Attorney general candidates debate
office’s role, conflicts
Attorney general
candidates state Sen. Kwame Raoul, D-Chicago (right), Republican Erika Harold
(center), and Libertarian Bubba Harsy (left) talk to the Chicago Sun-Times
Editorial Board
Illinois
voters will get a chance to pick a new attorney general in November for the
first time in 12 years and the major party candidates are arguing how far
conflicts of interest laws should go.
The
three candidates, Republican Erika Harold, state Sen. Kwame Raoul, D-Chicago,
and Libertarian Bubba Harsy, appeared jointly in front of the Chicago Sun-Times
this week.
Attorney
General Lisa Madigan announced in September she wouldn't seek a fifth term,
ending a 16-year stint.
Part of
the campaign Republicans are running across the state targets conflicts of
interest around lawmakers like House Speaker Michael Madigan’s law firm
handling property tax appeals while crafting property tax law.
Harold
said the attorney general should highlight where laws should be changed to
prohibit certain conflicts. Raoul warned such a move could overreach.
“It
hasn’t really been debated in great detail in the legislature, not at all,”
Raoul said. “I chair the [Senate] Judiciary Committee.”
“I
think if he wanted that debated in the legislature he could have had that
debated because he has in fact been in the legislature for 14 years,” Harold
said.
Harsy
said the property tax conflicts are a scheme and corrupt.
The
candidates also discussed the office’s role in providing a check on federal
government overreach.
Harold
said she wouldn't hesitate to sue the federal government where she sees
overreach. Raoul said Harold needs to address specific issues.
“Does
she not support Lisa Madigan and other attorney generals stepping up to protect
the Affordable Care Act?” Raoul said. “Does she or does she not support …
[efforts] to take on predatory lenders in higher education? Does she or does
she not support that?”
Harold
did say she agrees with suing the feds to free up federal law enforcement
grants. The feds are withholding money over the state’s TRUST ACT, something
critics say makes Illinois a sanctuary state.
Harsy
said the feds are the ones that have jurisdiction over immigration.
“We can
have as many AG guidelines as we want [but] unless the federal government gives
us the authority to handle it, we’re not really handling it,” Harsy said. “We
can pretend like we’re handling it but we’re not.”
All
three candidates said they support legalization of recreational
marijuana.
The
election is Nov. 6.
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