Quinn has vetoed S.B. 365, a rather modest set of reforms of the controversial legislative scholarship program. Quinn’s reasoning is that he wants to see the program totally eliminated. Of course, because he issued a total veto instead of an amendatory veto, Quinn has ensured that the scholarship program will continue operating in its current shady and dysfunctional fashion.
The $13.5 million program allows legislators to give away scholarships to anybody they choose, with the state universities bearing all the costs. Many lawmakers have set up processes to ensure that qualified candidates — not necessarily politically connected ones — are selected. But some legislators make the decisions themselves, leaving open the possibility that some scholarships might be awarded for the wrong reasons.
The bill would have prohibited a legislator’s relatives and donors from receiving scholarships. While eliminating the program would be better, this bill at least placed some rules on how the scholarships are awarded.
Now, Quinn could have used his amendatory veto and rewritten the bill to make it do what he wanted. But he did not do that. Instead he pinned his hopes on another bill, H.B. 4685, which passed the House, but not Senate. That bill would eliminate the program entirely. That bill has a LONG way to go before it passes, and the legislature is not even in session to consider it. In short, it could be years before this thing goes anywhere.
Yet again, Quinn failed to use his amendatory veto effectively, and now it’s up to the General Assembly to override the veto. And I’m guessing they won’t. So it’s business as usual in the State of Illinois.