Republicans critical of Pritzker’s pre-election push to purge embattled
Democrats
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[September 24, 2022]
By Greg Bishop | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – With the most recent
lawmaker charged with bribery pleading not guilty, statehouse
Republicans are critical of Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s pre-election push to
purge embattled Democrats.
After being indicted on bribery charges and lying to the FBI in a case
related to the red light camera industry, state Sen. Emil Jones III,
D-Chicago, pleaded not guilty Friday.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker had earlier said Jones should resign. Friday, after
Jones pleaded not guilty, Pritzker doubled down.
“With a history like our state has had and with the desire that we now
have to put ourselves on strong ethical footing, that it’s completely
appropriate to ask people who are now going to be engaged in defending
themselves against these charges, to step aside while they do so,”
Pritzker said.
Jones is the most recent of eleven current or former Democratic state
lawmakers who have been charged with federal crimes in the past decade.
At the request of Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, Jones
resigned from his deputy minority leader position and stepped down from
committee leadership roles, but he is still a senator facing reelection
unopposed Nov. 8.
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In his statement earlier this week, Pritzker also called for state Sen.
Michael Hastings, D-Frankfurt, to resign.
“When people are accused of very serious misdeeds and in one case an
indictment, it seems very appropriate to me to first to allow the Senate
to make a decision on how they will react and then to comment on what I
think should happen,” Pritzker said.
Hastings hasn’t been charged with any crime, but faces abuse allegations
that he denies. Hastings faces Republican Patrick Sheehan on Nov. 8.
Senate Minority Leader Dan McConchie, R-Hawthorn Woods, said in a
statement the governor’s comments are nothing more than an attempt to
“paper over his poor record on public corruption as he seeks
reelection.”
“The truth of the matter is, he has sat silently by as Democratic
legislators failed to even discuss, let alone allow a vote on many
anti-corruption measures that have been filed in the General Assembly
this legislative session,” McConchie said.
McConchie pushed for strong ethics reforms, including a constitutional
amendment to allow voters to recall members of the General Assembly, and
a measure that includes giving the legislative inspector general
subpoena power without having to seek authority from an oversight panel.
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. |