Interchange Fee Prohibition Act, which would exempt state and local taxes and tips from so-called swipe fees charged by credit card processors. Trade groups representing banks and credit unions have sued the state to block implementation of the law, which was set to go into effect on July 1 before the last-minute change by lawmakers.
*** Chicago ***
* Sun-Times | First medical school to open in Chicago in nearly 100 years takes aim at physician shortage: The first class will be only 85 students to start, but after the first two cohorts have enrolled, the school will graduate up to 170 students each year, according to Nealon. The medical school is being constructed in the former Tyson Foods building in the West Loop, and plans to open the facility in late 2025. The 247,000-square-foot space has eight floors of classrooms, laboratories and collaborative study spaces. The Chicago School is spending about $48 million in construction costs, and the expected economic impact over 10 years is projected to be $1 billion, with $4.8 million in taxes, according to Nealon.
* Sun-Times | Richard Garwin, Chicago physicist who created the hydrogen bomb and worked to see it wasn’t used, dead at 97: His work on the hydrogen bomb did not become widely known until a story in The New York Times in 2001 shed light on Mr. Garwin’s role, making him perhaps the most influential scientist nobody had heard of. In designing the first hydrogen bomb, Mr. Garwin relied on concepts developed by two other physicists: Edward Teller, who has been called the “father of the hydrogen bomb,” and Stanislaw Ulam.
* WBEZ | For Chicago rapper Jay Wood, personal style serves as a mirror to his music: Wood has risen quickly in the local scene for his authentic lyricism and energetic live performances. While rolling out his projects, Wood, 27, puts just as much thought into the visuals — and his apparel — as the music. Nowhere, Fast featured cameos from his Chicago Heights alma mater Marion Catholic High School, specifically the band and football field, and the title came from advice given by his former high school football coach. Naturally, Wood gravitated toward varsity jackets and collegiate patches during his “school” era.
*** Cook County and Suburbs ***
* Daily Herald | Fewer homes being purchased in Chicago area, but sales prices still going up: According to the most recent Illinois Realtors’ monthly residential real estate report for April 2025, the nine-county Chicago Metro Area had 11,791 residential properties on the market, up 3.6% from April 2024. However, the region saw a 4.2% dip in sales when comparing April 2024 to April 2025. The report showed 7,857 home sales in April 2025 compared to 8,198 for the same month in 2024.
* Tribune | Homer Glen Mayor Christina Neitzke-Troike says lobby stopped quick-take bill on 143rd Street: Homer Glen Mayor Christina Neitzke-Troike said Saturday afternoon a bill pending in Springfield to allow Will County to use quick take powers to seize property along 143rd Street is on hold until fall. Neitzke-Troike and Will County Board member Jim Richmond, whose district includes Homer Glen, headed to the capitol to ensure lawmakers didn’t plan a last-minute vote before the legislature’s spring session ended Saturday. […] The bill is in the Senate Judiciary Committee.
* Daily Southtown | Orland Park mental health event organizer: ‘I needed to do something positive’: The trying times Josette Songco and her two sons went through years ago taught them the importance of bringing more attention to mental health. The Songco family came out to volunteer Saturday at the Be Kind to Your Mind Mental Health/Wellness Fair and Walk to let other people know there is help out there for depression and other forms of mental illness.
* WGLT | Snow, McNeil ask Illinois State Supreme Court to hear appeals in murder convictions: The Illinois Supreme Court has been asked to review the appeals of two Twin City men who claim they were wrongfully convicted in unrelated McLean County murder cases from the 1990s. Attorneys representing Jamie Snow and Barton McNeil recently filed “Petitions for Leave to Appeal,” or PLAs, with the state’s highest court. A decision on whether the court will grant those petitions is expected within weeks. Both men are now represented by the University of Chicago Law School’s Exoneration Project, with McNeil also supported by the Illinois Innocence Project.
* WGLT | Ready, set, grow! How students at Bloomington’s Regional Alternative School are contributing outside of the classroom: The RAS program offers a different learning environment from traditional public schools, meeting students where they are. It serves students in grades 7 to 12 from Dewitt, McLean and Livingston counties, including those who’ve struggled in traditional school settings. RAS Vocational Coordinator Brian O’Kraski said this was the third year of renting a plot from the West Bloomington Revitalization Project — a community garden space near Downtown Bloomington where anyone can reserve plots for $25 for an entire season.
* WCIA | NWS upgrades to cause local NOAA Radio Outage: A planned National Weather Service upgrade to computer software through the local National Weather Service Office in Lincoln will lead to some temporary changes and outages in services offered by them. This is due to the required, scheduled upgrade to the office’s Advanced Weather Interactive Processing System (AWIPS) happening at various times to all offices around the country.
* WSIL | Hangar 9 reopening in Carbondale with new upgrades: On June 2, Hangar 9 announced they will be back open thanks to SIU alumni Andrew Perlmutter and Scott Moller who acquired the venue from Carter. With the opening of the venue, the new owners will also launch a two-phase revitalization plan.
*** National ***
* AP | Supreme Court rejects 2 gun rights cases, but assault weapons ban issue may be back soon: The majority did not explain its reasoning in turning down the cases over high-capacity magazines and state bans on guns like the AR-15, popular weapons that have also been used in mass shootings. But three conservative justices on the nine-member court publicly noted their disagreement, and a fourth said he is skeptical that assault-weapons bans are constitutional.
* WSJ | The Law Firms That Appeased Trump—and Angered Their Clients: Support for the law firms that didn’t make deals has been growing inside the offices of corporate executives. At least 11 big companies are moving work away from law firms that settled with the administration or are giving—or intend to give—more business to firms that have been targeted but refused to strike deals, according to general counsels at those companies and other people familiar with those decisions.
*** UPDATE *** This partial document is from the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget. Click the image for the full document, which includes notes on each revenue item…
[ *** End Of Update *** ]
* Roundup of somewhat conflicting news reports about new state revenues…
WGN: The budget was ultimately passed with $400 million in spending cuts and about double that in massive new taxes
Tribune: estimated $800 million plus in tax increases
WGLT: $1 billion in new taxes on nicotine products, sports betting, and businesses.
Sun-Times: “You know how it’s a bad budget? When it starts out with at least $1 billion in taxes,” said Senate Minority Leader John Curran, R-Downers Grove.
* The Illinois Policy Institute claims the revenue bill includes $394 million in tax hikes, $237 million in fund sweeps and $216 million from “delaying promised funding.”
* There is no complete list that I’m aware of to explain how much all these changes are expected to bring in. We told you about some of the estimates on Saturday. So, I’ve taken those and grafted it onto the only comprehensive revenue list I’ve seen so far, which is from Government Solutions Group…
On the revenue and corporate tax side, the package includes:
• Increase in the tobacco and vape tax to 44 cents to help fund the Medicaid program.
• A sports wagering tax of $0.25 per wager for the first $20 million wagers and $0.50 for each wager in excess of $20 million. [$36 million, but see below]
• Tax amnesty program. [$195 million]
• Extends the Hotel Operators’ Occupation Tax to short-term rentals. [$15 million]
• A state “throwback rule” impacting corporations that operate in multiple states (switches Illinois from the Joyce rule to the Finnigan Rule to enable the state to collect more corporate tax income). [$72 million]
• Telecommunications tax increase to fund 9-8-8 services, a statewide suicide prevention and mental health crisis line.
