Pritzker to sign legislator pay raise in state budget that some say is
unconstitutional
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[June 06, 2023]
By Greg Bishop | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker says he will sign the Illinois
state budget that looks to spend $50.6 billion next fiscal year,
including the pay raise state majority Democrats approved for
themselves. Some question whether the pay raise is constitutional.
Pritzker has been touring the state, talking up more taxpayer funds for
education, infrastructure and new programs like an early childhood
education initiative and programs to address homelessness and so-called
grocery deserts.
At a stop in Quincy, he defended increasing pay for legislators.
“It seems like an enormous bump to have one year where you’re going up
17% as happened I think last year, but it was in part because literally
pay had been frozen,” Pritzker said.
Earlier this year, during lame duck session for the 102nd General
Assembly, base pay for legislators was $72,906 a year. A supplemental
appropriation approved before Jan. 10 started the 103rd General Assembly
base pay at $85,000. The budget soon to be on Pritzker’s desk for the
fiscal year that starts July 1 increases the base pay to nearly $90,000.
State Rep. Mike Coffey, R-Springfield, was with Pritzker last week in
Springfield at a budget news conference touting increased higher
education funding. He explained why he did not support the spending
plan, which included Republicans being kept out of negotiations.
“When I decided to take the office, I think the salary was $68,000.
After I was appointed, it went to $85,000 and then I’ve been in office
three months and they moved it to $89,000,” Coffey said. “So that was
one of the big sticking points for me personally.”
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Illinois state Rep. Mike Coffey,
R-Springfield
Illinois.gov
During early morning debate on the budget last month, House Minority
Leader Tony McCombie, R-Savanna, said the raise to nearly $90,000 base
pay is on top of a raise legislators approved for themselves earlier
this year.
“This raise is in direct violation of the Illinois Constitution. A raise
can only take effect the next General Assembly,” McCombie said. “You
have created a constitutional problem with this budget.”
Article IV, section 11 of the Illinois Constitution dealing with the
legislature states, “A member shall receive a salary and allowances as
provided by law, but changes in the salary of a member shall not take
effect during the term for which he has been elected.”
Regardless, Pritzker said he will sign the budget.
“There are things in the budget that I don’t love and things in the
budget that I proposed and think are the right thing to do like funding
our universities and community colleges,” Pritzker said. “You look at it
as a totality and make a decision as governor about whether to sign it
and I intend to sign this one.”
The Illinois Constitution states the governor may reduce or veto any
item of appropriations sent to his desk. Any such item vetoed “shall be
returned to the house in which it originated and may be restored to its
original amount in the same manner as a vetoed bill except that the
required record vote shall be a majority of the members elected to each
house. If a reduced item is not so restored, it shall become law in the
reduced amount.”
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. |