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McCaleb: Old Latin term serves as message for legislators

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“Primum non nocere.”

“First, do no harm.”

Most of us are familiar with this Latin phrase and its centuries-old tie to the health care profession.

What does it mean? That sometimes, doing nothing is better than doing something, because doing something just for the sake of doing something sometimes can only make things worse.

In treating patients, doctors should “first, do no harm.”

This thought comes to mind as the Illinois General Assembly works its way through its veto session, and in advance of the lame-duck session in January. That’s when retiring legislators or legislators who were booted from office Nov. 6 will make their final votes that could impact the rest of us for years to come.

First, do no harm.

In the waning moments of the last lame-duck session in January 2011, the outgoing state Legislature did plenty of harm to taxpayers and local businesses. With the help of 12 Democratic lawmakers who were on their way out of office, the General Assembly passed a “temporary” 67 percent income tax increase and a 46 percent corporate tax increase.

Not a single Republican voted for the hikes. Gov. Pat Quinn needed every single one of the votes from the lame-duck Democrats to get the tax increases through. But several of the 12 Democrats who voted for the tax hikes previously were opposed to them. Something must have persuaded them to change their minds. What could that have been? I’ll get to that shortly.

Quinn and Democratic lawmakers promised at the time that the new revenue would be used to pay down the state’s billions of dollars of backlogged bills, the state’s budget would shrink, and that by 2015, the increases would be scaled back.

Of course, the first two promises haven’t been kept. Most of the new revenue has gone to the state’s bloated public pension systems, and Quinn is proposing a new budget that is more expensive than last year’s already unaffordable one.

As for the “temporary” tax increases, which cost an additional $1,600 a year for a family with an annual income of $80,000? Dream about it. The “temporary” soon will become a footnote in Illinois’ shady political history.

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