The bill amendment was the first major piece of the Republican
governor's $32 billion, fiscal 2016 general funds budget, which
relies on $6.6 billion in spending cuts, to come up for a
legislative vote.
The human services budget totaling $11.1 billion, a $1.2 billion
decrease from current appropriations, failed in a 0-67 vote.
Republican legislators voted "present" to protest the fact the
amendment was not vetted by appropriate House committees and was
instead sent directly to the chamber's floor by powerful Democratic
House Speaker Michael Madigan. Madigan said he offered the
legislation to facilitate legislative consideration of the
governor's budget.
State Representative Greg Harris, a Democrat, said committees have
heard hours of testimony from social service agencies and others
since Rauner unveiled his budget in February.
"It is not a mystery what is in this bill," Harris said.
House Democrats subsequently passed a bill amendment that restores
funding to some programs, as Republicans continued to vote
"present." Votes on more amendments were expected to follow.
Rauner's office said there was no time for "political stunts."
"Governor Rauner stands ready to work with Democrats to pass real
structural changes to our government and enact a balanced budget,"
his office said in a statement. "Rather than engaging in political
theater, we ask Democrats to meet the governor at the negotiating
table and help turn our state around."
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The state's fiscal year begins on July 1 and budget bills will
require a three-fifths legislative vote after May 31. Rauner has
ruled out any revenue increases without reforms that include
right-to-work zones, a local property tax freeze, pension cuts, and
legislative term limits.
Illinois has a chronic structural budget deficit, as well as the
lowest credit ratings and worst-funded pension system among the 50
states. The fiscal crisis is the most severe the state has seen in
decades, according to budget experts. Rauner has said reforms must
precede new revenue.
A $26 million cut in the current state budget to social service
programs ordered by Rauner in April was reversed after a groundswell
of protests.
(Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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