Fair
79°
Crystal Lake, IL
Fair|Forecast »

Miller: Bad week for Illinois Senate Democrats

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 1)

As a result, Senate President John Cullerton, a staunch gun opponent, said last week that he would “absolutely” work with gun-rights groups on a compromise that includes a court mandate to pass a concealed-carry law. But he could be negotiating from weakness now that his attempts to ram through sweeping gun-control provisions have failed.

A bill containing state spending authorization for construction, new Department of Children and Family Services caseworkers, workers’ comp claims and education grants went nowhere after a revolt by rank-and-file members, mainly in the Black Caucus.

Black Caucus members withheld their votes because a bill by Sen. Mattie Hunter, D-Chicago, to set up a revolving loan program for minority road contractors has gone nowhere in the House. The proposal passed the Senate, but has been sitting in the House Rules Committee ever since.

Some members also were upset that $12 million cut from the state’s mental health budget wasn’t restored. With all the talk of gun control in the wake of the Connecticut school massacre, there was no real discussion about shoring up the state’s mental health system, so the revolt against the spending bill intensified.

Last year when the state hiked the cigarette tax by almost a dollar a pack, the tobacco industry cut a deal to pass a bill that limited appeal bonds. Right now, state law mandates that bonds be posted equal to one-and-a-half times a judgment on certain cases before the ruling can be appealed. That resulted in a required $12 billion appeal bond years ago when Philip Morris lost a case involving Marlboro Lights. The appeal bond was lowered after negotiations, but the company has been fighting ever since to get something into law. The House passed a bill last year, but Cullerton, a visceral anti-tobacco legislator, bottled it up. It passed last week after the trial lawyers were given a neat little plum that guaranteed them higher contingency fees on big medical malpractice cases.

• Rich Miller also publishes Capitol Fax, a daily political newsletter, and CapitolFax.com.

||2|Next Page

Reader Poll

Are you going to any graduation parties this season?

yes
no