                                    2018 IL App (1st) 180654

                                                                                SIXTH DIVISION
                                                                               September 21, 2018

                                          No. 1-18-0654


                                        IN THE

                             APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                               FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT



JOSEPH BERRIOS, in His Official Capacity as )                Appeal from the Circuit Court of
Assessor of Cook County, Illinois; and JOHN K. )             Cook County.
NORRIS,                                        )
                                               )
       Plaintiffs-Appellants,                  )
                                               )
v.                                             )             No. 18 CH 1102
                                               )
THE COOK COUNTY BOARD OF                       )
COMMISSIONERS and THE COOK COUNTY              )
BOARD OF ETHICS,                               )             Honorable Sanjay Tailor,
                                               )             Judge Presiding.
       Defendants-Appellees.


       PRESIDING JUSTICE DELORT delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
       Justices Cunningham and Harris concurred in the judgment.

                                            OPINION

¶1     On January 26, 2018, Joseph Berrios, the Assessor of Cook County, and John K. Norris,

an attorney who practices real estate taxation law before the assessor’s office, filed a two-count

complaint against the Cook County Board of Commissioners and Cook County Board of Ethics

(collectively, the “Cook County defendants”) for injunctive and declaratory relief. Berrios and

Norris challenge the application and validity of various provisions of the Cook County Ethics

Ordinance. The circuit court rejected these challenges and granted summary judgment to the

Cook County defendants. We affirm.
No. 1-18-0654


¶2                                        BACKGROUND

¶3     In 1993, the Cook County Board of Commissioners (county board) adopted the original

version of the Cook County Ethics Ordinance (Ethics Ordinance). Cook County Code of

Ordinances §§ 2-560-2-642 (approved Aug. 3, 1993). The Ethics Ordinance establishes rules of

conduct for county officials and employees. It creates a Cook County Board of Ethics (Ethics

Board) and empowers it to enforce the Ethics Ordinance. The Ethics Ordinance has long

imposed restrictions on campaign donations to county officials from lobbyists and persons who

either contract with the county or seek to do business with the county. On October 5, 2016, the

county board amended the Ethics Ordinance by expanding these restrictions to also include

persons seeking “official action from the County.” The plaintiffs’ complaint challenges the

following three provisions of the Ethics Ordinance, as amended in 2016.

¶4     Section 2-585(b) of the Ethics Ordinance provides as follows:

                        “(b) No person who does business with the County [(Cook

                County)] or who has done business with the County within the

                preceding four years; or is seeking to do business with the County;

                or is a person required to register as a lobbyist with the County; or

                who has sought official action by the County within the preceding

                four years, or is an officer, director or partner of a firm, contracted

                by the County to act as financial counsel, bond counsel,

                underwriter’s counsel, legal counsel, or financial manager for the

                issuance of any bond and directly working on said bond

                transaction; or firm, officers, directors or partners, contracted by

                the County to provide financial audits of County finances and



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No. 1-18-0654


                directly working on said contract shall make contributions in an

                aggregate amount exceeding $750.00:

                       (1) To any candidate for County office or elected County

                official during a single candidacy; or

                       (2) To any elected official of the government of the County

                during any nonelection year of his or her term.

                       (3) To any local, state, or federal political committee that is established in

                support of, a specific candidate for County office or an elected County official.

                The combined effect of these provisions is intended to permit total contribution up

                to, but not exceeding, $1,500.00 in a year in which a candidacy occurs. A year,

                for purposes of this Section, is from January 1 to December 31 of each year.”

                Cook County Code of Ordinances § 2-585(b) (approved Oct. 5, 2016).

¶5     Section 2-585(f) of the Ethics Ordinance states as follows:

                       “(f) Any candidate for any County office or any current

                elected official in Cook County government shall return

                contributions found in excess of the limitations set forth in this

                Section within 30 days of notification from the Board of Ethics.

                Failure to return contributions within 30 days shall be a violation

                of this Section and subject to fines under Section 2-602.” Cook

                County Code of Ordinances § 2-585(f) (approved Oct. 5, 2016).

