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Chicago mayor-elect tells Senate 'bold action' - including a graduated income tax - is needed

SPRINGFIELD - In her second consecutive day of addressing lawmakers at the Capitol, Chicago Mayor-elect Lori Lightfoot again called for statewide unity and told the Illinois Senate "bold action" will be necessary to "bring real change" to the state.

"My charge is clear: Bring change by creating real opportunity in every neighborhood so that people have the luxury to dream big and to thrive," she said Thursday. "This is only possible if we, as leaders and public servants, create governments that are ethical."

One of those necessary changes, she said, was the graduated income tax touted by Gov. J.B. Pritzker - a measure that advanced out of the Senate Executive Committee on Wednesday.

"As elected officials, we must measure ourselves by the simple yardstick: Are we empowering people to make a better life for themselves and their families?" she said. "I commend this body for taking a step in that direction. I understand that recently you have taken the initial steps to move forward with the governor's plan to institute a fair tax that ensures everyone pays their fair share but frees the more modest earners from aggressive taxation that has kept them from getting ahead."

Lightfoot called the plan the "type of bold change" that she looks forward to working with Springfield to accomplish. The measure is a constitutional amendment that, if approved by voters, would allow the legislature to impose higher tax rates on larger incomes.

She also gave her support to protecting pensions, calling them a "promise," and put a focus on ending an "epidemic of violence."

She said violence must be addressed so children "do not have to live in fear" and so public safety is no longer "a commodity" available to only the wealthy.

"The solutions that we forge together in Chicago can and should have resonance across the entire state," she said.

She also touched on transportation, noting Illinoisans "expect and deserve" a transportation infrastructure that is safe and reduces bottlenecks and barriers to trade.

"I will be an active partner as we tackle these and other challenges," she said.

She also continued to focus on statewide unity, mentioning communities such as Centreville, Cairo, Decatur and Benton.

"We are open and anxious to learn from others in this state and across the nation in how we can build a better, greater Chicago," she said.

Senate President John Cullerton, a Chicago Democrat, thanked Lightfoot for her appearance.

"I'll be back," Lightfoot said.

Chicago mayor-elect calls for Illinois unity, addresses downstate resentment of city

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