After frenzied ‘lame duck’ session, 103rd General Assembly is sworn in
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[January 12, 2023]
By NIKA SCHOONOVER
& HANNAH MEISEL
for Capitol News Illinois
news@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – A mix of incumbents and newly minted lawmakers were sworn
into their terms in the 103rd General Assembly Wednesday following a
hectic week of “lame duck” action in the House and Senate.
The crowning achievement from Democrats who wield total control of state
government was a ban on the sale and manufacture of assault weapons in
Illinois. Sixteen hours after Gov. JB Pritzker signed the measure into
law, the Rev. Jerry Doss of Springfield’s Abundant Faith Christian
Center recognized it before his invocation over the House swearing-in
ceremony.
“I want to also personally thank you – the leaders and the
decision-makers – for passing the bill last night on banning assault
weapons,” Doss said. “We appreciate you. Thank you.”
Doss’ comment was met with rousing cheers from Democratic supporters –
and silence from Republicans. Though the dozens of speeches during
inauguration activities on Wednesday struck positive notes about working
together for the good of Illinois, they also contained subtle hints
about the growing partisan divide in Springfield.
“Those who choose discord, those whose blind allegiance to extreme
ideology would dismantle our fundamental institutions, those who would
derail the work people have sent us here to do – they will find that
this House will not waste the people’s time on their games,” House
Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch, D-Hillside, warned in his address in the
auditorium at the University of Illinois Springfield.
Seven miles north during the Senate’s inauguration ceremony at the Old
State Capitol, incoming Senate GOP Leader John Curran of Downers Grove
spoke as a member of the superminority party.
“We are all here to do one thing: create a better Illinois,” Curran
said. “That means that all legislators – not just the majority – are
here to represent our constituents through creating strong, practical
public policy.”
Welch touted the importance of debate and compromise while reminding
legislators to remember their “why.”
“As legislators, we’re going to disagree on ‘how’ to achieve a goal, or
‘when’ is the right time to do it. But more often than not, our ‘why’ is
very much the same,” he said. “We want to help people. We want to use
the opportunities afforded to us to create more opportunities for those
who come after us.”
He then took a moment to acknowledge former Republican Leader Jim
Durkin, of Western Springs, who officially resigned his seat on Tuesday.
“It’s no secret that Rep. Jim Durkin and I would disagree on many of the
‘hows’ and ‘whens’ of lawmaking, and we would often make those
disagreements known–sometimes at maximum volume,” Welch said. “And
that’s a good thing, because debate and disagreement are necessary steps
toward compromise and cooperation – as long as we never lose sight of
our ‘why.’”
Welch was formally elected to a second term as Speaker of the House with
unanimous Democratic support and was sworn in by his wife, ShawnTe
Raines-Welch, a new Cook County Judge. He took his oath on a family
Bible that was passed on to him and his wife when they got married 12
years ago.
Last year’s campaign cycle added to the tremendous churn in lawmakers
Springfield has seen over the past handful of years, resulting in the
least-tenured crop of House and Senate members in modern history.
Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, noted that “with a whopping
tenure of not quite three years” he’s now the longest-serving
legislative leader in the General Assembly.
“Make of that what you will,” he quipped.
Tony McCombie, elected for the first time as Republican Minority Leader,
became the first woman to ever lead a House caucus. In her speech, the
Savanna Republican stressed a need for better balance in Illinois,
making special note of the state’s “gerrymandered maps.”
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Newly re-elected House Speaker Emanuel
"Chris" Welch addresses the crowd of newly-seated lawmakers and
their families at the inauguration of the House members of the 103rd
General Assembly Wednesday at the University of
Illinois-Springfield. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
“We must prioritize the co-equal nature of our government and prioritize
fulfilling the constitutional duty,” McCombie told the crowd. “My
Republican colleagues in the House have put their faith in me to
restore, and to rebuild, and to bring balance to Illinois. It will be
difficult but we will claw back in the wake of the worst gerrymandered
maps in the country.”
Part of the turnover is also due to forced resignations as legislators
have found themselves mired in scandal in a wide-ranging federal probe
alleging wrongdoing connected with legislation including gambling
operations, red light cameras and giant utility companies.
Welch’s predecessor, longtime powerful House Speaker Mike Madigan ceded
his gavel nearly two years ago after growing pressure from his caucus to
step down after being named as the target of alleged bribes by
Chicago-based electric utility Commonwealth Edison. Madigan faces trial
next year, while others connected with the scandal are scheduled for
their day in court this spring.
After the feds filed even more evidence in their case against ComEd’s
former lobbyists and executives late Tuesday night, Harmon’s address
also included a warning to his colleagues, noting the “sweeping tarnish”
that affects all Springfield politicians “that comes when even one
elected official strays.”
“What is best for the nearly 13 million people who collectively call
Illinois home?” Harmon challenged his fellow senators to think about.
“Be guided by that truth, whether it be politically convenient or not.
If your motivations are elsewhere, the Illinois Senate is not for you.”
Curran’s rise to minority leader began around the Nov. 8 election, when
Republicans only netted one seat in the Senate under the direction of
Sen. Dan McConchie, R-Hawthorn Woods, who will remain in office despite
being pushed out of his leadership role after narrowly surviving a
Democratic challenge in November.
In his speech, Curran noted he replaced former Republican Leader
Christine Radogno of Lemont in the Senate after her retirement in 2017.
The suburban leader had been stymied in her efforts to broker a
bipartisan deal to end Illinois’ budget impasse under one-term GOP Gov.
Bruce Rauner.
While her efforts were ultimately unsuccessful, Curran’s voting record
is reminiscent of the type of suburban Republicans once common in
Springfield, who have largely followed Radogno out of office. Curran has
often been one of, if not the only, Republican vote on legislation
pushed by Democrats.
Sen. Jason Plummer, R-Edwardsville, joked that as Curran’s seatmate, he
“showed him there actually is a little red button” to vote against a
bill.
“A lot of people in this chamber get [us] confused for each other. It
might be our height, it might be our dashing good looks, it could be our
vo – well, maybe two out of three,” Plummer joked, referring to the
difference between his staunchly conservative voting record and that of
Curran.
Standing in the chamber where President Abraham Lincoln delivered his
famous “House Divided” speech, references to the 16th president were not
in short supply during the Senate’s inauguration. But Harmon pointed out
that when Lincoln gave that speech in 1858, it “bombed.”
“His friends and advisers warned it was far too radical for the times,”
Harmon said of the pre-Civil War era when the South was threatening to
secede. “Lincoln would lose that Senate race to Stephen Douglas. Some
would blame the tone of the speech for the loss. So why give it? Because
Lincoln believed there was an important message that people needed to
hear. The debate had gone on long enough. It was time to pick a side.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
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