Manipulated maps, hypocrisy and Illinois’ collapsing Congressional influence – Wirepoints

By: Ted Dabrowski and John Klingner

Everybody’s talking about Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s hypocrisy for harboring Texas Democrats who oppose redistricting mid-Census. Pritzker might be yelling about democracy, but it was he and his Democratic supermajority who only recently gerrymandered Illinois to the hilt: 44% of Illinoisans voted for Donald Trump, and yet Democrats control 82% of Illinois’ congressional seats (14 of 17 House seats).

Pritzker wants to be a national hero for the “resistance,” but there’s a problem: Illinois is far from the influential powerhouse the governor portrays it to be. Illinois has been bleeding people relative to the rest of the country for decades, and that can be seen clearly by the state’s collapse in Congressional representation.

In 1950, Illinois had 25 representatives. Today it’s just 17 and on its way to 16 in 2030, according to the Brennan Center for Justice

Contrast that to the states Pritzker loves to hate. Florida’s representation has spiked from just 8 house members to 28, with projections of it hitting 32 in 2030. That’s a 4X increase. 

And Texas will nearly double in representation from 22 to 42 by 2030.

The above numbers show how sick Illinois’ brand really is, and Pritzker is not helping with his denial of just how politically one-sided the state really is – in large part thanks to him.

The numbers also reveal how successful the Southern red states have been in attracting people and businesses. They are booming.

An absolutely essential goal of Illinois’ next governor must be to reverse this trend. There’s no reason why Illinois can’t compete – it just needs to get rid of its failed policies and its bad politicians. 

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Frank B.
7 months ago

Another interesting data point is that in the same time period. Wisconsin has gone from 12 Electoral votes to 10. So Illinois was about 2.5 times the size of Wisconsin in population (25 to 10) and now it’s roughly 2 times the size. (16 to 8). Clearly, forces apart from the weather are in play.

Your dime, your dance floor
6 months ago
Reply to  Frank B.

Wisconsin is also projected to lose a congressional seat so to totals will be 16 to 7.

Ataraxis
7 months ago

Please note the recent uptick in down voter activity on most threads due to the Wirepoints’ team’s targeted truth telling.
You can smell the fear from the cornered Dems.
It’s just like how vampires recoil in horror in the old movies when a Crucifix is held up in front of them.
The Dems are the vampires and Wirepoints is the Crucifix.

Last edited 7 months ago by Ataraxis
Wally
7 months ago

The quote I find funny is “IL next governor must reverse this trend. There’s no reason IL can’t compete.” How is the next governor going to eliminate pension debt, lower property taxes, break the stranglehold of public unions, and encourage businesses despite high corporate taxes? Not going to happen in next two generations.

Wally
7 months ago

The loss of eight house seats in 70 years indicates one less seat every 10 year census. Could be 2 seats in 2030 the way residents are leaving. I would like to hear Pritzker again deny population loss in IL in the face of these numbers. Oh, wait, the census in IL is rigged! The bottom line is, the less seats in the house, the less clout by IL representatives.

Bob - America First!
7 months ago

Love to see it. First, the GOP gets Illinois back. Then FINALLY we can recriminalize marijuana, end gay marriage, outlaw gambling, ban pornography and undo all the other depravities these people think are A-OK.

Just Al, from Park Ridge
7 months ago

AND, just as important, they can release the Epstein files.

Leaving Soon, just not soon enough
7 months ago

The numbers tell the whole story. Illinois has chased away the hard working private sector taxpayers. Other states have grown because they welcome businesses and have lower taxation. The public sector has robbed future generations to come, so they are now choosing to go rather than stay. Illinois is still declining, it has not hit rock bottom yet. Destroyed by greed and crime.

R hums
7 months ago

Those high earning that are still in Illinois need to leave immediately in order to preserve their wealth. The Dems have made it virtually impossible to change the progressive march to insolvency. Big tax increases on the horizon.

Publius
7 months ago
Reply to  R hums

Our hard work is paying off! Don’t fall for the despair legacy news and online trolls are trying to cultivate. Now is the time to take back Illinois! Pritzker can’t handle an NBC interview and Johnson has reached a level where he would get booed off the stage at his own birthday party. We’ve got some great opportunities!

Check out Johnson getting cussed out and booed by LGBTQ+ last weekend for some inspiration:

https://www.newsbreak.com/jonny-c-224527595/4167490894802-chicago-mayor-brandon-johnson-booed-and-cursed-out-at-lgbtq-market-days-event-as-his-approval-hits-historic-low

Matt J.
7 months ago
Reply to  R hums

I moved my high earnings out of Chicago 5 yrs to Kendall Cty. In three yrs, I’m taking the same earnings out of IL. I hope others will do the same. Potentially great city/state being decimated by power-grabs, not governing.

Lurker
7 months ago

Pritzker v JD Vance.

One a trust fund stumble-f*** kicked out of the family business

The other — from the humblest of means — became a veteran, self made entrepreneur and compelling conservative leader and orator

Can’t imagine a better position for the GOP

Vance — 2028-2036
Rubio — 2036-2044
Baron Trump 2044-2052

Your dime, your dance floor
6 months ago
Reply to  Lurker

Nice fever dream but there is no way in hell it happens.

Tom Paine's Ghost
7 months ago

The steady Illinois decline in electoral votes and congressional seats is ENTIRELY caused by the evil Democrats AKA Communists and their parasitic venereal urine stain Public Sector Union criminal co conspirators.

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Audio: Wirepoints’ Mark Glennon says Chicago pension buyout plan mostly shifts debt rather than eliminating it, property tax surge doubles inflation over three decades – Chicago’s Morning Answer

Chicago’s political leadership is floating a pension buyout program as evidence it is seriously addressing the city’s thirty-six-billion-dollar unfunded pension liability, but Mark Glennon, founder of the Illinois policy research organization Wirepoints, said that the proposal moves debt from one column to another rather than reducing it, and that the broader fiscal picture facing the city continues to deteriorate across every measurable dimension. Audio here.

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