• Ensures businesses outside of Illinois selling $100,000+ worth of physical goods to Illinois residents must collect Illinois sales tax, even without an in-state presence.
• Expands the Illinois Retail Act to include servicemen under occupation and use taxes, creating equal tax treatment.
• Eliminates the 200 transaction threshold for economic nexus, aligning with other states for more efficient enforcement.
• Implements a 15% tax rate when insufficient sales records are provided, encouraging proper documentation.
• Allows service providers to file returns for retailers and servicemen maintaining business in Illinois.
• Delayed final payment from the sales tax on motor fuel to the Road Fund. [$171 million]
I wouldn’t call a tax amnesty program a tax hike. And the delayed sales tax payment to the Road Fund is a one-time budgetary gimmick. Those two alone total $366 million.
The fund sweeps are not included in that list. They add up to about $100 million for the coming fiscal year, and more for this fiscal year.
Also, click here for an analysis which shows the total amount raised from the sports wagering tax will be about $160 million.
I’ll let you know if I find a reliable list of projected revenues.
A bill introduced in response to the 2024 fatal shooting of Sonya Massey in the Springfield area by a downstate sheriff’s deputy now awaits Pritzker’s signature.
Sean Grayson was fired from his job as a Sangamon County sheriff’s deputy after the killing and charged with murder. After Massey’s death, it was revealed that Grayson previously worked for five law enforcement agencies and had been the subject of citizen complaints and criticism from superiors who questioned his competence. Grayson also had two DUIs on his record before he went into law enforcement.
The legislation would bar law enforcement agencies from making a final offer for employment without getting a signed release from the applicant directing “any and all entities that previously employed the individual to produce or make available for inspection all employment records, including background investigation materials collected in connection with making a final offer of employment.”
Illinois lawmakers’ effort to reign in pharmacy benefit managers, the Prescription Drug Affordability Act, passed both houses of the General Assembly on the last day of the legislative session May 31.
The act targets the health insurance middlemen that manage members’ prescription drug benefits on behalf of the plans, negotiating prices with drug manufacturers, setting reimbursement rates for pharmacies, creating in-network lists for plan members to get prescriptions filled and creating formularies, or “preferred drug lists.”
The Illinois law, modeled after provisions being debated or passed by other states, forbids PBMs from engaging in spread pricing, charging insurance plans more than they reimburse pharmacies for, and keeping the difference; steering individuals to specific pharmacies or pharmacy companies; and limiting access to a covered drug by designating it a specialty drug contrary to the specified definition.
In addition, the law levies a fee, per each covered member, on PBMs that will be used in a fund award up to $25 million a year in grants to independent pharmacies and pharmacies located in rural counties, medically underserved areas, low-income communities and pharmacies that serve high concentrations of Medicaid patients.
* Governor JB Pritzker…
“Predatory pharmacy benefit managers have been the middlemen whose business practices too often jack up prescription drug prices and shut down small, independent pharmacies that are frequently rural communities’ lone options when people are seeking medications they need. I’m grateful for the General Assembly’s broad bipartisan partnership with me to require pharmacy benefit managers to become responsible actors and lower prescription drug prices.
“For far too long, pharmacy benefit managers’ business practices have operated with little regulation, transparency, and accountability. Illinois is putting an end to that. We will lead the nation in bringing transparency to PBM drug pricing. This bill grants the state full access to their books and records so we can follow the money and prevent exploitation of patients.
“It’s clear that we must do everything we can to lower the cost of medications and hold big corporations accountable. I look forward to signing this bill into law alongside its co-sponsors Sen. David Koehler and Rep. Natalie Manley, and I thank them for achieving a major step forward in the fight for affordable prescription drugs.”
If signed by the governor, a bill would mandate high school seniors and community college students automatically be offered enrollment to all state schools for which their GPA qualifies them.
The bill does not change universities’ and colleges’ GPA standards or admission requirements. Schools can revoke a student’s automatic admission if, after reaching out to the student, they discover they don’t meet other eligibility requirements.
The main sponsor of House Bill 3522, Katie Stuart, D-Edwardsville, said the state wants to encourage students not to leave Illinois for other institutions.
“Every student who is what we – I don’t love the term – but college material, for lack of a better term, knows the opportunities that they have in higher education in the state of Illinois,” Stuart said.
If it becomes law, the Illinois Board of Higher Education and the Illinois Community College Board would start the program during the 2027-28 school year.
A bill proposed by an Elgin high school student that will put supplies of opioid antagonists like Narcan in Illinois libraries passed the Illinois Senate unanimously.
House Bill 1910, proposed by Illinois Math and Science Academy senior Jordan Henry through Rep. Anna Moeller (D-Elgin), is now on Governor JB Pritzker’s desk. He is expected to sign it into law.
The law mandates Illinois public libraries maintain a supply of medications like naloxone, a nasal spray that can quickly reverse an opioid overdose with almost no side effects, and also have at least one staff member on duty at all times who is trained on administering the medication, Capitol News Illinois reports. […]
Unlike the Chicago program, which allows any member of the public to take and administer Narcan at libraries, the Illinois law allows only trained library staff members to administer the opioid antagonists. The medications will be kept on or near library grounds, and also at library-sponsored events, according to the legislation.
A bill heading to Gov. JB Pritzker’s desk could ensure safe drinking water standards in Illinois.
The legislation allows the Illinois Department of Public Health to impose civil penalties against non-community water supplies that violate drinking water standards.
It would also clarify that the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency is the primary agency responsible for implementing the Safe Drinking Water Act.
“Illinois would no longer be able to control our non-community water supplies if this bill does not pass,” said Rep. Nabeela Syed (D-Palatine). “It would be taken up by the federal government. So, this is a federally required mandate. If we don’t do right now, we will lose our authority over these.” […]
Senate Bill 2266 passed out of the House on a 75-39 vote. It previously passed out of the Senate on a 44-11 vote.
Legislation that would ban carbon sequestration activity within the footprint of a massive source of drinking water for Central Illinois is heading to Gov. JB Pritzker’s desk.
The Illinois House voted 91-19 on Tuesday to approve Senate Bill 2317, which would prohibit sequestration — the process of capturing and storing carbon by injecting it underground — within an area that “overlies, underlies, or passes through” a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency-designated sole-source aquifer. Only one aquifer in Illinois meets that definition: the Mahomet Aquifer.
The aquifer, a deep underground layer of sand and gravel, underlies 15 counties and is the main source of drinking water for more than 500,000 people in Central Illinois, including Normal, Champaign and Urbana. […]
The legislation comes as Illinois, especially downstate, has been targeted by the nascent carbon capture and sequestration industry due to its favorable geology and the availability of federal tax credits incentivizing the technology.
