Elections

Political honesty
There will be no "political honesty" constitution amendments on the November ballot because the Supreme Court on August 31 upheld the ruling by Cook County Circuit Court Judge Nathan M. Cohen that the proposed amendments did not deal with structural and procedure changes to the Legislative Article in the Illinois Constitution.

This is the first court test (Coalition for Political Honesty v. State Board of Elections, consolidated with Gertz v. State Board of Elections) of the initiative process in the 1970 Constitution. The proposed amendments reached the State Board of Elections after 650,000 persons signed petitions in support of them. The three proposed amendments dealt with banning legislative double-dipping (holding another government job), prohibiting conflict of interest for legislators, and barring legislators from receiving annual salary in advance (The legislators banned this themselves; see House Bill 3484 on p. 27.).

The Coalition for Political Honesty, which spearheaded the drive to put the proposed amendments on the ballot, announced September 14 that it will now work to get bills passed in the legislature covering the double-dipping and conflict-of-interest bans it sought by constitutional amendment. And, disappointed that the Supreme Court knocked the amendments off the ballot, Coalition spokesman Patrick Quinn said, "they haven't knocked the desire for tough ethics laws out of the minds of Illinois citizens."

One more plank in the Coalition's drive is to get a constitutional amendment allowing the "Sunshine Initiative" that would give citizens the power to propose laws by initiative petition and enact or reject them in a statewide election. The petition initiative process in Illinois is now restricted to constitutional amendments to the Legislative Article of the state Constitution, which itself was ratified by a statewide referendum in 1970. California now has the more open-ended "Sunshine Initiative."

The other parties
Full slates of candidates for five political parties other than the Democrats and Republicans were certified September 2 for the November ballot by the State Board of Elections. They are Communist, U.S. Labor, Socialist Labor, Socialist Workers and the Libertarian parties. Two other parties, the Socialist and the American Independence parties, were not certified because their petitions did not have the required 25,000 signatures./ C. S. G.


28 / November 1976 / Illinois Issues


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