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Monday, December 23, 2024

Rauner calls for political reform, referendums on fair maps, term limits

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Illinois Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner speaking during a Chamber of Commerce gathering

Illinois Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner speaking during a Chamber of Commerce gathering

Since the state Supreme Court ruled voter referendums can't be used to place measures on the ballot, Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner has called for state lawmakers to take action to restore redistricting to the November ballot and to also put term limits up for a vote.

"Our system of government is broken," Rauner said. "Two-thirds of our general elections don't have opponents. We've got to change the system."


Illinois Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner speaking during a Chamber of Commerce gathering.

Rauner issued that call for action to the General Assembly. His remarks were part of a renewed push to change how political boundaries are drawn in Illinois.

"Our system has been run by a broken powerful political machine in Chicago that looks out for itself, not for the people of Illinois and certainly not for the people of Southern Illinois," Rauner said. "We've got to get the power away from that machine. And we can do it with political reforms, fair maps and term limits."

Rauner's comments before the Chamber of Commerce gathering in Marion County came shortly after Illinois Supreme Court justices split along party lines and issued a decision to keep redistricting off the November ballot, saying the ballot measure was unconstitutional. The Independent Map Amendment referendum would have asked voters whether the state constitution should be amended and the House and Senate districts be redrawn.

The ballot measure was similar to the 2014 Illinois Independent Redistricting Amendment, known as "Yes for Independent Maps," that didn't reach that year's November ballot after a Cook County judge likewise ruled it was unconstitutional.

The high court's Democrat justices affirmed a Cook County judge's ruling that the proposal referendum did not fit into a narrow legal window for a petition-driven initiative aimed at changing the state's Constitution. Republican justices dissented and filed their own opinions, but the 4-3 ruling stands.

"They said it can't go on the ballot if it's done by voter referendum," Rauner said. "It can only be put on by the General Assembly putting it on the ballot for a vote. So I'm calling on all the members of the General Assembly. Do the right thing, represent the people of Illinois, vote to put fair maps, redistricting reform, on the ballot so that the people of Illinois — all of you — can decide yourselves whether we should have maps for the elections that are not partisan, so we can have competitive general elections."

Rauner also referred to a visit to Illinois Feb. 10 by President and former state Sen. Barack Obama, when the President addressed the General Assembly and said the time had come for redistricting reform. That, Rauner said, proves there is bipartisan support for redistricting reform in Illinois.

"Even President Obama supports fair maps," Rauner said. "He came to Illinois to say we should have redistricting reform. Democrats want it, Republicans want it, the General Assembly should put it on the ballot."

Rauner also called for the same thing to be done for term limits, which he added also has notable bipartisan support in the state. "Overwhelmingly, Democrats and Republicans support term limits," Rauner said. "The people of Illinois want term limits. The only way that the court says it can be done is if the General Assembly puts it on the ballot. Let's get the General Assembly to put it on the ballot."

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