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Lawmakers face long lame-duck agenda

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(MCT) — Illinois lawmakers convening Tuesday for their post-election lame-duck session face a lengthy list of issues — ranging from a burgeoning pension debt to expanded casino gambling — but it remains uncertain whether departing legislators will provide the votes to pass the most controversial measures.

Traditionally, the legislative session held after lawmakers' elections marks one of the busiest times in Springfield. Lawmakers who lost re-election bids or did not seek another term are viewed as political free agents who can more easily be persuaded to cast their votes on issues without concern to party loyalty or having to face voters ever again.

There are 21 lame ducks in the House and 15 in the Senate following the Nov. 6 election, enough to provide a surge of energy for issues that have been stalled by political stalemates despite the fact that Democrats hold the governor's office and control of both chambers. Both old and new business are on the table for discussion, if not action.

Lawmakers could seek to overturn Gov. Pat Quinn's veto of a gambling expansion bill that could bring a casino to Chicago, and they might also take a new run at a twice-failed idea to allow illegal immigrants to receive state driver's licenses. Other issues include an attempt by Democratic House Speaker Michael Madigan to have lawmakers set a spending limit for Quinn as the governor's office negotiates new union contracts with state workers, and a renewed push by Downstate lawmakers to legalize concealed carrying of firearms.

Majority Democrats displaced even more Republicans from both chambers in the election for all 177 House and Senate seats, thanks in part to new Democratic-leaning boundaries. The new lawmakers will be seated on Jan. 9, but the days right before that — rather than this week — are likely to see the biggest action.

That's because after Jan. 1 it takes only a simple majority to pass new legislation, rather than a three-fifths supermajority needed now.

Less than two years ago, another lame-duck session in January 2011 produced a 67 percent increase in personal income tax rates aimed at helping state government survive a fiscal crisis. This year, the fiscal crisis remains not only unabated, but enhanced by the depth of Illinois' unfunded government-worker pension debt.

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