Governor sends ethics bill back to lawmakers
Send a link to a friend
[August 31, 2021]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – An ethics bill that was hotly
debated during the spring legislative session is headed back to the
General Assembly with a request for a technical change, but not the
technical change that many Republicans had hoped for.
Gov. JB Pritzker on Friday issued an “amendatory veto” of Senate Bill
539, saying he supports the legislation but would like to see a minor
change in language dealing with the office of executive inspector
general.
“I am pleased by progress made by my partners in the General Assembly in
their efforts to pass meaningful ethics reform, and I support the steps
taken in this bill,” Pritzker said in his veto message.
An amendatory veto sends the bill back to the chamber where it
originated – in this case, the Senate – to consider the governor’s
recommended changes. Lawmakers then can consider whether to adopt the
changes and send the bill back to the governor, who then has a choice of
whether to sign or veto the final draft.
The bill came in the wake of a number of scandals over the previous two
years involving current and former lawmakers as well as the lobbying
activities of utility giant Commonwealth Edison.
One of those involved was former Rep. Luis Arroyo, a Chicago Democrat
who also had a lobbying firm that lobbied the city of Chicago on behalf
of a company involved in the sweepstakes gaming industry. He and the
owner of that company were charged with attempting to bribe a state
senator to support legislation that would have benefitted the company.
Among other things, the bill prohibits legislators and executive branch
constitutional officers from engaging in “compensated lobbying” of a
municipality, county or township. The same applies to elected and
appointed executive or legislative officials of county, municipal or
township governments.
It also gives the legislative inspector general independent authority to
launch investigations, but only after a formal complaint is filed. It
also restricts those investigations to matters that arise out of
government service or employment, not to outside employment.
The bill also makes a number of changes to financial disclosure
requirements and limits the ability of lawmakers to leave office and
immediately go to work as lobbyists.
[to top of second column]
|
The bill passed the General Assembly on the final day
of the spring session, June 1, by overwhelming majorities – 56-0 in
the Senate; 113-5 in the House – even though many Republicans
complained that they didn’t think the bill went far enough.
Soon after it passed, Legislative Inspector General
Carol Pope announced that she would resign, effective Dec. 15,
calling the job a “paper tiger” and it showed that “true ethics
reform is not a priority” for the General Assembly.
Following that announcement, some legislative Republicans called on
Pritzker to use his amendatory veto power to send the bill back for
revisions.
“There are very tiny aspects of this bill that are necessary, but it
barely scratches the surface of what truly needs to be accomplished
to clean up our state government and produce real ethics reform,”
Rep. Avery Bourne, R-Morrisonville, said in a statement at the time.
“The biggest fault of this bill is that it limits the legislative
inspector general, who is supposed to be an independent watchdog
over the legislature. At a time when we have seen countless elected
officials indicted and ongoing federal investigations, we need
stronger anti-corruption reforms to restore the public’s trust.”
In his message, however, Pritzker did not mention the office of
legislative inspector general, but rather its counterpart in the
executive branch, the executive inspector general.
Specifically, he pointed to a change made in the bill that says the
executive inspector general may receive and investigate complaints
of wrongful behavior “without advance approval of the executive
ethics commission.”
“However, advance approval of the Executive Ethics Commission has
never been required,” Pritzker said in his veto message. “The
addition of this language inadvertently confuses the clear authority
that the EIGs have under current law.”
Pritzker asked lawmakers to delete that language and return the
statute to its original form.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |