I've been talking about this in the run up to Tuesday's election. As America considers who will be the next POTUS - a still unresolved conclusion as of now although other states have been called since last nite - here in Illinois voters consider an amendment to the 1970 constitution.
Well to install to our state constitution a so-called fair tax or a graduated-income tax failed to pass. The last I checked the numbers it was winning in the city of Chicago who must love making the rich pay their fair share. So I suppose the rest of Illinois should thank their lucky stars that Chicago itself didn't determine the results.
To be honest I'm confused by this. The tally is clear however, how its supposed to get passed isn't:Pritzker’s graduated income tax campaign concedes defeat after huge loss https://t.co/WUNVuEGLMV
— Rich Miller (@capitolfax) November 4, 2020
Incomplete election results showed 55% of Illinoisans voting against the amendment, and 45% voting in favor with 97.6% of precincts reporting. State election officials said Tuesday there could be as many as 400,000 outstanding mail-in ballots.
The amendment needed a “yes” vote from a majority of all people voting in Tuesday’s election or 60% of people who specifically voted on the amendment.
This is what we'd see on our ballots yesterday is it 60% of all voters to vote on this amendment for it to pass or does it have to pass with 60% of the vote? Well it's clear a majority didn't vote in favor, and guess what now the state has to get to work on their revenues.
This was Gov. Pritzker's issue this is what he campaigned on when he ran for Governor in 2018, he has to look at plan B. It should be no surprised tax hikes and spending cuts.
It's been a few years since I heard Republicans are going to hurt our public schools. Obviously that's one entitlement that's not going away, however, the issues of the schools goes beyond the fiscal issues.Pritzker: “There will be cuts and they will be painful” https://t.co/EPBHUlreGv
— Rich Miller (@capitolfax) November 4, 2020
I also want to add that I was somewhat following the race for Cook County State's Attorney. I wasn't too disappointed in the result, I had just to be a realist Kim Foxx held on against a relatively strong challenge from a former Cook County Judge Republican candidate Pat O'Brien. There was another countywide race and that was for the clerk of the circuit court the Democrat was running away with it and Foxx as the incumbent didn't get away so easy.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments are now moderated because one random commenter chose to get comment happy. What doesn't get published is up to my discretion. Of course moderating policy is subject to change. Thanks!