Report reveals while in office Pritzker bought Illinois contractor stock
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[February 28, 2022]
By Kevin Bessler
(The Center Square) – A new report alleges
a blind trust set up to manage Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s fortune bought stock
in one of Illinois’ biggest contractors.
According to the non-partisan Better Government Association, the
investment was in Centene Corp. in 2020, the same year Pritzker's
administration made several decisions that benefited the company’s
bottom line. Centene is one of the state’s largest Medicaid contractors.
“Centene has made millions on serving our most vulnerable population
under Medicaid, and it is not appropriate or ethical for the governor to
be a known investor,” said State Rep. Tony McCombie, R-Savanna.
One of Pritzker’s campaign pledges was to purge his personal portfolio
of companies holding stage contracts.
State Rep. Deanne Mazzochi, R-Elmhurst, said the governor needs to
explain himself.
“The time has come for the governor to come clean with the residents of
Illinois and be open, honest and fully transparent about his financial
interests during his tenure,” said Mazzochi.
A BGA review of public records revealed the purchase of Centene stock
could have been made anytime during 2020. While the blind trust is
designed to guard Pritzker from knowing when the investment in Centene
was made, actions by his administration nevertheless benefited the
health care giant.
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Gov. J.B. Pritzker speaks at a news conference
on Monday, Dec. 27, 2021, at the Thompson Center in Chicago. Courtesy
of Facebook
As a result, Deputy House Minority Leader Rep. Tom Demmer, R-Dixon,
filed new legislation aimed at strengthening state ethics law by
extending the list of who is required to file quarterly statements of
economic interest to include department heads within the Executive
branch.
“Illinois taxpayers are justifiably skeptical about public officials and
those who serve under them directly taking advantage of their position
of public trust to turn a personal profit,” Demmer said in a written
statement. “Heads of state departments should be held to the same
rigorous standards for filing timely and accurate financial disclosures
currently in place for statewide constitutional officers, members of the
General Assembly and others as prescribed by state law.”
There was no response from the governor’s office when asked for comment.
The BGA reports Pritzker's attorney, Marc Elias, rebuked the report.
“The only information he received is a ready-to-file Statement of
Economic Interest, which contains no values,” Elias told the BGA in a
written statement. “To suggest otherwise is not only inaccurate but
potentially libelous.”
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