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Rauner's Proposals Fail In Illinois House

Democratic legislators in the spring approved a budget they recognized then as "incomplete," leaving new Gov. Bruce Rauner and this year's new incarnation of the General Assembly to deal with it.
Brian Mackey/WUIS
Democratic legislators in the spring approved a budget they recognized then as "incomplete," leaving new Gov. Bruce Rauner and this year's new incarnation of the General Assembly to deal with it.
Democratic legislators in the spring approved a budget they recognized then as "incomplete," leaving new Gov. Bruce Rauner and this year's new incarnation of the General Assembly to deal with it.
Credit Brian Mackey/WUIS
File photo of Illinois House, 2014

Gov. Bruce Rauner's proposal to cut the state budget took a spectacular fall Wednesday in the Illinois House.

The new Republican governor's plan reduces Illinois' budget by $6 billion for the next fiscal year.

That means doing away with, or spending less, on everything from healthcare for the poor, autism services and support for older foster kids.

No GOP legislator has actually introduced a bill that would precipitate those cuts. So in a surprise move, the Democratic Speaker of the House, Michael Madigan, took it upon himself.

"To permit us to have a full and open discussion and debate on this critical question," Madigan explained.

The measure failed with zero votes in support. Democrats all voted no. Republicans, who are in the minority, choose the in-between: they all voted present. They complain Madigan's move wasn't transparent, because it hadn't gone through the committee process.

It's an early signal from Democrats that Rauner's cuts won't stand. The governor's spokesman called it a political stunt.

Copyright 2015 NPR Illinois | 91.9 UIS

Amanda Vinicky
Amanda Vinicky moved to Chicago Tonight on WTTW-TV PBS in 2017.