Springfield, Ill. – Governor JB Pritzker delivered the State of the State address on Wednesday, showcasing how Illinois is improving financial stability to historic bipartisan accomplishments. Working with members of both parties, Governor passed a balanced budget on time, launched a historic capital plan to transform infrastructure throughout the state and made record investments in education. Using that progress as a blueprint, the Governor emphasized that the state can continue to address our challenges when we work together.
The Governor stressed that the state’s historic progress must not be hampered by corruption and self-dealing and urged the General Assembly to pass comprehensive ethics reform, including a ban on lawmakers lobbying any unit of government, more disclosure of conflicts of interest with stiff penalties for withholding information, and a revolving door prohibition for lawmakers.
“We have to work together to confront a scourge that has been plaguing our political system for far too long,” said Gov. JB Pritzker. “We must root out the purveyors of greed and corruption — in both parties — whose presence infects the bloodstream of government. It’s no longer enough to sit idle while under-the-table deals, extortion, or bribery persist. Protecting that culture or tolerating it is no longer acceptable. We must take urgent action to restore the public’s trust in our government. That’s why we need to pass real, lasting ethics reform this legislative session.”
The Governor also looked forward, outlining an agenda that prioritizes fiscal stability while rebuilding a hollowed-out state government to provide key services.
“Bit by bit, inch by inch, I am working hard to reverse the harm that has been done to people and communities that have been left behind over many generations by government policies and elected officials who were content to simply ignore them,” said Gov. JB Pritzker. “I remind myself every day that I have obligations not just to the current people of Illinois, but to the many people who preceded us who were discriminated against, harmed, treated as lesser, and forgotten – lasting damage that echoes through too many communities today. We are obligated to make our future more equitable and fair.”
Following the State of the State Address, State Representative Lindsay Parkhurst (R-Kankakee) issued the following statement:
“As Illinois residents and businesses continue to flee our state, we need true reform now more than ever. Our state’s population is at its lowest—and will continue to decrease if we don’t produce serious change. This means across the board reform efforts and we must start with ethics. The dark cloud of a massive federal investigation hovering over our state government impedes our progress, disenfranchises our residents, and inhibits our ability to make real change. This is a new legislative year. Let’s start it off on the right foot with a new path by adopting common sense reforms to root out the corruption that has too long permeated our state and undermined our residents.”
You can read the full State
of the State address below as prepared for delivery:
Speaker Madigan, President Harmon, Leader
Durkin, Leader Brady, Lieutenant Governor Stratton, my fellow constitutional
officers, members of the General Assembly, distinguished guests and people of
Illinois –
I want to begin by thanking the First Lady of
Illinois, my wife, MK – With quiet strength and with little fanfare, you’ve
worked hard over the last year to make this state more inclusive and welcoming
to all, from DuQuoin to Springfield to Chicago, caring about and advocating for
some of our state’s most vulnerable people. I want to say thank you for making
some important aspects of Illinois shine once again.
To now former Senate President John Cullerton:
I want to express my heartfelt gratitude for your many years of service to our
state. You have always fought for your constituents and for all the
people of Illinois with a clear devotion, with a vision to advance this state
as a national leader in healthcare, education and civil rights, and with a
willingness to listen and seek compromise at just the right moments.
John, you’ve brought kindness and humor in even the toughest days in the
General Assembly, and everyone on both sides of the aisle in this chamber will
miss you as you embark on a new chapter of your life with your beloved wife
Pam, who has made so many personal sacrifices over the last 41 years, as many
unsung heroic spouses do. On behalf of a grateful state, we thank you both.
And in turn, I look forward to working with our
new Senate President, a friend and ally for more than a quarter century and a
long-time champion of the Fair Tax amendment, Don Harmon.
My friends, it has been a little over a year
since I was inaugurated Governor. I have a real abiding love for the work I do
every day… and a deep respect for how fundamentally humbling it is to serve in
this office.
Illinois is a state with a grand history of
profound impact on our nation and our world. We’ve sent four transformative
Presidents to the White House. We were the first state to ratify two of the
most important amendments to the U.S. Constitution, one abolishing slavery and
another granting women the right to vote. The first cell phone was invented
here. So was the first television remote control and the first widely used
internet browser.
What all these things have in common is that
they were the product of the talented and forward-thinking people of our state.
Illinois is great because our people are great.
That’s why it’s been important to me as
governor to listen – truly to hear people from across our state who come with
passion and perspective that’s different than my own. Keeping an open door
policy means that I’ve been rewarded with a wealth of constructive feedback,
advice and help from Democrats and Republicans alike – an indication that
perhaps, here in Illinois, we are not as divided in our values and goals as
some would have you believe.
