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Careful what you wish for

Posted in:

* Daily Herald

Rep. Terra Costa-Howard said her understanding is that a group of Democrats will put forward suggested rules.

“In terms of (power) coming back to members I think that is going to be a discussion,” said the Democrat from Glen Ellyn.

A major change backed by suburban lawmakers from both sides of the aisle would ensure that certain bills make it to the House floor, especially if those bills carry bipartisan support.

“If a bill has a certain number of sponsors, that bill should get a vote. We could set some threshold,” said Rep. Thomas Morrison, a Republican from Palatine. “Maybe 10 sponsors or a certain number of bipartisan sponsors and those should be at least given a chance to get a committee hearing.”

Ten sponsors and they get a committee hearing? Yeah, that won’t clog things up at all.

…Adding… Walker in comments…

With unlimited bills allowed to be filed (there are 5000+ now), and as few as 10 sponsors required to move a bill to committee vote and the floor, a small minority could bring the legislature to an effective halt for a year with minor bills and amendments.

We need a very controlled release of pressure, with a system with well-designed valves.

He knows whereof he speaks.

posted by Rich Miller
Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 3:23 pm

Comments

  1. An opening for the eastern bloc separation

    Comment by Rabid Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 3:32 pm

  2. the “headline” says it all..

    Comment by NotRich Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 3:33 pm

  3. I don’t think the House Republicans have enough actual ideas to fill out a Committee hearing docket.

    Comment by Ok Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 3:33 pm

  4. Give the power back to a very, very diverse caucus. These groups are rarely in agreement on anything and are willing to fight to the end to get their individual causes passed. Hopefully the legislature enjoys gridlock and overtime sessions.

    Comment by Frumpy White Guy Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 3:35 pm

  5. Let’s start the auction off, now will you go 10 sponsors, can I get, 25, y’abletabid, yep, now 50 sponsors

    Comment by Kayak Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 3:41 pm

  6. Clog things up? LOL. The rank and file House members don’t do anything at all on most scheduled days. Most committees meet sparingly.

    Giving the public their day in court with a committee hearing isn’t much of an imposition. The rushed status at the end of session is totally manufactured. Aided and abetted by the ridiculous lack of activity earlier in the Spring.

    Comment by Astonished Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 3:48 pm

  7. Politicians that parade around catchy slogans or simple solutions to complex issues are typically clueless on the subject at hand.

    Comment by 1st Ward Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 3:49 pm

  8. New expanded rules are long overdue. The iron fist has been ousted. Bring the mushrooms out into the light. Let them find out what it’s like to really participate. This will be good for democratic representative government. We might see some bi-partisanship, unexpectedly.

    Comment by Jo Jo Monkeyboy Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 4:01 pm

  9. If Morrison wanted his bills to be heard, all he had to do was ask the committee chairperson.

    Comment by Precinct Captain Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 4:03 pm

  10. If everyone’s bills were guaranteed a public hearing, there would be a lot fewer bills filed.

    Comment by Third Reading Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 4:09 pm

  11. With unlimited bills allowed to be filed (there are 5000+ now), and as few as 10 sponsors required to move a bill to committee vote and the floor, a small minority could bring the legislature to an effective halt for a year with minor bills and amendments.
    We need a very controlled release of pressure, with a system with well-designed valves..

    Comment by walker Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 4:09 pm

  12. = If Morrison wanted his bills to be heard, all he had to do was ask the committee chairperson.=

    Seriously? Perhaps you missed how the House actually operated over the past 20 years at least.

    This comment is stunningly ill informed.

    Comment by Astonished Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 4:20 pm

  13. ===This comment is stunningly ill informed===

    Constituent bills almost always get heard. But if you propose something that is overwhelmingly opposed by the majority, what do you expect to happen?

    Comment by Rich Miller Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 4:23 pm

  14. -With unlimited bills allowed to be filed (there are 5000+ now)-

    What if this was raised to say… 30 sponsors ? 30 is the magic number in statistics for minimal useful data set.

    Comment by Thinking Moderate Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 4:29 pm

  15. **The rank and file House members don’t do anything at all on most scheduled days. Most committees meet sparingly.**

    Have you been in Springfield on a session day?

    Comment by SaulGoodman Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 4:36 pm

  16. The Illinois Legislature is the governing body of 12 million people.

    They do not exist to produce a debate or vote on every bill, they exist to govern. There are lots of reasons bills die in committee, but being a good idea with board support isn’t one of them.

    Comment by Candy Dogood Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 5:11 pm

  17. === We need a very controlled release of pressure, with a system with well-designed valves.===

    It’s always good to read - walker - telling it as it is.

    Something-Something… the asylum.

    Comment by Oswego Willy Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 5:11 pm

  18. 10 is a low number but you will likely see people less likely to sponsor bills.

    Many lawmakers sponsor bills because they know the issue play wells in the district and know the bill won’t move.

    Lawmakers would actually have to back things up more if a sponsorship could result in the bill moving.

    Comment by twowaystreet Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 5:35 pm

  19. 5,000, most of which are shell bills that aren’t going anywhere.

    Comment by Simply Sayin' Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 6:31 pm

  20. People who oppose government by who they consider to desire to govern against their interests will do anything to gum up the works. That’s their real goal, rather than their stated goal of allowing bills to be voted on the floor.

    Comment by PublicServant Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 6:46 pm

  21. Let’s see how many folks sponsor property tax freeze when it could actually make the floor and hurt their local school districts and municipalities. It’s an easy sponsorship when the bill won’t move.I’m sure a big group will still support but when services get cut at schools, like football and band, now the school board can legitimately make it the legislators fault.

    Comment by Frank talks Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 8:42 pm

  22. I always liked Rep. Walker. He calls it like he sees it

    Comment by Commisar Gritty Monday, Jan 25, 21 @ 10:15 pm

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