Legislative Action

Executive-legislative feuding

PARTISAN bickering is an accepted and expected practice in politics. Confrontation between branches of government can also occur but generally only when one party controls the chief executive office and the other party controls the legislature. Yet, conflict between the Illinois General Assembly and Gov. Dan Walker has continued at a high pitch and seems to have actually increased during the second half of Walker's term after the Democrats gained substantial majorities in both legislative chambers.

The confrontations in contemporary political life in Illinois are apparent to everyone, and it was obviously most clear in the defeat of Gov. Walker in the March primary. What may not have been quite as apparent was the endorsement of Secretary of State Mike Howlett by most of the Democratic leaders of the General Assembly and a number of prominent legislative independent Democrats who are not generally known for their loyalty to the Cook County organization headed by Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley.

Confrontation, not compromise
The nature of the conflict between the legislature and governor perhaps became more noticeable in Illinois because this is an election year. However, the confrontation is in clear contrast to the general conduct of politics at both the state and national level. The American system, with separation of powers and built-in "checks and balances," has normally been marked by the practice of "compromise." Rarely does the nature of conflict and confrontation reach the heights seen in the current work of the General Assembly.

One could point to many examples in the past three years where the governor and the legislature have locked horns, but few are as poignant as the interim report issued in early March by the Senate Committee on Fiscal Accountability. The committee presents data and arguments critical of the Walker administration and its reluctance to cooperate with the legislative investigation of the "fiscal condition of the state."

The committee stated that it was created by Senate Resolution 162 last year because of "... conflicting and confusing revenue estimates, budget recommendations, vetoes, partial vetoes, overrides, and controversies which have characterized the last two legislative sessions to a degree unparalleled in the modern history of this state." Their report continued: "A large part of the problem, .is due to the fact that governor's budgets in Illinois in recent years have shown a definite trend toward becoming more political — designed more as public relations documents to gain votes than as honest proposals for funding the various state agencies and their programs."

However, the Committee on Fiscal Accountability leaves itself open to allegations of presenting its own political document, rather than an objective analysis, in its interim report. The Table of Contents of the report includes the following headings: "The State Has Engaged in a Deliberate Policy of Delaying the Payment of Bills," "The Public Aid Mess," and "Refusal of the Executive Branch to Cooperate." It was not really necessary to read the report in order to discover the findings of the committee.

The report was critical of the Walker administration for a number of reasons including past budget submittals (including revenue estimates); the scheduling of the payment of bills and its effect on the state's cash balance; federal government statements of levels of ineligibility in public aid claims; and the level of cooperation received from the Bureau of the Budget and state agencies in the committee's effort to collect data it felt was necessary to its investigation. The purpose here is not to question the accuracy of the committee's interim report's findings and conclusions. However, the same standards must be applied to the committee's work that are used in assessing the work of the administration.

It is extremely valuable to carry out legislative investigations of the nature called for in the committee's enabling resolution. It is part of the oversight function which is the responsibility of virtually all American legislatures. Rarely, at the state level, has the function been well performed. But it is also important that such activities be placed in proper perspective.

Politics of the report
Any assessment of the quality of work carried out by this committee must be viewed in the political context of contemporary Illinois. The report itself makes reference to the conflict which has existed between Gov. Walker and the General Assembly since the administration took office at the beginning of 1972. The report was issued less than two weeks before the primary election in which Walker failed to gain renomination from the voters of his own party. In short, legislative documents must be viewed as being just as political as gubernatorial budget messages.

The question might be asked as to whether such a committee as this one on fiscal accountability would have been created if someone other than Dan Walker were governor. If the occupant of the chief executive's office were someone who sought cooperation rather than confrontation with the General Assembly, would this investigation have been undertaken?

It is quite likely that the ultimate result of this interim report and the continued work of the Senate's Committee on Fiscal Accountability will be the improvement of some aspects of administrative operation; most probably in the Department of Public Aid which has come under fire in recent months. In that respect, there will be positive effects from this exercise of the oversight function. If that is the case, one of the few justifications for confrontation politics will be displayed. / L.S.C.

May 1976 / Illinois Issues / 27


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