Illinois’ comeback story starts here.

HJR 45: better than nothing

HJR 45: better than nothing

Faint praise for a fainthearted resolution Much of Illinois politics has become a contest of wills between a political establishment that is prone to wishful thinking and government employee unions with worldviews that border on fantasy. House Joint Resolution 45, or HJR 45, represents the latest attempt to wrest control of state spending away from...

By Paul Kersey

Medicaid expansion would trap Illinoisans in inferior care

Medicaid expansion would trap Illinoisans in inferior care

Illinois lawmakers have a choice before them. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, or PPACA, permits states to expand their Medicaid programs to those up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level. Under the law, however, Illinois is not required to do so. Hundreds of thousands of the people targeted by the Medicaid...

By Jonathan Ingram

Veto session: sneak peek of week two

Veto session: sneak peek of week two

Last week in Springfield, there was very little legislative activity during the first week of veto session. Such limited action took place that the House canceled Thursday session, and it is rumored that the Legislature will only meet on Tuesday and Wednesday of this week as well. It is expected that the current two-week veto...

By Matt Paprocki, Jane McEnaney

Quinning! Gov. Quinn is the most unpopular governor in the nation

Quinning! Gov. Quinn is the most unpopular governor in the nation

According to Public Policy Polling, Gov. Quinn is the most unpopular governor in the nation. Gov. Quinn’s approval rating stands at a dismal 25 percent. Adding insult to injury, 64 percent of Illinoisans polled disapprove of his job performance. PPP Release IL 112912

By Ted Dabrowski

Rahm should focus on jobs first, hype later

Rahm should focus on jobs first, hype later

  In his recent op-ed, “How to rebuild America,” Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel boasts that Chicago’s “investments” in public schools, community colleges and infrastructure improvements have put Chicagoans back to work. Here’s what he said:   “The strength of these investments is proven in the number of people we’re putting back to work: Chicago is first...

By Ted Dabrowski, John Klingner

Tax, borrow and spend in style

Tax, borrow and spend in style

During a House Executive Committee meeting this week, one round of testimony began with the argument that Illinois is in a fiscal crisis because it has $9 billion in unpaid bills. That argument couldn’t be more backward. Illinois’ crisis is due to habitual overspending, that results in unpaid bills. Unfortunately, the recent “solution” offered up...

By Benjamin VanMetre

Veto session: recap of week one

Veto session: recap of week one

The Illinois Policy Institute opposed eight bills and appeared in several committee meetings during the first week of veto session. Our policy team had crucial face time with legislators and discussed our positions on public policy that affects all Illinoisans. We also reached out to many members of the House Republican staff. Here is an...

By Matt Paprocki, Jane McEnaney

State Rep. LaShawn K. Ford has been indicted for bank fraud

State Rep. LaShawn K. Ford has been indicted for bank fraud

State Rep. LaShawn K. Ford, D-Chicago, of Illinois’ 8th District has become the most recent example of a steady stream of Illinois politicians caught with their hands in the cookie jar. According to the Chicago Sun-Times: “Ford, 40, of Chicago — who also invests in Chicago real estate — allegedly fraudulently obtained a $500,000 increase...

By Brian Costin

For entrepreneurs, the grass is greener … almost anywhere but Illinois

For entrepreneurs, the grass is greener … almost anywhere but Illinois

How do American entrepreneurs decide where to set up shop? Business creators look at indicators like corporate tax rates and the health of a state’s finances when determining the best location in which to take root. According to a survey published recently by Thumbtack.com and the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, Illinois isn’t quite cutting the mustard. On...

By Hilary Gowins

Forget reform: Illinois legislators want to borrow $4 billion

Forget reform: Illinois legislators want to borrow $4 billion

It was déjà vu in Springfield as proponents of more debt pushed Illinois to borrow another $4 billion from the bond market. Their promise? That the state’s backlog of bills would finally get paid down. This is exactly what we heard almost two years ago, when advocates of the massive $7 billion income tax increase...

By Ted Dabrowski

Veto session: legislative update

Veto session: legislative update

Veto session commenced yesterday morning in Springfield. Typically, we would expect to see movement on controversial bills during this time because of the lame duck legislators who have been voted out of office but still retain voting power. However, impending Democratic supermajorities in both chambers of the Legislature means that we expect to see movement...

By Matt Paprocki, Jane McEnaney

How teachers’ salary schedules make pay increases misleading

How teachers’ salary schedules make pay increases misleading

If you want to begin to understand what’s wrong with our current public school system, look no further than teachers’ salary schedules. Public school teachers unions across Illinois have clung to these outdated pay schemes, despite evidencethat shows salary schedules reward teachers for things that have little to do with improving student outcomes. Still, it is...