Illinois’ comeback story starts here.

Shrinking the Illinois Senate

Shrinking the Illinois Senate

With 42,336 elected officials as of 1992, Illinois has nearly 12,000 more state and local elected politicians than any other state. Amazingly, with this unprecedented wealth of legislators Illinois hasn’t been able to adequately address some of its most dire problems. Illinois still ranks near the bottom of the nation in numerous key economic indicators,...

By Brian Costin

ObamaCare glitches

ObamaCare glitches

The ObamaCare exchanges have been riddled with glitches. I spent three hours last week trying to look at what’s available and couldn’t even create an account. It was not the “fast, completely scalable and secure” experience I was promised by the chief technology officer at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The administration has claimed these problems are related...

By Jonathan Ingram

U.S. Supreme Court takes on home-care unionization laws

U.S. Supreme Court takes on home-care unionization laws

Illinois is one of several states that have chosen to allow the “unionization” of people who provide care for children or disabled persons and receive assistance from state programs. But one woman has stood up against this forced unionization. Pamela Harris is a mother from Western Springs, Ill., who has been forced to fend off...

By Paul Kersey

ObamaCare: The great Medicaid expansion

ObamaCare: The great Medicaid expansion

Federal officials are trumpeting the high “demand” that ObamaCare’s health insurance exchanges are experiencing, but their celebration is misguided. What’s the point of the ObamaCare health insurance exchanges if the end result is to dump the majority of Americans covered under ObamaCare into Medicaid? The truth is that more than three-quarters of the newly insured next year...

By Naomi Lopez Bauman

High revenue growth in Illinois leaves lawmakers hungry for more

High revenue growth in Illinois leaves lawmakers hungry for more

Progressive lawmakers in Illinois continually argue that the state has a revenue problem. They argue that,  with a little more cash in the coffers, Illinois could solve its countless fiscal woes. This talking point is part of a larger sales pitch used to advocate for higher taxes in Illinois. But it’s not true. In fact,...

By Benjamin VanMetre

Obama derides workers who go on strike — ‘You’d get fired, right?’

Obama derides workers who go on strike — ‘You’d get fired, right?’

Does President Barack Obama think House Republicans should form a union? If not, it’s hard to make much sense out of his latest speech at a business in Rockville, Md., in which he equated House Republicans’ decision not to support a budget that would fund ObamaCare to disgruntled workers going on strike: If you are...

By Paul Kersey

Unmasking state Rep. Naomi Jakobsson’s agenda for higher taxes

Unmasking state Rep. Naomi Jakobsson’s agenda for higher taxes

State Rep. Naomi Jakobsson, D-Urbana, penned a press release attempting to mask her agenda for higher taxes in Illinois and sell her progressive tax plan as something it isn’t. When it comes to her peers and opponents, Jakobsson suggests that arguments about a progressive income tax for Illinois need come with coherent policy arguments combined with facts....

By Benjamin VanMetre

ObamaCare: federal government finally reveals premium rates, but not much else

ObamaCare: federal government finally reveals premium rates, but not much else

After months of requests, the public finally has a bit more information about what health insurance is going to cost under ObamaCare. And it is easy to see why federal and state officials dragged their feet in disclosing this information. For weeks, officials have been bandying a premium rate of $125 per month for a...

By Naomi Lopez Bauman

Nearly 72 percent of Illinois Medicaid cases reviewed last week had eligibility errors

Nearly 72 percent of Illinois Medicaid cases reviewed last week had eligibility errors

In January, the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services, or HFS, began a new project verifying eligibility for Illinois’ 2.7 million Medicaid enrollees. For years, state workers had failed to take adequate steps to ensure the people receiving Medicaid benefits were actually eligible for the program. As an Auditor General report noted, state workers failed to...

By Jonathan Ingram

Pay to stay

Pay to stay

Earlier this year Texas Gov. Rick Perry wrote a letter to Illinois’ businesses and individuals trying to sell them on a move to Texas. The sales pitch was simple — it wasn’t tax credits, grants or sweetheart deals. The sales pitch was this — Texas doesn’t have an income tax. Perry understands something that Illinois...

By Benjamin VanMetre

Federal agencies stage fake “shutdown” of websites

Federal agencies stage fake “shutdown” of websites

This morning we began to notice that a number of Federal agencies have “shutdown” their websites. We put that shut down in quotes because the websites aren’t really shutdown. In reality, federal agencies have “shutdown” websites while keeping them online to say they are “shutdown”. For example, here’s the page you will see when you...

By Brian Costin

Freedom for workers – teachers can get out of paying union dues

Freedom for workers – teachers can get out of paying union dues

Illinois public school teachers are required to financially support unions whether they want to or not. They don’t have much of a choice – it’s either pay up, or give up teaching. Union bosses claim to have teachers’ best interests in mind, but despite this they sometimes make outrageous demands that cost teachers their jobs....

By Paul Kersey

9 states looking to cut taxes, Illinois looking to hike taxes

9 states looking to cut taxes, Illinois looking to hike taxes

According to Bloomberg, at least nine states are currently pitching tax cuts. In addition to the proposed $500 million tax cut by a Gov. Rick Scott in Florida, the tax cut efforts include: Republican governors Scott Walker of Wisconsin, John Kasich of Ohio, Paul LePage of Maine, Terry Branstad of Iowa, Sam Brownback of Kansas...

By Benjamin VanMetre