Republicans fault Pritzker for not securing prisoner review board
appointees
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[March 24, 2022] By
Greg Bishop | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker
can blame himself for not receiving legislative approval for his
appointees to the Illinois Prisoner Review Board, a Republican state
senator says.
On a bipartisan vote in committee Tuesday, senators sent out two
Pritzker appointees to the PRB without recommendation. Those members had
a record of letting convicted criminals out of prison early more than
40% of the time. A third member with a leniency rate of about 29% was
approved by the committee, but later wasn’t able to secure enough votes
in the full Senate.
Wednesday, Pritzker defended his nominations and criticized Democrats
for listening to Republicans and not showing up to vote.
“It bothers me that they’re listening to the Republican rhetoric which
is, once again, false,” Pritzker said Wednesday in Springfield. “They’re
telling false stories. It’s a lot of Facebook fakery about these folks
that are nominated.”
State Sen. Jason Plummer, R-Edwardsville, serves on the Executive
Appointments Committee and said Republicans are not spreading fake news.
They’re highlighting high leniency rates of the nominees serving on the
board leading to convicted criminals being let free.
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“The governor has been playing games with this for over a year and the
games have caught up with him,” Plummer told The Center Square. “The
fact of the matter is he’s been skirting the constitutional process
because he’s not comfortable that the Senate Democrats will even support
his nominees because they’re so troubling.”
Republicans have highlighted for months how the governor has appointed
members to the PRB, withdrawn them after the Senate doesn’t take them
up, and then reappoints them, starting the clock over for when they must
be approved.
Without enough PRB members, Pritzker warned the body won’t be able to
function properly.
“If we don’t appoint enough members to the PRB, if they’re not approved,
right, the PRB will not be able to have a quorum and … a lack of a
quorum wouldn’t therefore be able to keep people in prison who are
brought back when they violate their parole conditions,” Pritzker said.
Plummer said that wouldn't be a problem if the governor put his ego
aside and filled vacancies with appointees that get bipartisan support.
“And to sit down and work with the legislative branch to put forward
people who represent mainstream values of Illinoisans,” Plummer said.
“This isn’t a Republican or Democrat issue. This is just a common sense
issue and the governor is failing this common sense issue.”
It’s expected the Senate could take up other nominees to the PRB in the
days ahead.
Greg Bishop reports on Illinois government and other
issues for The Center Square. Bishop has years of award-winning
broadcast experience and hosts the WMAY Morning Newsfeed out of
Springfield |