Illinois dual office holding debate intensifies amid Calumet funding,
ethics concerns
[May 26, 2026]
By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributor
(The Center Square) – Ethics advocates say Illinois’ loose restrictions
on dual office holding leave the door open to conflicts of interest and
potential retaliation by public officials, following renewed scrutiny
surrounding Thaddeus Jones and allegations involving city spending and
state funding threats.
The controversy intensified after a recent WGN Investigates report
detailed accusations that Jones threatened to withhold $250,000 in state
funding after criticism over municipal spending.
Jones did not immediately respond to The Center Square’s requests for
comment.
Reform for Illinois Executive Director Alisa Kaplan said Illinois’
ethics laws do not provide enough safeguards when elected officials
simultaneously serve in multiple offices, such as mayor and state
legislator.
“Many states have stricter limits on dual office holding, and I think
Illinois could benefit from those as well,” Kaplan said. “It leads to
too much consolidation of power in the hands of one person.”
Kaplan said conflicts can arise when lawmakers oversee municipal budgets
while also serving in the state legislature, where they can influence
funding decisions affecting their own communities.
“A state legislator might tend to favor their own municipality at the
expense of others,” Kaplan said. “State legislators can wield their
state power to retaliate against city officials in instances like this.”

Illinois law currently allows many forms of dual office holding that
other states prohibit outright or limit more aggressively. Kaplan said
some states use attorney general reviews or formal advisory opinions to
determine whether a conflict exists when one person holds two public
offices.
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The Springfield office space of the Illinois Legislative Ethics
Commission and Legislative Inspector General. Photo: Greg Bishop /
The Center Square

“In many other states, they must present conflicts more often than
they do here in Illinois,” Kaplan said.
Questions surrounding public spending have also drawn attention in
recent years following controversies involving former mayor of
Dalton Tiffany Henyard and other municipal officials accused of
questionable use of taxpayer funds.
Kaplan said she was unsure whether Illinois has sufficient statewide
safeguards governing municipal spending on items such as travel,
meals, or luxury expenses, but said clearer standards may be needed.
“If there’s not, there should be,” Kaplan said regarding state-level
limits on municipal spending practices.
Kaplan noted supporters of dual office holding often argue it
expands the pool of qualified candidates willing to serve in local
government. Still, she said the ethical concerns remain significant.
“It does present so many ethical problems and so many potential
conflicts of interest,” Kaplan said. “That’s why some states choose
to just ban it altogether or to put really severe limits on it.”
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