¶ 6	   Section 2-602(d) of the Ethics Ordinance provides:

                       “(d) The Board [of Ethics] may impose a fine of up to

                $1,000.00 per offense on any person, including officials or



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                candidates, found by the Board to have knowingly violated any

                provision of this article other than Section 2-574 or 2-583, to have

                knowingly furnished false or misleading information to the Board

                or to have failed to cooperate with an investigation under this

                article.” Cook County Code of Ordinances § 2-602(d) (approved

                Oct. 5, 2016).

Unless context dictates otherwise, we will refer to these three provisions as the “Ethics

Ordinance,” even though the full text of the Ethics Ordinance is much longer.

¶7     Normally, candidates for public office in Illinois may not accept contributions of more

than $5600 from a single individual source during an election cycle. 10 ILCS 5/9-8.5(b), (g)

(West 2016); Ill. State Bd. of Elections, Contribution Limits Per Election Cycle (Jan 1, 2017),

https://www.elections.il.gov/Downloads/CampaignDisclosure/PDF/ContributionSummary.pdf.

However, candidates may donate unlimited amounts to their own campaign funds, as may their

immediate family members. 10 ILCS 5/9-8.5(h) (West 2016). Under section 9-8.5(h), when a

candidate for county office (or family member) donates $100,000 or more to his own campaign

fund, the contribution limits in section 9-8.5(b) no longer apply. This event is known colloquially

as a self-funding candidate “lifting the caps.”

¶8     The following recitation of facts is taken from the pleadings and exhibits of record.

Berrios ran for re-election in the March 2018 General Primary Election 1 against a self-funding

candidate who donated “more than $800,000 to his [own] campaign committee since May 2017.”

Because of the aggregate effect of the contribution limits in both the Ethics Ordinance and the



       1
           We take judicial notice that he lost that election. See Jackson v. Board of Election
Commissioners, 2012 IL 111928, ¶ 22 n.1 (holding that courts may take judicial notice of
election results).
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No. 1-18-0654


Election Code (10 ILCS 5/1-1 et seq. (West 2016)), Berrios’s committees could only receive

contributions of $750 per election cycle or non-election year from individuals seeking “official

action” from Cook County, even though the Election Code’s caps were lifted because a self-

funding candidate was running against him. Despite the Ethics Ordinance’s restrictions,

Berrios’s opponent was able to donate unlimited sums to his own campaign. Berrios was not

prohibited from doing so himself, but he did not do so.

¶9     As a matter of course of regular business, the Ethics Board compared the contributions

that Berrios’s committees received and compared them to public records showing that attorneys

and law firms sought property tax reductions from the assessor’s office. This analysis revealed

that some of those attorneys and law firms contributed more than $750 to one or more campaign

committees related to Berrios. On July 21, 2017, the Executive Director of the Ethics Board sent

“Notice[s] of Excess Contributions” to Berrios in his dual roles as chair of his own campaign

committee (the Berrios committee) and as Committeeman of the 31st Ward Democratic

Organization (the 31st ward committee). The Ethics Board issued these notices pursuant to the

Ethics Ordinance’s safe harbor provision, section 2-585(f), which gives a candidate the

opportunity to avoid being fined for accepting an excess contribution if the candidate simply

returns the excess portion within 30 days of being notified by the Ethics Board. The notices

stated that the committees had reported receiving particular donations in excess of $750 from

attorneys or law firms that represented taxpayers before the assessor’s office and demanded that

the excess portions of the contributions be returned. Berrios and his committees declined to do

so, taking the position that (1) the contributions complied with the Election Code and (2) the

contributors were not seeking “official action by the County” as defined in the Ethics Ordinance.

In an affidavit attached to plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment, Berrios characterized his



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No. 1-18-0654


rationale for doing so as follows: “[T]hey were operating under a good faith basis that State

election law applied, *** the contributions at issue comply with the Election Code, and ***

section 2-585(b) of the ordinance did not apply to the contributions at issue.” Until the 2018

election cycle, Berrios had returned excess contributions that violated the Ethics Ordinance.

