Mayor Daley Calls
Blagojevich 'Cuckoo'
CBS2 Chicago ^ | January 23, 2009
Posted on 1/23/2009,
1:29:03 PM by rightwingintelligentsia
Mayor Daley called Gov. Blagojevich "cuckoo" at
a news conference Jan. 23, 2009, in reference to the governor's claim that
state lawmakers want to get him out of the way so they can pass huge tax increases.
Responding to questions about
Gov. Rod Blagojevich's claims Friday that Democratic lawmakers are trying to
oust him so they can raise taxes, Mayor Richard M. Daley said the governor was
"cuckoo."
He noted that he has called Blagojevich
"cuckoo" once before. The earlier comment came in September, when
Blagojevich questioned financial statements by the head of the Chicago Transit
Authority.
"I've said 'cuckoo' once. I'll say it again,"
Daley said.
He chirped another "Cuckoo!" to reporters
before leaving his Friday morning news conference.
Meanwhile, Blagojevich said
Friday afternoon that his choice not to attend his impeachment trial in the
Illinois State Senate was "not an act of defiance," but a protest
against what he again characterized as a violation of constitutional civil
liberties.
Illinois lawmakers pass big tax hike to aid budget
Karen Pierog
Wealth January 12, 2011 /
7:12 AM / 9 years ago
CHICAGO (Reuters) - A big income tax increase squeaked
through the Illinois House and Senate as Democratic lawmakers played
beat-the-clock to get the measure passed before a new legislative session
begins on Wednesday.
Wealth
January 12, 2011 / 7:12 AM / 9 years ago
Illinois lawmakers pass big tax hike to aid budget
Karen Pierog
CHICAGO (Reuters) - A big income tax increase squeaked
through the Illinois House and Senate as Democratic lawmakers played
beat-the-clock to get the measure passed before a new legislative session begins
on Wednesday.
The bill, which passed the House in a 60-57 vote late on
Tuesday and the Senate in a 30-29 vote early on Wednesday, now heads to
Governor Pat Quinn, who supports the measure.
The legislation would raise about $6.8 billion a year for
the state’s beleaguered budget by raising the individual income tax rate
temporarily to 5 percent from 3 percent and the corporate tax rate to 7 percent
from 4.8 percent.
“We are in desperate need to improve our bond rating and
we will do that by raising more money,” said Senate President John Cullerton, a
Chicago Democrat.
But Republican lawmakers argued
against what they called the biggest tax increase in Illinois’ history.
“No state ever taxed its way
into prosperity,” said State Senator Kirk Dillard.
The four-year tax increase
would be accompanied by state spending limits through fiscal 2015. For fiscal
2012, which begins on July 1, the limit would be $36.8 billion, which
Republican lawmakers contend would mark a 10 percent increase from fiscal 2011
spending levels.
If the state breaches the limit, the higher income tax
rates would revert to current levels unless the governor declares a fiscal
emergency to raise spending by a set amount for a single fiscal year, according
to the legislation.
Revenue from the tax hikes would enable Illinois to sell
about $12.2 billion of bonds to pay off a huge bill backlog and make a $3.7
billion pension fund payment for fiscal 2011.
A bill that would authorize $8.75 billion of 15-year
general obligation bonds with proceeds earmarked to pay off bills failed to
muster enough votes in the House. However, a bill authorizing the sale of $4
billion of taxable pension bonds received final approval.
Illinois, which faces a budget gap that could grow to $15
billion, is one of many U.S. states grappling with record budget deficits after
the deep recession stunted tax revenue. It is considered one of the weakest
states after years of what critics say was mismanagement of state finances.
Uproar over even bigger tax increases that were floated
last week by Democrats who control the legislature led to pared down increases
in income tax rates in the final bill.
Various groups condemned the original tax proposal as a
job killer that would propel businesses and residents to leave the state. In an
opinion piece published in the Chicago Tribune on Tuesday, Caterpillar Inc
Chairman and CEO Doug Oberhelman warned the tax increase “will stifle economic
growth.”
In a floor debate over the tax hike bill, Republican
State Representative David Leitch said he was inundated with 1,600 emails
against the tax hike with 1,200 or more coming from Caterpillar workers.
Investors, meanwhile, are nervous about Illinois bonds.
As a result spreads over Municipal Market Data’s triple-A scale have been
widening since the beginning of the year for the state’s debt, said Domenic
Vonella, an MMD analyst. Those spreads are now the widest among all the states.
A fix for Illinois’ $52 billion all funds budget that
includes nearly $25 billion of general fund spending has been elusive as
revenue collections remain lackluster and bills continue to pile up.
The state’s inability to pay its bills, while relying on
borrowing and other one-time revenue measures, has led to credit rating
downgrades. Illinois shares Moody’s Investors Service’s A1, the lowest among
all the states, with California.
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