Chicago Sun-Times

Fact-check: Rauner, Pritzker threw ‘lots of heat, little light’ at Sun-Times face-off

- BY KIANNAH SEPEDA-MILLER Better Government Associatio­n The Better Government Associatio­n runs PolitiFact Illinois, the local arm of the nationally renowned, Pulitzer Prize-winning fact-checking enterprise that rates the truthfulne­ss of statements made by

As it hurtles toward a Nov. 6 climax, Illinois’ recordshat­tering race for governor is throwing off lots of heat but very little light.

Republican incumbent Bruce Rauner and Democratic challenger J.B. Pritzker are saturating the airwaves with attack ads and blistering each other with insults in debates billed as formal that more resemble bar brawls in tone. Last week, as the two appeared together before the Chicago SunTimes Editorial Board, the bickering cross-talk became so hard to follow that editorial page editor Tom McNamee felt compelled to play referee.

“Boys, boys!” McNamee implored the 61-year-old Rauner and 53-yearold Pritzker. “Please, please, please! You have to take turns here a little bit, OK?”

But much of what transpired at the Sun-Times event, as well as other debates featuring the pair, had a Groundhog Day feel with the candidates reliving questionab­le variations of wellrehear­sed put-downs and defenses over everything from taxand-spending priorities to a big tax break snagged by Pritzker and Rauner’s handling of a fatal disease outbreak at a state home for aging veterans.

We are not going to attempt to apply truth-o-meter ratings to the contradict­ory claims gushing out at these debates. The sheer volume makes that a foreboding task.

But here are some highlights —

or lowlights.

Toilet troubles

Rauner portrayed Pritzker as a lawbreaker after a report from the Cook County inspector general, first reported by the Sun-Times, branded a steep property tax break obtained by Pritzker on an empty Gold Coast mansion “a scheme to defraud.”

One factor the report said contribute­d to that conclusion was a directive to contractor­s from Pritzker’s wife just days ahead of the property being reassessed in 2015. The order, the report said, was to disconnect every toilet.

At the Sun-Times event and other debates, Pritzker has adhered closely to a script in denying any wrongdoing. “The rules were followed here,” he told the paper’s Editorial Board. “There were inaccuraci­es in that report.”

His version of events largely rests on technicali­ties rather than substance.

The inspector general’s report, while taking issue with how the Pritzker break was handled by the Cook County assessor, also said the office was “the victim of sworn affidavits containing false representa­tions” of the property’s condition as it related to its bathrooms.

Pritzker spokesman Jason Rubin disputed that conclusion, pointing to a statement in sworn documents signed by J.B. Pritzker’s brother-inlaw and an assistant to Pritzker’s wife that were used to obtain the breaks: “The property has been vacant and uninhabita­ble from January 1st, 2012 to present. There are no functionin­g bathrooms or kitchen. The interior stairwells are unsound.”

“The time period cited in the affidavit refers to the period when the property was vacant and uninhabita­ble, not the period during which there were no functionin­g bathrooms or kitchen,” Rubin wrote in an email.

But the statement referred to by Rubin is ambiguous. What’s more, the report includes a different affidavit form in which the brotherin-law and assistant appear to apply the full three-year time frame to unusable toilets and kitchen.

Quincy crisis

Rauner, meanwhile, has been on the defensive over his administra­tion’s management of a deadly Legionnair­es’ disease outbreak at the historic state-run Quincy Veterans Home in 2015.

A WBEZ report this month revealed the governor’s office played a role in a six-day delay in informing residents, families and the public about the outbreak. That delay meant some residents got sick and, in some cases, died without their families knowing why.

The deaths of 14 residents have been linked to Legionnair­es’, with another 70 residents and staff sickened by the disease since 2015, according to WBEZ.

“Our team went there immediatel­y, took action every day to keep the veterans safe and the staff safe and brought in immediatel­y the national experts and did what was necessary to mitigate the risks,” Rauner told the Sun-Times Editorial Board.

Those claims fly in the face of what health safety experts told WBEZ. They said the delay aggravated the impact of the outbreak, with one infectious disease authority calling it “mind-boggling.”

And Rauner’s own labor department censured his veterans affairs department for failing to “effectivel­y notify all employees” about the outbreak after two workers first fell sick in 2015.

Tax (cross) talk

Rauner has attacked Pritzker over the Democrat’s plan to replace Illinois’ flat-rate income tax with a more common graduated rate system where those with higher incomes pay more. The governor claims such a switch would hit the middle class as well as the wealthy, something Pritzker disputes.

“Every state — every state — that’s put in a graduated income tax, the middle class has paid more in taxes after the income tax came than before,” Rauner said at the Sun-Times event. “Look at what the middle class paid before the graduated income tax came in and what they paid afterwards.”

Variations of the line are repeated often by Rauner, and last month we rated it False.

At the same event, Pritzker made a tax claim of his own to rebut Rauner. The Democrat contended most graduated tax states “are doing better than the state of Illinois” on job creation.

What the Pritzker camp failed to point out is that topping job growth rates among the states in 2017 was Utah, according to federal statistics. And Utah, like Illinois, has a flatrate income tax.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES ?? J.B. Pritzker and Gov. Bruce Rauner at the Chicago Sun-Times session Tuesday.
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES J.B. Pritzker and Gov. Bruce Rauner at the Chicago Sun-Times session Tuesday.
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