¶ 10   Because the committees did not return the excess contributions before the specified

deadline, the Ethics Board sent “Notice[s] of Determination” to Berrios and his committees on

January 8, 2018, stating that 41 specified attorneys and law firms who sought “official action”

from the assessor made contributions in excess of $750 and thus violated the Ethics Ordinance.

The determination notices further stated that the Ethics Board imposed a $1000 fine for each of

the 41 violations (for a total of $41,000), a fine of $11,000 jointly against Berrios and the 31st

Ward committee, and a fine of $30,000 jointly against Berrios and his own committee.

¶ 11   The plaintiffs sued the Cook County defendants, claiming that certain provisions of the

Ethics Ordinance (1) exceeded the county’s home rule powers because they were superseded by

contrary state law, with the result that the county had no authority whatsoever to regulate

campaign contributions to candidates for county office, (2) violated the rights of candidates and

citizens under the first amendment to the United States Constitution because they regulate speech

and are not closely drawn to a proper legislative purpose, (3) denied candidates and citizens the

constitutional right to due process of law under the constitution because the term “official action”

is unconstitutionally vague, (4) violated public policy because they infringe on the Illinois

Supreme Court’s authority to regulate the practice of law and the right of taxpayers to retain

counsel of their own choice, and (5) were invalid because only the state’s attorney, rather than

the Ethics Board, has the power to prosecute violations of county ordinances.




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No. 1-18-0654


¶ 12   Each these contentions establishes its own separate and distinct claim of

unconstitutionality, and each of the two plaintiffs have slightly different claims due to their

distinct statuses as candidate and official action-seeker, respectively. Even so, the complaint

aggregates their claims all together into a single 79-paragraph narrative that ends with a brief

recitation of two counts. Cf. 735 ILCS 5/2-603(b) (West 2016) (“Each separate cause of action

upon which a separate recovery might be had shall be stated in a separate count ***.”). Count I

of the complaint seeks a declaratory judgment that the challenged provisions of the Ethics

Ordinance are invalid on each of these bases. Count II seeks an injunction against the defendants,

prohibiting them from enforcing those provisions.

¶ 13   On February 1, 2018, the circuit court stayed enforcement of the Notices of Violation,

pending its decision on the parties’ summary judgment motions. The Cook County defendants

answered the complaint, denying the substantive allegations and pleading an affirmative defense

of laches regarding the home rule and first amendment claims.

¶ 14   The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The Cook County defendants

supported their motion with the affidavit of Ranjit Hakim, Executive Director of the Ethics

Board. Hakim’s affidavit explained the Ethics Board’s procedures for identifying excessive

campaign contributions and its enforcement mechanisms against the contributors and the

corresponding campaign committees. Hakim stated that the Ethics Board “has not, and does not

intend” to deem anyone who seeks ministerial functions from county officials, such as marriage

licenses or picnic permits, as one seeking “official action” under the Ethics Ordinance. He

further provided numerous news clippings reporting on decades of alleged “pay-for-play”

corruption with respect to the county’s property tax assessment process.




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No. 1-18-0654


¶ 15   The plaintiffs’ motion set forth a statement of undisputed facts established by admissions

contained in the defendants’ answer. The plaintiffs also included an affidavit from Berrios in

which he stated that his opponent had donated or loaned more than $800,000 to his own

campaign fund, thus lifting the Election Code’s contribution caps for the race. Berrios noted that

the Ethics Board imposed a $1000 fine for each of 41 excessive contributions. He also stated that

he would be filing a request with the Ethics Board to reconsider its decision imposing fines

against the 31st ward committee and the Berrios committee and that the fines imposed against

those entities and him jointly ($11,000 and $30,000, respectively) were “not part of this action.”

Berrios concluded that he wished to exercise his first amendment rights to freely associate with

the contributors in question and that the Ethics Ordinance prevented a “level playing field ***

against a ‘millionaire candidate’ ”.

