DISQUS

CapitolFax.com: Question of the day

  • Bo · 4 years ago
    To me, it is all about leverage. Both parties can use it to some degree. It seems the animosity can develop from one single issue and the snowball effect is one party doing what they can derail a timely session. Finger pointing ensues, etc...you know the rest. To the question, I believe that session WILL go overtime. How much over (is that part of the question)? End of June. I do not believe they will get into the headache of passing bills to appropriate money for a month at a time (FY06 begins July 1). There are some very contentious issues this session (gambling expansion, gun control, and of course the budget and who gets what piece of the pie). And with elections around the corner, look for each party to try and target seats/Reps' votes on particular issues.


    Happy St. Pats Day!
  • PrairieStateDem · 4 years ago
    It depends on who is the Blago "Enemey of the Week".


    Maybe him and Tusk are thinking up a new one, someone who cant fight back cause thats the kind they like the most.



    So be it the Board of Ed, the Legislature or perhaps kindly ederly war widows we will have an overtime session.





    Just think of all the overtime money Rod will blow this year, and how much good it could do rather than being wasted.



    Rod claims to be such a historian maybe he has heard the phrase "You cant fool all the people all the time."



    Illinoisans will rember in November ( Hopefully in March too)
  • Tessa · 4 years ago
    Overtime, again this year. No doubt in my mind. Jones and Madigan don't agree on how to address it and what the priorities are, and this year, the legislature really hasn't even started talking budget. Late June at best.


    I'd like to think something magical will happen, but we're in Illinois and we have no pixie dust to spread around Springpatch.
  • Anonymous · 4 years ago
    Aug. unless chicago get its casino sooner. Bag-O-Cash-avich filled the gaming board today, that should tell us something.
  • Anonymous · 4 years ago
    there is no way they finish on time. overtime brings the republicans in and everything goes to hell. you'd think that the repubs would be the ones supporting the pension reform because its whats best for the state. however, they know that there is a high percentage of state employees in their districts and they fear their voter backlash. they need a copy of profiles in courage.
  • Anonymous · 4 years ago
    At some point in May, the Gov, Speaker, and Senate Prez will have to decide if they want the Republicans involved in the budget deal. If they decide they don't, they'll come to the best accommodation of each other they can in two weeks and ram something through. I'd give that scenario at least a 25% chance of occurring. A couple of Republicans are secretly praying for that to happen so that they don't have to put any votes on the final deal, which is likely to be ugly no matter how you slice it.