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Democratic majorities remake Illinois' legislative landscape

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CHICAGO – A huge election night gave Illinois Democrats unprecedented power at the state Capitol, allowing them to set budgets, borrow money and override vetoes by the governor without any input from Republicans.

But bigger majorities won’t necessarily make legislative business headache-free for the Democrats.

The veto-proof control of both chambers they secured Tuesday night could give legislative leaders even more influence in negotiations with Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn, who at times has clashed with the General Assembly.

He vetoed a popular measure to expand legalized gambling and has differed with lawmakers on how to spend the state’s money, shore up its fiscal house and deal with a gap of $85 billion owed to state employees for future retirement obligations.

Still, Quinn insisted Wednesday that he is happy with his party’s victories in the elections and isn’t concerned about losing some muscle in the legislative process.

Democrats won a historic 40 seats in the state Senate – up from the 35 they have now – to just 19 for Republicans. In the House, Democrats picked up seven seats, reversing their losses in the 2010 Republican surge, leaving the GOP outnumbered 71-48.

“It’s hard to think of a landslide when someone already has a majority, but this is as close to a landslide as one can imagine,” said Christopher Mooney, a University of Illinois at Springfield political science professor.

Democrats have never held so many Senate seats, but for much of the 20th Century, the GOP dominated the upper chamber.

In 1906, Republicans won 44 of the Senate’s 51 seats and had more than 40 posts for most of the 1920s, according to records kept by Charles Wheeler III, a longtime Statehouse reporter and professor at U of I Springfield.

Since the size of the House was cut from 177 to 118 in 1982, a Democratic majority of 72-46 in 1991 was the biggest split. Democrats elected 118 House members in 1964, with help from an odd, court-ordered at-large ballot and President Lyndon Johnson’s landslide.

Exultation might be the natural reaction after unleashing such a blistering conquest. But all those new lawmakers will have their own agendas, making party cohesion more difficult. And Mooney said they pose other problems, particularly in setting an agenda that voters in distinct legislative districts will support in the next election.

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