Convention Visitors, Here’s The True Impact of Progressive Government On Illinois and Chicago – Wirepoints

Led by Gov. JB Pritzker in national TV appearances, the political establishment in Illinois and Chicago is listing its triumphs as the Democratic National Convention in Chicago nears. Mayor Brandon Johnson, too, is “looking to spread his vision for progressive governance on everything from raising wages for workers in Chicago to achieving a ceasefire in Gaza,” as The Nation recently put it.

Through a progressive’s lens, successes are real: a higher minimum wage, establishment of the state as an abortion haven, a major capital budget, aggressive green energy mandates, welcoming and sanctuary policies for migrants and more. We publish those claims as they are made. Illinois may indeed be “the most progressive state in the nation and damn proud of it,” as Gov. Pritzker says.

But there’s another side to the story, thousands of pages long, of severely crippling results of progressive policies.

What follows is a summary of the other consequences of progressive policies for Illinois and Chicago. Each point is documented by facts and data. Links are to original sources or to Wirepoints reports that cite the original sources.

  • Fleeing population and tax base
  • Stagnant economy and job market
  • Expensive and broken education system
  • Rampant crime
  • Suffocating taxes
  • Pension crisis ignored
  • Massive spending on illegal immigrants
  • No equity – a failure by their own standards
  • Economic policy centered on statism and doomed focus on renewable energy
  • Free speech under assault and autocracy reigns
  • Disastrous pandemic management yet no accountability
  • Still more

For still more details, see our page linked here collecting all our pertinent articles and research grouped by topic.

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Fleeing population and tax base

      • The Census Bureau’s decennial count (2010-2020) showed Illinois was one of only three states to lose population over the decade. The bureau’s latest estimates show Illinois has lost another 240,000 in population since 2020.
      • More than 1.5 million people on net have moved out of Illinois since 2000 according to IRS migration data. Illinois would have taken in an estimated $3.6 billion more in income tax revenue in 2022 alone were it not for that exodus.
      • IRS migration data shows Illinois netted a loss of 87,000 residents and $9.8 billion in adjusted gross income in tax year 2022. Illinois’ losses were the nation’s 3rd-worst, behind only New York and California.
      • Illinois had 24 U.S. House Representatives after the 1970 Census. Today it has just 17.

Stagnant economy and job market

      • Illinois has created no net new employment in five years – the nation’s 3rd-worst performance. Fewer people are on Illinois’ employment rolls today than when Gov. Pritzker took office.
      • llinois ranks 45th through 47th in the country in economic metrics used by the state’s own Commission on Government Accountability and Forecasting to compare itself to other states: GDP, employment and personal income.
      • Illinois’ current unemployment rate of 5.0% is 3rd-worst in the nation.
      • Chicago’s unemployment rate of 6.2% is the highest of America’s 50 biggest metro areas.
      • Chicago is ranked dead last among major cities for creating new millionaires.
      • Illinois is a “net taker” from the federal government and has been since around 2019.
      • Illinois’ credit rating and budgets were greatly assisted by the nearly $200 billion in covid funds distributed by the federal government to the state’s public and private sectors.
      • Annual state claims to “balanced budgets” aren’t true because, among other reasons, Illinois consistently underfunds its pension contributions by about $5 billion every year.

Expensive and broken education system

      • Illinois has dismal student outcomes. Just 35% of students statewide can read at grade level and only 27% are proficient in math. It’s worse for minorities: Just 16% of black students and just 22% of Hispanics can read at grade level. In all, 1.2 million Illinois students can’t read at grade level.
      • Illinois is spending nearly $24,000 per student in 2024, up more than 30% compared to 2019.
      • Only 25% of Chicago Public School students can read at grade level and just 18% can do math. Yet CPS graduates 83% of its students. Chicago Public Schools spent nearly $30,000 per student in 2024, up 39% compared to 2019.
      • Not a single child tested proficient in math in 67 Illinois schools. For reading, it’s 32 schools.
      • The state’s accountability metrics are broken. Ninety-seven percent of teachers statewide are rated “excellent or proficient” and 83% of schools are rated “exemplary” or “commendable.”
      • Based on Census Bureau data, Illinois spends the most per student of any state in the Midwest. Illinois’ total per student spend grew 98% between 2022 and 2007, the 3rd-largest increase of the nation’s 50 states.
      • Illinois’ “evidence-based” school funding formula has failed. After seven years and $8.5 billion in dedicated funding to the formula, the number of students reading at grade level has not improved.
      • While 19 states have adopted some form of school choice since 2023, Illinois politicians last year killed off the state’s only choice program: a small tax-credit scholarship.

Rampant Crime

      • Chicago has led the nation in total homicides for 12 years in a row.
      • Pritzker has said “violent crime in the City of Chicago … has been coming down for three years, in particular, over the last year” and frequently made similar claims. In truth, Chicagoans are suffering under a six-year high in violent crimes.
      • Thanks to crime levels and overwhelmed police, if you’re shot, robbed or assaulted in Chicago, there’s a 50/50 chance there will be no police to respond to your 911 call.
      • Since the implementation of the controversial SAFE-T Act which eliminated cash bail, Cook County’s jail population has fallen to its lowest levels in 40 years.
      • Prosecuting criminals in Chicago and all of Cook County is in the hands of Kim Foxx, widely regarded as among the most pro-criminal prosecutor in the nation and notorious for dropping charges against actor Jussie Smollett. She was endorsed in both her election and reelection to Cook County State’s Attorney by the entire Illinois ruling progressive establishment.

Suffocating taxes

Pension crisis ignored

      • Illinois has the worst pension crisis in the nation under most metrics.
      • The unfunded liability for Illinois state pensions grew from $137 billion in 2019 (when Pritzker took office) to $142 billion in its most recent report.
      • Chicago’s worst-in-nation pension crisis is worsening. Chicago’s pension shortfall across the city’s four major retirement funds rose to $37.2 billion in 2023. Add in the teachers fund, and Chicagoans are on the hook for $53 billion in unfunded pension liabilities – over $45,000 per Chicago household.
      • The number of Illinois public sector workers or retirees with pension benefits or salaries exceeding $100,000 per year has jumped by 50% since 2018, now at 140,000.
      • Illinois and Chicago have the nation’s worst credit ratings, largely due to the pension crisis.
      • Pritzker and other Illinois officeholders refuse to consider an amendment to the state’s constitutional pension protection clause, dishonestly claiming that the federal Constitution would be an impediment. Other states prove it’s not so.

 Massive spending on illegal immigrants

No Equity – Failure by Their Own Standard

      • By their own primary measure of success – “equity” – Illinois and Chicago have failed miserably. Study after study, looking at equity from many angles, says progressive equity efforts in Illinois and Chicago have flopped miserably.
      • The biggest pension in the state, for teachers and school administrators, is structurally set up to shift money to the richest school districts. Lawmakers could easily fix that but don’t.