* Sen. Karina Villa…
Following the federal government’s rescission of a 2021 Department of Homeland Security policy memo that prohibited immigration enforcement in protected areas, State Senator Karina Villa championed a measure to secure students’ safety at school. […]
House Bill 3247 would prohibit schools from disclosing or threatening to disclose information about a student’s immigration status or the immigration status of a person associated with the child. The bill also requires schools to develop procedures for reviewing and authorizing requests from law enforcement agents attempting to enter a school or school facility.
Additionally, the measure would ensure that children are not denied a free public K-12 education based on their or their parents’ perceived or actual immigration status, codifying the right to free public education for immigrant children. […]
A bill heading to Gov. JB Pritzker’s desk could require seat belts for all new Illinois school buses.
The legislation could mandate that any school buses manufactured in Illinois have three point seat belts starting in 2031. […]
This plan will grandfather in any school buses purchased before 2031.
Senate Bill 191 passed out of the House on a 83-27 vote. It previously passed out of the Senate on a 39-13 vote.
* Sen. Kimberly Lightford…
All too often, students of color feel the brunt of being expelled or suspended from school, rather than being provided restorative approaches to help with their emotional and mental health – a phenomenon Senate Majority Leader Kimberly A. Lightford is fighting to change. […]
Expulsion of students in kindergarten through second grade would not be permitted under Lightford’s measure. Additionally, pre-k through second graders would not be able to be suspended without the principal receiving written or verbal consent from the district superintendent.
Research from the University of Chicago using data from Chicago Public Schools shows that restorative practices are effective in reducing not only suspension and expulsion but also student arrests. As reported by Chalkbeat in 2019, early exclusion from school can trigger “a domino effect of negative interactions between schools and families,” increasing the risk of future exclusions and setting a child on the path of the so-called school-to-prison pipeline.
The measure builds upon Lightford’s previous work – Senate Bill 100 from the 99th General Assembly – which addressed the frequency and racial disparity of suspensions and expulsions by limiting their use, creating policies that re-engage students and avoiding interrupting a student’s learning as much as possible. […]
Legislation has advanced that would free senior citizens of the need to take a behind the wheel driving test to maintain their drivers license, until they reach the age of 87.
If signed by Gov. JB Pritzker, the law would also create a process for family members to report any concerns about driving ability. […]
Legislation would amend the Illinois Vehicle Code to raise the age from 79 to 87 when drivers need to take a behind-the-wheel test to renew their license, in addition to allowing family members the ability to report concerns.
An Illinois bill hoping to improve care and raise awareness of a rare pregnancy complication is headed to Gov. JB Pritzker’s desk.
The Illinois House passed SB1814 on Friday, May 23. It passed the senate back in April.
The bill would require the Illinois Department of Health to create a public education campaign and help train more healthcare workers on amniotic fluid embolism. The condition is essentially an allergic reaction to the amniotic fluid entering the bloodstream. This reaction can lead to cardiac or pulmonary failure. […]
AFE is extremely rare, affecting approximately one in every 40,000 deliveries in the United States. Its cause remains unknown, and studies suggest the death rate may be as high as 60%.
Illinois lawmakers passed a bill that would prevent insurance companies from putting time limits on anesthesia coverage to protect patients from financial burden.
This comes after the fall of 2024, when Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield tried do just that in New York, Missouri and Connecticut by tying payments to the length of time a patient was under anesthesia. In other words, they would stop covering the patient after an arbitrary length of time, and the rest of the anesthesia would be billed to the patient directly.
Now, that bill has passed both the House and the Senate with bipartisan support and is heading to Governor JB Pritzker’s desk. This would cover anesthesia regardless of how long the procedure takes. […]
If the governor signs the bill into law, it will take effect next year for all insurances.
Retail creates more jobs in Illinois than any other private sector employer, with one out of every four workers employed by the retail sector. Importantly, retail is an industry in which everyone, regardless of credentials, can find a viable career path.
Retailers like the Rich in Peoria enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA showcase the retailers who make Illinois work.
As I write this column, the spring legislative session is a day away from adjournment. Nothing of great importance has cleared both chambers. So there’s no point in writing about any of that. I’ll let you know my thoughts next week.
Let’s discuss a different topic instead.
For quite a while now, most folks in politics have assumed that Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias and Comptroller Susana Mendoza will probably run for mayor of Chicago in 2027. The incumbent Brandon Johnson is spectacularly unpopular, and a real hunger is developing in the city (again) for new leadership.
Anyway, some wags have also speculated that one or even both of the statewide officials will not run for reelection in order to gear up for a mayoral bid.
With Cook County Democratic Party candidate slating coming up in July, the rumors have intensified.
I bumped into Giannoulias last week at the Statehouse, and we talked about the rumors, and then I asked him if he was running again.
“I’m running for reelection,” Giannoulias bluntly replied. He did not rule out or rule in a run for mayor.
Mendoza’s response was different.
Back in 2018, Mendoza easily won reelection, besting her Republican opponent by 23 percentage points.
But in September of that year, Rahm Emanuel surprised the city’s political world when he announced that he wouldn’t seek a third term. People who hadn’t considered running suddenly changed their plans. Mendoza, in the midst of her first reelection bid, was suddenly on a growing list of possible candidates.
Then, a few days before Election Day, NBC5 Chicago’s Mary Ann Ahern disclosed a draft TV ad by Mendoza announcing her mayoral candidacy.
Mendoza said it was just a contingency in case she decided to run, but she caught a lot of heat. And while it obviously didn’t hurt Mendoza in her statewide bid, it may have damaged her somewhat when she eventually jumped into the mayor’s race. Mendoza didn’t make it past the first round.
So I asked Mendoza’s people if she planned to stand for reelection as comptroller and/or run for mayor.
“Comptroller Mendoza is weighing her options, including reelection,” a spokesperson said. “She loves her job and is committed to public service. She will make her decision based on what is best for Illinois, Chicago and her family.”
Now comes the important part: “She will not run for two offices at the same time. Whatever she decides to run for, she’ll be all-in.”
Asked to clarify that statement (after all, she could run for reelection and then spend a few weeks after the election gathering petition signatures for mayor), I was told it’ll be one race or the other. If she announces for reelection, she won’t run for mayor.
There are those who believe Mendoza may be overthinking the impact of her 2018 back-to-back election experience.
On the other hand, there are those who believe that Giannoulias may not fully appreciate the pressure he’ll be under and the criticism he will face if he runs for reelection and then runs for mayor.
The secretary of state is one of the best jobs in state government. If Giannoulias had hedged about running again, a long line of potential hopefuls would have quickly started forming.
Not as many people are interested in being state comptroller, but if Mendoza decides to skip reelection, the opening will add to the growing turnover in Illinois politics.
U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin’s, D-Ill., retirement announcement has already attracted three incumbent Illinois office holders who want to replace him.
U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly, D-Ill., announced her intention to run, as has U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, D-Ill.
Those attempts to move up have already attracted several candidates and potential candidates. And many of those folks are elected officials who will either have to give up their current offices to run — creating more down-ballot turbulence — or be replaced by an appointee, who might then have to be replaced, etc.
Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton has also announced for U.S. Senate. That means Gov. JB Pritzker will have to choose a new running mate. And if chooses someone who is an elected official, then that’ll create more openings down the food chain.
