Pritzker preps for presidential run carrying weight of Illinois failures
Pritzker preps for presidential run carrying weight of Illinois failures
Outcomes for Illinoisans have dropped since Gov. J.B. Pritzker took office. The nation’s Democrats need to see where he’s taken Illinois before following his lead on the national stage.
By Patrick Andriesen
Illinois’ opaque budget process drives mismanagement, harms taxpayers
Illinois’ opaque budget process drives mismanagement, harms taxpayers
Despite Illinois law setting clear budget rules, lawmakers routinely fast-track last-minute, backroom deals, keeping voters and other legislators in the dark.
By Lauren Zuar
Housing won’t be affordable until Illinois starts building more units
Housing won’t be affordable until Illinois starts building more units
Illinois municipal leaders didn’t grant building permits to enough new housing in 2024. Low numbers and lack of density indicate Illinois could improve its housing picture with more development.
By LyLena Estabine
Judge allows member lawsuit against Chicago Teachers Union to continue
Judge allows member lawsuit against Chicago Teachers Union to continue
A lawsuit challenging the Chicago Teachers Union’s failure to release mandated financial audits to its members survived CTU’s attempt to get it thrown out.
By Mailee Smith
Too much local government makes Illinois inefficient, raises property taxes
Too much local government makes Illinois inefficient, raises property taxes
Illinois is the most inefficient state in the Midwest and the 14th-most inefficient in the country. That’s driven in part by excessive units of local government – more than in any other state. High property taxes are one result.
By Chris Coffey
Illinois lawmakers get 26 seconds per page to read 2025 budget
Illinois lawmakers get 26 seconds per page to read 2025 budget
Illinois state lawmakers must be super speed readers, because who would vote on something they hadn’t read? They were given an average of 67 seconds per page to read the past nine state budgets, but last year received only 26 seconds per page.
By Patrick Andriesen
What to expect with 3 more years of Stacy Davis Gates leading Chicago Teachers Union
What to expect with 3 more years of Stacy Davis Gates leading Chicago Teachers Union
Stacy Davis Gates and her slate of progressive Chicago Teachers Union leaders won reelection on May 16. Illinoisans can expect the union to pursue more money, more power and more radical policies during her continued tenure as union president.
By Mailee Smith
Watch out: Illinois lawmakers may still spike pensions this session
Watch out: Illinois lawmakers may still spike pensions this session
Illinois lawmakers could still pass expensive changes to newer state worker pensions using a “gut and replace” maneuver. The proposal would cost taxpayers over $76 billion by 2050.
By LyLena Estabine
‘Homeschool Act’ stalls on Illinois House floor after fierce opposition
‘Homeschool Act’ stalls on Illinois House floor after fierce opposition
Tens of thousands of homeschool and private school families and other Illinoisans have filed opposition to House Bill 2827 – dubbed the ‘Homeschool Act.’ The bill is stalled on the House floor and poised for defeat.
By Hannah Schmid
Federal school choice program included in U.S. House budget reconciliation bill
Federal school choice program included in U.S. House budget reconciliation bill
A federal bill is cause for hope for 15,000 low-income Illinois students who lost their private school scholarships in 2023. That’s when teachers unions got state lawmakers to kill the Invest in Kids program.
By Hannah Schmid
Melony Armstrong
Melony Armstrong
“A bill like this also meets a huge need economically. I have taught so many African-American women who were able to take this craft of hair braiding and make an honest living for themselves and for their families."
Illinois payroll tax would kill jobs, reduce wages
Illinois payroll tax would kill jobs, reduce wages
Illinois state lawmakers are considering a statewide payroll tax that would raise business costs, reduce wages and kill jobs. Workers are already taxed on their income, meaning this would tax their wages twice.
By Bryce Hill