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Lawmakers face long lame-duck agenda

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The renewed effort comes as the state Department of Public Health issued a recent rule allowing same-sex parents using surrogacy births to have their names listed on birth documents.

There also is a post-election push for legislation to allow illegal immigrants to obtain an Illinois driver's license after passing the traditional driving, written and vision tests and obtaining insurance.

The measure comes after Democrats gained overwhelming support from a growing Latino voting base and amid some Republican concerns that the GOP needs to do more outreach for future elections.

Former Republican Gov. Jim Edgar, also a former secretary of state, is backing the license measure sponsored by Senate President John Cullerton, a Chicago Democrat. Edgar said the GOP should be looking to appeal to Latino voters for the future, but he also praised the plan as a public safety measure to get more drivers licensed and insured.

Meanwhile, supporters of a plan vetoed by Quinn that would expand casinos to Chicago, the south suburbs, Lake County, Rockford and Danville are counting votes for a potential override or may try to launch a new bill. The plan also would bring video slot machines to the state's horse racetracks.

Last spring the gambling expansion plan passed the House with 69 votes, two shy of the number needed to override a veto. But it passed the Senate on a 30-26 vote, the minimum needed for approval and six votes shy of what is needed for an override.

Quinn vetoed the bill, saying it lacked ethical oversight and failed to ban political contributions from gambling interests.

Sen. Terry Link, the Waukegan Democrat who sponsored the gambling package in his chamber, said he is in contact with legislative leaders and the governor's office in hopes of getting a satisfactory solution that will put a law on the books.

"I'm very optimistic that something will be done," Link said. "I don't know if it's an override, (or) a new bill. Something will be done."

Madigan, a Chicago Democrat, appears ready to move forward with a plan aimed at inserting lawmakers into the collective bargaining process with state employees — a power traditionally reserved for the governor. Madigan's plan would let lawmakers cap how much money the state could spend on worker wages.

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