96th Illinois General Assembly explained

Before:95th
After:97th
96th Illinois General Assembly
Term Start:2009
Term End:2011
Chamber1:Illinois Senate
Chamber1 Leader1 Type:President
Chamber1 Leader1:John J. Cullerton, Democrat
Chamber1 Leader2 Type:President pro tempore
Chamber2:Illinois House of Representatives
Chamber2 Leader1 Type:Speaker
Chamber2 Leader1:Michael J. Madigan, Democrat
Election:2008
Meeting Place:Springfield, Illinois
Website:Official site

The 96th Illinois General Assembly convened on January 14, 2009[1] and adjourned sine die on January 11, 2011.[2] Over that period, the Illinois Senate was in session for 144 legislative days,[2] and the Illinois House was in session for 165 legislative days.[3]

Of the 59 members of the Senate, 40 were elected in the 2008 election,[1] as were all 118 members of the House. The House and Senate both had Democratic Party majorities during this session.

Legislation

The 96th General Assembly enacted a total of 1,555 bills into law.[4]

These laws included the abolition of capital punishment in Illinois, which Governor Pat Quinn signed into law on March 9, 2011.[5] There had been a moratorium on executions in Illinois since 2000.[5]

Other measures passed included the Employee Credit Privacy Act, which prohibits employers from asking for a job applicant's credit history in most cases,[6] and the Prevent School Violence Act, which targets school bullying based on characteristics including sexual orientation and gender identity.[7]

On May 27, 2009, House Speaker Michael Madigan introduced an amendment to the Illinois Freedom of Information Act. His daughter, Attorney General Lisa Madigan, had worked on the draft amendment with the Illinois Press Association, the Illinois Campaign for Political Reform, the Better Government Association, and Citizen Advocacy Center.[8] The bill passed the House the same day, then proceeded to the Senate, where it was sponsored by Kwame Raoul. The Senate concurred in the House's amendment on May 28, 2009. The governor signed the bill into law on August 17, 2009.[9] The amendments roughly doubled the size of the Act based on its word count.[10] The Illinois FOIA became considered one of the most liberal and comprehensive public records statutes throughout the United States.[11] The legislation became effective on January 1, 2010, issuing the most sweeping changes to FOIA since the original enactment in 1984.[12] The Illinois FOIA became considered one of the most liberal and comprehensive public records statutes throughout the United States.[11]

Removal of governor

See main article: Rod Blagojevich corruption charges. Governor Rod Blagojevich was arrested by federal agents on December 9, 2008, and charged with conspiracy and soliciting bribes.[13] In the closing days of the 95th General Assembly, the House voted 114–1 (with three abstentions) to impeach the governor.[14] [15] The charges brought by the House emphasized Blagojevich's alleged abuses of power and his alleged attempts to sell legislative authorizations and/or vetoes, and gubernatorial appointments including that of US President Obama's vacated Senate seat. On January 14, 2009, the 96th House voted to affirm the impeachment vote of the prior session with only Deborah Mell dissenting.[16] [17]

The impeachment trial in the Illinois Senate began on January 26, 2009.[16] [18] Blagojevich boycotted attending his own hearings, referring to them as a kangaroo court.[19] [20] On the first day of the 96th General Assembly, the Senate adopted rules governing the impeachment trial.[1] By two separate and unanimous votes on January 29, the governor was removed from office and prohibited from ever holding public office in the state of Illinois again. Lieutenant Governor Patrick Quinn then became governor of Illinois.[21]

Senate

Under the 1970 Illinois Constitution, the Illinois Senate has 59 members, who are elected to overlapping two- and four-year terms. Of the 40 members elected in the 2008 Illinois Senate election, 39 were elected to four-year terms; Heather Steans of the 7th District was elected to a two-year term.[1]

Senate leadership

John Cullerton was chosen by the Senate Democratic Caucus in December 2008 to replace outgoing president Emil Jones.[22] Jones had been a strong ally of governor Blagojevich.[22] Cullerton was formally elected on the first day of the 96th Senate, in a party-line vote.[1]

Position Name Party District
President of the SenateJohn CullertonDemocratic6
Majority LeaderJames Clayborne Jr.Democratic57
Minority LeaderChristine RadognoRepublican41

Party composition

The Senate of the 96th General Assembly consisted of 37 Democrats and 22 Republicans.[23]

AffiliationMembers
Democratic Party37
Republican Party22
Total
59

State senators

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House

The Illinois House has 118 members, who all serve two-year terms.

