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Illinois bill looks to minimize private donors' influence on judicial elections

Illinois bill looks to minimize private donors' influence on judicial elections

Yahoo13-02-2025

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (WCIA) —Illinois judicial campaigns have become very expensive, with interest groups and wealthy donors throwing around lots of cash to get their favorite judge on the bench. This has raised questions about the fairness of the election and money's influence on the campaign.
Sen. Rachel Ventura (D-Joliet) filed a bill looking to reduce the influence of private donors in Supreme Court and Appellate Court races. This will allow candidates to use public funds instead of interest group funds. She filed the bill in response to the record-breaking amount of money spent in the 2022 Illinois Supreme Court Elections.
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She said this legislation would keep judicial elections balanced and the candidates wouldn't feel like they are indebted to a single person or organization.
'The goal is to allow all judges to have the same opportunity, ' Ventura said. 'And to get rid of that kind of off-putting feeling that someone is donating to a judge who may then later be making decisions that harm or hurt them or help them.'
The 2022 Illinois Supreme Court race spending surpassed $23 million across both sides. PACs, outside interest groups, and even Governor JB Pritzker poured money in campaigns leading up to the election.
The bill proposes a public financing program for Supreme Court and Appellate Court candidates through the Judicial Election Democracy Trust Fund.
The idea comes with a pretty big price tag. Under Ventura's proposal, the fund will contain an initial $40 million from the state's General Revenue Fund for candidate use if they choose to opt-in to the public fund for their campaign spending.
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Kent Redfield, Professor Emeritus of Political Science at the University of Illinois Springfield, sees this bill as a well-meaning idea, but wouldn't be effective due to the voluntary option of it.
'The problem with public financing is that it only works if candidates actually use it.' Redfield said 'But if your opponent is getting millions from independent groups, you can't afford to just rely on public funds.'
With Illinois's current law on expenditure campaigns, the 2010 Citizen United vs. FEC ruling allows unlimited independent expenditures for corporations or unions with an emphasis on free speech.
Redfield, who has done extensive research on money in politics and campaign finance, said the ruling has changed how the judicial race is run.
'Ever since Citizens United, judicial elections have turned into high-stakes political battles, the idea that judges are above politics is just not reality anymore,' Redfield said. 'Now, outside groups can spend unlimited amounts, and that money isn't just coming from local donors—it's national, ideological, and often hidden.'
Ethics advocate groups said public financing is one step in avoiding corruption in the court systems.
Alisa Kaplan, executive director of Reform for Illinois, said this bill allows judges to be impartial compared to how the current law is written.
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'The way judicial campaigns are currently funded it really allows for special interest groups to have potentially a lot of influence on who our judges are and how they make decisions, and that's just not how anybody wants courts to run,' Kaplan said. 'You want the decisions that they make to be based on the arguments that they see before the court. You don't want them thinking about who's funding their campaign.'
Several states across the nation publicly finance political campaigns such as Arizona and Maine, and a few are considering it for judicial races. With fewer candidates on the ballot for Supreme Court and Appellate Court elections, many see public finance as the most suitable option.
With $40 million coming from the General Revenue Fund, the proposal raised eyebrows given the state's budget problem.
'The public response to that generally is 'I don't want my tax dollars going to politicians to run campaigns,'' Redfield said 'The fact that we have a budget deficit, we're looking at a very tough fiscal year. The idea of taking $40 million out and not giving it to schools or universities or early childhood education, it's not a very attractive time.'
But Kaplan said the amount is smaller compared to the state's overall budget.
'It's 0.08% of the budget, the way the bill is written right now. ' Kaplan said. ' So an extremely, extremely small part of the overall Illinois budget for something that could really have a huge impact on how cases are decided and how justice is distributed in the state of Illinois.'
Ventura believed this bill will start a conversation on fairness in the Illinois judicial system.
'I think Illinois is well on its way to exploring this, but we need to hear from our residents. What would they prefer? Because, as I said, candidate campaigns are very expensive,' Ventura said. 'But we want to make sure that none of our candidates are bought and paid for.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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time3 hours ago

  • USA Today

'Civil rights for everyone!' LGBTQ+ community holds massive rally in DC

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time6 hours ago

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Southern Baptists to vote on effort to overturn same-sex marriage

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Opinion - Trump's war against DEI isn't going so well in Virginia

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The updated process also ensured that each middle school receive a number of seats equal to 1.5 percent of its eighth-grade class. The school board resolved that '[t]he admission process must use only race-neutral methods that do not seek to achieve any specific racial or ethnic mix, balance or targets.' This means that admissions officials are not told the race, ethnicity, sex or name of any applicant. In Supreme Court parlance, the entire admissions process was 'colorblind.' The new process produced promising results. In its inaugural year, Thomas Jefferson High School received 1,000 more applicants than the prior cycle. This larger applicant pool also 'included markedly more low-income students, English-language learners, and girls than had prior classes at TJ.' Consistent with the heightened GPA requirement, the admitted class's mean GPA was higher than in the five preceding years. The new process also yielded greater racial diversity. Black students comprised 10 percent of the applicant pool and received nearly 8 percent of offers and Hispanic students comprised 11 percent of the applicant pool and received over 11 percent of offers. The overall percentage of Asian American students decreased from the preceding year, but Asian Americans continued to enjoy the highest percentage yield of all racial groups. And as the Fourth Circuit detailed, Asian American students from historically underrepresented middle schools 'saw a sixfold increase in offers, and the number of low-income Asian American admittees to TJ increased to 51 — from a mere one in 2020.' In short, Thomas Jefferson High School adopted a 'race-neutral' process to pursue a set of goals that included increasing Black and Hispanic representation. This is the precise type of practice the Trump administration denigrates as 'illegal DEI.' Efforts to promote racial diversity do constitute DEI. But they are far from illegal. In fact, Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard — the 2023 decision striking down Harvard University's formal consideration of applicant race — supports most of the DEI policies Trump now targets. Writing for the majority, Chief Justice Roberts deemed Harvard's underlying goals as 'worthy' and 'commendable.' Justice Brett Kavanaugh made the point more directly; writing for himself, Kavanaugh noted that 'racial discrimination still occurs and the effects of past racial discrimination still persist' and that 'universities still can, of course, act to undo the effects of past discrimination in many permissible ways that do not involve classification by race.' The actions of the high school square with Kavanaugh's call for policies that attend to race but do not differentiate between individual students on this basis. This should short-circuit the Department of Education's investigation against Fairfax County. But it is unlikely to stall Trump's desire to outlaw integration. The Pacific Legal Foundation, which initiated the lawsuit against Fairfax County and remains a force on the right, wants to revive Goldwater's hostile approach to integration. Consider the following FAQ on Pacific Legal's website: 'schools may use or not use standardized tests, essays, interviews, or auditions, as long as their reasons for using or not using them are not racial.' By this logic, a high school could lawfully eliminate an admissions fee if motivated by public relations concerns, but it would be unlawful to take that same action if done to decrease racial barriers that exclude low-income Black and Hispanic students. Now consider higher education. Per Pacific Legal, Harvard University could eliminate admissions preferences for the children of alumni and wealthy donors if done to appease alumni pressure. But it would be unlawful for Harvard to take the same action if the goal is increasing the number of Asian American students or mitigate unearned racial preferences that flow to wealthy white applicants. The upshot is that affirmative efforts to reduce racial inequality — everything Trump dubs 'illegal DEI' — remain legal and morally just. So, at least for now, integration does not equate to segregation. Jonathan Feingold is an associate professor at Boston University School of Law. He is an expert in affirmative action, antidiscrimination law, education law, and critical race theory. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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