¶ 16   In his affidavit in support of the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment, Norris stated

that he was an attorney who practiced before the assessor’s office to obtain assessment

reductions for his clients. He also stated that the Ethics Ordinance “purports” to bar him from

contributing more than $750 to Berrios and to the campaigns of other county officials from

whom he had no intention to seek official action.

¶ 17   The plaintiffs moved to strike Hakim’s affidavit because the facts it set forth were

inappropriate in the context of a facial challenge to the Ethics Ordinance. They also contended

that the affidavit violated Illinois Supreme Court Rule 191(a) (eff. Jan. 4, 2013) because it

contained unsupported legal conclusions and facts outside the personal knowledge of the affiant.

The Cook County defendants responded to the motion to strike.

¶ 18   Each side filed responses to the other’s motion for summary judgment. These responses

elaborated on the parties’ positions with respect to the legal issues framed by the complaint. The



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Cook County defendants’ response contained a second affidavit from Hakim, stating that there

had been at least nine prior instances where, in response to a notice of violation, Berrios’s

committees returned contributions in excess of the $750 limit to particular contributors. The

second affidavit also included copies of the relevant correspondence and refund checks.

¶ 19   On March 13, 2018, following argument, the circuit court issued an order, granting

summary judgment in favor of the Cook County defendants on both counts of the complaint. The

court rejected all of the plaintiffs’ challenges, specifically finding that (1) Cook County had

home rule authority to enact the Ethics Ordinance, even though the state Election Code also

limited campaign contributions, (2) the cap-lifting in the assessor’s race did not nullify the

contribution limits in the Ethics Ordinance, (3) the Ethics Ordinance was not unconstitutionally

vague (noting that “any ambiguity about the meaning of the words ‘official action’ exist[ ] only

at the hypothetical fringes of interpretation” and did not “permeate the text of the Ethics

Ordinance”), (4) the contribution limits were a reasonable approach to avoid the appearance of

quid pro quo corruption and thus did not violate first amendment rights, (5) nothing in the Ethics

Ordinance infringed on attorney-client relationships, and (6) the Ethics Ordinance did not

infringe on the state’s attorney’s prosecutorial authority because that office itself also represented

the Ethics Board.

¶ 20   The circuit court’s summary judgment order did not refer to either of the Hakim

affidavits, nor to the pending motion to strike his first affidavit. On March 21, 2018, the court

tied up the loose end created by the plaintiffs’ then-pending motion to strike the affidavit and

denied it as moot. The plaintiffs moved to stay the court’s order pending appeal, but the court

denied that motion. This appeal followed.




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No. 1-18-0654


¶ 21    We digress to explain one matter to the parties. Normally, an appeal in this court is not

assigned to an authoring justice or panel until briefing has been completed. See Ill. App. Ct.,

First Dist., R. 2(I)(B) (Sept. 1, 2004). On April 6, 2018, this court entered an order granting the

plaintiffs’ motion for placement on an accelerated docket pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court

Rule 311(b) (eff. July 1, 2017). Under this court's local rule 2(I)(E), when the court grants the

motion for accelerated schedule, the accelerated case is immediately assigned to an author and

panel even if no briefs have yet been filed. Ill. App. Ct., First Dist., R. 2(I)(E) (Sept. 1, 2004).

This exception to the general assignment rule allows the author to begin working on the

accelerated case so that the court can promptly issue its decision after the conclusion of briefing

and oral argument, if any. Due to administrative exigencies and technical issues, however, this

case was not immediately assigned as provided by Local Rule 2(I)(E) when the court granted the

Rule 311(b) motion. This court’s original accelerated docket order adopted the briefing schedule

requested by the parties, which required that the reply brief be filed by June 11, 2018. Briefing

concluded when an electronic-filing-compliant reply brief was eventually filed on June 21, 2018,

and the case was not assigned to an author and panel until the next group of “ready” cases that

were not on an accelerated docket was processed on July 19, 2018.

