Jesse Jackson Jr. sentenced to 2½ years; Sandi must serve full term of one year
Jesse Jackson Jr. sentenced to 2½ years; Sandi must serve full term of one year
Former U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. was sentenced to 2½ years in prison Wednesday after pleading guilty to stealing more than $750,000 from his campaign fund and illegally using the money for personal purchases. “I was wrong and I don’t fault anyone,” he said. His wife received a term of one year and will have...
ObamaCare: health insurance for the little people
ObamaCare: health insurance for the little people
In a weekend appearance on Las Vegas PBS’s “Vegas Week in Review,” Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nevada, not only admitted that ObamaCare is designed to fail; but he also admitted that the law is one step toward a single-payer health care system. This admission should be added to the growing pile of ObamaCare’s broken promises. Just as many of the law’s...
By Naomi Lopez Bauman
North Carolina budget ends master’s degrees pay
North Carolina budget ends master’s degrees pay
Studies have shown that paying teachers for earning a masters’ degree is one of the worst ways to spend money in education. U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said as much in a 2010 speech: “Doing more with less will likely require reshaping teacher compensation to do more to develop, support and reward excellence and effectiveness,...
How Detroit’s collapse hurt Detroit Public Schools – a lesson for Chicago
How Detroit’s collapse hurt Detroit Public Schools – a lesson for Chicago
In the wake of the Detroit bankruptcy, the media have paid a lot of attention to the effects of Detroit’s massive population loss – increased corruption, ineffective public safety and an unsustainable pension system, to name a few. But among the hundreds of articles written about the city after it declared bankruptcy, no one has...
More food stamps: Another 20,000 Illinoisans added to SNAP rolls in May
More food stamps: Another 20,000 Illinoisans added to SNAP rolls in May
More than 2 million Illinoisans – 16 percent of the state’s population – are on food stamps according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, enrollment numbers continue to rise in Illinois, and have been continuing to increase across the nation. Illinois added nearly 20,000 people to food stamp rolls...
By John Klingner
Judge renames couple’s baby, needs First Amendment refresher
Judge renames couple’s baby, needs First Amendment refresher
We write a lot about the ridiculous things government officials in Illinois do, but make no mistake: officials in other states do plenty of outrageous stuff, too. In Tennessee, for example, there’s Child Support Magistrate Lu Ann Ballew. When two unmarried parents had a dispute over whose last name their child should take, Judge Ballew decided to...
U.S. Sen. Richard Durbin attempts to interrogate the Illinois Policy Institute
U.S. Sen. Richard Durbin attempts to interrogate the Illinois Policy Institute
Last week, U.S. Sen. Richard Durbin (D-IL) was kind enough to send us the following letter (see below). Below that letter is our response. Finally, I gave a speech at ALEC last week on the very subject of the campaign to crush dissent to the progressive world view. Here is a brief excerpt that is...
By John Tillman
Devil’s Night
Devil’s Night
I grew up in Detroit, and as far back as I can remember my hometown was in trouble. But if there was a time when people just gave up on the place, it was probably October 30, 1984 — just a couple weeks after the Tigers won the World Series — when fires on “Devil’s...
By Paul Kersey
Chicago tied for the third-lowest rate of entrepreneurship among major US cities
Chicago tied for the third-lowest rate of entrepreneurship among major US cities
As the Detroit bankruptcy unfolds, the attention has started to shift to other big cities such as Chicago. Detroit and Chicago differ in countless ways, but regardless of the disparities, one unfortunate characteristic is shared by both: they’ve been successful in scaring away entrepreneurs. Between 2010 and 2012, Detroit was tied with Philadelphia for dead...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Politicized Belleville TIF district results in lawsuit from small business owner
Politicized Belleville TIF district results in lawsuit from small business owner
There’s an old saying that goes, “don’t mix politics and business,” and as long as your business isn’t politics that’s some pretty wise advice. Unfortunately, nowadays government is more frequently going out of its way to mix business and politics in the form of tax increment financing districts, or TIF districts, and corporate welfare. For...
By Brian Costin
MLB union’s handling of Biogenesis scandal highlights collective bargaining weaknesses
MLB union’s handling of Biogenesis scandal highlights collective bargaining weaknesses
The fallout from the Biogenesis scandal in Major League Baseball – New York Yankee Alex Rodriguez fighting a long suspension, a dozen other players accepting 50-game suspensions – reveals a big problem with U.S. labor law: how unions deal with disciplinary problems. How far should a union be willing to go to protect a member...
Illinois liquor law stifles competition among distributors
Illinois liquor law stifles competition among distributors
Running a competitive business can be difficult – unless you have friends in government to help squash competition for you. In late May, Gov. Pat Quinn signed House Bill 2606 into law, which amended Illinois’ Liquor Control Act to prohibit out-of state brewers, distilleries and other alcohol manufacturers from owning any part of an alcohol distributor in...
By Bryant Jackson-Green
Nearly 106,000 Medicaid enrollees in Illinois found ineligible for the program
Nearly 106,000 Medicaid enrollees in Illinois found ineligible for the program
For years, the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services, or HFS, has failed to take adequate steps to ensure the people actually receiving Medicaid benefits are eligible for the program. In 2012, for example, somewhere between 15 percent and 20 percent of Medicaid files were overdue for their annual eligibility checks. The auditor general noted that...
By Jonathan Ingram
Detroit: Then and now
Detroit: Then and now
Back in the late 1980s I lived in northwest Detroit (at Seven Mile and Lahser) and worked downtown. I remember a t-shirt slogan that was very popular at the time: “I’m so bad I vacation in Detroit.” It was fitting. The few tourists who visited downtown saw a rundown commercial district with few shops or...