Joint N.J. legislative committee probing Christie"s "Bridgegate"
Monday, January 27, 2014
Joint N.J. legislative committee probing Christie"s "Bridgegate"
Joint N.J. legislative committee probing Christie"s "Bridgegate"
Saturday, January 11, 2014
Gearing Up For 2014 Legislative Sessions
Gearing Up For 2014 Legislative Sessions
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Rachel Swaffer
Rachel is the Strategic Outreach Associate for Citizen Watchdog. She is a graduate of Hillsdale College and is passionate about free markets and constitutionally limited government.
Read more about Gearing Up For 2014 Legislative Sessions and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com
Wednesday, November 27, 2013
UPDATE 1-Illinois legislative leaders strike deal on pensions
UPDATE 1-Illinois legislative leaders strike deal on pensions
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Wed Nov 27, 2013 2:32pm EST
CHICAGO Nov 27 (Reuters) – Illinois’ legislative leaders on Wednesday reached a long-elusive deal to reform the state’s woefully underfunded public pensions and are now moving to win the support of their members, their spokespeople said.
Details were not immediately available.
“The four leaders have reached an agreement on comprehensive pension reform that they will present to their caucuses,” said Patty Schuh, spokeswoman for Senate Republican leader Christine Radogno, adding that the final language of the plan was being drafted.
The Democrat-controlled Senate will join the Democrat-controlled House in holding a session on Tuesday to take up a pension measure, according to Ron Holmes, a spokesman for Senate President John Cullerton. House Speaker Michael Madigan put his chamber’s members on notice on Monday that they will be meeting for a one-day session.
“The Senate president will be debriefing members of his caucus in the coming days in hopes of garnering support,” Holmes said.
Illinois has the worst-funded public employee pension system among the 50 states, with an estimated $ 100 billion unfunded pension liability. Pension costs are squeezing out funding for core services such as education, and Illinois has been punished by credit rating agenices with downgrades that have left it with the lowest credit ratings among U.S. states.
Far-reaching changes to Illinois’ retirement benefits have been a hard sell in the Senate, where many members are wary of violating state constitutional protections for public employee pensions. Labor unions have pushed back against any effort to impose cuts to pension benefits, though they had offered backing to a Senate bill last spring that would have given workers and retirees a choice in how benefits might be cut.
The state’s House and Senate have backed competing proposals, with the House plan taking a more aggressive approach to cost reductions.
Legislative leaders have been seeking ways to boost a projected 30-year savings to $ 150 billion, up from about $ 138 billion eyed by a special legislative panel on pensions created in June.
Negotiations have centered on savings that could be achieved through changes to the current 3 percent compounded cost-of-living adjustments for retirees. One proposal would limit such adjustments to half the annual inflation rate, with some compounding of payment increases.
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Saturday, May 4, 2013
Dem Congressman Blames "Legislative Constipation" On Republicans
Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-Mo.) thinks Republicans are doing a number on the nation’s body politic.
“There’s no question that Republicans, at least in the House and perhaps in the Senate as well, have contributed significantly to the legislative constipation that we are experiencing in the United States,” Cleaver said on MSNBC’s “Politics Nation” Friday.
The Congressman blamed sequestration for the country’s slow economic recovery.
Though April’s jobs report was stronger than expected–165,000 workers were added to nonfarm payrolls instead of the projected 140,000–the month also saw 11,000 jobs cut from the public sector.
“When you start cutting fire and police–public sector [workers]–those are human beings, those are Americans. And when they lose their jobs, it stymies our growth,” Cleaver said on the show. “My fear is that the sequestration is eventually going to hurt our chances of doing what the President has worked hard to do, which is drop unemployment numbers.”
This isn’t the first time Cleaver has used vivid language to voice his displeasure with budget-cutting measures.
The Congressman described a 2011 deal to avoid the debt ceiling, involving $ 1 trillion in spending cuts over 10 years, as a “suger-coated Satan sandwich.”
“If you lift the bun,” he wrote then on Twitter, “you will not like what you see.”
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Dem Congressman Blames "Legislative Constipation" On Republicans