Illinois
Vallas: J.B. Pritzker’s $55.2B budget fuels Illinois’ financial death spiral
J.B. Pritzker wants a third term as Illinois governor, but based on his history of boosting taxes and creating spending records, can Illinois afford him for four more years? Will the state grow even smaller as Illinoisans get fed up and leave?
Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker recently announced his plans to seek a third term, but can Illinoisans really afford another four years of him?
With the signing of Pritzker’s seventh budget, he paused his near-daily Trump bashing to declare, “After decades of mismanagement, Illinois is balancing our budgets, and the results are clear.” He framed the budget as a continuation of his administration’s commitment to fiscal responsibility and strategic investment.
Really, Gov. Pritznocchio?
Pritzker’s leadership has produced tax hikes, spending scandals and population loss – all of which are threats now and to Illinois’ future. “The results are clear,” all right, and here they are.
Tax, spending increases
Since taking office, Pritzker has increased state spending by more than $15 billion, far higher than previous Democratic or Republican governors, while burning through nearly $14 billion in one-time federal pandemic relief funds and hiking taxes and fees 49 times.
This represents a 37% jump since 2019.
Illinoisans already bear the highest combined state and local tax burden in the nation – averaging 16.5% of a family’s income. Despite these heavy burdens, Illinois ranks dead last in economic equity between Black and white residents, starkly contradicting Pritzker’s claim Illinois is a national leader in equity.
Pritzker tried to blame his multiple tax increases in this year’s budget as a precaution against the impact of Trump’s cuts. His relentless attacks on Trump, whether deserved or not, will ensure that at best the state and city will receive little help from the Trump administration, and at worst invite retaliation – which is the last thing Illinois needs.
Despite these record tax increases, the state is projecting a growing deficit, expected to hit $5.2 billion by fiscal year 2029. Illinois also holds the nation’s highest per capita debt, with government pension liabilities at $144 billion, although independent actuaries say the actual cost might be more than double that.
Combined state and local pension debt is twice the total of all neighboring states combined. Instead of reversing decades of mismanagement, Pritzker has aggressively used short-term gimmicks and chronic underfunding to make it worse. Pension contributions are $5.1 billion short of what experts said is needed to stay even.
Fiscal mishaps
Two scandals further encapsulate the fiscal recklessness of Pritzker’s tenure.
First, the Illinois Auditor General found the state overpaid $5.2 billion in fraudulent unemployment benefits in the first 18 months of the pandemic. Pritzker blamed the Trump administration, but the report found his Department of Employment Security delayed implementing anti-fraud safeguards recommended by the U.S. Department of Labor.
Additionally, the Health Benefits for Immigrant Seniors program cost $1.6 billion through July 2024, which was over eight times the original estimate. Pritzker increased funding without legislative approval, continuing a pattern of executive overreach. He similarly ruled by executive order during the COVID-19 pandemic, issuing over 100 orders, including 40 disaster declarations which prolonged shutdowns of schools and the economy, inflicting unnecessary, lasting damage on children and businesses alike.
Job loss and exodus
The state’s May unemployment rate stood at 4.8%, well above the national average of 4.2%. More concerning, however, is Illinois’ post-COVID job growth is driven almost entirely by government hiring, not by private-sector job creation. Illinois added roughly 32,000 government jobs while losing a disturbing 16,200 professional and business service jobs.
More people dependent on taxes for their pay, fewer taxable jobs and more taxpayers are moving out.
Since 2010, Illinois has lost 1.6 million residents, ranking third nationally in population loss behind only California and New York. The exodus is not just retirees seeking warmer weather: Indiana and Wisconsin are now top destinations. A recent survey found 54% of participants cited high taxes as the No. 1 reason for wanting to leave Illinois, outpacing crime and school problems.
What’s worse, those leaving Illinois earn significantly more than those arriving. In 2022, the average taxpayers who left made $124,000 per year, while the average taxpayer who entered Illinois earned $86,000 per year. Since 2010, the difference in income between those departing and arriving to the state has grown from $5,519 to $37,922.
While research shows Illinois’ net loss of households to other states occurs in every single income and age bracket, the most alarming is the exodus of high-income young professionals, ages 26–35 and earning over $200,000. This demographic is most critical to future tax revenues and has the biggest immediate and long-term impact on Illinois’ tax base.
Illinois leaders are, whether by incompetence or design, driving out wealthier, tax-contributing residents while attracting lower-income, often government-dependent populations – including large numbers of undocumented immigrants. Under Pritzker’s leadership Illinois has spent over $2.5 billion in state and local funds on migrant support, not including education costs.
Illinoisans can’t afford another Pritzker term. His continuous spending and taxing spree leaves little room for optimism. Worse, the next term would lack any federal COVID relief.