U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., has announced her retirement, and people are lining up to replace her, including Democratic state Sen. Laura Fine, who will have to give up her seat to run.
And there are plenty of rumors that U.S. Rep. Danny Davis, D-Ill., won’t run for reelection.
Next year promises to be a fascinating campaign season.
May 31st next year will fall on a Sunday, so I’m gonna have the same dilemma.
While the Illinois General Assembly didn’t end up passing legislation this session that helped or hurt the Chicago Bears’ stadium efforts, one suburban lawmaker said the legislature got close to a deal on property tax legislation — a measure widely seen as a way to ease a team move to Arlington Heights.
“We were super close and just ran out of time,” state Rep. Mary Beth Canty, a Democrat who represents the northwest suburb and surrounding areas, said Sunday.
Rep. Kam Buckner pushed back on the idea that any agreement was close, as no deal was ever actually introduced in the legislature.
“The Bears have made it clear — they no longer want to be in Chicago. That’s their decision,” Buckner, a Chicago Democrat whose district includes Soldier Field, said in a text message Sunday. “But if they want to leave and use state dollars or ask for special tax protections to do it, they’ll have to come through Springfield. And in Springfield, that means facing the Chicago delegation directly.”
As House Speaker Pro Tempore Buckner told Isabel on Friday about a rumor that language to help the Bears build a stadium in Arlington Heights might be included in the BIMP: “I would take serious umbrage with that.” If a top leader says something like that and can’t follow, then he’s not a top leader.
* ICYMI: New taxes on sports bets, nicotine products as Democrats pass $55.2B budget. Capitol News Illinois…
- Illinois Democrats pushed through a $55.2 billion budget for next fiscal year late Saturday, bolstering coffers with new taxes on sports bets, nicotine products and businesses.
- The budget marked a roughly 3.9% spending increase from the current year, while Republicans criticized it for containing few cuts.
- It raises about $500 million more in new revenue than what Gov. JB Pritzker proposed in February to make up for declining base revenues.
* The Governor has no public events scheduled for today, but you can read a transcript of his post-session press conference here.
*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***
* Sun-Times | Illinois Senate leaves without taking a vote on plan to let terminally ill people end their own lives: State Sen. Linda Holmes, D-Aurora, the lead sponsor of the measure, said the Senate ran out of time this legislative session to get the bill over the finish line. It could still be called for a vote at a later date. […] It remains unclear where Democratic Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker stands on the proposal. A spokesman for Pritzker said he would only comment on the bill if it landed on his desk.
* Capitol News Illinois | Senate’s transit funding, delivery tax proposal stalls in House: With public transit agencies in Chicagoland facing a fiscal cliff and the potential for thousands of layoffs, the state did not pass a bill that would have provided the agencies with potentially over $1 billion in new funding. A version of the bill passed in the Senate, sponsored by Sen. Ram Villivalam, D-Chicago. But the House adjourned early Sunday morning without concurring as some of its tax hikes became too controversial. Now, the future of Chicagoland transit is in limbo as the bill awaits further action.
*** Statewide ***
* Tribune | Who owns most of the farmland in Illinois? Not farmers: Less than a fourth of Illinois farmland is owned by the farmer who works the land, according to data from the Illinois Farm Business Farm Management, a nonprofit association that helps farmers make management decisions. The rest is leased to farmers by individuals, family trusts and, increasingly, businesses. The Tribune is launching a series of special reports analyzing the hurdles many farmers face in trying to be good stewards of the land as climate change intensifies. Among the challenges are fewer opportunities for farmers — and would-be farmers — to own their land.
* WCIA | Free fishing days coming to Illinois waterways: The IDNR said the free fishing days will be June 13-16. During these four days, everyone can fish in Illinois lakes and waterways without a license, salmon stamp or inland trout stamp.
* Axios | Trump halting student visas could have $2B risk for Illinois: International students contribute about $2.4 billion to the state economy and more than 23,000 jobs, according to data from NAFSA, an international education nonprofit. Of the 1.1 million international college students studying in the U.S. during the 2023-24 school year, about 5.5% were studying in Illinois, per data from NAFSA.
* KWQC | Illinois Democrats pass resolution calling for health care reforms, not cuts: The majority party passed a resolution Thursday that calls on the U.S. Senate to table the health care cuts bill. Instead, the party suggests they pursue reforms such as the Illinois’ Healthcare Protection Act which provides care to illegal immigrants.
* Crain’s | Transit bailout falls apart in Springfield as clock strikes midnight: The setback came despite Senate Democrats approving the package in a 32-22 vote without GOP support less than 20 minutes before midnight, a constitutional deadline to approve the bill with a simple majority. At the time, the House was debating the state’s $55.2 billion budget, which was approved seven minutes before the deadline. That left the House little wiggle room to call the transit bill, but the chamber had already realized the votes weren’t there, even if they had more time.
*** Chicago ***
* Block Club | Chicago Public Transit In Limbo After State Lawmakers Fail To Fill Nearly $1 Billion Budget Gap: With no new funding for Chicago-area mass transit included in next year’s state budget, CTA and other agencies could see massive cuts to service and its workforces, officials have warned. The funding nosedive is set for the beginning of 2026 as COVID-19 relief money runs out. An estimated 40 percent of the Regional Transit Authority’s service could be cut along with an additional 3,000 layoffs without a new funding mechanism, Villivalam said.
* ABC Chicago | I-Team reporting on illegal gun trafficking through O’Hare Airport leads to congressional inquiry: Now, U.S. Representative Raja Krishnamoorthi is asking the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) for more information on their work deterring illegal weapons and materials from entering the country. “We were astonished by what you found,” Krishnamoorthi told the I-Team, “Namely that illegal firearms, as well as firearm accessories, are coming from China, and, you know, furthering the gun epidemic that exists across the country, but also here in Illinois.”
* WTTW | New Navy Pier Marina, Offering Short-Term Docking for Recreational Boaters, Expected to Open Mid-June: The Navy Pier Marina is expected to officially open to the public June 14. The opening of the marina, located on the north side of Navy Pier, comes as this year’s boating season kicks off. Navy Pier Marina founder and developer Randy Podolsky said during a Wednesday news conference that the idea for the marina came in 1983.
* Block Club | 60-Unit ‘Passive Living’ Affordable Housing Breaks Ground In West Humboldt Park: The project will have 60 apartments geared toward young professionals and families in the community, with 48 of those units reserved for households making at or below 60 percent of the area median income. Thirteen units will be reserved for people with disabilities, including four for people with sensory impairments.
* Tribune | As residents and dogs again fill Chicago parks, data shows fewer than 1 in 4 reported bites result in citations: The city department received some 6,435 bite reports between January 2020 and April 30 of this year, according to a Tribune review of data obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request. For that same period, data shows that CACC has issued about 1,516 citations, for “unrestrained violations,” to animal owners. The violations cover dogs found to be off-leash in public areas, but not every violation issued pertains to a bite.
