Capitol Briefs: Republicans sue over law banning legislative candidate
slating
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[May 14, 2024]
By HANNAH MEISEL
Capitol News Illinois
hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com
One week after Gov. JB Pritzker signed an elections-related measure that
his fellow Democrats quickly muscled through the General Assembly,
Republicans sued over the new law, alleging the majority party is
blocking ballot access to would-be legislative candidates.
The law , passed early this month as the legislature’s spring session
ramps up to its scheduled May 24 adjournment, bans the long-running
practice of political parties slating candidates to run if the party
didn’t put up a candidate in the primary.
The practice has been used by both Democrats and Republicans for decades
when the winner of the opposite party’s primary election is deemed
beatable. Until Pritzker signed the new law, state statute allowed
parties to designate a candidate within 75 days of a primary; this year,
that date is June 3.
Four would-be GOP candidates are plaintiffs in the case, filed by the
Liberty Justice Center, a libertarian outfit behind lawsuits intervening
in state law and politics – including one that ultimately resulted in
the U.S. Supreme Court striking down so-called “fair share” union dues
in 2018.
According to the filing, “at least a dozen people” were set to be
appointed to the November ballot through the slating process. The four
plaintiffs on the suit were all designated by their local parties in
March and April, but none of them filed their nominating petitions
before the law went into effect.
One of the four – Republican Daniel Behr of Northbrook – attempted to
file petitions the afternoon before Pritzker signed the bill into law,
and ended up filing them just six minutes after the governor’s signature
was recorded on the bill the morning of May 3.
The suit cites but doesn’t name another candidate – Jay Keeven of
Edwardsville – who was able to turn in his nominating petitions the day
before Pritzker signed the law. Keeven is challenging Democratic Rep.
Katie Stuart, also of Edwardsville.
The filing claims the timing of the law’s passage is unfair and
undermines “free and fair elections.”
“The state has an interest in providing free and fair elections, and
enacting legislation in the middle of a well-established process for
candidates to appear on the ballot, allowing some candidates to access
the ballot and prohibiting others, is clearly contrary to the interest
in providing free and fair elections,” the suit said.
But the Illinois State Board Elections is still accepting nominating
petitions for slated candidates until June 3 and will still go ahead
with the one-week petition challenge process thereafter.
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“We are honoring the deadlines and procedures as defined before this
bill was signed into law,” Board of Elections spokesperson Matt Dietrich
told Capitol News Illinois, acknowledging the petitions will likely end
up in court one way or another.
Natural gas prices
Consumer natural gas bills could triple over the next 10 years without
state intervention, according to a report from the Building
Decarbonization Coalition and Groundwork Data.
The report attributes much of the potential increase to the fact that
most utility infrastructure spending is going toward technology that’s
likely to be phased out anyway. The report's authors argue the need for
a “managed” transition away from natural gas as more builders and
homeowners choose to use electricity for building heat, as opposed to
traditional gas-powered options.
“An ‘unmanaged’ transition will be far more expensive and far more
inequitable, and it's proven in large part by how much it costs to
maintain the gas system,” Dorie Seavey, the report’s author, said last
week.
The Building Decarbonization Coalition is backed by utilities, such as
California’s Pacific Gas and Electric, as well as companies like Google,
Salesforce and LG, according to the coalition’s website. The head of the
Illinois Citizens Utility Board, a consumer advocacy group, applauded
the report last week.
“The crippling cost of heating bills has already caused a financial
emergency for many Illinois families, and this new study shows that
current conditions represent only a fraction of the fiasco to come if
spending by gas utilities is not held in check,” CUB Executive Director
Sarah Moskowitz said in a statement.
The report’s authors presented their findings to regulators, advocates
and industry representatives last week as part of the state’s ongoing
“Future of Gas” proceeding, aimed at identifying how best to regulate
the fossil-fuel reliant industry as the state continues to transition to
clean energy.
The city of Chicago is considering mandating electric heat in some new
construction and Illinois lawmakers proposed incentivizing
electrification earlier this month.
Capitol News Illinois is
a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state government. It is
distributed to hundreds of newspapers, radio and TV stations statewide.
It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert
R. McCormick Foundation, along with major contributions from the
Illinois Broadcasters Foundation and Southern Illinois Editorial
Association.
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