-
Website
http://capitolfax.com/ -
Original page
http://capitolfax.com/2009/05/05/question-of-the-day-732/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
wordslinger
96 comments · 42 points
-
Rich Miller
147 comments · 56 points
-
LoopLady
16 comments · 6 points
-
theoriginallynns
16 comments · 2 points
-
dupage dan
28 comments · 2 points
-
-
Popular Threads
Yes re the $ limits. That might actually make a difference. If the speaker can't make extra money s/he may think twice about everyone else's perks.
Imagine if you went to the hospital, an accountant, lawyer, building contractor or whomever, and they said we fire anyone with 10 years of experience. Thus guarnateeing the experience and knowledge of whoever you hire is kept at a minimium.
Do you want surgery perfomred by the most experienced or inexperienced: how about your house? representing you in an audit? in a court room?
I want the most capable person I can get, and that usually equates to experience. I wonder how many of the people on the comission who made this recomendation had been in their current profession less then 10 years and planned to leave just as they were hitting their stride.
I want an experienced politican who knows the ropes and the system.
Why is this committee, which was formed in the wake of RRB's scandals, so obsessed with Madigan and Cullerton? It all seems like a personal gripe with Collins.
A big part of me favors term limits for all offices, but I do understand the argument that it’s intellectually undemocratic..."if the voters want to re-elect someone, they should be able to, blah blah." But citizens don’t elect the legislative leaders, who have vastly disproportionate power relative to the indirectly ‘democratic’ way that they are chosen.
To “Ghost’s†point about long-tenured professionals being better...The legislature isn’t (or, at least shouldn’t) be a “profession.†Indeed, the idea of a ‘professional ruling class’ is in direct conflict with the spirit of our nation’s founding (government by, for and of "the people," - as the man on our license plates once said - not government by professional legislators). Unfortunately, it IS what we have had for all practical purposes on both a state and federal level for at least the past 100-150 years....and how well has that worked out for us all??? Does anyone out there think that we have an effective, efficience and response government in either Springfield or Washington??
It honestly blows me away that on the one hand, you have people arguing that we need our legislators to be more “professional†and removed from the realities of common life, and on the other you have the President arguing that we need judges who have “empathy.†Completely backwards! The Founders must be spinning in their graves…
Move along.
The leaders should also not be able to be the State Chairman of their party and be able to dole out monies for other elections. You have the potential for a leader creating a dynasty of General Assembly members who are forever beholden to the leader for their jobs. At that point you no longer have a democracy. When thinking of the impact of the proposed reforms you have to think worst case scenerio and not what has been true in the past. Blago's rule was a prime example.
So it is either term limits, recall, or statewide elections for leadership positions, and an end to leadership controlling campaign money for other elections, if you truly want a representitive form of government.
Let's make a deal: give up gerrymandering and no term limits on leaders.
The problem with the commission's case for GA reform is they're not selling it; to do that, you have to put some flesh and bone on the story.
Unless I've missed it, they've yet to give examples and name names of how present GA leaders have abused power to the detriment of the public. It's all very civics class; give it a real-world, present-day context.
For example, when you recall Blago's high-jinks and the incredible amount of money he raised, you provide context to make the case for limits on money.
On that note, to the bonus question: Are there recent examples of how today's leaders outside jobs have harmed the public interest? If so, let's hear them.
Why single out leaders? This is a solution in search of a problem.
I am just very suspicious of Pat Quinn's self serving commission recommendations on the eve of his impending race against the Speaker's daughter.
Eliminating outside income for legislative leaders will only encourage more "creative" means of padding their wallets (think Patti Blagoof realtor).
"legislative leader term limits…" Goes back to my 'anbody but an incumbent' theme. Tired of the strangle-holds the 'leaders' have.
"... bar outside income for the Senate President and House Speaker." Sure; if they are the 'leaders', doing work for the citizens & taxpayers of IL is a full time job. Do it.
If we are talking about limiting campaign contributions from contractors who do business with the State would it also not follow that a member of the GA could not be employed by such an entity? How do you draw the line between campaign contribution and pay for consultant work? And how does the general public really find out about connections between legislators and companies that do business with the State? I would really like to know what the connection was between Emil Jones and People's Energy and would really like to know why all payments for my electric bills for People's Energy have been going to the University of Chicago for the last several years. I also still pay a minor fee to Ameren who actually supplies the power.
Legislators are not state employees. I really can't stand this silly canard. They are elected officials.
Neither the House Speaker nor the Senate President was, unless I am mistaken, arrested on December 9, 2008 or convicted on April 17, 2006. If the gubernatorial reform commission wants to term limit, term limit where state ethic problems apparently lie--the governor's office.
He was a top dog for 16 years. Not far above the term limit.
NO to complete limits on outside income. As a simple matter of equity, outside income should be treated no differently for leadership than other legislators.