Our state has challenges. We inherited a mess
that was years in the making, and it had bipartisan roots. On day one it was
clear to me that we had a government infrastructure that had withered from
neglect and a lack of public trust. At times, it seemed like even the most
basic things – like getting a government-issued iPad to work – were hard to do.
But one thing I know in life is that if you
want to make profound change in a broken system, you have to do the next good
thing that needs to get done. Big problems become big problems when you let
small problems sit.
Let me share one small example: The story of
the Thompson Center flags.
Sometime last summer, a watchful Twitter
citizen noticed that the flags flying outside the state government building in
Chicago, the James R. Thompson Center, were hanging a bit haphazardly from
their rods, dangling by their last threads.
I have to admit, I didn’t notice it. In fact no
one among the 2,000 people working there seemed to notice it – maybe because
you could spend all day noticing things dangling by their last threads in the
Thompson Center if you tried.
So we did a little research and found that the
flags used to be serviced by a small, fourth generation family-owned business
in Chicago that has tended Illinois’ flags for a century’s worth of parades, state
visits, and sports championships.
But during the last few years – you guessed it
– the flag company stopped getting paid. Like so many other small businesses in
Illinois that were caught up in the budget impasse, this company did their
best, but the Thompson Center flags ended up falling into disrepair.
Once the dangling flags were brought to my
attention, we contacted the company and heard their story. We immediately
paid them what they were owed, and the next weekend they came with a huge ladder
truck and fixed it so our state’s flags flew straight once again.
As it turns out, fixing those flags made people
really happy. In fact it’s the most pleased Twitter has ever been with me. I
think it’s because this simple story about a flag at the Thompson Center is a
metaphor for where state government has been – and where it’s going. And it
reminded me that – we have a choice about how we tell our story. We could spend
our time reliving every past failure, every bygone insult and fight – or we could
fix things and be ardent voices on behalf of an agenda of opportunity in the
years ahead. The last year has shown what we can do when we roll up our sleeves
and work together to restore stability to our state.
Those who would shout doom and gloom might be
loud – using social media bots and paid hacks to advance their false notions –
but they are not many. You see, we’re wresting the public conversation in
Illinois back from people concerned with one thing and one thing only —
predicting total disaster, spending hundreds of millions of dollars promoting
it, and then doing everything in their power to make it happen.
I’m here to tell the carnival barkers, the
doomsayers, the paid professional critics – the State of our State is growing
stronger each day.
Don’t believe me? Consider these facts…
Today the Illinois economy supports 6.2 million
jobs. This is the most jobs on record for our state, and we now have the
lowest unemployment rate in history. Last year, for the first time in nearly 20
years, every major region in our state was growing simultaneously – and even
more remarkably, communities in southern Illinois like Carbondale have led that
growth. Over the past year, Illinois has reduced its unemployment rate more
than ALL of the top twenty most populated states in the nation — and more than
our Midwestern peers.
237 Illinois businesses from all over the state
made Inc Magazine’s List of Fastest Growing Businesses in the Nation, including
companies in Columbia and Rock Island, St. Charles and O’Fallon, Taylorville
and Chicago.
Student applications to Illinois’ public
universities increased last fall for the first time in many years. Illinois is
the second-largest producer of computer science degrees in the nation, accounting
for nearly 10 percent of all computer science degrees awarded in the entire
United States.
Our great state has an awful lot that’s going
right.
And just look at what a difference a year can
make.
We passed a bipartisan, truly balanced budget
on time, with renewed investments in job creation, cradle to career education,
and physical and mental healthcare. Even the credit rating agencies and
financial analysts described a “distinct improvement” in our fiscal stability,
and investors took notice and lowered our state’s borrowing rate.
A balanced budget is an important
accomplishment, but it’s more than just about fiscal discipline. It’s a moral
document that reflects our values as a state.
Thirteen years ago, Bonnie Brackett and her
family opened the doors on a new family business: Heartland Kids Early Learning
Center in Marion, Illinois. Over the years, hundreds of Williamson County’s
babies and toddlers have gone through her program, which is one of the
top-ranked in the state.
But as with hundreds of childcare providers
across Illinois and more than ten thousand parents, the budget crisis became
Bonnie’s crisis and disrupted families across the area. At one point, Bonnie’s
staff dropped to a low of 14 teachers from a high of 21.
Bonnie, one of only three childcare centers in
Marion, almost had to close her doors.