*** Cook County and Suburbs ***
* Fox Chicago | Construction begins on Chicago project to send Lake Michigan water to southwest suburbs: he project is a partnership between the City of Chicago and the Grand Prairie Water Commission, which is made up of Joliet, Crest Hill, Channahon, Minooka, Shorewood, and Romeoville. The southwest suburban municipalities banded together to establish the new commission last year to purchase Lake Michigan water through the City of Chicago. They did so because their current water supply from underground aquifers is projected to be insufficient to meet current needs by the year 2030.
* Daily Herald | Student journalist’s investigation into Prospect’s first principal prompts review of honorary naming: A student journalist for Prospect High School’s newspaper uncovered former Principal Alvin Kulieke’s ties to a fringe religious group and its early embrace of eugenics principles. Now Northwest Suburban High School District 214 is considering stripping the name of Kulieke — principal of the Mount Prospect school from its opening in 1957 until his death in 1973 — from the school theater.
* Naperville Sun | Naperville expanding composting program, introducing clothing recycling: Starting Monday, there will be city-designated locations around town for residents to compost food scraps and to drop off clothing and textiles for reuse and recycling, city officials said. The programs will run through Aug. 29. Compost drop-offs locations will be available at the city’s compressed natural gas filling station at 1720 W. Jefferson Ave. and the former park-and-ride lot at 91st Street and Wolf’s Crossing Road. As for clothing and textiles, residents can leave items at the city’s Environmental Collection Campus at 156 Fort Hill Drive from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. weekdays.
* Daily Herald | Buffalo Grove embraces its diversity with seventh annual Pride Parade: With the theme “Pride is Natural,” and organized by The Pinta Pride Project, the parade included groups from schools, religious organizations, businesses and advocacy groups marching along Buffalo Grove Road. […] “I never thought we’d get the chance to be married, and so that’s probably the biggest thing that we’ve experienced in 40 years,” said Woodard, a retired physical education teacher.
* Daily Herald | Algonquin landowner wants to create a public riverfront park. Village says no thanks: Swanson asked the village “on more than one occasion” to purchase the land and turn it into a park. But the village does not back his plans. Village President Debby Sosine said the village already has allocated millions toward upgrading its existing parks. Presidential Park opened Wednesday and Towne Park is nearing completion, while officials recently revealed a final renovation design for Willoughby Park. “I appreciate his enthusiasm for wanting to do something there, but village is not buying — especially at the cost ($324,000)he is asking,” Sosine said.
*** Downstate ***
* WGLT | Central Illinois lawmakers stick to party lines on state budget: After some tension in both chambers, the budget was passed in the last two hours before the deadline with no Republican support. For Democrats, the budget is a success. Democratic state Rep. Sharon Chung of Bloomington said the caucus was engaged and focused throughout the session.
* WCIA | U of I researchers looking back at COVID protocols to see what they can learn: Becky Smith is a professor of epidemiology. She said the shutdowns were successful in keeping hospitals from being flooded with patients. But — she thinks the federal government could have used that time to build a better test for the virus– and understand its transmission quicker. Smith’s biggest takeaway was the erosion of trust between public health officials — and the general public.
* BND | Opponents of solar farm at Mount Hope Cemetery launch campaign to stop it: More than 450 people have signed a petition asking Belleville officials to halt their plans to clear-cut woods behind Mount Hope Cemetery to make way for a community solar farm. Opponents are hoping that the new administration of Mayor Jenny Meyer, who defeated former Mayor Patty Gregory in April, will be more open to their concerns about what’s planned for the city-owned property.
*** National ***
* AP | States are rolling out red carpets for data centers. But some lawmakers are pushing back: Kansas approved a new sales tax exemption on goods to build and equip data centers, while Kentucky and Arkansas expanded pre-existing exemptions so that more projects will qualify. Michigan approved one that carries some protections, including requirements to use municipal utility water and clean energy, meet energy-efficiency measures and ensure that it pays for its own electricity.
* You Gov | Trust in Media 2025: Which news sources Americans use and trust: By this measure, The Weather Channel persists as the most trusted news source, as it was in 2022, 2023, and 2024: Americans are 49 percentage points more likely to call The Weather Channel trustworthy as they are to call it untrustworthy — up from +43 last year. Like last year, the Weather Channel is followed by two public broadcasters: the BBC (+26) and PBS (+25). By far the least-trusted outlet included in the poll is the National Enquirer (-37, better than -44 last year, when it also ranked last for trust). The outlets trusted least besides the Enquirer are, like last year, Infowars (-15) and Breitbart News (-7).
* WaPo | Discrimination cases unravel as Trump scraps core civil rights tenet: The Justice Department now is reviewing its entire docket and has already dismissed or terminated “many” cases that were “legally unsupportable” and a product of “weaponization” under the Biden administration, said Harmeet Dhillon, who heads the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. “We will fully enforce civil rights laws in a way that satisfies the ends of justice, not politicization,” she said in a statement to The Washington Post.
* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
* Governor Pritzker held a post-budget press conference this morning…
Reporter: This budget relied on a few one-time fixes. You’ve tried in the past to fix the structural deficit in 2020. Is that something that you’re going to be looking to spend political capital on going forward? Something a little bit more long-term? So we don’t have to do this every year—the one-time moving stuff around?
Pritzker Well, I remind you, Olivia, that there are a lot of one-time expenditures that occur in a budget as well. And so what we tried to do was make sure that any one-time revenues that you’re referring to really matched up with [the] diminishing of the one-time expenditures that we have to make. So we’ve gotten really much closer than ever before to balancing that structural deficit, to getting rid of the structural deficit.
As you remember, when I came into office, we did a study in early 2019 that showed a structural deficit of $3.2 billion and we have whittled away at that year after year after year. And the fact is that we’re getting closer and closer. We’ve been, I think, prudent this year about making cuts to government where we thought we could, and there are hundreds of millions of dollars of cuts that we made. While at the same time addressing needs that we knew that we had to.
One last thing, just to remind everybody about the state budget. As you know, there was an Edgar ramp put in back in the mid 90s to deal with pensions. It increases the amount that goes into pensions from the state budget, roughly by $400 to $500 million a year. Add on top of that that we have the evidence-based funding model that requires about $350- $300 million to schools every single year in addition to the existing budget. So you start really $800 million in the hole, so to speak as you’re trying to balance the budget every year from year to year. And so we have that to take into account. So when people talk about increased spending from one year to another. You’re already talking about $800 million—and there’s more: interest and other factors that are, as we say, above the line.
Reporter: Governor, you got a lot done this session, you passed a budget, you passed a Medicaid omnibus, PBM reform, on and on, but your community college bill didn’t make it, the cell phone ban in schools stalled. Township consolidation, cannabis equity, energy bill, ect. What happened?
Pritzker: You don’t get everything done in one year. I think that maybe the Senate President will back me up on that. And lots of people in the General Assembly—sometimes they spend two years, four years, six years trying to get something big done. I think we’ve been hyper-successful at getting things done in a shorter period of time than they’re expected. I have said for a long time about the community college bill, for example, that this was introduced back when Andy Manar was Senator. Manar and years before he came to work for our administration. Be was, I think, the Senate sponsor at one point. And so this is years old, and something that it takes a lot of work to get people together on. Energy-let’s take that as an example. [The lCimate and Equitable Jobs Act] was about a year and a half in the making. Longer, really, if you take all the pre-work that was done. But a year and a half in working groups to try to get all the various interests at the table and try to address their concerns in order to put together a package that everybody felt was going to address the problem that we had in the state. So things take sometimes longer than one session to get done.
