POLITICS | Rich Miller
“It’s so quiet,” sighed Pippin in The Fellowship of the Rings.
“It’s the deep breath before the plunge,” counseled Gandalf.
“I don’t want to be in a battle,” said Pippin, “but waiting on the edge of one I can’t escape is even worse.”
That
exchange pretty well sums up the current climate in the General
Assembly. It’s very quiet. Too quiet. Everybody knows that big, tough
decisions are both looming and inevitable, and they’re all tiptoeing
around Springfield, peering over their shoulders and whispering about
the coming fight which, deep down, they are starting to realize they
cannot fully escape. The bloodiest of all battles is just around the
corner and they know it.
The
most natural human reaction to a crisis is to either run away or try to
deny reality. Maybe, some think, the General Assembly could just solve
part of the gigantic and ever-growing $2.7 billion hole that the
Medicaid program has blown in the state budget. Or they could kick the
can down the road on pension reform until after the election, when
dozens of lame duck legislators can be used to pad the roll calls.
But
according to the governor, at least one credit agency has threatened
Illinois with what’s known as a “double downgrade” of our bond rating if
both the Medicaid and pension crises aren’t resolved this spring. A
double downgrade would lower the credit rating by two notches instead of
one and would likely result in an enormous public relations disaster,
but would also put the state dangerously close to junk bond status, if
not right in it.
The last time Illinois
faced a double downgrade was just before the income tax hike was
approved. The state was given the same threat a few days before the
General Assembly rammed through major pension reforms for new government
employees in 2010’s spring leg islative session.
So,
the governor’s position is that the big stuff needs to be done this
spring – or this summer, in case the job isn’t completed by the end of
May. No ifs, ands or buts about it, his people say.
“We come to it at last, the great battle of our time,” Gandalf said in the movie.
It
won’t be much longer before our own great Statehouse battle is in full
swing. The first major volley beyond the trashtalking in Gov. Quinn’s
budget address was launched last week when the governor detailed his
tough but reasonable plan to patch a $2.7 billion Medicaid hole. On
Friday, Quinn announced his pretty well thought-out pension reform plan.
Session
is scheduled to adjourn at the end of May. In between now and then,
there will be much loud gnashing of teeth, with threats issued from all
sides from those about to lose what they have.
But
the threat with the biggest teeth will probably turn out to be that
double downgrade. The state has so much bonded indebtedness and such a
strong desire to do more capital spending that it cannot possibly ignore
those warnings.
The New York bond houses always win in the end, and this year may be no exception.
I’ve
been telling friends for weeks that this is the most important
legislative session of my lifetime. This spring is when Illinois’
government decides whether it wants to continue living in a dream world
of spending as much money as it wants without ever worrying about how to
pay for anything or whether it finally decides to stand up and face the
grim reality of its own making.
“My
dear Frodo, Hobbits really are amazing creatures,” said Gandalf. “You
can learn all there is to know about their ways in a month, and yet
after a hundred years they can still surprise you.”
The
long-term (and shortterm) fiscal health of this state absolutely hinges
on what our legislative Hobbits do in the next six weeks. They must
take that big plunge toward responsibility and surprise all of us.
And
the governor needs to stick to his guns and demand they complete their
task, no matter how long they have to stay in session.
Rich Miller publishes Capitol Fax, a daily political newsletter, and CapitolFax.com.