But this year, with the increase in state
funding for childcare that we announced in December, Bonnie is not only able to
stay in business but has a plan for teacher training, rebuilding enrollment,
classroom improvements, and even beginning the process of hiring more staff.
Now, thanks to our bipartisan investments, dozens more parents in Marion can go
to work, and Bonnie can get back to the business that matters most to her:
caring for the children of Southern Illinois.
Bonnie Brackett is here today, and we want to
thank her for all she does for her community, for our kids, and for our state.
For the first time in a decade, we passed a
bipartisan infrastructure bill. Rebuild Illinois will create and support
500,000 jobs in the state as we fix our aging and crumbling roads and bridges,
bring broadband to parts of the state that are internet deserts, as well as
modernize our hospitals, our community centers, our state police facilities,
our universities and colleges – all of the things that keep us going and
growing.
Over the last several months I’ve had the
pleasure of attending many local events celebrating the jobs and projects that
Rebuild Illinois is bringing to our communities. Most times those events are
attended by legislators and mayors and local officials of both political
parties, and it’s clear that when we stand together in front of the public and
talk about what we are doing together to literally rebuild bridges and roads
and childcare centers and schools – we restore a little bit of the public’s
trust that has been lost in government institutions at all levels in the past
few decades.
Rebuild Illinois is about more than just roads,
bridges and universities; it’s about jobs: middle class careers with wages and
benefits, the kind of jobs that help you raise a family. And together, we did
more to make these jobs more inclusive and diverse, by investing in the
Illinois Works program to recruit new construction apprentices and set strong
goals for our public works projects to include diverse employees.
With me today is Reggie Marizetts Junior, a
first-year apprentice with Laborers’ Local 165 in Peoria. Reggie fell in love
with hands-on work early in his life, and it’s his apprenticeship where he is
learning all the skills to succeed not just now, but for decades to come.
Reggie intends to become a full-time journeyman and later to pursue his
lifelong dream: opening a father-son construction company with his dad. Reggie,
please stand so we can cheer for your hard work and your bright future.
Over the next six years, in addition to our
expansion of apprenticeships, Rebuild Illinois will transform our
infrastructure – even as we create a lot more opportunities for Reggie and
thousands of young people just like him, with steady work that will help make
sure that our economy works for everyone.
Last year we made enormous strides toward
equality and opportunity when Democrats and Republicans came together to legalize
adult-use cannabis with the most equity-centric legislation in the nation which
will result in 63,000 new jobs, and new opportunities for entrepreneurs,
especially those from communities that have been left behind. It gives us a
chance to collect tax revenue from the residents of Wisconsin, Missouri, Iowa
and Indiana, and most importantly, we’re giving a second chance to hundreds of
thousands of people who had a low level cannabis conviction or arrest on their
record.
The bipartisan License to Work Act that I
signed two weeks ago ended the practice of revoking driver’s licenses for
unpaid parking tickets and fines – because often the only way someone has to
pay their parking ticket is if they can travel to work. We restored driving
privileges to more than 50,000 people.
When public policy makes it a crime to be poor,
it ends up costing us all. The situation you may be born into, the
struggles you may be born with — even the struggles you never expected to be
your own — should not be allowed to write your entire future.
We’ve also begun the long work of tackling our
pension problems. In addition to expanding our state pension buyout
program, in the fall veto session we accomplished something that eluded
governors and General Assemblies for almost 75 years by consolidating 650
downstate and suburban first responder pension systems – which will alleviate
local property tax burdens and strengthen the funds that offer a decent
retirement to our police and firefighters.
Maybe more significantly – the bill we passed
was supported by both a leading progressive Representative, Will Guzzardi, AND
an outspoken conservative Senator, Dan McConchie.
All I can say is, anything is possible.
We did big things to help people. Real
people who live and work here every day. We raised the minimum wage,
advanced equal pay for women and minorities, provided millions of Illinoisans
relief from high interest on consumer debt, and expanded health care to tens of
thousands more people across the state.
We are reaffirming that our most important
commitments are to our children and their education. Mark my words, Illinois
will be the best state in the nation to raise a young family. Today,
20,000 more kids are getting childcare, and thousands more are going to preschool.
To address our state’s shortage of teachers, we raised the minimum teacher
salary so we can retain educators in Illinois, and we made it more attractive
for out-of-state teachers to move here. We made it easier for high school
graduates to get a skilled wage by expanding vocational training and career and
technical education for the first time in a decade. And after years of decline,
we are turning around university student enrollment by making college more
affordable, expanding scholarships to an additional 10,000 college-bound
students – and this fall, more than half of the families in our state will be
eligible for free tuition at the University of Illinois.