Reporter: Do you think you should have met with more members one-on-one or taken the time to meet with small groups?
* Pritzker: I don’t know that that’s possible. I met with an awful lot of members. I mean, I certainly continue to find time for people whenever they want. But no, I meet with an awful lot of organizations and individuals and enjoy those individual meetings. Sometimes it’s two or three at a time, sometimes one, sometimes with cold caucuses. But it’s important to me to have a good relationship, not only within the Democratic caucuses, but also on the other side of the aisle. Sometimes we don’t agree on things, but it’s good to have dialogue.
Reporter: Governor, can you reflect on transit not getting across the finish line? And there was a proposal that was in the amendment yesterday that would have put a delivery fee to fund transit across the whole state. Would you support that?
Pritzker: I didn’t introduce the proposals that [would have] paid for the transit bill, and didn’t see them, actually, until all of you saw them—maybe a day and a half before they were introduced on the floor yesterday.
I can say this, that we need transit reform. We need to make sure we’re addressing the needs of commuters, and not just in the city of Chicago or in Cook County or in the collar counties, but all across the state. I think you’ve heard me say that every single time I’ve talked about transit. The entire state relies upon transit. So whatever solution we have has to address them.
And I have to give some credit to the people who are working in those working groups, that they took that seriously, and there was a significant focus on the amount of money that would go to downstate transit systems. So I’ll continue to work with them. We were not the leaders of that endeavor, but we were at the table, listening and helping whenever we were asked to. And again, I think there’s significant work that will need to be done over the summer and in the fall to make sure that it gets across the board.
Reporter: Just to follow up, a few days ago you talked about you would not support broad based tax increases, sales and corporate income, but delivery tax. A lot of people get deliveries on Amazon or DoorDash that would hit a lot of people. Would that fall into that category of a broad based tax you would not support?
Pritzker: When I think of the broad-based tax in the state, I think of the largest sources of tax revenue. And those are the individual income tax, the corporate income tax, the sales tax. I obviously want to make sure we’re lowering, not raising, taxes whenever we can. And so again, I think the decisions that will get made at the working group table over the next bunch of months that’ll get surfaced.
I hope Republicans will help. They have not helped so far with what sources of revenue might help to address the transit challenges [in] their communities. Republicans that live in their areas, Democrats in their communities—need them to step up to the plate, too.
Reporter: Governor, on Friday, as things were wrapping up here in Springfield, federal prosecutors recommended a 12.5 [year] prison sentence for former Speaker Mike Madigan. They talked about the stain his records left on government, and in their filings they talked about the letters of support he received from current and former government officials that are still strong allies, despite the evidence of illegal conduct. And yet, here in Springfield, the House never held its promised hearings on ethics legislation. And what we saw from the Senate was an 11th-hour proposal that appeared designed to address an issue that the Senate President had with his campaign finances at the State Board of Elections—that would have allowed the Lieutenant Governor and others who are running for federal office to fundraise on session days outside of Sangamon County. Why weren’t ethics a stronger priority this session? And why haven’t things like a stronger revolving door provision and more transparency about what’s spent on lobbying in Springfield, which are common across the country—why aren’t those on the agenda here?
Pritzker: I think you’re aware that nearly every year that I’ve been governor we have addressed ethics. I talked about it a lot, with regard, for example, to the utilities that have been accused in those cases that you’re referring to. I think in 2020, in my State of the State speech, I talked about the fact that we’re not going to let utility companies make decisions for the majority of people in the state of Illinois. They’re not going to be the ones who are directing the legislation that addresses energy. But rather the voices of the people would be heard. And that happened. And indeed, we included within CEJA, ethics legislation. People don’t pay a lot of attention to that. They think that ethics legislation has to sit as a separate thing. But actually within a lot of the major issues that we’re addressing, we addressed ethics. Once again, ethics [are] hugely important to me. We try to address them whenever we can. We had a very busy session. There were, in fact, discussions with the Chair of the Committee in the House about his ideas for this. So we’re going to continue to address it wherever we can. And I don’t think you can ever stop talking about how do you make sure that we have a corruption free and
an honest government?
* Reporter: Governor, Illinois still has among the lowest credit rating in their country. Republicans say that’s not Donald Trump’s fault. Why are they wrong?
Pritzker: They’re not wrong. Donald Trump didn’t cause the problem that occurred before Donald Trump became president in 2017. In the 20 years before I became governor, Illinois, I think, had 21 credit downgrades. Consistently, not a single credit upgrade, and eight of those occurred during my predecessor’s term. This has been a problem for many, many, many years. I’ve never blamed the credit challenges that the state of Illinois has had on Donald Trump. I blame a lot of other things on Donald Trump. I mean, he has made it difficult for working families in Illinois, and now, even worse than ever before as a result of the budget that he’s proposing.
Reporter: And then to follow up, how does this budget help the states catch up with the rest of the country? We traditionally lagged the country in economic rebound after the Great Recession, even after COVID. So what in this budget is actually going to make us competitive?
Pritzker: I’m so glad you asked that question. As you know, Greg, I made it a hallmark of our administration and worked very closely with the General Assembly to try to speed up economic growth in the state by making the kinds of investments that are required for us to leap ahead. We are a traditional economy that’s got large agriculture sector, large manufacturing sector, those sectors [are] hugely important, and we want to make sure we maintain those and grow those. But we also need to make sure we have some very high growth sectors that we’re investing in. And that we’re doing everything we can to make Illinois a welcoming state for businesses that want to move. Whether they want to move from one place in the United States to another, or businesses that are outside of the country and wants to move to the United States.
So example, the Surplus to Success program that is in the budget. That’s a program where we’re taking state owned properties. We’re talking about prisons that have been closed, facilities that have been owned but closed many years ago. That just sit idle and frankly, rotting in their communities or to try to either reform the properties themselves so that they’re sale-able and usable, or to to tear down whatever’s there and make sure that-because remember, these are properties that have utilities. They’ve got water, they’ve got power. These are all the things that a business is looking for often when they move to Illinois. And the more of those properties available in great communities like Lincoln, the better off we are. So that’s an example, but I could go through many examples for you about how the General Assembly has introduced and we’ve worked with them on this incentives to bring businesses to the state. So that is something we work on all the time.
I think great news for people in Illinois, in part, is that when there’s a downturn, Illinois really doesn’t suffer quite as much often as other places. In part because we have a very stable and quite diverse economy, as compared to some other places. You see a state like, I don’t know, I guess I’d pick Oklahoma, where they’re dependent on oil and gas. And if the oil and gas economy is terrible, their state is in terrible shape. In Illinois you can weather the storm in one industry or another, because we have such a diverse economy. We want to continue that way, but also make investments in biotechnology and quantum technology and and things that will leapfrog us ahead
of other states.
