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McCaleb: Our representatives may have tough road ahead

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When the new General Assembly is sworn in in January, eight Illinois lawmakers whose districts cover a portion of McHenry County will be representing us in Springfield.

That’s up from five lawmakers representing portions of the county the past 10 years.

Despite that increase in number, it’s hard to say that the county will fare any better in Springfield because of what happened statewide.

The reason for the increase in representation is post-census redistricting.

McHenry County being a predominantly Republican County, the Democratic state leaders who redrew the legislative maps carved us up like a Thanksgiving turkey. Crystal Lake alone was sliced and diced into three representative and two Senate districts.

Depending on where you live in Crystal Lake, your state representative beginning next year either will be longtime state Rep. Mike Tryon from Crystal Lake; outgoing County Board member Barbara Wheeler, also from Crystal Lake; or investment banker David McSweeney of Barrington Hills. All are Republicans.

Also representing McHenry County in the state House is longtime Rep. Jack Franks of Marengo, who will continue to be the only Democrat from our area in Springfield, and Rep. Timothy Schmitz of Batavia, whose new district just nudges up into south central McHenry County near Huntley.

In the state Senate, the familiar Sens. Pam Althoff of McHenry and Dan Duffy of Lake Barrington will continue to serve. They will be joined by outgoing Kane County Board Chairman Karen McConnaughay of St. Charles. Her Senate district encompasses Tryon’s and Schmitz’s representative districts.

Unlike in McHenry County, voters statewide leaned heavily Democratic. In fact, Democrats picked up seven seats in the House and five in the Senate, giving them veto-proof majorities in both chambers.

If they wanted, elected state Democrats wouldn’t have to bother with their Republican counterparts for much of anything.

That’s a scary thought.

It’s pretty much been Democratic leadership in Springfield that’s put Illinois in the financial mess it’s in. Yet voters decided on Tuesday to put more of the same into office.

Of course, more of the same is what we can’t have. We desperately need pension reform and some semblance of fiscal responsibility.

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