Ill. House OKs budget, ends historic impasse
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. The Illinois House voted Thursday to override Gov. Bruce Rauner’s vetoes of a budget package, giving the state its first spending blueprint in more than two years and ending the nation’s longest fiscal stalemate since at least the Great Depression.
Although the vote will help ease some financial woes, the new budget will be fueled by a permanent 32 percent income tax increase, and it includes spending cuts.
The Legislature has have been meeting in a special session called to deal with the budget crisis. The session was widely seen as a battle between the first-term Republican governor, a former private equity investor, and longtime Democratic House Speaker Michael Madigan of Chicago.
Lawmakers approved the bill to raise taxes by a 71-42 vote. The spending bill passed 74-37. It takes 71 yes votes to override a veto.
Rauner rejected the measures because, he said, he saw no indication that the Democratic-controlled Legislature would send him the “structural” changes he’s demanded. Those include a statewide property tax freeze, costcutting restrictions on compensation for injured workers, changes to pension benefits for state employees, and reforms making it easier for voters to merge or eliminate local governing bodies.
Rauner described the override vote as “another step in Illinois’ never-ending tragic trail of tax hikes.”
The income tax increase means individuals will pay 4.95 percent instead of 3.75 percent. The corporate rate jumps to 7 percent from 5.25 percent.
Madigan’s plan “is not balanced, does not cut enough spending or pay down enough debt, and does not help grow jobs or restore confidence in government,” the governor said. “It proves how desperately we need real property tax relief and term limits.”
Speaking from the House floor just after the vote, Madigan said the budget was the result of bipartisan efforts to end the “destructive” impasse.
The standoff, which on Saturday entered a third fiscal year, had effects statewide. Road construction work shut down. Public universities were cut to the bone and faced a loss of accreditation. The United Way predicted the demise of 36 percent of all humanservices agencies by year’s end.
Credit-rating houses threatened to downgrade the state’s creditworthiness to “junk,” signaling to investors that buying state debt is a highly speculative venture. Two agencies gave Illinois some breathing room Monday after House votes over the weekend.
But on Wednesday, a third credit-rating agency, Moody’s Investors Service, put Illinois under review for a downgrade even if lawmakers overrode the veto. Moody’s said that while lawmakers have made progress, the House package does not address the state’s massively underfunded pensions or do enough to pay down bills.