¶ 22                                         ANALYSIS

¶ 23    Summary judgment is appropriate “if the pleadings, depositions, and admissions on file,

together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and

that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” 735 ILCS 5/2-1005(c) (West

2016). Since the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, they conceded that no

material questions of fact existed and that only questions of law are involved that the court may

decide based on the record. Pielet v. Pielet, 2012 IL 112064, ¶ 28. The mere filing of cross­



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No. 1-18-0654


motions for summary judgment, however, does not establish that there is no issue of material

fact, nor is a circuit court obligated to render summary judgment for either party. Id. We review

the court’s decision as to cross-motions for summary judgment de novo. Id. ¶ 30. Some of the

Cook County defendants’ arguments in this appeal rely on the Hakim affidavit. However, since

the complaint challenges the Ethics Ordinance on a facial basis, we will follow the circuit court’s

lead and not consider the facts contained in the affidavits in our analysis.

¶ 24   On appeal, the plaintiffs raise three contentions of error: (1) the Ethics Ordinance is

unconstitutionally vague, (2) the contribution limits were not narrowly drawn to avoid the

appearance of quid pro quo corruption and thus violated first amendment rights, and (3) Cook

County did not have home rule authority to enact the Ethics Ordinance because the state Election

Code’s campaign contribution limits preempted that authority. The plaintiffs present no

arguments on the other two issues they raised below: (1) that the Ethics Ordinance interferes

with the Illinois Supreme Court’s authority to regulate the practice of law and (2) that the Ethics

Ordinance provides the Ethics Board, rather than the state’s attorney, the power to prosecute

violations of county ordinances.

¶ 25   Our supreme court has explained:

                       “In construing the validity of a municipal ordinance, the

                same rules are applied as those which govern the construction of

                statutes. [Citation.] Statutes are presumed constitutional, and the

                burden of rebutting that presumption is on the party challenging

                the validity of the statute to clearly demonstrate a constitutional

                violation. [Citation.] This court has a duty to uphold the

                constitutionality of a statute when reasonably possible [citation],



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No. 1-18-0654


                and, therefore, if a statute’s construction is doubtful, a court will

                resolve the doubt in favor of the statute’s validity. [Citation.]”

                Napleton v. Village of Hinsdale, 229 Ill. 2d 296, 306-07 (2008).

¶ 26   The government bears the burden of justifying contribution limits in light of a facial

challenge. Nixon v. Shrink Missouri Government PAC, 528 U.S. 377, 387-88 (2000). With those

principles as our backdrop, we consider each of plaintiffs’ arguments in turn.

¶ 27                                   Vagueness/Due Process

¶ 28   As their first contention of error, plaintiffs argue that section 2-585(b) of the Ethics

Ordinance is unconstitutionally vague and therefore violates due process. They contend that the

term “official action” is so undefined that it “gives no hint that it applies to lawyers representing

their clients in property tax assessments cases or other quasi-judicial proceedings.” For instance,

plaintiffs suggest that the term “official action” could include minor ministerial functions, such

as a county official issuing picnic permits, marriage licenses, or even something as innocuous as

obtaining a photocopy of a county record. They also contend that the Ethics Ordinance’s

coverage of “persons” who seek the “official action” does not mention or refer to lawyers who

represent those “persons,” leading to a possible construction that the restriction does not apply to

those representing the “persons” in a representational or agency capacity.

¶ 29   In Wilson v. County of Cook, 2012 IL 112026, ¶¶ 21-24, our supreme court outlined the

framework for a constitutional vagueness analysis. Vagueness challenges are grounded in the

constitutional principle of due process. Id. ¶ 21. The court considers “(1) whether the law fails to

provide people of ordinary intelligence a reasonable opportunity to understand what conduct it

prohibits so that one may act accordingly; and (2) whether the law provides reasonable standards

to law enforcement to ensure against authorizing or even encouraging arbitrary and



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No. 1-18-0654


discriminatory enforcement.” Id. (citing Hill v. Colorado, 530 U.S. 703, 732 (2000), and

Grayned v. City of Rockford, 408 U.S. 104, 108-09 (1972)). But it is not necessary that the Ethics

Ordinance provide “perfect clarity” or “precise guidance.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id.

