After 36 years in Springfield, the last ten as the Illinois
Senate’s powerful president, and the previous 12 as Senate Republican
minority leader, Pate Philip is leaving the Illinois political scene with
a whimper, not a bang.
It’s not that Philip has overstayed his time or his welcome.
Instead, through sheer luck, the Democrats won the lottery to determine
which party drew the legislative remap, and Philip’s current 32-27
Republican majority will disappear after the 2002 elections -- as will
Philip, who will resign next January when the Democrats take over the
chamber.
Arguably one of the shrewdest of the state’s politicians, Philip
molded his cohesive majority behind a simple, coherent program – namely:
no tax hikes, and no new liberal social programs. He constructed a
money-raising machine, hired talented staffers (who then managed
campaigns), raised close to $6 million every election cycle, recruited
viable candidates, and spent lavishly to re-elect his incumbents. In ten
years, the Democrats were unable to move beyond a high of 27 senators.
A staunch fiscal conservative, Philip viewed himself and his
colleagues as a bulwark against any tax hikes. When Jim Edgar proposed
raising the income tax in 1997, Philip’s Senate bottled it up in
committee, and it never came up for a vote. Under George Ryan’s
big-spending administration, the governor wisely acknowledged that any tax
hike, if proposed, would never pass – so he didn’t bother.
But the Democrats’ remap makes a Senate majority a likelihood, if
not a certainty. That, coupled with a Democratic governor and a Democratic
majority in the House (which is now 62-56 Democratic), and the current
state revenue shortfall, makes an income tax hike in the next several
years also a likelihood, if not a certainty.
A total of ten current Republican senators (out of 32) are either
retiring or have been defeated by another incumbent in the March primary.
The Democratic map put eight Republican senators in four districts, with
four of them battling each other in two districts in the primary, and the
rest retiring. One, the Northwest Side’s Wally Dudycz (R-7), an 18-year
veteran, was placed in a district with Democratic incumbent Jim DeLeo
(D-10), and Dudycz chose to retire. Overall, Democrats took the districts
of 14 Republican senators, excised all the Democratic voters possible from
those areas, and created eight mega-Republican districts; they then used
the leftover territory to shuffle the boundaries of existing Democratic
districts and create six new Democratic-leaning districts. Even though
Illinois’ population growth was in the collar-county suburbs, the
Democratic map still managed to create one new black-majority Chicago
district, and two new Hispanic-majority districts, at the expense of
eliminating only one Chicago Democratic district (Lisa Madigan’s).
A total of 17 Democrats are unopposed for senate seats, and another
ten are cinches to win. An independent black, James Meeks, could beat Bill
Shaw on the South Side, but Meeks will caucus with the Democrats. That
makes 28 sure Democratic seats.
On the South Side and in the south
suburbs, two new Democratic districts were drawn, and will be won by
Democrats Maggie Crotty and Ed Maloney. A new district was drawn in the
north suburbs. Republican incumbent Kathy Parker, of Northfield, will run
there, but is the underdog against Susan Garrett, a Democratic state
representative from Lake Forest. If Garrett wins, that’s 31 seats, and a
Democratic majority.
Two Democratic incumbents – Pat
Welch of Peru and Bill O’Daniel of Mount Vernon – are vulnerable.
O’Daniel, age 78, faces John Jones, a popular Republican state
representative, and will likely lose. Welch will beat Republican Rod
Thorson. In an open Republican seat, in the Peoria-Galesburg area, the
Democrat, Knox County State’s Attorney Paul Mangieri, could upset
Republican Dale Risinger.
But the bottom line is that, in a
worst-case scenario, Democrats will have 30 seats; and, in a best-case
scenario, they’ll have 34. So it will be bye-bye Pate. He’ll quit and
be replaced as Republican leader by Kirk Dillard, of Hinsdale. And the
minority Republicans, over the next decade, will struggle mightily (as did
the Democrats in the 1990s) to raise money and recruit candidates to
retake the Senate, and, like the Democrats in the past decade, they’ll
fail mightily and become irrelevant players in state government.
The adjoining vote
chart lists the local senators, including Northwest Side Chicagoans
Dudycz, DeLeo and Ira Silverstein (D-8), as well as Lakefront Democrat
John Cullerton (D-6), and Park Ridge Republican Dave Sullivan (R-28). All
except Dudycz will win
another term. Note the unanimity and the lack of controvery on the
roll-calls. Every vote is a no-brainer, as every bill that comes up for a
vote (even Ronald Reagan Day) is so obviously acceptable to everybody that
everybody votes for it. That’s typical of the current Springfield
climate: controversial bills passed by the House get buried in the
Senate’s committees, and vice versa. The party leadership does not want
their minions to go on record on a divisive issue, and no divisive bills
get called for a vote.
But, with Pate’s majority
withering into history, the next legislature, with its Democratic
majorities, will be much different. The Democrats will have an agenda, and
there will be no gridlock to stymie it.