Economic policy centered on statism and doomed focus on renewable energy

      • Virtually all major, recent Illinois announcements of new or expanding Illinois employment centers were induced through taxpayer subsidies. Most new major projects subsidized by the state are renewable energy projects, which are the centerpiece of Illinois central planning. They include subsidized facilities for Stellantis, Rivian, Lion Electric and Gotion.
      • The Gotion project is particularly controversial. The Chinese company with multiple ties to the Chinese Communist party is scheduled to receive over $8 billion in state and federal subsidies for a plant that will cost the company less than $2 billion. The project is widely opposed by the public and is for manufacturing batteries for electric vehicles, demand for which is languishing. Full reporting on those facts and the rest of the Gotion controversy is collected in our special section here. Pritzker has expressly refused to answer any questions whatsoever about the project.
      • Illinois is aggressively pursuing a goal of having one million EVs on the road by 2030, but Illinois would have to quadruple its current adoption rate for EVs to meet the state’s goals.
      • In 2021, Illinois passed legislation to push 50% of its electricity production to renewable sources by 2040 and 100% from clean energy sources by 2050, which became law last year and was called by one of its sponsors “the most aggressive, most progressive climate bill in the nation.”
      • Partly as a result of those policies, electricity costs have already risen 50% in much of the state with high risks of brownouts. As in most of the nation, many planned renewable electricity projects are now on hold because grid connections don’t exist, which may be prohibitively expensive to fix.
      • Last month the state announced a major bet on quantum computing. Illinois will provide $200 million to PsiQuantum for a Chicago projected to create just 154 jobs. The state is also contributing another $500 million to the industrial park for quantum computing in which the facility will be located, which the state says will result in “thousands” of jobs. However, those additional jobs are entirely speculative at this point.
      • Most recently, Lion Electric, an electric school bus maker that last year built a new Illinois plant with state incentives is struggling for survival. The project was highly touted by Pritzker, who projected 1,200 jobs by 2028. Lion also benefits from the $5 billion subsidy program for electric school buses championed by Vice President Kamala Harris, which is also failing.

Free speech under assault and autocracy

      • Illinois has established itself as the state most hostile to First Amendment free speech rights. A list of examples is linked here. In one instance, a federal judge labeled a law the state was trying to defend as “stupid and likely unconstitutional,” so Attorney General Kwame Raoul gave up on the case.
      • Illinois’ highly touted “ban on book bans” is an empty, dangerous and hypocritical stunt. It delegates censorship powers to libraries and to an unelected national association headed by a self-described Marxist. It conflates questions of age appropriateness with censorship, and is a transparent attempt by the leaders of the cancel culture to wrap themselves in the flag of free speech.
      • Pritzker has expressed views particularly hostile to established First Amendment law, saying on CNN that what the government deems to be lies should be subject to criminal prosecution.
      • The University of Illinois maintains one of the most onerous “loyalty oaths” for faculty, demanding proof of their active commitment to wokeness.
      • Illinois Congressmen have implored social media to do more censorship in at least five separate hearings where tech platform CEOs were grilled.
      • During the covid pandemic, Illinois was ruled under 45 consecutive monthly emergency orders giving unparalleled power to the executive.
      • For illegal immigrants, Illinois was ruled under 24 monthly emergency orders. The proclamations broadcast inducements for illegals to come, including “transport, emergency shelter and housing, food, health screenings, medical assessments, treatments, and other necessary care and services.”
      • Illinois this year retroactively changed the rules on candidate slating for General Assembly elections, which targeted Republicans only. A lower court ruled against the law, which is now on appeal.
      • Most recently Illinois passed a ban on employers from discussing “religious or political matters” at meetings where worker attendance is mandatory. Violations will be punishable with fines up to $1,000 per employee. It’s patently unconstitutional and absurdly overbroad.

Disastrous pandemic management yet no accountability 

      • A full list of covid response failures by the State of Illinois and City of Chicago is here, many of which were obvious errors even as they were being made. No remorse has been shown or accountability imposed.
      • That list includes massive fraud in pandemic relief, suppression of dissent and conflicting data, unfounded projections portrayed as “science” and willful indifference to the rule of law.
      • Most importantly, Illinois kept schools closed long after prevailing opinion and the CDC advised otherwise, among the greatest policy errors in healthcare history. 