Reporter: Lawmakers approved a delay of the prohibition on the tax for the swipe fees. Why was that done? Is it because of the legal challenges that are happening right now for the interchange fees?
Pritzker: I think that’s right. I can’t tell you what’s not my initiative. But I can say I think this is still sitting in the courts. I think the uncertainty is probably why it was brought up. But I think it was a one year push of the implementation date. So this will be something that will probably get resolved over the next year.
Reporter: Governor, can you talk about the Bridge fund that was created? It, because I know that’s something unique, instead of using the rainy day fund more. Why was that done?
Pritzker: Think about the challenges that we saw in February from the Trump administration, when all of a sudden, the systems that operate Medicaid, the systems that operate Head Start, were shut down by DOGE or by the Trump administration. We don’t exactly know who did it. But in that period of time- and they had intended to keep them shut off for some time-but the huge outcry from around the country had them turn it back on. But that doesn’t mean they’re not going to come back at it. And so what we wanted to do, wanted to do is to have a Bridge fund, for example, to deal with a situation like that. We’ve seen this kind of chaos out of the federal government that causes real dislocation for people, for working families in Illinois, and we want to try to keep those level and available of services for working families and and the Bridge fund allows it.
Reporter: Governor, the Chicago Bears have said that on any move to Arlington Heights would be contingent on legislation that would basically allow them to negotiate property tax assessments with local municipalities. How would you feel about a plan like that? And are you aware of any legislation that passed through the spring session or in the final days of the spring session to that effect, for the Bears?
Pritzker: As you know, just on a personal level, I would like them to stay in the city of Chicago. Having said that, this is a private business, they’ll choose to do what they like. There’s legislation that I’ve seen. I don’t think that anything, at least not that I’m aware of anything passed that would address that right away.
But I’m quite interested to make sure that-not for the Bears-but for developments all across the state of Illinois, that we have available things like, this is not direct to Bears, but STAR bonds. Which is a great idea when implemented properly, and it is being implemented properly in Marion, Illinois right now, but we think that’s something that should happen across the state. There are other proposals like that that we’re all kind of anticipating.
Again, this is about making this a business friendly, job friendly state, and not specifically about the Bears.
Reporter: Governor, what are your currently thoughts on the state commutation for Larry Hoover potentially?
Pritzker: We have a process in the state of Illinois, if you want to seek commutation or pardon, you go through a process. First, you apply through the Prisoner Review Board, and then the [PRB] makes a recommendation to the governor. They put together during that process, and this is why it’s so important. They put together a record where they’re interviewing not only the incarcerated person, but also they have family and friends that speak on their behalf the victims or the victims families also are heard in that process. And record is kept at that and taken to that. And that whole record is put together, a recommendation is made by the [PRB] to me that includes that entire record, and I review the entire record when that happens. I have had pardons and commutations, hundreds of them during the course of my administration, and they all, every single one of them has involved that kind
of a record.
Reporter: Governor back to transit. RTA says they need money now. Is there enough time to be able to send them a bailout in veto session before they would have cuts to service on busses and trains and they would lay people off. Or do you think, in fact, a little chaos, service disruption might help both chambers agree on legislation?
Pritzker: I think the group should be working expeditiously to try to get to a conclusion on transit funding. I also would say that they’d have more money in their coffers if they hadn’t spent money advertising here in Springfield to try to convince people something that they really should be leaving to the legislators to decide. But the fact is that we need to address transit funding as fast as possible, and no doubt the legislators will be meeting over the course of the summer. Our office will be present in those and be helping in any way that we’re asked of.
Reporter: The budget you’re being sent is roughly the same amount that you proposed. Do you believe that properly is prepared for potentially revenue being lower than what’s expected, since we’ve already seen revenue projections decline in the last three months?
Pritzker: Well, again, it’s all a projection, right? And what we would rely upon S&P, one of our advisors, to tell us what is the economy likely to look like over the next year. And then you put that through an equation that helps you come up with the revenue. To determine sales tax revenue and income tax revenue and so on. We’ve also seen JP Morgan and other large banks, economists, lower their projections for the coming year. So we try to follow all of that and incorporate that into our budget projections. It’s the best we can do. We have also people who work for state government that are experts, but we like to look at an awful lot of other information.
So we don’t know. I mean, the answer is, it’s so chaotic. If you talk to business people, and I’m talking about Republicans. Democrats and Republicans, and people who voted for Donald Trump, right? Who will tell you at a minimum, in private, if not in public, that the chaos that they see, that the uncertainty, the turbulence, is really causing them to kind of step back and wonder, where is this all going? Should I shut down a line that I have operating in my manufacturing facility, because I’m not sure if those customers will be ordering because of the tariffs, for example. Or not invest in the next line.
And so that all is not good for the economy, and that’s why the ‘Trump Slump’ is really having a terrible effect on income to states—not to mention, more importantly, businesses and jobs that people hold. All of that affects, again, revenue to a state or local government.
Reporter: Governor, what do you say to taxpayers waking up this morning saying, oh my gosh, there they go again. They pulled a fast one. We didn’t see the revenue bill until like five hours before the deadline. The budget bill didn’t come out until about 24 hours or so. But they’re waking up this morning, seeing the largest state spending plan in state history, a billion dollar tax increase.
Pritzker: That’s not true.
Reporter: What do you say to those who see that-
Pritzker: Let me correct you. As you know, revenues for a state budget consists of a lot of different things. One of the things they consist of is collections. Not new taxes, collections. And in this budget, half of that number, it comes from just collections that are owed to the state of
Illinois.
Reporter:Like the amnesty programs?
Pritzker: Yes, but I’m also talking about, for example, there is a hospital assessment program where there’s a payback from hospitals over the course of time. They owe us, and we are collecting from them in part, as part of the revenue that you’re referring to, and that the Republicans have been saying, ‘Oh, that’s some kind of a tax increase.’ It’s not a tax increase. These are literally owed to the state of Illinois, and they have to be put into the budget as revenue.
You remember the fake revenue that my predecessor put into two, I think, of his budgets—where they were supposedly selling the Thompson Center. And that was revenue in his budget—$350 million, I think, for two years in a row. These are collections. It’s not fake revenue. They are not operating taxes that are ongoing. So I just want to be clear with you about that.
Second, the budget that we passed yesterday, that the legislature passed, is not that much different than the budget that I introduced. So the idea that anybody is pulling a fast one, I think it’s pretty obvious that we have a state budget that’s pretty stable. That we had a tough budget year and so we made sure that we were moderating spending in the state. You’ll see those hundreds of millions of dollars of cuts and keeping any increases down to sometimes 1 percent or even zero, wherever we felt we could
Reporter: Going back to Olivia’s question. You’re talking about revenue, and just—does the state need to look at a more comprehensive, long-term plan so then you don’t have to balance the budget by doing things like pausing things that are important to you, like expanding preschool programs, taking away healthcare from undocumented immigrants?
Pritzker: We need more stability out of Washington, D.C., is my answer to you. We would not have suffered this problem had we not had the ‘Trump Slump’ affecting us—the $500 million of reduced revenues to the state of Illinois as a result of what Donald Trump has done to a booming economy.
