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Tuesday, April 30, 2024

Marron: ‘We need to focus our energy this year on implementing real fiscal reforms for the people of Illinois’

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State Rep. Mike Marron (R-Fithian) | repmarron.com

State Rep. Mike Marron (R-Fithian) | repmarron.com

State Rep. Mike Marron (R-Fithian) is criticizing Gov. J.B. Prizker’s 2024 budget proposal.

Marron said if the state continues to spend more money, it will be in a bad fiscal situation "when revenues go back down."

“Gov. Pritzker’s budget proposal is the growth of government and government spending,” Marron said in a video posted on Facebook. “While the Governor admits in his proposal that Illinois is projected to have a 3% decrease in overall revenue next year, his budget address includes $2.7 billion in new spending, almost 8% increase over last year. We need to focus our energy this year on implementing real fiscal reforms for the people of Illinois.” 

Pritzker’s budget plan seeks to increase the state’s budget for 2024 by 11% over last year, Chalkbeat Chicago reported. The $49.6 billion he is proposing includes increased payments to schools. The budget is yet to be debated, but given Democratic super-majorities in both chambers of the General Assembly many are expecting no forceful pushback from legislators.

Other areas of expenditure include the state’s troubled Department of Children and Family Services. 

“Failed GOP gubernatorial candidate Darren Bailey said the governor needed to fire DCFS Director Marc Smith, who retained his position in Pritzker's second term. Smith has been held in contempt of court 12 times for failing to place children in proper care within the proper timeframe,” The State Journal-Register wrote. Prtizker’s budget also includes funds to increase the coffers of Medicaid and to expand the accessibility of broadband internet.

Wirepoints said Pritzker’s budget is largely based on an unprecedented $200 billion in one-time funds from federal COVID relief and does not tell the entire story when it comes to the state’s fiscal woes.

“All of their celebrations ignore a simple fact. Illinois lawmakers had almost nothing to do with creating the state’s record budget. Revenues are up, deficits are papered over and Illinois’ credit ratings are improved for one reason: the Fed’s unprecedented $200 billion stimulus. The reality is, even after the federal bailout, Illinois remains at the bottom of the barrel nationally,” Ted Dabrowski and John Klingner wrote. 

Illinois has the lowest credit rating in the nation with Chicago and Chicago Public Schools in worse fiscal condition than the state. Wirepoints said Pritzker lied when he said the state is “strongest financial position in decades.”

“The state’s credit rating was just two notches below a AAA rating in 2009. Since then, Illinois has been in a credit-rating freefall, dropping eight notches under Gov. Pat Quinn, another 13 under Gov. Bruce Rauner and one under Pritzker. In April 2020, Illinois was just one notch from a junk rating,” Dabrowski and Klingner wrote. “The three upgrades under Gov. Pritzker barely change anything. Illinois needs around 20 more upgrades to really get back to the ‘strongest financial position in decades."

Bailey, a former state senator who unsuccessfully tried to unseat Pritzker in last fall’s elections, told The Center Square he warned voters. “When I was a candidate, I warned people this would happen and talked about us having to live within our means or face destroying the state,” Bailey said. “What the governor is pushing is a bridge to higher taxes for everyone in this state,” he said. “He’s using COVID and federal money to advance his own agenda. There will come a day when these bills are due and the only way to pay will be to raise taxes on everyone or drastically cut services.”

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