Chicago Sun-Times

No love for Bears dome from state’s top Dems

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

Bears President Kevin Warren’s glitzy new lakefront stadium proposal was met with a resounding no by the state’s top Democrats on Wednesday.

At least for now. Noticeably absent from the Bears unveiling, Gov. J.B. Pritzker echoed previous public statements and again brushed aside the latest proposal — which includes more than $2 billion in private funds from the Bears but still requires taxpayer subsidies, saying it “isn’t one that I think the taxpayers are interested in getting engaged in.”

The Democratic governor noted that even on-field success has not helped in other cities like Kansas City, where voters rejected a measure that would have helped fund renovation­s for Arrowhead Stadium, home to the NFL’s Super Bowl champion Chiefs, and a new ballpark for the Royals.

“Maybe one lesson that can be learned just from the last few years is stadium deals, and taxpayers putting money forward for stadium deals, [are] not particular­ly popular around the country. Take note that the winner of the Super Bowl this year, the team went out to try to get the stadium financed by the public and it was rejected by the public in a place where the Super Bowl champions reside,” Pritzker said.

“And I think this is a recognitio­n that these are private businesses. That the owners of these private businesses need to put a lot more forward ... [to] have their dreams fulfilled and not just rely upon the taxpayers of Illinois to make that happen for them.”

Later, Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch, D-Hillside, publicly squashed the Bears chances of getting legislatio­n passed during the current legislativ­e session, which is scheduled to adjourn on May 24 but is likely to extend into the waning days of May.

“I want to say to you publicly what I said to Kevin Warren privately last week. If we were to put this issue on the board for a vote right now, it would fail, and it would fail miserably,” Welch said at a separate press conference in Maywood. “There’s no environmen­t for something like this today. Now, in Springfiel­d, environmen­ts change. Will that environmen­t change within the next 30 days? I think that’s highly unlikely.”

Illinois Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, issued a statement showing he, like Pritzker, was cautious at best.

“At first glance, more than $2 billion in private funding is better than zero and a more credible opening offer,” he said. “But there’s an obvious, substantia­l gap remaining, and I echo the governor’s skepticism.”

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