We made healthcare more available – and more
affordable.
Working with Senator Andy Manar, we capped
out-of-pocket insulin costs at $100 for a 30-day supply so that no one in
Illinois has to decide between buying food and paying for the medicine they
need to stay alive.
We expanded insurance coverage for mammograms
and reproductive health. And we protected people who need treatment for
life-threatening allergic reactions.
Overall, the number of opioid related deaths
are declining.
We diminished dependence on opioids by
reforming the medical cannabis program to cover chronic pain conditions, and
we’re focused on using evidence-based practices to reduce racial disparities as
we continue to battle the opioid crisis.
In the face of the resurgences of measles,
mumps and other diseases, we restored federal funding of our state immunization
program — which was shut down under the previous administration.
We raised the age to buy cigarettes and vaping
products to 21, so we can reduce youth tobacco use.
We stood up for human rights and civil rights
when we put Donald Trump on notice that Illinois will not be complicit in his
shameful and draconian immigration policies.
We opted in — to welcoming refugees to Illinois
– continuing a proud tradition in this state that stretches back to my great
grandparents, welcomed here a century ago after fleeing anti-Semitism in
Europe.
We invested in public safety by expanding the
number of new Illinois State Troopers. And we’re building a new state police
forensics lab so we can solve crimes faster and address the backlog of DNA
testing of rape evidence — because crime victims shouldn’t have to wait for
justice.
We stopped bad-mouthing the state and started
passing laws that make Illinois more attractive for businesses and jobs.
Working across the aisle, we brought tax relief for 300,000 small businesses
through the phase out of the corporate franchise tax. And we laid the
groundwork for new high-paying tech jobs by opening new business incubators, by
incentivizing the building of new data centers, and by investing $100 million
in a University of Illinois and University of Chicago partnership that will
make Illinois the quantum computing capital of the world.
Jobs and businesses are coming to this state
because we are investing in the things that have always made us great: a
skilled workforce, modern infrastructure, great public schools, top research
universities, a robust agricultural sector, and a culture of innovation and
entrepreneurship literally built into the steel frames of our skyscrapers –
themselves a symbol of Illinois’ ambition and belief in the future.
By almost every measure, over the past year
we’ve improved the financial wellbeing, health, education and safety of the
residents of Illinois – and we did it working together.
And now we have to work together to confront a
scourge that has been plaguing our political system for far too long. We must
root out the purveyors of greed and corruption — in both parties — whose
presence infects the bloodstream of government. It’s no longer enough to sit idle
while under-the-table deals, extortion, or bribery persist. Protecting that
culture or tolerating it is no longer acceptable. We must take urgent action to
restore the public’s trust in our government. That’s why we need to pass real,
lasting ethics reform this legislative session.
Honest members of the General Assembly from
both sides of the aisle have some good ideas, and so do I.
It’s time to end the practice of legislators
serving as paid lobbyists. In fact it’s time to end the for-profit influence
peddling among all elected officials at every level of government in Illinois.
Disclosure of conflicts of interest and punishment for breaching them must be
included in any ethics package for us to truly clean up government. Most states
have a revolving door provision for legislators, and it’s time for Illinois to
join them. Elected officials shouldn’t be allowed to retire and immediately
start lobbying their former colleagues. It’s wrong, and it’s got to stop.
There are many more ethics reforms that must be
addressed this spring, and I expect the legislature’s bipartisan ethics
commission to issue its report in the next 8 weeks. Restoring the public’s
trust is of paramount importance. Let’s not let the well-connected and
well-protected work the system while the interests of ordinary citizens are
forgotten. There is too much that needs to be accomplished to lift up all the
people of Illinois.
The overwhelming majority of people involved
with government and public policy and politics here in Illinois truly just want
what is best for this state. From legislators to citizen activists to reporters
– they chisel away at intractable problems and put their shoulders into making
real, lasting institutional change. They don’t get distracted or dejected
– whether they are battling poverty, fighting for increased education funding,
or fixing the unglamorous but essential problems of our state’s IT
infrastructure. Illinois is full of people who love our state and are willing
to work earnestly every day to fight for her.
Which is why we have to be committed to the
hard work of changing another aspect of the political culture in this state
that has too often rewarded a go-along-to-get-along attitude at the expense of
truly ethical conduct.
When I took office a year ago, I hired people
who came from all walks of life, all different backgrounds – who were diverse
in gender, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, geography and life experience
and whose only loyalty is to good ideas and good results. And I took heat
for it from some who had been here a very long time. Many were incredulous that
I wasn’t just automatically hiring the same old faces that get jobs year in and
year out.
