Illinois

Voters to Decide on Pritzker's Graduated Income Tax Program

The House voted 73-44 Monday to put the question on the November 2020 ballot

Voters will decide whether to change Illinois' income-tax structure after the House approved a constitutional amendment on Gov. J.B. Pritzker's graduated tax proposal.

The House voted 73-44 Monday to put the question on the November 2020 ballot. It needed 71 votes.

Voter approval would mean eliminating the current flat-rate tax of 4.95%. Democratic Pritzker intends that a progressive structure would increase taxes on incomes higher than $250,000. Pritzker says 97 percent of taxpayers would pay no increase in taxes.

"Today’s vote is a giant leap forward for the middle class and those striving to get there," Pritzker said. "It’s about fairness, and change and reform; and it’s about financial stability, economic opportunity and growth for our state."

The amendment does not specify what rates would apply to income levels. That must come in separate legislation.

But minority House Republicans complained that the proposal amounts to a tax hike and allow runaway Democratic spending.

"I campaigned on a promise to put Springfield back on the side of working families, to ask people like me to pay more, and to protect middle class families," Pritzker went on to say. "Today we have reached a major milestone in that endeavor."

The Senate approved the amendment May 1.

Copyright The Associated Press
Contact Us