A political action committee says the candidacy of Villa Park state House candidate Deborah Conroy is part of a scheme by House Speaker Michael Madigan (D-Chicago) to keep suburban property taxes high.
Madigan is almost entirely financing Conroy's campaign. He has given her $1,422,915 in all, according to the Illinois State Board of Elections.
A direct mail piece sent to District 46 voters by Liberty Principles PAC describes what it calls the "Conroy-Madigan Fix," claiming Madigan requires candidates he supports oppose suburban property tax caps "so he can continue making millions as a property tax appeals attorney."
Jay Kinzler
"If Mike Madigan pays for it, he owns it," the mail piece says.
District 46 includes all or part of Elmhurst, Oakbrook Terrace, Wheaton, Addison, Bloomingdale, Milton, York, Addison, Bloomingdale, Carol Stream, Glen Ellyn, Glendale Heights, Hanover Park, Lombard, and Villa Park.
Madigan earns a living appealing high property taxes, for which he receives a percentage of the reduction. A 2017 analysis found that his law firm, Madigan & Getzendanner, won cuts of $70 million for its clients between 2008 and 2016.
Liberty Principles PAC, which is supporting Conroy's opponent Jay Kinzler, is pushing a hard, one percent of home value property tax cap. A home valued at $250,000 would have a bill of $2,500 per year, under its plan.
Daniel K. Proft, founder and president of Liberty Principles PAC, is a principal of Local Government Information Services, which publishes the Dupage Policy Journal.