Welch reflects on first year as House speaker
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[January 12, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – One year after being named
speaker of the Illinois House, Rep. Emanuel “Chris” Welch says he is
proud of the accomplishments he and his colleagues achieved and he looks
forward to building on that record.
“I actually thought 2021 was one heck of a year,” the Hillside Democrat
said during a recent interview. “You know, we passed the historic,
nation-leading Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, the CEJA bill. We
protected and expanded voting rights. We made Illinois the beacon of
hope for protecting reproductive rights and a refuge for women all
around the country. The work that we did on the budget and restoring
fiscal stability and credit upgrades, paying off a $2 billion loan and
saving $82 million. Where do I end? We had a really great year, and
certainly looking forward to building on that.”
On Jan. 13, 2021, Welch was elected speaker of the House, succeeding the
long-serving but embattled Michael Madigan and becoming the first Black
person in state history to lead either chamber of the General Assembly.
“It's a very time intensive job,” he said when asked what he’d learned
in his first year. “And literally, you're working seven days a week
no-stop. …A lot of work involved. It takes cooperation from your friends
from your family, from your employers.”
During his first year, Welch worked to put his own imprint on the
speaker’s office, setting a much different tone than Madigan, who seldom
gave media interviews and shunned the use of email or social media.
“I certainly think that it's a new day in Springfield,” he said. “I
think Democrats up and down our ranks would agree with that. I think if
you get past Republican leadership, the rank-and-file Republicans would
agree that it's a new day.”
“The office of the speaker has been open more than it ever has, I
believe in the last 36 to 40 years,” he continued. “Many of my
colleagues on the other side of the aisle came into the office of
speaker and said they had never been in there before. They came in to
meet with me about ideas they were proposing last year in the
Legislature, ideas that got out of Rules (Committee), got out of the
House, got out of the Senate, and hit the governor's desk and became
law. Many of those rank-and-file Republicans were able to go home and
talk about victories that we actually had in the General Assembly. I
think they'll tell you that that's a new thing for them.”
Welch’s relationship with the GOP caucus, however, has not always been
friendly. That was particularly true during redistricting, the
once-in-a-decade process of redrawing state legislative and
congressional district lines in accordance with the most recent U.S.
Census.
With Democrats firmly in control of both chambers as well as the
governor’s office, they drew maps that were intended to ensure they
would maintain their majorities for the next 10 years. But Republicans
called it blatant partisan gerrymandering, while voting rights advocacy
groups complained of a process conducted behind closed doors that
actually resulted in the dilution of minority voting power in some parts
of the state.
They all sued in federal court but were unsuccessful. Welch cited the
federal court’s decision as a vindication of the Democrats’ efforts.
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“I think, because of COVID, we were actually more open, more accessible,
more transparent because we had over 50 or 60 hearings, because we were
able to do in-person hearings and virtual hearings,” he said. “If we
were not in COVID, we might not have had the opportunity to do virtual
hearing. So I think we were more open and more accessible. And the proof
that we got it right is the opinion written by the three-judge federal
panel that totally rejected the advocacy groups’ claims. Totally
rejected.”
Welch was first elected to the House in 2012 from a district in the
western suburbs of Chicago. Prior to becoming speaker, one of his major
focuses was addressing issues about racial equity. In 2019, he sponsored
a bill requiring corporations domiciled in Illinois to report on the
diversity of their governing boards. He has also pushed for more
diversity in state hiring and contracting.
He has continued those efforts as speaker. On Monday and Tuesday of this
week, Welch said, he met with the presidents of state universities and
the CEOs of the private insurance companies that administer the state’s
Medicaid program, known as “managed care organizations,” or MCOs, to
push them further toward meeting diversity goals.
“Before I ever became speaker, diversity, equity and inclusion was
really important to me. And in fact, I don't think I would be here
without that push over the last few years for diversity, equity
inclusion,” Welch said.
“When I started this job in 2013, that diversity was not there. And it
was quite impressive to see,” he said of his meeting with university
presidents. “And to see it showing up in their hiring practices at the
universities is quite impressive as well. And there's certainly more
work that can be done. And so we're working very closely with Chairman (LaShawn
K.) Ford, who chairs (Senate) Higher Ed, and Chairman (Katie) Stewart
who chairs (House) Higher Ed, to continue those efforts forward. And we
really plan to make this year the year where we truly plant that
diversity flag in Illinois.”
Welch said his main priority for the 2022 session will be passing a
budget, a task made easier this year by the state’s improving revenue
picture. At the end of December, the Commission on Government
Forecasting and Accountability reported that base revenues through the
first half of the fiscal year were up $918 million from the previous
year.
In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, there will be a lot of competition
for those new dollars, but Welch said he’s hopeful of reaching a
bipartisan consensus.
“We're going to convene Democrats and Republicans and we're going to see
what the rank-and-file members believe are the priorities,” he said.
“We're going to ask them what the priorities are. But we certainly know
that with COVID still being here, and the fact that we're in the midst
of a surge, that we're going to still have to continue to address many
of the things that we're dealing with, or have dealt with in the past.
We know that we still have (American Rescue Plan Act) dollars that can
be allocated. We did receive ARPA dollars, and we have four years to
spend them. We've only spent $2 billion out of $8 billion. So we have
some room that will allow us to continue to help people to deal with
this pandemic. I think that's really a top priority.”
Lawmakers had scheduled a shortened session this year so they can return
to their districts in April to campaign for the June 28 primary. But the
recent surge of COVID-19 cases brought on by the omicron variant have
cut the number of scheduled session days even further. Both chambers are
currently recessed until further notice.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service
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Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |