Chicago Sun-Times

House GOP fights Pritzker plan

Demgov hopeful pushes progressiv­e income tax

- BY TINA SFONDELES, POLITICAL REPORTER tsfondeles@suntimes.com | @TinaSfon

Democrat J. B. Pritzker wants to change the state income tax to put a higher burden on the wealthy, but he’s had a tough time providing specifics.

Republican­s are trying to fill that void, tossing out words such as “disaster,” “horrible policy” and “punishment to the middle class.”

A day after Gov. Bruce Rauner denounced Pritzker’s plan to enact a progressiv­e income tax, House Republican­s on Tuesday filed a resolution and vowed to block any attempts to enact the tax.

Pritzker has campaigned on a promise to change the state’s tax structure, even though it will require a constituti­onal amendment and could take years to enact.

If history is any indication, changing the state’s tax structure is no easy feat. Former Illinois Gov. Richard Ogilvie proved just how difficult and unpopular it could be, surviving just one term after enacting the state’s first income tax in 1969.

“I knew damn well that it was probably signing my death warrant as governor,” Ogilvie later said. “But everything I had in mind doing was contingent on having additional revenues — school needs, social service requiremen­ts.”

Trying to mess with the income tax was also political dynamite for Dawn Clark Netsch, who pitched a $ 2.5 million income tax increase to fund schools and provide property tax relief during her 1994 gubernator­ial campaign. She lost to Republican Gov. Jim Edgar, who ultimately embraced the unpopular idea.

On Tuesday, state House Republican Leader Jim Durkin went after Pritzker’s plan to tinker with the tax, spearheadi­ng a resolution in opposition of a progressiv­e income tax — signed by 50 House Republican­s and sans just one.

Speaking at a Springfiel­d news conference, Durkin did not mention Pritzker by name, citing “recent proposals from the Democrat Party” and calling a progressiv­e income tax “a punishment to the middle class.”

And he vowed that House Republican­s will block Democratic efforts to change the tax structure.

“Enough is enough. We are here today in solidarity to show that we will oppose and block every measure to get a progressiv­e income tax passed in Illinois,” Durkin said.

Rauner released a statement in support of the resolution, claiming a progressiv­e income tax “will kill the middle class.”

Rauner on Monday said Pritzker’s plan for a progressiv­e income tax would be a “disaster for the state of Illinois.” “Disaster. Horrible policy,” Rauner said. Pritzker favors a progressiv­e income tax, in which higher earners would get taxed at a higher rate. The state currently has a flat tax in which all residents are taxed at the same rate.

Pritzker last week admitted his progressiv­e income tax, pitched to fund education, would take “a little time”— about two years — to get passed through the Legislatur­e.

But when asked for specifics about the graduated income tax— and how much the rate would be— Pritzker has offered none.

In response to the Republican resistance, the Pritzker campaign on Tuesday focused on its portrayal of Rauner as a “failed leader.” But the campaign said Pritzker supports the tax to lower the income and property tax burden on the state’s middle class “and those striving to get there.”

“The resolution introduced today is pure politics, carried out by Republican­s pressured to distract from Bruce Rauner’s utter failure as governor,” Pritzker spokeswoma­n Jordan Abudayyeh said in a statement. “This is what happens when you head into an election year with no accomplish­ments to point to.”

 ??  ?? Gov. Bruce Rauner
Gov. Bruce Rauner
 ??  ?? J. B. Pritzker
J. B. Pritzker

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