74th Illinois General Assembly explained

Before:73rd
After:75th
74th Illinois General Assembly
Term Start:1965
Term End:1966
Chamber1:Illinois Senate
Chamber1 Leader1 Type:President
Chamber1 Leader1:Samuel H. Shapiro, Democrat
Chamber1 Leader2 Type:President pro tempore
Chamber1 Leader2:W. Russell Arrington, Republican
Chamber2:Illinois House of Representatives
Chamber2 Leader1 Type:Speaker
Chamber2 Leader1:John P. Touhy, Democrat
Election:1964
Meeting Place:Springfield, Illinois

The 74th Illinois General Assembly convened on January 6, 1965, and adjourned sine die on June 30, 1965.

Legislation

The 74th General Assembly set a record for the number of bills introduced, at 3,590. Of these, 2,211 were passed by both houses and sent to the governor. Governor Otto Kerner Jr. vetoed 267 in their entirety and 13 in part.

Notable laws enacted by the 74th General Assembly include the Local Governmental and Governmental Employees Tort Immunity Act, which provided sweeping protection from civil liability for government workers.[1] The legislature also enacted a measure to curb the use of billboards on Illinois highways, which was amended several times thereafter,[2] and the state's first Good Samaritan law making physicians who render assistance in emergencies immune from civil liability.[3]

Notable failed legislation in the 74th General Assembly included a measure to abolish capital punishment in Illinois, which passed the House by a 97 - 69 vote.[4] Had it been enacted, Illinois would have joined Iowa, New York, West Virginia, and Vermont in ending capital punishment that year.[5] Instead, the Illinois death penalty remained on the books until 2011.[6]

Senate

Following the 1964 election, the Illinois Senate contained 58 members, one from each senate district. Under the Illinois Constitution of 1870, Senators served overlapping 4-year terms. Thus, the 29 senators representing even-numbered districts were elected in 1964, the remainder having been elected in 1962.

Senate leadership

Position Image Name Party District
Lieutenant Governor and President of the SenateSamuel H. ShapiroDemocratic
President Pro TemporeW. Russell ArringtonRepublican4

Party composition

The Senate of the 74th General Assembly consisted of 33 Republicans and 25 Democrats. The number of Democrats soon fell to 24, however, when Theodore Swinarski of the 14th District was unseated due to a failure to meet residency requirements.[7]

AffiliationMembers
Democratic Party25
Republican Party33
Total
58

State senators

House of Representatives

Under the Illinois Constitution of 1870, the state representatives were elected by cumulative voting, with each voter distributing three votes among the available candidates. The Illinois House of Representatives as elected in 1964 thus contained 177 members, representing three for each of the state's 59 House districts.

However, in a nationally unprecedented event,[8] in 1964 all members of the Illinois State House were elected at-large statewide, as a result of the legislature's failure to agree on a redistricting plan the previous year. The resulting ballot was 33inches long. Because of the length of the ballot, the election was remembered as the "bedsheet ballot" election.

Both parties ran slates of 118 candidates.[9] The House had previously had a Republican majority, but in 1964 every Democratic candidate was elected, giving Democrats a two-thirds majority in the House. Representative Zeke Giorgi attributed the Democratic victory to the effect of the Democratic landslide in the presidential election. As a result, the election saw a very large number of Republican incumbents lose their seats. The election swept in 49 new Democratic representatives,[10] launching the careers of several Democratic politicians who later became prominent, including Adlai E. Stevenson III and Harold Washington.[11]

The members of the House represented a historically unusual proportion of Chicago-area representatives, because the at-large voting system eliminated the longstanding gerrymander in favor of downstate.[12] Consequently, Illinois' 1965 redistricting, which implemented the one person, one vote rule imposed by the United States Supreme Court in Reynolds v. Sims, had little effect on the subsequent balance of power in the House.[12]

House leadership

Position image Name Party
John P. TouhyDemocratic
Democratic
Paul F. ElwardDemocratic
Albert W. HachmeisterRepublican
John C. ParkhurstRepublican

Party composition

AffiliationMembers
Democratic Party118
Republican Party59
Total
177

State representatives

Works cited

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 745 ILCS 10/ Local Governmental and Governmental Employees Tort Immunity Act . 2020-01-28 . Illinois General Assembly.
  2. News: Illinois Issues . The billboards are coming down along Illinois' primary highways . 2020-01-28 . O.T. Banton . August 1976 . 13.
  3. Illinois Bar Journal . Theodore R. . LeBlang . The Physician as Good Samaritan: Evolving Legal Protections Under Illinois Law . 522 . October 2002.
  4. Web site: House Votes To End Death Penalty. 2020-03-08 . Daily Illini . 1965-03-03 . Associated Press .
  5. News: History Of The Death Penalty . 2020-03-08 . PBS Frontline: The Execution . Michael H. . Reggio . 1999-02-09.
  6. Web site: Illinois Abolishes The Death Penalty . 2020-03-08 . NPR Illinois . 2011-03-09.
  7. News: THEODORE A. SWINARSKI, LEGISLATOR, COURT CLERK . Chicago Tribune . 2020-03-09 . Kenan Heise . 1992-07-24.
  8. The Role of Newspapers in Illinois' At-Large Election . James L. . McDowell . 1965-06-01 . 10.1177/107769906504200217 . Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly . 42. 2. 281 .
  9. Web site: BALLOT IN ILLINOIS BIG AS BATH TOWEL; Voters Face 177 Choices in at‐Large House Election . 2020-01-28 . The New York Times . 1964-10-29.
  10. News: Morning Star . Rockford, Illinois . 1964-06-21 . New Democrat Candidates In House Race Are Listed . 10A.
  11. Web site: RULING REKINDLES VISIONS OF '64 'BEDSHEET' BALLOT . 2020-01-28 . Chicago Tribune . Rick Pearson and Thomas Hardy . 1991-12-17 . It was Nov. 3, 1964, and voters who entered polling places throughout the state were met by what has become known as 'the bedsheet ballot.'.
  12. News: Chicago Daily News . Edward S. . Gilbreth . 1964-12-04 . A New Map Is Carved . The new legislative districts won't change by much the Cook County-Downstate lineup in the House to be elected next year (the at-large election of all 177 representatives last year resulted in a close-to-even split between Cook County and Downstate)..