CHANGE Illinois! Says Agreement to Limit Campaign Contributions Puts Illinois on the Road to Reform

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Thu Oct 29, 2009 7:26pm EDT

CHANGE Illinois! Says Agreement to Limit Campaign Contributions Puts Illinois
on the Road to Reform

Remains Committed to Additional Reforms

SPRINGFIELD, Ill., Oct. 29 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The CHANGE Illinois!
coalition has reached agreement with Governor Quinn, Senate President
Cullerton and Speaker Madigan on legislation that would establish limits on
campaign contributions by political parties, legislative leaders, individuals,
corporations, unions, and PACs.

For the first time in the history of Illinois -- one of only five states where
unlimited campaign contributions are legal -- there would be limitations on
the amount of money contributed to political campaigns.

Other important elements of the agreement will create a framework for
regulation of the finance system and enforcement of a new limits law.  They
include:

    --  Swift disclosure to the public of every contribution of $1,000 or
more;
    --  Quarterly (now just twice a year) reports from committees detailing
the
        source of every contribution of more than $150 and listing how funds
        were spent in the quarter;
    --  Audits of the finances of political committees selected at random by
the
        State Board of Elections to check compliance with state laws; and

    --  Creation of a searchable database of penalties assessed by the State
        Board of Elections in response to violations of the campaign
disclosure
        and limitation laws.


In addition, a bi-partisan task force, including public members, will be
created to analyze the new limits, make recommendations for improvements, and
examine the feasibility of creating a voluntary public campaign finance system
for all state offices, including the judiciary.

"Setting limits on contributions to political campaigns will be an important
step in bringing meaningful reform to Illinois," said George Ranney, a
co-chair of CHANGE Illinois! and President and CEO of Chicago Metropolis 2020.
 "As important as this first step is, it is only that -- one step in a long
road to the reform of this state's political culture.  We have much more work
to do and loopholes to be closed."

"After scandals in Washington and in state capitols and city halls around the
nation, the federal government and most other states passed laws limiting the
role of campaign contributions during the past couple of decades," said
Cynthia Canary, Director of the Illinois Campaign for Political Reform.  
"Finally, Illinois is about to signal to the rest of the nation that we're
ready to join them and impose limits on all contributions coming into the
system."

CHANGE Illinois! is a coalition of civic, business, labor, professional,
non-profit and philanthropic organizations, which represents more than 2
million members advocating for Illinois to join the federal government and
virtually every other state in the nation by enacting campaign finance limits.

The coalition led a public education campaign that generated support for
strong campaign finance reform and resulted in Gov. Quinn's veto of a badly
flawed campaign finance bill passed earlier this year by the General Assembly.
Members of the coalition promised to work with the Governor and legislative
leaders to produce a bill with meaningful limits and effective enforcement
tools.

Following that veto, the coalition worked with the Governor and legislative
leaders to design a reform program that would be comparable to systems in use
elsewhere in the nation.

Under terms of the agreement, individuals will not be able to contribute more
than $5,000 to any candidate in an election cycle; businesses, labor unions
and associations will have $10,000 limits on contributions to candidates; and
political action committees will be limited to no more than $50,000 per
candidate.

One major stumbling block in negotiations centered on the ability of political
parties and caucus leaders to transfer unlimited amounts of money from their
funds to political candidates. The final agreement does include limits on the
amounts of money that can be transferred to candidates during primary
elections.  Party leaders will no longer be able to control local primary
election campaigns by pouring unlimited amounts of money into the campaigns of
favored candidates.

"There was no agreement reached on transfers from leaders to candidates during
general election campaigns, but CHANGE Illinois! will continue to advocate for
those limits in the future," Ranney said.

"Because parties and legislative leaders have been able to contribute
unlimited amounts of money in primary campaigns, few people have been willing
to run for office without the backing of party leaders," said Anton Valukas, a
former U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois and a member of
CHANGE Illinois! coalition.  "As long as they have the support of their
leaders, many state legislators get a free ride to reelection. Setting limits
in the primary will not remove all advantages of incumbency, but they should
give more challengers a fighting chance and offer voters more choices."

The agreement will create limits on transfers from party leaders to all
candidates for all state and local offices in primary elections. Each limit
will be an aggregate limit, meaning the total of any combination of party and
leader committees in a primary cannot exceed the limit.   The limits on
transfers are $200,000 for statewide candidates, $125,000 to Senate
candidates, $75,000 for House candidates, and a range of limits from $50,000
to $125,000 for candidates running for every other office -- from local
offices to seats on the Illinois Supreme Court.

"Placing limits on campaign contributions and their influence is an important
first step in reminding our elected officials that the citizens and voters of
Illinois have special interests too," said Bob Gallo, AARP Illinois Senior
State Director. "This legislation promises to be a significant first step in
addressing the lack of public confidence in the capability of our elected
officials to address the issues concerning individuals and their families
during these difficult economic times."

"This reform measure, while imperfect, is a long time overdue and an essential
first step toward a cleaner, fairer, more representative election system,"
said Dawn Clark Netsch, a former legislator, statewide officeholder, long-time
advocate of limits and a member of CHANGE Illinois! coalition.




SOURCE  CHANGE Illinois!

Jim Bray of CHANGE Illinois!, +1-217-793-8416
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