Pritzker budget includes new tax on online fantasy sports
Pritzker budget includes new tax on online fantasy sports
The budget awaiting his signature also imposes licensing fees on operators.
The budget awaiting his signature also imposes licensing fees on operators.
Eight years of the governor’s budgets have exposed the cost of spending-driven budgeting and repeated tax hikes.
Illinois is tagged with more taxes when the governor had the opportunity to say no.
Lawmakers approved a legally dubious new tax on targeted advertising services as part of the state budget. Gov. J.B. Pritzker should use his line-item veto power to reject the tax.
None of the three proposed amendments to the Illinois Constitution that would have repealed or endangered the state’s flat income tax protection advanced during this year’s legislative session.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s 2019 “Rebuild Illinois” plan created automatic inflationary adjustments in the state gas tax, which could reach over $1 per gallon by 2056.
The new budget focuses on semantics rather than ensuring the right people receive SNAP benefits.
The spending plan passed in a familiar scramble in the final hours of the 104th Illinois General Assembly.
The state’s residents paid over $8,300, which was 18.5 percent more than the national average.
Illinois lawmakers’ late-night budget sets a new spending record financed by more tax hikes on the final day of legislative session.
Lawmakers plan to stop the automatic gas tax increase for six months but plan to use an unexpected $150 million in sales tax from high gas prices to balance the budget rather than benefit taxpayers.
Renewing the state pension buyout for two years means flexibility for retirees and savings for the state.