Still more

      • “After years of Republican failure, Pritzker says, Illinois Democrats have turned the state around.” In truth, Democrats have held the majorities in both houses of the Illinois General Assembly for 21 years and super majorities in both houses for 11 years. A Democrat has been governor for 17 of the last 21 years. Chicago has not had a Republican mayor for 93 years.
      • A catalog of deceitful or dishonest claims by Pritzker and the state is here. 
      • Mayor Johnson as well as Chicago Teachers Union President Stacy Davis Gates have both condemned standardized tests as racist and rooted in eugenics.
      • For voting, Illinois maintains aggressive mail-in voting rules, no requirement for picture IDs and the probably the most gerrymandered maps in the nation.
      • Antisemitism has been the predictable result of DEI preached by JB Pritzker and his sister, Penny Pritzker. Like Penny Pritzker at Harvard, JB Pritzker’s tenure on Northwestern University’s board of trustees contributed to the current wave of antisemitism at the school.
      • Illinois is in fact a moderate state not properly represented by its progressive political establishment. On virtually every major issue, Illinoisans are centrists.
      • Mayor Johnson and Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle are among the nation’s strongest supporters of Universal Basic Income. Cook County claims its UBI program is the biggest in the nation. But neither Chicago nor the county have any way to pay for continuation of the programs, most of which have been paid for with temporary covid relief money.
      • The commercial property “Doom Loop” is a growing concern. Chicago, like many cities, faces a frightening, downward spiral from declining office building valuations. Though the problem may derive primarily from the work-from-home trend, it’s worsened by Chicago crime. Actual, daily occupancy of downtown offices hovers around 55% of pre-pandemic levels. Lower valuations will force massive residential property tax increases or severe budget cutbacks.
      • Johnson was elected mayor of Chicago despite his calls for defunding the police and justifying violent protests.
      • Mayor Johnson routinely places blame for Chicago’s problems on racism, disinvestment and even Richard Nixon.
      • Illinois progressives celebrate December 4 as Fred Hampton Day. Hampton was a member of the Black Panthers and advocated for violent, Marxist revolution.
      • Pritzker’s approval rating is 41% according to the most recent poll by a major pollster. Mayor Johnson’s is 28%.
      • “Social justice” principles guide investment of state cash. Illinois Treasurer Michael Frerichs remains an unapologetic champion of ESG (environmental, social, governance) investing. He manages an average balance of well over $100 billion of state money which he subjects to his social justice goals.
      • A 2018 Cook County inspector general’s report concluded that more than $330,000 in property tax breaks and refunds that Pritzker received on a property he owned — in part by removing toilets to render the property uninhabitable — constituted a “scheme to defraud.” Pritzker repaid the county treasurer’s office, and said the repayment was not an acknowledgment of anything improper. A federal criminal investigation of Pritzker, his wife and brother-in-law was reported to have begun on the matter in October 2018, though nothing further has been reported on that.

For more of our research or any questions, contact us at Admin@wirepoints.org.

THIS COLUMN HAS BEEN UPDATED TO INCLUDE RECENT DATA

41 Comments
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Isn’t Illinois Fun?
1 year ago

When you are born into an incredibly wealthy family, live in an enormous mansion, have never once had to budget and make hard financial choices, when you have had things handed to you your entire life without earning them, you become detached from economic realities, from what most people experience and become attached to academic abstract ideas that sound wonderful in the lab but do not work in practice. You buy the governorship of an essentially bankrupt state and use temporary federal covid money to shore up state finances temporarily while perpetuating and exacerbating the long term spending and fiscal… Read more »

AC
1 year ago

It’s funny how people will moan and complain about Illinois tax policy. I left Illinois 20 years ago for one of the states that has “low taxes” – Guess what, it sucks. Lack of services and infrastructure improvements are a glaring hole in many of these states.

But, keep bashing Illinois while the “low tax” states struggle with low education, poor transit, and no services.

Honest Jerk
1 year ago
Reply to  AC

Absolutely…better to pay sky high taxes in Illinois for low education, poor transit, and lousy services.

Hello, Indiana!
1 year ago
Reply to  AC

Hmm.. focusing on one of the many foibles facing those in IL while ignoring the many, many others such as rampant crime, corruption, disastrous policies etc. It will take a lot more cherry picking to make a pie.

