SPRINGFIELD — Gov. J.B. Pritzker tried marijuana himself, “a long time ago.”
But it won’t be long before Illinois residents are able to smoke it legally, if the freshman governor gets his way.
The Chicago Democrat hopes to get a recreational marijuana bill
passed before the end of the spring legislative session as part of an
ambitious first year plan.
“I think the bill that will get introduced and passed is going to be a very, very, strong good bill,” he said Thursday.
That leaves only about seven weeks for Pritzker to reach his
benchmarks when it comes to legal pot and his No. 1 priority, a
graduated income tax.
In a wide-ranging interview with the Chicago Sun-Times on Thursday in
his Capitol office, Pritzker discussed his hopes for legalized
marijuana in the state, his evolution from opponent to proponent, how he
overcame his concerns, as well as his past usage. On other topics,
Pritzker talked of his offer to help Mayor-elect Lori Lightfoot in
stemming gun violence and in unpacking the city’s financial struggles.
And, of course, he spoke about the graduated income tax. But he tries not to call it that.
It’s a “fair tax” — a more digestible term that no doubt helps to
market his plan. But it’s not so easy. Pritzker has a swear jar of sorts
in his office. He has to put in money every time he doesn’t use the
preferred “fair tax” name.
“Someone else in my office suggested something like that, and I
thought it was a good idea. It turns out I’m the guilty party for the
most part because people ask me questions that have the words ‘graduated
income tax’ in or ‘progressive,’ and then I sometimes will parrot it
back, and then I catch myself,” Pritzker said. “So yes, but it’s really
my own swear jar.”
The billionaire — who will be paying 3% more on his taxes should his
plan succeed — says he truly believes the proposal is “fair.” Pritzker
says it would provide tax relief for 97% of Illinois families, or those
who make $250,000 or less. Ideas Illinois, the dark money group
fighting the tax, calls his plan a “jobs tax” that will cripple the
economy and prompt even more of an exodus of Illinois residents.
“I think the term for it, fair tax, is much more descriptive of what
we’re trying to do, which is to be fair to people who have been treated
unfairly for too many years under a flat tax system,” Pritzker said.
Pritzker, too, said he is “somewhat disappointed” at the lack of
dialogue he’s had with Republicans about his plan. He said he is open to
conversations regarding his proposed rates and the corporate income tax
portion of the proposal.
“They could have come to talk about any of those things,” Pritzker
said. “I’m here. I sit in the governor’s office. My door is open. … The
most important part, I think, is that I’m open to conversations about
it. I have risen the subject where I could with Republicans. But coming
with proposals and having real conversations and negotiations, that’s
something that I welcome. But you can’t sit on your hands and say no to
everything. That’s what Bruce Rauner did for four years and that clearly
didn’t work.”
After four months on the job, Pritzker’s Capitol office already looks
lived in, with a well-stocked library of political books, and dozens of
pictures of his children and the state’s new first lady, M.K.
Pritzker.
Gov. Pritzker has a plaque on his desk with the Latin phrase
“Illegitimi non carborundum,” which translates to “Don’t let the
bastards get you down.”
The governor on Wednesday welcomed Lightfoot into that office, saying
he didn’t offer any sort of advice to the fellow political newcomer,
except to remind her about the importance of bringing in “great people
into your administration into senior positions.”
Mayor-elect
Lori Lightfoot shakes hands with Gov. J.B. Pritzker after they held a
meeting together in his offices at the Illinois State Capitol Wednesday
in Springfield. (Justin L. Fowler/The State Journal-Register via AP)
The two also spoke about maintaining a regular dialogue.
“There is a lot that we need to share together about job creation,
about economic growth and around, in particular, around gun violence and
fighting gun violence,” Gov. Pritzker said. “The state has a lot to do
with helping cities all over Illinois to reduce gun violence. … I made
it clear to her as we enter the summer, which is always the most violent
season of the year for every city in the state, that we’re going to be
helpful to her and other cities around the state.”
J.B. Pritzker campaigned on a promise to legalize adult use of
cannabis in the state. And the Democrat, who said he wasn’t always on
board with legalization, said he has tried marijuana.
“I have tried marijuana, you know, in the past,” the governor said. “It’s been a long time.”
He said some of his earliest concerns about legalization stemmed from worries about teen use of cannabis.
“I have teenagers, and I was very concerned, just not knowing. I
asked a lot of questions about how does this affect teen use,” Gov.
Pritzker said. “And in Washington state — where that was the governor’s
big concern there too — they did a very good job of showing there was no
increase in teen use.”
As for the concerns of police associations across the state over how
law enforcement will be able to determine whether a driver is impaired,
he acknowledged there’s no current technology to measure impairment when
it comes to cannabis.
Marijuana plant. File photo. | AP
“Necessity is the mother of invention, and it’s now clear that with
11 states already with legalized adult use cannabis, there are
entrepreneurs out there that recognize that every police department is
going to want something,” Pritzker said.
Pritzker said he has spent a “reasonable” amount of time studying
other states that have legalized recreational marijuana, specifically
Washington state. And he acknowledged there will likely be follow-up
bills to the legalization measure. But he said legalization is crucial
as a criminal justice reform element, to ensure the safety of cannabis
in the state and to create jobs.
“This happened in medical cannabis. You start out and then you figure
out this isn’t working out quite as well and you make tweaks along the
way,” Pritzker said. “With legislation, nothing is perfect and so yes,
along the way, it’ll improve.”
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