With budget deficits mounting, residents should brace for even higher taxes and fees – further accelerating the departure of both individuals and businesses.
Pritzker is leading Illinois toward a financial death spiral, driven by over-taxation, overspending and political self-interest. He keeps calling it progress, but ignores that it is in a swirling, downward direction.
Illinois
Voters had no choice in nearly 9-in-10 primary elections
Illinois voting data shows voters had no choice of candidate in nearly 9-in-10 Democratic and Republican primaries for state and federal office in 2024.
Voters had no choice of candidate in nearly nine out of every 10 Republican and Democratic primary elections for state and federal office in 2024.
Analysis of Illinois voting data shows Democrats ran one or no candidate in 135 of the 155 primary elections for the U.S. House, Illinois Senate and Illinois House. That left voters with a choice between candidates in just 20 races.
Meanwhile, Republicans only ran one or no candidate in 137 of the 155 primary elections last year for non-judicial state and federal positions, giving voters of a choice in just 18 races.
In total, there were 155 primaries for the U.S. House of Representatives, Illinois Senate and Illinois House in 2024. Democrats did not run a candidate in 28 of these races while Republicans failed to run a candidate in 50.
And in the 107 Democratic primaries and 87 Republican primaries were only one candidate ran for the position, those candidates secured their spot on the general election ballot with a single primary vote.
To get on the primary ballot for Illinois Senate, the Illinois General Assembly mandates established party candidates to get 1,000 petition signatures from district party members. Illinois House candidates need 500 signatures. For U.S. House, either party’s candidates need signatures from 0.5% of all primary voters from their party in the district.
This lack of choice between candidates for Democratic and Republican party primaries also left general election voters with fewer choices on the ballot.
In the 2024 election cycle, 65 of the 155 non-judicial state and federal general elections had only one candidate on the ballot. That means in 65 districts, it only took one vote for a candidate to win a seat representing the entire district.
Illinoisans already suffer from a lack of choice in candidates. Research shows an average of 4.7 million Illinois voters had no choice in their state representative between the 2012 and 2020 election cycles.
Research shows more choice drives voter participation and makes legislators less susceptible to the influence of lobbyists and special interests. Lightly contested elections also tend to skew policies in favor of powerful special interests.
Illinois should consider reforms that will give voters more choices at the ballot box, such as making it easier for independents to enter the general election like they do in Iowa, Wisconsin and Tennessee.
Until that happens, Illinoisans will continue to see elections with too few choices and too much influence handed to those already in power.
Illinois
2 men shot, 1 fatally, outside bar in Morris, police say
MORRIS, Ill. (WLS) — A man was killed and another was injured in a shooting outside of a bar in Grundy County.
The shooting happened early Saturday outside of Clayton’s Tap in the 100 block of West Washington Street in Morris, Illinois, officials said.
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The Grundy County Sheriff’s Office responded to the scene, where they found two men with gunshot wounds. One was pronounced dead at the scene and the other was taken to a hospital in critical condition.
The victim who died was identified by the Grundy County Coroner’s Office as 35-year-old Julian Rosario of Channahon.
A suspect in the shooting, 22-year-old Marshall Szpara of Seneca, was arrested and “initially charged with two counts of aggravated battery with a firearm, pending further review from the Grundy County States Attorney’s office,” Morris police said.
No further information was available.
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Illinois
Firefighter faces arson charges after Illinois wildfire burns hundreds of acres
A volunteer firefighter is facing arson charges after he allegedly set a fire in a Lee County wildlife preserve, scorching hundreds of acres.
According to authorities, 21-year-old Trent Schaefer, a volunteer firefighter in Ohio, Illinois, was charged with one count of arson in connection to a fire that occurred in the Green River State Wildlife Management Area Friday.
On that date, temperatures had soared into the 60s, winds were whipping at more than 30 miles per hour, and humidity plunged below 30%, leading the National Weather Service to issue warnings on the danger of wildfires in Illinois.
It is alleged that Schaefer was seen by witnesses getting out of a vehicle and igniting multiple small fires within the nature preserve, which then coalesced into a larger blaze.
Those witnesses were able to restrain the suspect until Lee County sheriff’s deputies arrested him.
Image taken by Lee County Sheriff’s Office
By the time firefighters arrived on scene the blaze had already spread, and multiple departments were called in to assist with the fire, including the Illinois Department of Natural Resources.
Firefighters were able to bring the blaze under control by the late afternoon, but not before it burned more than 700 acres, according to authorities.
Schaefer is also a suspect in several other arsons around Lee County, but he has not been charged in any other fires at this time.
Illinois State Police are assisting with the investigation, and no further information was immediately available.
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