Illinois politicians' pockets deepen with new law removing contribution
caps
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[July 05, 2024]
By Catrina Petersen | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – Ahead of Illinois’ Nov. 5 election, state
legislators approved a measure Gov. J.B. Pritzker enacted into law that
contains multiple provisions impacting elections. One provision impacts
how parties can spend campaign money.
The law allows for political parties, like the Democrat Party of
Illinois and the Illinois House Republican Organization, to funnel
unlimited campaign dollars into candidates’ war chests for both primary
and general elections. State Rep. Maurice West, D-Chicago, carried the
bill in the House and state Rep. Blaine Wilhour, R-Beecher City, opposed
the measure.
“Were they [the political parties] not powerful enough before?” asked
Wilhour.
“We’re not making them powerful,” said West.
“Money is power,” said Wilhour.
“There’s no limit in the general election and this [bill] is making it
in parity with the primary election as well,” said West.
Prior to House Bill 4488, campaign contribution caps were only applied
to primary races. Now both primaries and general election candidates can
receive unlimited funds from their political parties.
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State Rep. Dan Caulkins, R-Decatur, questioned West on the House floor.
“With the unlimited campaign contributions in a primary, does that apply
to every candidate, like those running for the Illinois Supreme Court?”
asked Caulkins.
“Yes sir,” said West. “They can receive unlimited campaign contributions
from the party only.”
The law takes effect immediately.
Also this legislative session, West supported a separate election bill,
Senate Bill 2412, that changed the rules for slating candidates to fill
vacancies. That law is currently under the microscope of the Illinois
Supreme Court. Candidates, like Leslie Collazo, filed a lawsuit
challenging Illinois' hastily changed election law.
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Illinois state Rep. Maurice West, D-Rockford
Greg Bishop / The Center Square
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HB 4488 originally was going to establish a Crohn's and Colitis
Awareness Week but later was gutted and replaced with an elections
omnibus. SB 2412 was originally a bill about child welfare but was
gutted and replaced to be the slating change.
Reform for Illinois said they’re disappointed that the omnibus bill
didn't address urgent needs like requiring disclosure of deepfake
election communications. Executive Director Alisa Kaplan said this
omission means Illinois voters will lack essential tools to separate
fact from fiction.
“So there were concerns from both sides of the aisle and there were
obvious concerns for democracy and our election but somehow it
didn’t make it in,” said Kaplan. “They were supposed to address
deceptive election communications that were generated by artificial
intelligence, so deepfakes. It wouldn’t have banned the use of
deceptive communication, it would have just required a disclosure on
them. The idea was that voters should know what they’re looking at.”
The New Hampshire Attorney General’s office said it was
investigating reports of an alleged robocall that used artificial
intelligence to mimic President Joe Biden’s voice to tell voters to
not show up to the polls for the primary election.
While deepfakes were not addressed, Illinois' omnibus bill did
address how candidates fund their campaigns.
State Rep. Kevin Schmidt, R-Cahokia Heights, voted against the
measure in the House.
“Unlimited funds in the primary, it really only helps the
establishment and it doesn’t give a fair shake to newcomers,” said
Schmidt.
Reform for Illinois said removing the caps on party contributions is
a significant move that reflects party leaders’ intent to gain more
control over primary elections, which are often the only meaningful
contests in a state with many uncontested districts statewide.
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