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Thursday, November 21, 2024

Rose criticizes Pritzker, Welch, Harmon for traveling while 'inflation, COVID and crime continue to surge!'

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Sen. Chapin Rose (R-Champaign) | Photo Courtesy of SenChapinRose.com

Sen. Chapin Rose (R-Champaign) | Photo Courtesy of SenChapinRose.com

State Sen. Chapin Rose (R-Mahomet) is speaking out about what he views as the tone deafness of the state’s top Democrats.

“The Governor, the Speaker and Senate president enjoying a pint of merry in Old England,” Rose captioned a photo on Twitter of Gov. J.B. Pritzker, House Speaker Emmanuel “Chris” Welch (D-Westchester) and Senate President Don Harmon (D-Oak Park) toasting at an English pub amid a week of being abroad to pitch the state as a green energy hub to world leaders at a United Nations summit.

“Meanwhile, inflation, COVID and crime continue to surge!” he added.

With the consumer price index is already up by more than 6.2 percent over the last year, representing the biggest 12-month jump in more than three decades, government officials concede the higher prices could last at least until 2022.

The sharp uptick in price increases has swelled even after White House officials described the change as being “transitory.” 

 “It’s a large blow against the transitory narrative,” former Obama administration economic adviser Jason Furman told The Associated Press. “Inflation is not slowing. It’s maintaining a red-hot pace.’’

The bottom-line effect has been increasing prices across the country for staples like bacon, eggs and gasoline.  

While maintaining that at least some of the inflation was predictable as the country sought to rebound from slowdowns caused by the pandemic, including the loss of some 22 million jobs, Furman, now an economist at the Harvard Kennedy School, adds misguided policy has played a role in things becoming as bad as they are.

“They poured kerosene on the fire,” he said of much of the government spending, including President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package.

“Inflation is a lot higher in the United States than it is in Europe,” he said. “Europe is going through the same supply shocks as the United States is, the same supply chain issues. But they didn’t do nearly as much stimulus.’’

Meanwhile, back at home, Rose recently filed a bill that would mean harsher penalties for carjacking crimes.

First introduced in early October, Senate Bill 298 seeks to amend the Criminal Code of 2012, with the proposed amendment also calling for enhanced sentencing in the case of weapons possessed or used by convicted felons, aggravated discharge of a firearm and the use of a “stolen or illegally acquired firearm in the commission of an offense.”

Rose has also recently chastised leaders at the National Archives over a campaign designed to place warning labels on some of the country’s most celebrated founding documents.

“A trigger warning on the Constitution,” Rose recently posted on Twitter, referencing this page of the National Archives. “Who the hell do these idiots think they are? Enough is enough.”

With the move being largely seen as part of the National Archives’ much talked about “institutional commitment to diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility,” the Declaration of Independence and Bill of Rights are among the documents having been stamped with the labels, The Daily Citizen reported.

This development comes after a National Archives task force concluded that historical documents’ portrayal of the founding fathers was “too positive,” according to Reclaim the Net. Top archive officials stress they are only flagging content that is viewed as “potentially harmful,” with staffers defining offensive content as that which is “discriminatory towards or exclude diverse views on sexuality, gender, religion, and more.”

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