Illinois House Republicans decry ‘pork’ spending as ‘corrupt’ practice
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[May 13, 2022] By
Greg Bishop | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – Illinois is the third
most corrupt state on the University of Illinois at Chicago’s annual
report for the third year in a row. House Republicans say the way
Democrats craft budgets can feed into the problem.
Despite a decline in corruption cases nationwide, the UIC report
“Corruption Continues Through the COVID-19 Pandemic” shows Illinois on a
per capita basis remains the third most corrupt state while Chicago is
the most corrupt jurisdiction.
“After scores of federal prosecutions in recent decades, the general
public is beginning to demand that their elected officials pass
effective reforms,” said UIC political science professor Dick Simpson, a
former Chicago alderman. “Voters too are more willing to consider the
impact and cost of corruption when they vote. And, it is likely that
allegations of corruption and which candidates have the strongest and
most credible anti-corruption campaign pledges will affect the upcoming
elections.”
House Minority Leader Jim Durkin, R-Western Springs, said Thursday it’s
no wonder Illinois is among the most corrupt.
“You just have to look and see what the corruption tax has done and how
it has played out in the past two years,” Durkin said. “We have
approximately nine former Democrat senators and representatives who are
either defendants or have pled guilty in the federal court to various
corruption and also violations of the tax code.”
The highest profile corruption case in Illinois is that of former House
Speaker Michael Madigan. He’s pleaded not guilty to 22 federal
corruption counts alleging he used his elected position for personal
gain. Madigan has pleaded not guilty and the case is pending in federal
court.
Durkin said one thing that feeds the corruption is budgets that
taxpayers don’t get to see before it’s too late.
“These backroom deals and secrecy drives fiscal chaos in this state and
also breeds corruption,” Durkin said.
Democrats stand by the budget, despite being approved along party lines
just hours after the final version was revealed in the early morning
hours on the last day of session last month.
“They claim to be about fiscal responsibility and public safety, but
Republicans voted no on our budget that supports education and
affordable housing, provides nearly a half-billion dollars for public
safety and pays down $4 billion of unpaid bills,” House Majority Leader
Greg Harris, D-Chicago, said.
The budget starts July 1. Coming in at $46.3 billion, it’s the largest
spending plan in state history. The final plan wasn’t revealed until
just before a vote in the early morning hours of April 9.
Durkin said $3 billion in projects for only districts with Democratic
lawmakers is wrong, and a reminder of how Madigan ran things for decades
as House Speaker.
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In a section of the nearly 3,500 page budget where spending from the
federal American Rescue Plan Act is spelled out, Republicans offered
some examples.
Spending in that section includes $8 million for Navy Pier, $15 million
for the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center in Rosemont, and $300,000
to both the Katherine Dunham Museum House of Miles Davis Museum both in
East St. Louis.
Other examples include $10 million to the group United Power, which says
on its website it's “composed of 40 religious congregations,
not-for-profit groups, hospitals, health centers and civic organizations
from across Cook County.” There’s also $100,000 to the East Bluff
Community Center “for operational expenses” and another $100,000 to the
South Side Mission “for operational expenses.”
An appropriation of $2.5 million is set aside for “Youth Guidance for
all costs associated with Becoming a Man Program.” Another $2.3 million
goes to “Working on Womanhood.”
State Rep. Tom Demmer, R-Dixon, said there are “hundreds” of examples of
spending for projects from Democrat-only legislators.
“That simply say ‘to go to this organization for operations,’ whatever
that means,” Demmer said. “The state has no ability now to tie that to
any performance metric, to try to reach any specific goal with it. It
just says ‘to operations.” There is no oversight, there is no check and
there is no balance.”
For capital projects, there are “pork” examples Republicans provided
with hundreds of thousands of dollars each for various cities from Villa
Park to Hickory Hills. The village of Winnetka gets a combined $28
million for stormwater management improvements. Lake County will get
$122 million “for costs associated with regional stormwater management
projects.”
Harris responded saying their budget is responsible and recent credit
upgrades for the state prove that.
Demmer said there’s a heavy reliance on federal COVID-19 relief dollars
that will soon dry up.
“Democrats in Illinois, like they have in the last several years, will
have no choice but to come back to taxpayers and say ‘we need yet
another income tax increase,’” Demmer said.
Demmer said the federal dollars would have been better spent to pay off
the remaining unemployment trust fund debt, which if not paid off will
lead to tax increases on businesses and benefit reductions for the
unemployed.
“We negotiated with business and labor to take strong, responsible
action on the unemployment insurance fund and pension obligations –
bringing needed stability that will result in more than $1 billion in
savings for taxpayers,” said state Rep. Jay Hoffman, D-Swansea. “While
Republicans were at the table, they refused to put forward any real
solutions. Despite their talk, they repeatedly voted against fiscal
responsibility, paying debt early and interest savings.”
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. |