A commitment to diversity and inclusion is not
just a talking point for me, and I hope that the past year has proven that. I
have an administration that looks far more like the state we represent than any
that has come before it. I have elevated talented people who have been
overlooked for far too long, and our state is doing better because of it.
Change needs to happen. And much of this
change needs to happen outside of the scope of legislation. It’s about
how we, as public officials, conduct ourselves in private that also
matters. Common sense and basic decency need to prevail in the everyday
interactions that make government work. People need to treat disgusting
suggestions with disgust. The old patronage system needs to die…finally and
completely. The input of women and people of color need to be treated as
essential to decision making – not as some token show of diversity.
Bit by bit, inch by inch, I am working hard to
reverse the harm that has been done to people and communities that have been
left behind over many generations by government policies and elected officials who
were content to simply ignore them. I remind myself every day that I have
obligations not just to the current people of Illinois, but to the many people
who preceded us who were discriminated against, harmed, treated as lesser, and
forgotten – lasting damage that echoes through too many communities today. We
are obligated to make our future more equitable and fair.
I came into this office with the message that I
am committed to doing things differently in my administration. A lot of
folks didn’t believe me a year ago. Now you can see how far we can come in a
year – even when work still remains.
It’s time for us to recommit ourselves to the
hard work of bringing prosperity and opportunity to all communities in Illinois
through a fairer tax system, job creation, education and job training programs,
child care and pre-school, and a focus on building essential tools of success
such as high-speed Internet in all corners of our state.
This spring, working with legislators, we will begin
the long path toward a fairer criminal justice system. That starts with phasing
out cash bail and following many of the recommendations made by the bipartisan
criminal justice reform commission created by my predecessor, most of whose
ideas were never adopted because of the rancor and dysfunction.
Our spring agenda must also address the
pressing issue of adopting new clean energy legislation that reduces carbon
pollution, promotes renewable energy, and accelerates electrification of our
transportation sector. We saw the effects of climate change right here in
Illinois last year with a polar vortex, devastating floods, record lake levels,
and emergency declarations in more than a third of Illinois’ counties.
Urgent action is needed — but let me be clear,
the old ways of negotiating energy legislation are over. It’s time to put
consumers and climate first. I’m not going to sign an energy bill written by
the utility companies.
Property taxes in Illinois are simply too high.
That’s why it’s time to put the best ideas to work from both sides of the
aisle. Local governments continue to max out their levies even when they don’t
need to. There are perverse incentives in state law that encourage that. We can
change the law to support local governments and lower property taxes. And with
nearly 7,000 units of government in Illinois, it’s time to empower local
taxpayers to consolidate or eliminate them. These changes, along with our
landmark pension reform that consolidated police and firefighter pensions, can
make a serious dent in property taxes.
Today in Illinois we are governing with our
heads and our hearts. In a time when cynicism has too often become the rule
rather than the exception, we’re proving that we really can make progress.
We’re showing the rest of the nation what pragmatic progressive leadership
looks like – and putting our state back on the side of working families.
A year ago, I shared a story at my
Inauguration. It was also about flags – about how a couple in Barrington,
Illinois, had their Pride flag stolen from their backyard and replaced with an
American flag.
Bigots wrapping themselves in a veil of
patriotism are an increasingly familiar sight these days, and it’s a dangerous
trend.
But the community fought back. A
neighbor, Kim Filian, upon hearing about the incident, put a Pride flag in her
yard in solidarity. And then suddenly lots of people were asking for
them, and she was giving out Pride flags to everyone in Barrington – they were
popping up in yards all over the neighborhood.
Kim told the news at the time: “Frankly, I’ve
grown weary of this, of all this hate. And I gotta say, it just seemed like
there was one thing that I could do that I had control of.”
I’ve thought a lot about that story this past
year. It reminds me of the fundamental goodness and decency of the people
who live here in Illinois and about how hard they will fight for each other.
It reminds me that we all ought to think a
little like Kim Filian every day – to remember the things we have control of.
So this past June, I asked Secretary of State
Jesse White to fly a Pride flag over the Illinois state capitol for the first
time in our history. After all, we have a choice about how we tell our story,
and I want our Illinois story to be one of hope, inclusion, opportunity and
kindness. I want it to be inspired every day by the fundamental goodness of the
people who live and work here and who struggle so hard for a fair shot.
Those are good ideals to live by. Those are
good ideals to govern by. Let’s all try to remember them in the year
ahead.
Thank you.