House leadership

Position Name Party District
22
Democratic 25
84

Party composition

The House of the 96th General Assembly consisted of 70 Democrats and 48 Republicans.[24]

AffiliationMembers
Democratic Party70
Republican Party48
Total118

State representatives

See also

Works cited

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Senate Journal . 2022-06-03 . 2009-01-14 .
  2. Web site: Senate Journal . 2022-06-03 . 2011-01-11 .
  3. Web site: House Journal . 2022-06-03 . 2011-01-11 .
  4. Web site: 96th General Assembly Public Acts . State of Illinois . 2022-06-02.
  5. Web site: Death Penalty Update - Illinois . 2022-06-03 . National Conference of State Legislatures . 2011-03-11 . On March 9, 2011, Illinois Governor Pat Quinn signed senate bill 3539 into law, abolishing capital punishment in the state..
  6. Web site: Changes in Illinois Labor and Employment Law Coming in 2011 . 2022-06-03 . Littler Mendelson P.C. . Amanda Inskeep . 2010-12-30 . Effective January 1, 2011, employers may no longer ask any applicant for his or her credit history as part of the hiring process unless it is a bona fide occupational requirement. .
  7. Web site: Illinois Governor Quinn to Sign Antibullying Legislation; Lambda Legal Applauds . 2022-06-03 . Lambda Legal . 2010-06-25.
  8. Ericson. Brooke. Fall 2009. Illinois revises transparency laws on heels of scandal. News Media & the Law. 33. 4. 18. 0149-0737. Communication & Mass Media Complete.
  9. Web site: Bill Status of SB0189 – 96th General Assembly. 2020-12-08. Illinois General Assembly.
  10. Helle. Steven. 2010. Survey of Illinois Law: New Freedom of Information Act – Peeking Behind the Paper Curtain. Southern Illinois University Law Journal. 34. 1094. 2020-12-11. https://web.archive.org/web/20150921190113/http://law.siu.edu/_common/documents/law-journal/articles-2010/new-freedom.pdf. 2015-09-21. live.
  11. Klaper. Sarah. Fall 2010. The Sun Peeking Around the Corner: Illinois' New Freedom of Information Act as a National Model. Connecticut Public Interest Law Journal. 10. 1. 65. https://web.archive.org/web/20201209183946/https://cpilj.files.wordpress.com/2013/09/10-conn-pub-int-l-j-63.pdf. 2020-12-09. live.
  12. Roth. Stephan. Romas-Dunn. Jeannie. June 2011. Freedom of Information Act — Recent & proposed changes. The Public Servant. Illinois State Bar Association. 12. 4. 6–7. 2020-11-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20201211095323/https://www.isba.org/sites/default/files/sections/newsletter/%20June%202011_5.pdf. 2020-12-11. live.
  13. Web site: Illinois Governor Charged in Scheme to Sell Obama's Seat . 2022-06-03 . The New York Times . Monica Davey and Jack Healy . 2008-12-09.
  14. News: Illinois House Impeaches Governor . April 21, 2009 . January 9, 2009 . . Saulny, Susan.
  15. http://www.ilga.gov/legislation/votehistory/95/house/09500HR1671_01092009_002000.pdf Vote on House Resolution 1671
  16. Web site: Ill. Senate take steps toward governor's trial: Same senators to handle Blagojevich's impeachment starting January 26. January 16, 2009. January 14, 2009 . NBC News.
  17. http://www.ilga.gov/legislation/votehistory/96/house/09600HR0005_01142009_003000.pdf Vote on House Resolution 5
  18. News: The Rod Blagojevich saga: The second act. January 16, 2008. January 15, 2009 . The Economist.
  19. News: Blagojevich, boycotting his own impeachment trial, compares self to Gandhi. January 26, 2009. January 26, 2009. Los Angeles Times. Neuman, Johanna.
  20. News: Blagojevich Calls Illinois State Senate Impeachment Trial a 'Kangaroo Court': Gov. Rod Blagojevich declared his innocence Monday, calling the Illinois State Senate impeachment proceedings a "kangaroo court".. January 26, 2009. January 26, 2009 . FoxNews.com.
  21. News: Chicago Tribune . Impeached Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich Has Been Removed From Office . 2022-06-03 . 2009-01-30 . Ray Long and Rick Pearson.
  22. News: Cullerton to lead Senate . Rick Pearson and Ray Long . . 2008-11-20 . 2022-06-03.
  23. Web site: Illinois State Senators: 96th General Assembly . 2022-06-02 . Illinois General Assembly.
  24. Web site: Illinois State Representatives: 96th General Assembly. 2022-06-02 .