From Illinois Issues:
Pay-to-play ban becomes law
- posted by Bethany Jaeger
Monday did become Ethics Day. After three years of back-and-forth, the Illinois
House and Senate finally agreed and enacted landmark ethics reforms that will
become effective January 1. The governor and some legislators already are trying
to expand the so-called pay-to-play ban, but that could take just as long as the
first effort. In the meantime, Monday’s action is likely to generate a lot
of campaign mail as incumbents and candidates enter the home stretch before the
November 4 elections.
Meanwhile, as I write this, budget negotiators from both chambers and both political
parties are meeting behind closed doors to hash out a plan that would prevent
state parks and historic sites from closing this fall, as well as prevent hundreds
of state employees from losing their jobs. Whether they will strike a compromise,
however, won’t be known until Tuesday, when both chambers will reconvene
in another off-season legislative session.
All day Monday, which included multiple special sessions called by Gov. Rod Blagojevich,
served as a perfect example of how everything will change in January. In addition
to new ethics laws that will affect the governor’s fundraising abilities,
January marks the end of Senate President Emil Jones’ reign. Throughout
the day, there was an acute awareness that Jones is on his way out of office with
numerous individuals interested in taking his place. More on that later.
One set of ethics reform down, more to go
The Illinois Senate agreed with the House to override Blagojevich’s changes
to HB 824, meaning new campaign contribution rules will take effect in the New
Year. Businesses holding state contracts worth more than $50,000 will not be able
to donate to the political campaigns of the officeholder who signs the contract.
The Senate president said the new law contained in HB 824 doesn’t go far
enough. “It turns hard money into soft money,” Jones said, later adding,
“They’ll still be able to give the soft money through the back door.”
He meant that instead of donating directly to the officeholder, state contactors
will still be able to give money to statewide political parties that turn around
and filter the money to the officeholder who signs the contract, anyway.
Jones supports the governor’s proposals, which would expand the so-called
pay-to-play ban. The governor’s amendatory veto language was inserted into
a new bill. It would:
* Ban businesses that hold significant state contracts from
donating to legislators and statewide political parties, as well as statewide
officeholders;
* Prohibit legislators from working second jobs in any unit
of government, with some exceptions;
* Clarify the process by which legislators vote to accept their
pay raises.
The Senate sponsor, Chicago Democratic Sen. James DeLeo, said SB 780 would level
the playing field and help legislators avoid the perception that money buys influence.
Cindi Canary, executive director of the Illinois Campaign for Political Reform
and a main force behind HB 824, said it felt odd, but she had to oppose the new
measure during a Senate committee Monday evening. She said the more expansive
ethics legislation is “not ready for prime time, yet.”
She said she supports the concept but believes the governor’s proposal isn’t
the right vehicle for enacting contribution limits on legislators. Banning state
contractors from donating to elected officials who have no control over state
contracts could invite a legal challenge based on the First Amendment that protects
free speech, she said. She also questioned the fallout of prohibiting active state
legislators from also working in some public sector jobs but not others. And she
said the one aspect that would be ready to go if it were proposed as a stand-alone
measure is the portion that would clarify the system of approving legislative
pay raises.
Sen. James Clayborne, a Belleville Democrat, agreed with Canary and said the governor’s
proposals need some more work, but he voted to advance the measure to the full
chamber in hopes of working through more changes before a final vote.
Restoring budget cuts
Meanwhile, budgeters are working behind closed doors in an effort to compromise
to restore some of the governor’s $1.4 billion in budget cuts, which are
resulting in plans to close 11 state parks and 13 historic sites, lay off hundreds
of public employees and drastically reduce state funding for such human services
as substance abuse treatment and prevention.
Earlier this month, the House approved two measures that would sweep about $221
million from special funds to plug some but not all of the budget holes. (See
the spending portion in SB 1103.)
Sen. Donne Trotter, a Chicago Democrat and budget negotiator, said the Senate
Democrats found $42 million of that $221 million that they would like to spend
in a different way than approved by the House. That includes $37 million the House
included to reimburse mass transit districts for the free rides granted to seniors
and people with disabilities enacted earlier this year. The Senate Democrats would
take that out and shift the funding, for instance, to increase the amount of money
for college grants through the Monetary Award Program. The House also would restore
funding for constitutional officers at 100 percent of the original funding level,
while the Senate Democrats would restore them at 75 percent.
Republicans are involved in the budget negotiations. According to Patty Schuh,
spokeswoman for Senate Minority Leader Frank Watson, the GOP Caucus prioritizes
restoring funding for state parks, historic sites and human services. But members
argue that it doesn’t make sense to restore funding to the parks and historic
sites and then sweep money from the special fund dedicated to the Department of
Natural Resources.