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Is it worthless to amend a worthless state Constitution?

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• VETO POWER: Gov. Pat Quinn, in an obvious effort to capitalize politically from the Aurora, Colo. shootings, abused his amendatory veto powers (Article 4, Section 9) to completely rewrite a pro-Second Amendment bill which passed both houses into an assault weapons ban that has been on hold because it doesn't have the votes to pass.

While Quinn said he acted legally, Rich Miller at Capitol Fax points out that Illinois Supreme Court case law forbids governors from using an amendatory veto to change the fundamental purpose of a bill.

A commenter on the Miller article I linked to made a great point: If what Quinn did was legal, as he maintains, why can't he just rewrite a bill to lessen pension benefits by fiat? One of the answers, as I blogged here, is that the clause protecting pension benefits (Article 13, Section 5) is the only part of the Constitution that our lawmakers consider sacred.

• SUBMITTING BILLS: Bills passed by both houses must be presented to the governor within 60 days of passage (Article 4, Section 9). But when lawmakers in May 2011 passed a massive expansion of gambling, the Senate did not give the bill to Quinn out of fear that he would veto it.

Senate President John Cullerton, D-Chicago, got around the requirement by filing a motion to reconsider after the bill passed, which in effect froze it in place.

• SHELL BILLS: The state Constitution requires in Article 4, Section 8(d), that bills be read by title in both chambers of the General Assembly on three separate days. But despite this measure, which is aimed at transparency, a lot of important bills get hashed out in back rooms.

Legislators accomplish this through "shell bills" that essentially are placeholder bills consisting of a spelling correction, replacing "the" with, well, "the." Click here to see what a shell bill looks like, and this will make more sense. Legislators read the blank shell bill to meet the constitutional mandate, only to come out of their back rooms and ram through bills as an amendment, allowing a same-day vote without the otherwise mandated due diligence, and with the added bonus of avoiding public scrutiny.

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About the Author

Kevin Craver

Senior reporter

Northwest Herald

Crystal Lake, IL

kcraver@shawmedia.com

Kevin has worked at the Northwest Herald since 2000. The Illinois Associated Press awarded his blog this year as the best news blog in the state for medium-sized newspapers. He has won more than 70 state and national journalism awards.

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