Treasurer’s Race: Frerichs touts investment gains, Demmer sees
opportunity for GOP check
Send a link to a friend
[September 22, 2022]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – In Illinois, the role of
state treasurer is that of chief investment officer.
Treasurer Michael Frerichs has held that position for two full terms,
winning by less than 10,000 votes in 2014 before cruising to an 18
percentage-point victory in 2018.
He boasts that Illinois has topped $1.2 billion in interest gains on its
investments since he took office, making him just the second treasurer
since Republican Judy Baar Topinka, who held that post from 1995 through
2007, to reach that threshold.
“We've raised more than a billion dollars for the state of Illinois,” he
said in a podcast interview with Capitol News Illinois. “A billion
dollars that didn't have to be raised in taxes or a billion dollars in
cuts that didn't have to be made to things like our schools, our roads
and bridges.”
He said the treasurer’s office invests about $26 billion in state funds,
about $15 billion in pooled municipal assets and administers a college
savings program through which Illinoisans have saved almost $17 billion,
among other tasks.
His opponent is state Rep. Tom Demmer, a Republican from Dixon who has
served in the General Assembly since 2013 and is currently House Deputy
Minority Leader. He’s the House Republicans’ point person on budget
issues.
Demmer said his focus is on adding a Republican check on Democratic
power among the state’s constitutional officers – those include
governor, comptroller, attorney general, secretary of state and
treasurer – all of which are currently held by Democrats, although all
will be up for vote in November.
“When you have one party in control of really every aspect of
government, sometimes folks in the office, they don't have an incentive
to speak up,” Demmer said in an interview with Capitol News Illinois.
“They don't want to rock the boat. They don't want to try to hold
somebody else accountable, because they're in the same party, and they
don't want to ruffle any feathers. That's not how our government is set
up to work.”
Each candidate spoke to Capitol News Illinois’ Capitol Cast podcast to
share their plans for the office.
Frerichs pointed to his office’s efforts to increase transparency
through “The Vault,” an online portal through which Illinoisans can find
analysis from the office as well as information on the state's
investments and borrowing.
“So he says the office should be a check and balance between the
governor and the General Assembly, but ignores the fact that we already
do so through examples such as co-signing bonding agreements to make
infrastructure improvements possible, guiding the General Assembly as it
creates new programs, such as the Secure Choice Retirement Savings
Program,” Frerichs said.
While the treasurer plays no official role in setting tax policy for the
state, Demmer’s most frequent criticism of Frerichs is in regard to a
graduated income tax amendment Frerichs supported that would have raised
the rates for high-income earners but was rejected by voters in 2020.
Frerichs made a comment at a forum in 2020 in which he said a graduated
income tax could allow for a broader conversation about taxing high
levels of retirement income.
“Treasurer Frerichs can go out and make the case for why we should tax
retirement income, I'll make the case for why we shouldn't tax
retirement income,” Demmer said.
Frerichs has consistently said he doesn’t support a retirement tax.
He said he made the 2020 comment in a discussion with the Illinois
Chamber of Commerce President Todd Maisch at a forum to debate the
graduated income tax. Frerichs said he was trying to convey that he
doesn’t support a retirement tax, but anybody looking to tax pensions
should support a graduated tax structure which would allow for taxation
only on higher levels of income, rather than the flat rate required
under current law.
“I have been very clear, and my opponent knows this, that I didn't
support a retirement tax. I don't support a retirement tax, and I will
not support a tax on retirement,” he said, claiming Demmer repeats the
claim to distract from his anti-abortion record and placement on a
Republican ticket topped by controversial candidate Darren Bailey.
[to top of second column]
|
State Treasurer Michael Frerichs, left,
and his opponent Tom Demmer are pictured during Illinois State Fair
political days in Springfield. (Capitol News Illinois photos)
Demmer would prefer not to talk about Bailey. There’s been no
endorsement either way, although in a news conference earlier this year,
Demmer said he believed Bailey would make a good governor.
“We've tried to build a plan that's very focused on issues of taxes and
spending of dollars and cents,” Demmer said. “And so, you know, trying
to cut through some of the rest of the clutter that comes out there,
just by having a very straightforward message.”
Demmer was among a slate of candidates backed in the Republican primary
by megadonor Ken Griffin. Those included Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin for
governor, John Milhiser for secretary of state and Steve Kim for
attorney general – all of whom lost in the primaries.
Demmer and comptroller candidate Shannon Teresi both ran unopposed in
the primary and were the only candidates in the slate that made the
general election ballot. But the $50 million Griffin gave to Irvin
hasn’t trickled down.
That’s left Demmer behind in fundraising. His campaign fund had a
balance of $465,000 as of June 30, and he reported raising about $68,000
since then.
Frerichs, meanwhile, had $2 million in the bank on June 30 and has
raised at least $360,000 since then, with hundreds of thousands of
dollars coming from labor unions.
While Demmer downplayed the gap between the candidates and attributed it
to the challenges of fundraising in general, Frerichs said fundraising
is easier for him due to his success in office.
Frerichs also touted his management of the Bright Start 529 college
savings plan, which has been gold-rated by the financial services firm
Morningstar. It’s managed by an outside partner and frequently
outperforms the market, Frerichs said, although over the past year many
plans within the program have seen negative returns.
In 2016 and 2017, his office hired a new investment manager for the fund
that offered more plans and lower fees, he said, creating savings for
those participating in the plan.
“The funded plans grew from 387,000, valued about $7 billion (in 2015),
to 824,000, valued at over $16 billion (in 2022),” he said.
Demmer said his proudest accomplishments in the General Assembly came as
a member of the unofficial bipartisan working group that negotiated
Medicaid policies.
“It's a key area where we have to be sure that when we're making a
promise that we can afford to keep it,” he said regarding the state’s
administration of the health care program. “And so, working on those
bills year after year, having direct input into what was in those bills
and what wasn't, was something I've been really proud of, and I think is
a tribute to what can be done when there's an opportunity to work in a
bipartisan way.”
Demmer is the sponsor of a bill in the General Assembly that would put a
constitutional amendment to voters to collapse the office of comptroller
into the treasurer’s office. Demmer said he believed it could create
about $10 million in taxpayer savings.
It’s something both Frerichs and Demmer supported, although Comptroller
Susana Mendoza called it a bad idea that only comes up in election
years. She said the 1970 constitution separated the investment and
fiscal offers to create a safeguard against fraud.
“Because back in 1956, Orville Hodge, who did the combined job of
treasurer, comptroller and auditor embezzled $6 million, which today
would be the equivalent of about $59 million,” Mendoza said. “And that's
why in 1970, the legislature decided to split the duties … and never
allow something like this to happen where the person who invests the
money also has access to the checkbook.”
Demmer’s proposal would need approval from three-fifths of both houses
of the General Assembly before appearing on the ballot for voters,
making it a longshot to actually become law.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government that is distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |