It’s Tax Day and Illinois Democrats want to raise our taxes higher

CHICAGO — Tax season always causes worry, headaches and stress for families across our country. Illinois causes more worry than most though. A recent study declared Illinois as the state with the HIGHEST tax rate in the United States. Even though Illinois has the highest tax rate in the U.S., that doesn’t stop Illinois’ tax-and-spend Democrats from wanting to raise them even higher. See for yourself:

It’s doesn’t get any clearer than this:

“Slew of taxes threatens future of Chicago as a finance hub. Trading firms, exchanges want new mayor to curb surging crime”

Bloomberg: Trillion-Dollar Industry Powering Chicago at Risk of Leaving, 9.23.23
Bottom line: Illinois Democrats want to raise our taxes even higher.

WTAS: Democrat Chaos Reigns

CHICAGO — Another week of Democrat chaos reigns as JB Pritzker and Brandon Johnson bicker over too late migrant funds, silence members of their own party, and state Democrat leaders face the music for the Illinois Prisoner Review Board’s release of Crosetti Brand that resulted in the death of an 11 year-old boy. It’s more clear than ever before that where Democrat leaders go, chaos follows. See for yourself:


Chicago Tribune: Blocked DNC protest permits spark lawsuit as convention pressure builds

Activist groups hoping to “make life miserable” for the Democratic National Convention’s organizers and attendees filed a federal lawsuit Friday alleging Chicago violated their First Amendment rights by blocking their protest plans.

“The tens of thousands of people that are coming – not only from the Midwest, but all across the country – will be marching on the DNC, permit or not,” Hatem Abudayyeh, executive director of the U.S. Palestinian Community Network, said at a Federal Plaza news conference Friday after groups affiliated with their protest filed the suit.

The city has so far blocked every protest permit requested near the August convention’s United Center headquarters, despite Mayor Brandon Johnson’s promises that demonstrators will have a fair platform and security. Instead, the city has offered each group the same two-block route through Grant Park – a proposal the groups allege doesn’t fulfill their right to be within “sight and sound” of the convention.

“The First Amendment is not important when everybody agrees, but it’s critical when there are disagreements,” Williams said.

WMAQ NBC: Mayor Johnson to seek $70M more in funding for migrant crisis in an apparent reversal: sources

Two months after Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson declined to add another $70 million in funding for the city’s migrant crisis, all signs pointed to Johnson changing his mind.

In February, Gov. J.B. Pritzker visited Chicago City Hall and sat down with Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle and Johnson to find a dollar amount to care for migrants through the 2024 fiscal year.

Pritzker asked the Illinois General Assembly to approve $182 million from the state. Preckwinkle and Johnson, meanwhile, agreed to split the rest – $70 million each.

However, a week later, Johnson distanced himself from the deal, saying “I’m not aware” when he was asked repeatedly by reporters on Feb. 15.

The State Journal-Register: Pritzker calls for improved training for Prison Review Board following fatal stabbing

Further changes could be coming to Illinois Prison Review Board, a state agency recently seeing its chairman and a board member step down.

The governor’s office announced the resignations of chair Donald Shelton and board member LeAnn Miller last week, following a controversial decision to grant parole to a Chicago man with a history of domestic violence.

Crosetti Brand, released by the review board from Stateville Correctional Center last month, is now facing charges for allegedly stabbing his pregnant ex-girlfriend and killing her 11-year-old son.

While Pritzker advocates for improved training, Republicans are calling for a broader overhaul of the board and pointing the blame on the Democratic governor.

Legislation yet to be filed would establish a qualifications standard to be eligible to serve on the board and immediately notify victims if a prisoner is released early. Raising the qualifications, requiring a minimum of 20 years of working in the criminal justice system, Senate Republican Leader John Curran said would effectively “tie the governor’s hands” as he selects replacements.

“Requiring the governor to actually find people with broad based experience in the criminal justice system will elevate the board as a whole,” Curran, R-Downers Grove, said in a press conference on Tuesday.

At the same time, Sen. Steve McClure, R-Springfield, is targeting penalty enhancement for those violate the terms of an order of protection. First-time offenders would now face a Class 4 felony and subsequent violations would jump to a Class 3 felony – a potential prison sentence of five to 10 years.

ICYMI – Chicago Tribune Editorial: Republicans are right to call out failings of Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s Illinois Prisoner Review Board

Jayden Perkins’ death shines a tragic spotlight on Prisoner Review Board

The horrifying case of Crosetti Brand has surfaced an issue that’s been percolating in Springfield for four years: the performance of the Illinois Prisoner Review Board.

The state body, comprising up to 15 members and by law required to include representatives of both parties, is responsible (among other things) for the critical job of deciding whether and when criminals should be paroled. It was the Prisoner Review Board that ruled last month it couldn’t continue to hold Brand when he clearly committed acts that should have been deemed parole violations and should have returned him to prison. Brand was initially paroled late last year after serving eight years of a 16-year sentence for home invasion and aggravated battery involving an ex-girlfriend.

After the board decided it lacked evidence to continue holding him despite his threats early this year to a different woman he had dated more than a decade before, he was released and the following day attacked her, according to police and prosecutors. Her 11-year-old son, Jayden Perkins, was killed on March 13 trying to defend his 33-year-old pregnant mother, who was badly injured but survived.

. . .

But the issue of the board and how it’s operated under Pritzker is far from settled. Senate Republicans who sounded the alarm for years on questionable parole decisions (well before the Crosetti Brand fiasco) now are proposing wide-ranging legislation to reform the board and to increase penalties for violations of orders of protection in domestic situations. Among other things, the bill would require more stringent qualifications for board members, who are paid nearly $100,000 a year.

“We have been raising red flags,” state Sen. Jason Plummer, R-Edwardsville, said Tuesday at a news conference to unveil the bill. “We have been warning about the lack of qualifications of some of the governor’s appointees for years. Literally years. . I don’t know why it’s taken a dead child for people to recognize some of these people are not qualified to serve on the board.”

Plummer, the top Senate Republican on the Executive Appointments Committee, said the board under Pritzker has been more than twice as likely to parole convicts, including murderers, than the past three governors, including two Democrats.

Those parolees include some notorious examples such as Chester Weger – the so-called Starved Rock Killer, convicted of the 1960 murder of three women out for a hike – who was released in 2020 at age 83. Another was the 2021 release of Johnny Veal, who along with a second man was convicted of killing two Chicago police officers in 1970. Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx, generally sympathetic to restorative-justice and rehabilitation arguments, opposed Veal’s parole, describing the cop killings as “cold-blooded executions” and adding that Veal boasted about it.

Yet another was Ray Larsen, given a 100-to-300-year sentence for murdering a 16-year-old fishing in a forest preserve in 1972. The board moved to release him in 2021, and Larsen immediately violated parole and was a fugitive for a week before authorities caught up with him at a local hospital. While Larsen was unaccounted for, Foxx’s office warned surviving family members of Frank Casolari, Larsen’s victim, since Larsen previously had threatened to harm family members, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

Under Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner, the Prisoner Review Board voted 12-0 to deny Larsen parole. Under Pritzker, the board granted Larsen’s release on a 9-3 vote.

Republicans in Springfield often struggle to be heard, since Democrats enjoy overwhelming majorities in both legislative chambers. But they’ve been right to call out the governor on the failures of the Prisoner Review Board, and Democrats in the capital should have heeded their warnings far earlier.

Like it or not, Pritzker bears part of the responsibility for the nightmare Jayden Perkins’ family has endured. Many of his Prisoner Review Board appointees have reflected a philosophy emphasizing criminal rehabilitation over victims’ concerns, and the board’s decisions have followed suit.

We hope it goes without saying that Democrats must engage honestly with Republicans. Senate Majority Leader Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, says he’ll review the GOP proposal. Hopefully, that review won’t be just cursory. If Republicans’ proposal to require a minimum 20 years of consecutive experience in the criminal justice system isn’t the right prescription, Democrats need to negotiate a set of qualifications to reassure the public that board members won’t be more sympathetic to criminals than to victims.

Illinois Republicans propose overhaul for Gov. Pritzker’s ‘anti-victim’ parole board after stabbing

Associated Press | April 2, 2024

https://apnews.com/article/domestic-violence-parole-prisoner-review-board-pritzker-ca95835e5555a8a8f38f2bdbd608e356

The Illinois Senate’s minority leader proposed legislation Tuesday to overhaul Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s Prisoner Review Board after it released a convicted domestic abuser who then attacked a pregnant Chicago woman with a knife and fatally stabbed her 11-year-old son.

Republican Leader John Curran criticized Pritzker and said he plans legislation to require that board appointees have 20 years of criminal justice experience as a prosecutor, defense attorney, probation officer or judge, and that each member undergo annual training on domestic violence and sexual assault and the warning signs that precede repeat attacks.

Other proposed measures would require advance notice to victims of board decisions to release perpetrators and more transparency on the members’ deliberations in each case, including how they voted.

“For too long, these $100,000-a-year positions at the Prisoner Review Board have been given to political appointees who don’t have the requisite experience to make these life-and-death decisions,” Curran, who’s from the Chicago suburb of Downers Grove, told reporters in a teleconference. “We must take politics out of the appointment process to create a qualified board with a deep understanding of the criminal justice system.”

Pritzker has acknowledged the parole board didn’t sufficiently consider evidence in releasing 37-year-old Crosetti Brand on March 12. The next day, Brand allegedly broke into the apartment of Laterria Smith, 33, who had an order of protection against him, attacked her with a knife and killed her son Jayden Perkins when he intervened to protect his mother.

. . .

Curran and his colleagues, Sens. Jason Plummer of Edwardsville and Steve McClure of Springfield, parried questions about whether Senate Democrats, who hold a supermajority, would entertain their plans.

“We’ve been warning about the lack of qualifications of some of the governor’s appointees for years,” Plummer said. “I don’t know why it’s taken a dead child for people to finally recognize some of these people are not qualified to serve on the board. My Democratic colleagues have largely taken a step back and allowed the governor’s office to drive the train.”

. . .

“I would hope that the Democrats in the Senate now realize that Gov. Pritzker has a policy of trying to get the most far-left, anti-victim people on the Prisoner Review Board,” McClure added. “My hope is that moving forward, the Democrats have learned their lesson.”

ILGOP Responds to Cook County State Attorney’s Candidate

CHICAGO — Today, ILGOP Chairman Don Tracy released the following statement responding to the Democratic nominee Cook County state’s attorney, Eileen O’Neill Burke’s statement that she isn’t tough on crime: 


“Eileen O’Neill Burke campaigned in the Democratic primary as a genuine tough on crime States Attorney who will actually prosecute criminals and not coddle, defend or make excuses for them like Kim Foxx does. Now, Burke is flipping her stance and pandering to soft-on-crime Democrats that have made Chicago a beacon of crime. There is only one choice for voters looking for someone who will be tough-on-crime and clean Cook County up – Bob Fioretti.”

Gov. Pritzker’s Soft-on-Crime Agenda Brings Consequences

CHICAGO — Republicans are fighting across the state to make our communities safer, something Gov. Pritzker has simply failed to do. After multiple resignations on the state’s Parole Review Board, Republicans like Sen. Jason Plummer are fighting to depoliticize the process.

Take a look at the coverage from Center Square:

“He has politicized the process and he has tried to ram unqualified appointees through the Senate. When the Senate has objected, he has not worked with us,” Plummer told The Center Square. “This tragic event that happened is a perfect example of what we warned the governor would happen if he continued down this reckless path that he’s been dead set on following since he took office when it comes to the PRB.”
…Max Cerda, another board member, was convicted of a double murder when he was 16 years old and was appointed by Pritzker in March 2021.

“Historically, if you look at the PRB, under [former governors] Blagojevich, Quinn and Rauner, the voting under the PRB, the voting stayed relatively consistent,” said Plummer. “Under Pritzker, he started withholding some of the appointees and not allowing them to go before the Senate for confirmation. We noticed the voting patterns on the PRB changed dramatically. They were letting people out at a much more aggressive pace and at a higher rate. When we started asking questions about votes that were cast, questions about the appointees, Pritzker started playing games.”

Cerda, while on the PRB, voted to let out a convicted cop killer whom Cerda actually served time with in prison.

Another controversial appointee of Pritzker’s was Oreal James, who Plummer said voted to release multiple cop killers.
…After Miller and Shelton resigned Monday, Pritzker said he’s committed to ensuring additional safeguards and training are in place to prevent tragedies like this week’s from happening again.

“If you want tragedies like this to not happen again, you can’t let people like Pritzker appoint unqualified people to this board,” said Plummer.

ICYMI: Sorenson has ‘no’ regrets hosting drag events for kids

CHICAGO — Freshman Democrat Eric Sorenson has come under scrutiny for hosting a drag event for kids in his battleground western Illinois district. Take a look at some of the coverage of the latest uncovered video from Fox News:


Fox News: Freshman Dem in battleground district says he has ‘no’ regrets hosting drag events for kids
A Democratic congressman in an Illinois battleground district said he has no regrets about hosting drag shows for children after years of promoting drag events on social media.

“No,” Rep. Eric Sorensen said in a recent video obtained by Fox News Digital when asked if he regrets hosting drag shows for children.

Earlier this month, popular social media account Libs of TikTok posted previous photos of Sorensen both dressed in drag and hosting a drag show for children in Illinois in 2021, which was viewed hundreds of thousands of times since it was posted on March 11.

…Last year, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee released a list of Democratic incumbents most vulnerable in the 2024 election cycle as they work to retain their seats in a Republican-controlled House.

Sorensen was listed among 28 other House Democrats deemed vulnerable by the party this year.

…In comment to Fox News Digital, the National Republican Congressional Committee called Sorensen a “far-left radical” representing rural Illinois.

“Eric Sorensen is a far-left radical who would be more at home representing San Francisco than rural Illinois. His actions are outrageous, and he clearly has no remorse,” NRCC spokesman Mike Marinella said.

Fox News Digital reached out to Sorensen’s campaign and press secretary for comment on his support for drag shows, including for children, but received no replies.

ICYMI: Chicago Rejects Mayor’s Radical Progressive Agenda

CHICAGO — In Tuesday’s primary, voters in the city of Chicago sent a message that Mayor Johnson’s radical progressive shift in policy is not right for the city. In what is looking like an overwhelming denial, the initiative is currently losing by more than 7% and nearly 23,000 votes. With 80% of the vote in, the margin is nearly insurmountable for Mayor Johnson’s keystone policy proposal.

See what coverage had to say about Chicago voters rejecting the progressive agenda of Illinois Democrats and special interests:


Wall Street Journal Editorial Board
: Glimmers of Election Hope in Chicago

Maybe Chicago isn’t fated to a downward progressive spiral after all. On Tuesday voters shocked everyone by soundly rejecting a ballot referendum to raise the city’s real-estate transfer tax, despite active support by Mayor Brandon Johnson and the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU).

Or perhaps the defeat was because of their support. Chicago residents voted 54% to 46% against the tax scheme with most votes counted. The result is all the more surprising because turnout in the primary was an unusually low 20%. Low turnout typically helps political machines like Chicago’s, which is why they scheduled the tax increase vote for March. They lost anyway.

Chicago Tribune: Bring Chicago Home referendum in serious trouble – and it would be a stinging defeat for Mayor Brandon Johnson’s grassroots base

The referendum was set up to become Johnson’s first levy hike as mayor, after campaigning on a “tax-the-rich” agenda that caught fire last year amid a tumultuous election where he adopted Bring Chicago Home as a key pledge. A defeat would signal trouble for Johnson’s leftist coalition that took over City Hall for the first time in decades but has since faced nonstop resistance from politically moderate foes and business interests, on top of sky-high costs from the migrant crisis.

CBS Chicago: Bring Chicago Home real estate transfer tax referendum appears headed to defeat

Republican political strategist Aaron Del Mar, a former Cook County Republican Party chair, said the referendum’s showed voters have a lack of trust in government to spend tax money wisely.

“I don’t think people trust the Chicago government group, aldermen, mayor, or whatever – to use the money appropriately,” he said.

While the tax might not have affected most homeowners, Del Mar said it was clear voters were not ready for another tax hike, one that would have affected small businesses and many landlords.

“I think they caught too many of the people of Chicago in here, including small business owners. You’re catching landlords that have a three-flat, that’s their whole life investment. I mean a million dollars is certainly a lot of money, but it’s not what it used to be,” he said.

Del Mar said he believes the measure likely would have passed easily if supporters had targeted the tax increase on properties worth $3 million or more, rather than $1 million.

Chicago Sun-Times: Bring Chicago Home: Mayor Johnson’s plan to fight homelessness appears headed to defeat

“Bad policy should be defeated, and voters saw that it was bad policy,” said veteran political strategist Greg Goldner, who quarterbacked the campaign against the referendum.

…”It can’t build affordable housing. It can’t solve homelessness. It can’t provide mental health services. It can’t solve the migrant crisis. It can’t provide affordable housing for teachers and vets. It can’t do all of those things for a revenue stream that has proven to be unpredictable,” he added. In the end, Goldner said, voters agreed the referendum was “poorly constructed, poorly defined” and a “very cynical public policy initiative.”

WGN: ‘Bring Chicago Home’ real estate tax referendum headed toward defeat at the polls

“This ordinance, as it’s written – or this referendum – is really going to impact a lot more renters than people might assume,” said Miguel Chacon, a real estate broker and representative of the Neighborhood Building Owners Alliance. “Anything that increases the operating expenses for any property owner, or any business for that matter, is eventually passed down to tenants.”

Illinois Republican Party Statement on Tonight’s Primary Results

CHICAGO — The people of Illinois have made their voices heard in our primaries across the state today, and following the results of today’s votes, Illinois Republican Party Chairman Don Tracy released the following statement:

“Today’s votes have made it clear that Republicans are energized to elect strong leaders who will fight for us in Springfield and Washington! Together, we can send President Trump back to the White House, reelect our brilliant Congressional delegation including Representative Mike Bost, and secure victories in the Statehouse to bring Governor Pritzker to the negotiating table to rework his radical agenda.

It’s time for Republicans to unify and move forward to build a brighter future for Illinois. Onward to November!”

Illinois Republican Party Congratulates President Trump on Primary Win

CHICAGO — Illinois Republican Party Chairman Don Tracy released the following statement following President Trump’s victory in the Illinois primary and his status as the Republican nominee for President of the United States. 

“The Illinois Republican Party congratulates former President Trump for winning our state primary and the Republican nomination for President of these United States. Thank you to the thousands of Republicans who took part in this primary election for voting, volunteering, and making your voices heard. Now is the time to come together as one party, to recruit, encourage and persuade all of our fellow Republicans and independents to re-elect President Trump and end the Biden-Pritzker agenda of open borders, pro-criminal legislation, and taxing-and-spending your family’s hard earned dollars.”