Put it another way; at some point, to get some traction, they're going to have to say "We think MJM is an example of why we need term limits for leaders, and here are our reasons for saying that." Context.
these folks keep thinking that how you stripe the field can determine whether people will play by the rules during the game. Silly.
I don't understand how having a rotating Speaker with someone behind the throne holding the real power is a reform.
I'm also skeptical that the public can be sold on term limits for the Speaker and Prez of the Senate, but not for others. But maybe the public isn't the audience for this, maybe the audience is the legislators.
I guess I can go along with weakening the Speaker and Prez of the Senate vis-a-vis members of their chambers. But I think the governor (generically, not Quinn specifically) is always going to want to weaken the legislative leaders because s/he knows that weaker legislative leaders mean a stronger governor.
Even before Bush I kinda favored a strong legislature and a weak executive. Experiencing Bush has made me feel more that way.
I'm in favor of reform, but the governor pushing a reform measure that is pretty weak in general reform terms, but shifts power from legislature to governor.
I'm inclined to oppose.
And the outside income ban.... If we're going to have "part-time" legislators then they get outside income. Much of this outside income is unseemly. But the reform that needs to be enacted is one that stops them from getting money connected to their public duties and status as politicians (consulting for local gov't, tax appeals, etc.)
What if a legislator had a legit private sector job? Do we expect him/her to give it up b/c s/he's a candidate for speaker? "Sorry, the reformers say you can't take your vegetables to the market."
Sometimes how the field is striped matters. Leadership limits strike at the heart of control over legislation. When a leader changes the rules to preserve their power post-leadership, they remain in control as a #2 party elder, or they use the purse strings of party campaign coffers to control legislation (ignoring possible legal implications), then we'll talk.
Until then, recognize that some of these stripes make sense, and please use your experience to further the conversation.
COPN
But before term limits then eliminate pensions and other benefits and minimize compensation to a reasonable amont.
I do like limits on outside employment. This would help eliminate some possibility for conflicts of interest. Madigan, Cullerton and Cross are all attorneys whose firms court and support business with entities who seek access to those with legislative power.
It always seems that turnover means a sort of new day for wherever it's occurring, and I think that's something that could be good to have happening regularly...not just when somebody decides to retire from public office and leaves a vacancy. The expertise can still be there, heading committees, leading on the floor, etc. Sure it would be different, but from what I've seen the last fifteen years, different can't really be any worse, and it can certainly be better.
The limits on outside income seems silly to me. I thought this was supposed to still be a citizen legislature. Maybe lower the salaries for committee leadership spots all the way up all leadership positions so the top ones are not such highly-paid positions. I like the idea of legislators needed outside income to live comfortably.
I don't think anyone believes these reforms are going to solve all the state's problems, and those using that as an excuse to oppose them are either short on good reasons to say no or are just being disingenuous to avoid saying they support the status quo. Are they THE answer? Of course not - not alone. Might they help? They might. We're in such a mess in this state, I'm will to try. Couple that with new mapping, and I'd be interested to see where the state is in fifteen years.
Only the truly naive/inexperienced (aka Quinn Commission) do not recognize this immediately.
Term limits for all, not just for leadership positions.. and for all elected office under the IL Constitution---I kinda like the idea of 10 years in any one office and 14 years lifetime limitation, maybe 12 and 16, something like that.
Outside income--
should apply to all. Used to argue legislator was just a part-time job, but in the last 20 years or so they've goosed their pay and perks to where it pays better than most of them could get in a full-time "real" world job. Limit outside earned income to something like 50% of legislative pay. The trick, as per previous commenter, is to deal with spouses, etc. and I don't have an easy answer for that.
the real answer, of course, is govt is too big and has its fingers in too many pies, so of course ego and corruption are there. That isn't about to change, so all of this is just feeble palliatives at best
I would only support barring outside income for the state legislature's presiding officers only if they were made full-time employees of the state.
This proposal is really bad, in that it attempts to limit the terms of the leaders but not the Governor. With term limits, power is shifted towards the executive branch under any scenario. In this one, even more power could go to a long serving Governor who would then be able to roll over newly elected legislative leaders. Imagine a Jim Thompson, with as much power as he had, without a Madigan or Rock. May as well disband the legislature.
Also a bad idea to limit outside income. In that case, only millionaires (like say Garrett or Steans) could afford to be leaders.
These are among the worst ideas from the DEFORM COMMISSION.
We hear complaints that voters are too stupid to choose correctly, and now we don't think the legislators are capable of voting correctly for their leadership?
Stop the second guessing. No to term limits.
End gerrymandering.
The best term limiter is a ballot box. It isn't perfect, but it's better than the alternatives.
No on the outside income idea. probably unconstitutional, and definitely a solution in search of a problem. Not that Madigan, Cullerton, or Quinn object to legislation targeting one person.
Finally, hat tip to Schnorf for this great quote:
"A big problem with reformers is when their reforms don’t work they think its because they haven’t reformed enough yet." Amen, brother.