Ex Illini
1 year ago
Reply to  AC

You should try to come up with something a little more believable. Seriously, everyone knows you’re one of the CrapFax gang, or one of the other usual suspects. Thanks for the laugh though.

Free at Last
1 year ago
Reply to  AC

You should move back to Illinois and enjoy what has been created for you. I’m sure you will love it. You’ll love the high quality schools, roads and transit systems. The services are great especially if you make a 911 call. While you’re there please make sure to experience some of the great night life offered in Englewood, Lawndale and South Austin and now all other parts of the City. It’ll be just the shot to your heart that you need.

Lawrence
1 year ago

This is the best summary of “State of Illinois” talking points I’ve read. It’s long because Illinois has many problems, but it’s concise and to the point. Every Illinois taxpayer should read it before voting. Thank you, Wirepoints. Unfortunately, the people who read Wirepoints and keep up with what’s happening in Illinois are a minority, and most will continue to check the Democratic box on election day. We need to get this information out to the public. I do my best, but responses range from yawns to vehement attacks claiming it’s “disinformation.” Many of my social media posts have been… Read more »

ron
1 year ago

Just stop any government mandates.

alison
1 year ago
Reply to  ron

I bet the Fed would hate that!!

William Butler Hickok
1 year ago

Wirepoints, a job we’ll done.

Hello Indiana!
1 year ago

Carnival barkers.

Old Joe
1 year ago

Nice summary WP but I don’t think the Dem delegates read WP.

Fullbladder
1 year ago

Excellent article Wire Points

Rick
1 year ago

Wow Mark, this is one nice list to put together ahead of the convention.

Former Illinois Wimp
1 year ago
Reply to  Mark Glennon

The WP team did such a good job compiling this list that it almost seems pointless to continue. There isn’t much left to say. We all know it’s just going to be more bad news from here on out for those in Illinois.

JackBolly
1 year ago
Reply to  Mark Glennon

I believe the high crime is understated in term of it’s negative impact. ‘Pallooza goers are having their eyes opened in a bad way. A warning needs to be issued to out of town visitors. Nothing accelerates economic decay like rampant crime and a city and county leadership that want to defund the police and feel the crime is ‘equity’.

AC
1 year ago
Reply to  Rick

Oh please – it was a hack-piece

Former Illinois Wimp
1 year ago

There it is everyone. WP has summarized all the Illinois crud into one article. It’s overwhelming. If after reading it, you still intend to stay, you are putting your physical, mental, and financial future at extreme risk. Perhaps you are also putting others close to you at risk, because if you stay, they will also stay. It’s worthy of consideration. Just a suggestion…why not send the link to this article to those living with/near you in Illinois. Tell them you are thinking about leaving. Get a conversation going and see where it leads. FYI: Well done Wirepoints. Take a few… Read more »

Honest Jerk
1 year ago

and when you discuss Illinois with others, stress the point that the risk in staying isn’t stagnant, it’s growing. It’s not just about one mayor being bad, or one state leader being bad. Lightfoot is gone. Madigan is gone. The state still reeks of corruption, mismanagement, and just plain evil.

NancyB
1 year ago
Reply to  Honest Jerk

Folks need to wake up to all of this. Illinois stinks. Wisconsin, Indiana, Kentucky, those places are the future.

Former Illinois Wimp
1 year ago
Reply to  NancyB

Nancy, if you go thru all the trouble of leaving Illinois, I recommend going a little farther to Tennessee, a truly conservative state, but getting out of Illinois is the most important thing.

Billy
1 year ago

Not sure if you’ve been to TN lately friend but the days of it being truly conservative are long over. Enough of these bleeding heart moderate types got smart about taxes but remain stupid about abortion and gay marriage.

