Another Illinois governor has drawn the attention of the feds.
Four of the last 10 Illinois governors have gone to prison. But this latest
probe is different, because it drives at the core of Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s policy
agenda: making Illinoisans pay what he thinks is “fair.”
WBEZ reported Wednesday that Pritzker, his wife and brother-in-law are under
federal investigation for what the Cook County inspector general called a
“scheme to defraud” taxpayers.
The inspector general’s report found that now-Illinois First Lady M.K. Pritzker
ordered the removal of five toilets from one of the family’s Chicago mansions
shortly before an inspection, in order to declare the home uninhabitable. An
email between contractors showed M.K. wanted to reinstall one of the toilets
after the inspection to service J.B.’s “hangout/meeting area.” This dance
allowed the Pritzkers to reap more than $331,000 in property tax breaks.
That scandal broke in the final weeks leading up to the gubernatorial election
last year, when the Cook County inspector general’s report was leaked. What
WBEZ’s latest reporting exposed is that the scandal is far from over. Pritzker
and his wife are the subjects of a federal criminal investigation.
In suburban Chicago this week, Democratic state Rep. Terra Costa Howard held a
packed town hall event about Pritzker’s progressive income tax proposal, which
he calls the “fair tax.” Ralph Martire of the union-backed Center for Tax and
Budget Accountability held court.
Martire claims tax hikes do not change behavior – Pritzker’s proposed $3.4
billion tax hike would not harm the state’s economy or drive wealth out of
Illinois. It’s a common claim among those backing the governor’s plan.
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Maybe this federal investigation will change their
minds. If high taxes don’t affect behavior, how does one explain
“toilet-gate”? The governor’s family took outlandish steps to hide
their wealth and lower their tax burden.
The hypocrisy reveals reality: Illinois’ middle
class will be tapped for future tax hikes when revenues don’t come
in as expected under Pritzker’s plan. The governor has offered no
compelling response to that concern.
In an interview on his first 100 days in office, Pritzker was asked
by ABC 7’s Craig Wall if he could guarantee Illinoisans making under
$250,000 would not see further tax hikes.
“As you know, we currently live in a system in which the taxes can
be changed at any moment so there’s certainly no guarantees, but
what I will tell you is that I am fighting for the plan that I put
forward,” Pritzker said.
No guarantees.
When they return to Springfield at the end of April, state lawmakers
will face serious pressure from the Pritzker administration to
eliminate the most important taxpayer protection in the state: a
constitutionally mandated flat income tax. In exchange, Pritzker is
offering a political promise of “fair” taxation.
Lawmakers must keep this question in mind when deciding whether to
put Pritzker’s “fair tax” amendment on the ballot:
Why should Illinoisans trust an alleged tax cheat to judge the
fairness of their tax bill?
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