Senate Republicans offer ‘voter empowerment’ amendments
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[January 19, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Republicans in the Illinois
Senate have again introduced a package of proposed constitutional
amendments that they argue would give voters more of a direct say in the
legislative process.
“We're reintroducing these constitutional amendments in order to really
put the people back in charge again,” Senate GOP Leader Dan McConchie,
of Hawthorn Woods, said during a virtual news conference Tuesday.
The package includes a renewed call for an independent redistricting
commission. Other amendments would give voters greater power to amend
the Illinois Constitution, as well as the power to repeal legislation
and the power to recall elected officials at all levels of government.
Specifically, Senate Joint Resolution Constitutional Amendment 13 would
remove the current requirement that each Senate district be divided into
two House districts and would incorporate provisions of the federal
Voting Rights Act of 1965 into the constitution while requiring that
districts be compact and contiguous.
It would also establish a 17-member Independent Redistricting Commission
to redraw legislative and congressional district lines starting in 2023.
The commission members would be drawn from each of the state’s 17
congressional districts and would be made up of seven Democrats, seven
Republicans and three unaffiliated voters.
SJRCA 14 would expand the ability of voters to amend the constitution by
initiative, by deleting current language that limits such amendments to
“structural and procedural subjects” while adding language that would
prohibit initiative amendments from altering the Bill of Rights.
In 2016, a sharply-divided Illinois Supreme Court blocked a proposed
amendment calling for independent redistricting from going on the
ballot, ruling that it changed some of the duties of constitutional
officers and therefore went beyond “structural and procedural subjects.”
SJRCA 15 would give voters authority to repeal legislation by
referendum. Voters could call for a referendum on any public act, except
appropriations measures, by gathering a number of petition signatures
equal to 5 percent of the total votes cast for governor in the last
gubernatorial election. Today, that threshold would be 227,383
signatures.
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Senate Republican Leader Dan McConchie outlines a
package of proposed constitutional amendments during a virtual news
conference Tuesday. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
And SJRCA 16 would expand the authority to recall elected officials,
which is currently limited to the governor. It would allow for the
recall of all constitutional officers, state lawmakers, the auditor
general and local elected officials. It would also allow voters
statewide to remove a speaker of the House or president of the Senate
from those posts.
“Over the past year, we've seen the majority party use its
supermajorities in the General Assembly, not only to push through
controversial and extremely partisan legislation, but sometimes do it
with little or no notice, and sometimes to do it in the middle of the
night when nobody, including the members that are voting on it on the
floor, have any idea what's actually in the legislation,” McConchie
said.
Many other states allow for initiatives, referenda and recall petitions.
They were especially popular during the Progressive Era of the early
20th Century as a way to combat political corruption. But in more modern
times, and with the advent of professional signature gathering firms,
they have been criticized for giving special interest groups too much
ability to bypass the legislative process to push their own agendas.
McConchie, however, said the GOP’s proposals for Illinois do not go as
far as some other states.
“We've tried to model this on the way other states have done it
successfully,” he said. “For example, in the ability to amend the state
constitution, we didn't go as far as California has, which certainly you
could argue has special interests dominate the putting of constitutional
amendments on the ballot. We didn't go that far. We didn't make it quite
as open as that.”
McConchie also noted that many Democrats, who hold supermajorities in
both chambers, have supported an independent redistricting commission,
although they did not consider one in the most recent redistricting
cycle. And it remained unclear Tuesday whether Democrats would consider
any of the GOP’s proposals this year.
“I’m sure they will get the appropriate, thorough review,” John
Patterson, a spokesman for Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, said
in an email.
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. |