First Amendment topicsAbout the First Amendment
News Story
 
print this   Print

Ill. lawmakers approve campaign-contribution cap

By The Associated Press
06.01.09

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. — Illinois lawmakers sent Gov. Pat Quinn the state’s first-ever cap on campaign contributions, while a proposal to “fumigate” top appointees of the last two disgraced governors stalled last night.

The House voted 64-46 to limit the amount of money donors may give to political candidates.

Quinn supports the measure, meaning that nearly four decades after the Watergate scandal, Illinois would put its first check on individual campaign contributions.

While supporters acknowledged it as a compromise, critics excoriated the plan, saying it’s almost no reform at all.

“’Better than nothing’ doesn’t sit very well with the voters at home,” said Rep. Kathleen Ryg, a Vernon Hills Democrat.

In the final scheduled day of a Legislature bent on reform after the federal corruption arrest and indictment of former Gov. Rod Blagojevich, the Senate also approved dumping the way pay raises are determined for legislators.

But a plan by House Speaker Michael Madigan to force fellow Democrat Quinn to get rid of about 750 state government workers appointed by Blagojevich and his predecessor former Gov. George Ryan — who is serving jail time — was buffeted by criticism in the Senate before its sponsor pulled it out of consideration.

Madigan also shepherded the contribution cap in the House. It limits individuals to contributing $5,000 to a political candidate annually, with $10,000 the maximum for a corporation or association.

But it also allows political parties or interest groups to hand over $90,000 to each candidate annually. And parties could still provide unlimited “in-kind” services — political mailings, computers or door-knocking workers — to their favored hopefuls.

“That’s a hole big enough to drive an armored bank truck on steroids through,” said Rep. Bill Black, R-Danville.

But Madigan, who has spent 38 years in the House, and Senate President John Cullerton are sensitive to an outsider’s ability to raise money. Cullerton ran a losing 1994 race against then-U.S. Rep. Dan Rostenkowski shortly before the powerhouse congressman was indicted and jailed for corruption.

Madigan said challengers for federal office, where individuals are limited to $2,400 contributions for each election, “spend their entire day trying to raise money.”

“Let’s take a first step, let’s impose caps, but let’s acknowledge that the lower the cap just advantages the incumbents, so I would suggest that the caps contained in this bill are reasonable,” Madigan said.


Update
Ill. governor vetoes campaign-finance bill
Gov. Pat Quinn, who once had praised measure, says Republican, Democratic lawmakers, reform groups and average people around state persuaded him to scrap bill and start over. 08.28.09

Related

Hawaii appeals court upholds higher campaign contributions

Businesses, unions can donate to political candidates at same levels as individuals or campaign committees. 06.30.09

Ill. governor signs open-records bill

New law establishes first-ever fines for FOIA violations, provides public-records training for government employees and gives attorney general's office enforcement authority. 08.18.09

Campaign finance overview


News summary page
View the latest news stories throughout the First Amendment Center Online.



Last system update: Saturday, November 21, 2009 | 08:02:46
 SEARCH  MORE
About this site
About the First Amendment
About the First Amendment Center
How to contribute
Video/RSS/podcasts
First Amendment programs
State of the First Amendment
reports

Religious liberty in public schools
First Reports
Supreme Court
Columnists
Experts
First Amendment publications
First Amendment Center history
Glossary
Freedom Sings™
Events
First Amendment
Schools

Congressional Research Service reports
Guest editorials
FOI material
The First Amendment
Library

Lesson plans
freedomforum.org
Newseum
Contact us
Privacy statement
Related links