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South Central Reporter

Thursday, December 26, 2024

Wilhour responds to businesses leaving Illinois: 'There's no stability and nothing to build on'

Wilhour

Rep. Blaine Wilhour spoke about the factors driving businesses out of Illinois. | State Representative Blaine Wilhour – District 107/Facebook

Rep. Blaine Wilhour spoke about the factors driving businesses out of Illinois. | State Representative Blaine Wilhour – District 107/Facebook

State Rep. Blaine Wilhour (R-Shelbyville) expressed his disappointment with job creators, who he said no longer believe in Illinois.

"Job creators don't have a lot of confidence in Illinois," he told South Central Reporter. "There's no stability and nothing to build on – just bad policy and pol[itician]s more interested in propping up the special interest over creating jobs and successful businesses. If you [are] constantly creating policy that makes it burdensome to create jobs, then you're not pro-worker."

Billionaire Ken Griffin was the wealthiest resident of Illinois. He is among the top 50 wealthiest people in the world, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, as reported by MarketWatch. He has an estimated worth of $28.9 billion. 

Griffin recently moved to Miami, Florida, and relocated his hedge-fund firm, Citadel, and market-making firm, Citadel Securities, to the city. His announcement was the third in the last two months from major companies that are pulling their headquarters out of Illinois. Citadel officials said crime was a factor in Griffin's decision.

"Chicago will continue to be important to the future of Citadel, as many of our colleagues have deep ties to Illinois," Griffin wrote in a letter to his employees. "Over the past year, however, many of our Chicago teams have asked to relocate to Miami, New York, and our other offices around the world." 

Wilhour spoke about the factors driving businesses out of Illinois.

"We're overtaxed, overregulated; if we could just be normal, our natural advantages as a state would carry the day," he said.

Caterpillar revealed in mid-June that it would move its global headquarters from Deerfield, Illinois, to Irving, Texas, according to a press release from the company. 

"We believe it's in the best strategic interest of the company to make this move, which supports Caterpillar's strategy for profitable growth as we help our customers build a better, more sustainable world," Chairman and CEO Jim Umpleby said. 

State Sen. Darren Bailey (R-Flora) was asked about the main factors that are driving these big companies out of the state.

"It's the high workers' comp cost," he said. "Unfortunately, here in Illinois, those cost[s] are out of control, and with Dems refusing to pay off the unemployment insurance fund these will only get worse. You couple that with all the other issues, and as great of [a] state as Illinois is, there aren't a lot of reasons for businesses to stay or come here."

Wilhour suggested additional steps that lawmakers can take to attract businesses.

"We have to show we're headed in [the] right direction, show job creators we're serious about addressing our structural problems," he said. "If we can do that, people would have no problem investing here. We've got [to] do deregulation to get businesses back to looking at us. Besides the bad policy, Illinois has everything else it needs."

Boeing revealed in May that it would transfer its headquarters from Chicago to a suburb of Washington, D.C., according to NBC Chicago.

"We are excited to build on our foundation here in Northern Virginia," Dave Calhoun, Boeing president and CEO, said. "The region makes strategic sense for our global headquarters, given its proximity to our customers and stakeholders and its access to world-class engineering and technical talent." 

Chief Executive magazine conducted a survey of approximately 700 business owners from every state, The Center Square reported. The survey ranked Illinois 48th overall, meaning it is the third-worst state in the country for business. The two states that ranked worse than Illinois were New York and California. Texas, Florida, and Tennessee were ranked as the top three states for businesses. 

"We're too corrupt," Ted Dabrowski, president of Wirepoints, said. "Our taxes are way too high. We have way too many regulations and we have massive debts, and that is plenty of reason enough for companies to not want to locate in Illinois, not to mention the state is shrinking in population so it's not a growth state to put your business in."

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