As always, please pardon any transcription errors.
* From House Speaker Chris Welch’s end of session speech…
Working through uncertainty to make the tough decisions, to make the tough choices it takes to deliver a fiscal plan that is both responsible and compassionate. While it’s clear the decisions in Washington are neither. You see, none of us here know what the future holds in this volatile environment, but the leaders in this house have been unequivocal that we will not surrender our role in shaping the future.
We will be vigilant, we will be compassionate. And if Washington’s agenda warrants, yes, we will be back here to continue that effort.
Because above all, we will remain focused on building a brighter future for our state. Ladies and gentlemen, I want to thank you once again for your work over these long days. In January, I said we had to rise to the moment, and I believe that we all rose to that moment.
Now it’s time to go home
* Senate President Don Harmon’s speech…
So we wrap up our work for the spring, but we’re not going out of business. We’ll be back when the world requires us to be back. But for the next weeks or months, the world is safe because the General Assembly is not in session. God bless you all. Be safe getting home, and we’ll see you all soon.
I don’t know if it’s related or not, but we usually see the veto session schedule at the end of the spring session. Neither the House, nor the Senate has posted one as of 1:43 this morning.
…Adding… From the House Dems…
Veto calendar is still being worked on, so that will be announced at a future date
* Sen. Chapin Rose (R-Mahomet) during Senate debate tonight about raises for care workers…
Well, here’s what we didn’t do. To get to 150 percent of minimum wage for those development disabled workers. [A] bipartisan bill, Senate Bill 1690, Leader Koehler. Only takes $2 an hour to get to 150 percent of minimum wage. Why do I say 150 percent? Because that’s where we were when Governor Pritzker became governor. We’ve gone backwards on funding the development disabled for six years. We’re backwards! It takes $2 to get to 150 percent. You know what the dollar amount of that is? It’s $80 million. $80 million out of GRF.
The minimum wage was $8.25 an hour in 2019, so 150 percent of that was $12.38 an hour. The minimum wage today is $15 an hour, so 150 percent of that is $22.50.
Illinois’ minimum wage has also risen faster than inflation. $8.25 an hour in January of 2019 would be $10.51 an hour today.
Those care workers absolutely deserve it, and I agree with Rose that the money should’ve been found. But Sen. Rose voted against the 2019 bill to increase the minimum wage to where it is today.
* The Senate’s chief budgeteer Elgie Sims talked about this topic a bit today after the budget vote…
Sims: As I have told you time and time again, this budget is a statement of our priorities. It’s balanced, focuses on not just today, but tomorrow. But one of the things I would have to say, it’s amazing the hypocrisy from some of the comments from the other side of the eye. I did not and have not seen them vote for those DSP workers. I have not seen them vote for property tax relief grants. I’ve not seen them vote for investments in education. It’s easy to talk about problems. It’s harder to find solutions. We are finding solutions. We’re running right towards those solutions, and we’re making the hard choices to make Illinois better.
Reporter: Chapin Rose’s comments on developmental disabilities. Your thoughts? Do you think there could be any amendments, and like in the future, if there was a summer budget?
Sims: We’ve been working on this issue, and we funded this. I would welcome my colleague on the other side of the aisle participating with us to provide additional resources. But come to the table. It’s not just enough to say what you’re against, tell me what you’re for.
Reporter: The tax on tobacco products… was something that was new since February. What was the process that led to that being included?
Sims: A number of advocates came to us and talked about what they’d like with some of those revenue ideas that they had. We divided this budget into really three buckets. The bucket on, in terms of collecting resources from those who are able to pay for them, or who have been trying to avoid them; those who owe taxes or revenues based on those who make choices, and those in government resources. This one came about from the advocates who are looking for a way to capture those resources and also to make sure that we are using those resources effectively. So we are doing that. We are putting those resources into health care, but also in into cessation programs.
Reporter: I know it wasn’t in the budget bill, the transit bill, but how do you reconcile ‘we’re not going to do a broad based increase on working people’ and then have this delivery tax? How do you reconcile those two?
Sims: Well, that’s, again, that falls in that bucket of choices. This is a service, that’s a revenue source that you may or may not choose to use, or service you may or may not choose to use. But instead, what we’d like to do, what we were trying to do, is make sure that we had options that individuals were able to if they chose to use those services, they could certainly pay for them.
Reporter: Leader, why was the digital ad tax removed?
Sims: Well, there’s not enough support both in the House or the Senate to pass it at this time. But that does not mean, it’s not an issue that’s under consideration, something that we continue to talk about. It’s something that we’ll consider to explore. We’ve looked at both the examples of how it was happening, how it was done, both in Maryland and Washington, to examine whether it stands on sound legal footing. We’ll continue to examine that and other revenue sources to make sure we have a budget that works for people.
Reporter: Senator, we’re hearing fair share. Multinational corporations paying their fair share, corporations paying their fair share. What does fair share look like?
Sims: Well, one of the one of the revenue options is we included what’s called the 80/20 rule. Under that rule, corporations use a sophisticated tax plan strategy to avoid taxation. So in a case like that, you’d have the unitary body who would then create a subsidiary, pay the subsidiary, who was really just an offshoot of the corporation, and then deduct the monies that they pay that subsidiary that should not be so you shouldn’t be avoiding tax. You should be paying your fair share.
Reporter: Senator, I think one of the biggest critiques from both houses the past few days has just been the fact that you guys released a budget with a little bit more than 24 hours to go, maybe not giving time for people to look at the budget, including constituents. I mean, your thoughts on that?
Sims: Well, most of this budget was out. It was introduced when the governor introduced his budget back in February, so I disagree with the contention that folks didn’t have the opportunity to see what’s in the budget. Not only did we post a budget in February, but we’ve posted multiple, multiple amendments and had public hearings. So we had a public hearing earlier today to make sure that folks had a chance to have questions hear what was in the budget.
Reporter: So, how about property tax relief? What about property tax relief? That was one of the major critiques that was about this budget.
Sims: I would I would love to see our Republican colleagues vote for property tax relief. As I mentioned earlier, I have not yet seen them put a vote on a property tax relief grant, but I’m waiting for it.
Reporter: Republicans have, I guess, said that Democrats get like, a certain amount for projects in their district. That sort of thing. And I know that last night, the House talks around that to tie back. Can you just explain a little bit more transparently, like, what the process is for special projects that members want to get done in their districts?
Sims: The budget is spent in every district across the state of Illinois, whether it’s from Cairo to Chicago, from Waukegan to the Quad Cities. The budget spends everywhere, and that includes Republican districts and Democratic districts. When the money goes for universities. There are universities in Republican districts represented by Republicans. There are tourism activities in Republican districts. So the contention that Republicans are not having money spent in their districts is just not true.
Reporter: How do you balance, you know, taxing multinational corporations their fair share while also encouraging them to develop and expand in the state?
Sims: I mean, I want them to expand here. That’s why we made investments in economic development opportunities to ensure that they will have the opportunity to have the best, most trained, most educated workforce. That does not change just because we are making sure that they are not using complicated strategies to avoid taxation.
That property tax relief answer was not his best moment, to say the least.