Elaine S.
1 year ago
Reply to  Billy

Which raises the eternal question: what good will it do to leave blue states for red states if the red states end up turning blue from increased populations? Are conservatives just supposed to keep cutting and running forever until there is no where left to hide? I don’t blame anyone who does leave Illinois, but there are valid reasons to stay that go beyond politics, and to constantly tout “throw in the towel and move out” as the ONLY solution may not be such a good idea in the long run.

Former Illinois Wimp
1 year ago
Reply to  Elaine S.

I believe more independent and conservatives are leaving the blue states than liberals. The country is doing a voluntary reorg. Be my guest and remain in Illinois if you think that’s best for you and your family. We can compare notes in 10 years and see who made the better decision.

debtsor
1 year ago
Reply to  Elaine S.

YOU, the blue state conservative are the reinforcements red states want and need. Fortify the red states and make them redder. Leaving Illinois is a tactical retreat.

Former Illinois Wimp
1 year ago
Reply to  debtsor

And if Illinois ever does change direction, you can always go back, but I doubt anyone would want to after experiencing life in a truly red state.

AC
1 year ago

Living in a red state for 20 years is why I moved back to Illinois.

Lt Col
1 year ago
Reply to  debtsor

Something I learned in the military is that tactical retreats are just a polite way of telling your troops you’ve lost. Giving up is for cowards. We will fight blue America to the death.

Lawrence
1 year ago
Reply to  Lt Col

Illinois is my home. I was forced out of Austin (which 60 years ago was a nice neighborhood) and kept moving west until I reached the Fox Valley. It was great for many years until Chicago politics gained a foot hold in the state and now aided by Pritzkers money and progressive agenda the entire state is being sucked into Chicago’s demise. I will keep fighting, this is my home but it is sure draining the strength out of this old body.

AC
1 year ago
Reply to  Lawrence

“Forced out” is code for “white flight”

Honest Jerk
1 year ago
Reply to  AC

You may be correct, but what of it? My parents did it many years ago from Chicago, and I’m so glad they did.

Honest Jerk
1 year ago
Reply to  Lawrence

For me it was Chicago to Des Plaines to Algonquin. Almost 60 years total. Finally, I realized the progressives win as long as I stay and keep paying their bills, so I left Illinois.

Reg
1 year ago
Reply to  Honest Jerk

60 years? It’s highly possible that what you think was the good old days is really just the days when you had no responsibility. Illinois wasn’t great, you were just six years old.

debtsor
1 year ago
Reply to  Honest Jerk

Algonquin looks solidly blue to me. The problem being first and foremost, demographics change in southeast McHenry County, as hispanics and AWFLs replace the long term residents, and secondly, it’s sandwiched between the two bluest areas in McHenry – Crystal Lake and Carpentersville. McHenry county in general is on the precipice of forever turning blue. My relatives in McHenry tell me their entire subdivision demographics have changed in the past decade and they almost the only original residents left, it’s now two families per house, 6 cars in every driveway, and so on. They’ve lived there since the 90’s. I… Read more »

Honest Jerk
1 year ago
Reply to  Lt Col

Of course you’ve lost Illinois, but go ahead and lead a banzai charge if it makes you feel better. A better alternative, give Illinois more time to implode from its stupidity, and then fight back. I’m pretty sure that is the Wirepoint long range goal.

debtsor
1 year ago
Reply to  Honest Jerk

Has Detroit or Cleveland or Baltimore ever recovered from their implosion? They have not. Chicago and Illinois will never recover from the implosion. By then, it’s too late.

cynthia
1 year ago
Reply to  Elaine S.

Be alot easier to just vote RED

Lawrence
1 year ago
Reply to  cynthia

The Goons (-1) don’t like that Cynthia. Voting Red on not allowed in Illinois.

Former Illinois Wimp
1 year ago
Reply to  Billy

Tennessee is a lock for Trump. Illinois is a lock for Harris.

William Butler Hickok
1 year ago
Reply to  NancyB

The state stinks because a fish rots from the head down. Jay Robert has been smelling a bit gamey lately

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