¶ 22 (quoting United States v. Williams, 553 U.S. 285, 304 (2008), quoting Ward v. Rock Against

Racism, 491 U.S. 781, 794 (1989)). The Wilson court also noted:

                     “The Constitution tolerates a lesser degree of vagueness in

                enactments with criminal rather than civil penalties and

                specifically those without a scienter requirement because the

                consequences of imprecision are more severe. [Citation.] In order

                to succeed in a facial vagueness challenge, as opposed to an as-

                applied challenge, the vagueness must ‘permeate[ ] the text of such

                a law.’ ” Id. ¶ 23 (quoting City of Chicago v. Morales, 527 U.S. 41,

                55 (1999) (opinion of Stevens, J., joined by Souter and Ginsburg,

                JJ.)) .

¶ 30   The plaintiffs have challenged the Ethics Ordinance on a facial, rather than an as-applied,

basis. Therefore, they face an especially difficult burden. “Facial invalidation is, manifestly,

strong medicine that has been employed by the court sparingly and only as a last resort.”

(Internal quotation marks omitted.) Pooh-Bah Enterprises, Inc. v. County of Cook, 232 Ill. 2d

463, 473 (2009) (quoting National Endowment for the Arts v. Finley, 524 U.S. 569, 580 (1998),

quoting Broadrick v. Oklahoma, 413 U.S. 601, 613 (1973)). The fact that a law could be found

unconstitutional under some set of circumstances does not establish its facial invalidity.

Napleton, 229 Ill. 2d at 306.




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¶ 31   The plaintiffs’ burden is compounded even more, since the Ethics Ordinance does not

automatically impose penalties on violators. Instead, the Ethics Ordinance requires that, after

receiving a warning, the candidate can return the excess contribution without penalty to the

committee, candidate, or donor. The Ethics Ordinance provides as follows:

                   “Any candidate for any County office or any current elected

                official in Cook County government shall return contributions

                found in excess of the limitations set forth in this Section within 30

                days of notification from the Board of Ethics. Failure to return

                contributions within 30 days shall be a violation of this Section and

                subject to fines under Section 2-602.” Cook County Code of

                Ordinances § 2-585(f) (approved Oct. 5, 2016).

And while the Ethics Ordinance imposes civil, rather than criminal, penalties, it contains a

scienter requirement because a fine can only be imposed if one “knowingly” violates it. See

Cook County Code of Ordinances § 2-602(d) (approved Oct. 5, 2016).

¶ 32   The test of vagueness applicable here is whether someone, applying common and

ordinary meaning to the words, would characterize a particular activity as an “official action” in

the context of an ordinance aimed at prohibiting quid pro quo impropriety. The normal rules of

statutory construction apply to municipal ordinances. Pooh-Bah Enterprises, 232 Ill. 2d at 492.

The primary rule of statutory construction is to examine its plain language “in light of its

common understanding and practice.” Wilson, 2012 IL 112026, ¶ 24 (citing Pooh-Bah

Enterprises, 232 Ill. 2d at 492). “If the plain text of the ordinance sets forth clearly perceived

boundaries, our inquiry is ended.” Id.




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¶ 33   In support of its contention that the Ethics Ordinance is sufficiently clear, the Cook

County defendants provide numerous examples where ethics laws use the term “official action”

without further definition, including the gift ban provisions in section 10-10 of the State Officials

and Employees Ethics Act (State Ethics Act) (5 ILCS 430/10-10 (West 2016) (barring

intentionally soliciting or accepting gifts from any “prohibited source”); see also id. § 1-5

(defining “prohibited source” as any person seeking “official action” by a state official)). Local

governments such as Cook County must adopt ethics rules at least as stringent as those in the

State Ethics Act (id. § 70-5(a)), and the attorney general has issued a model ethics ordinance for

those governments to adopt. That model ordinance also uses the phrase “seeking official action”

without further elaboration. See Ill. Att’y Gen., Model Ethics Ordinance, at 4,

http://www.ag.state.il.us/government/model_ethics_ordinance.pdf. Further, federal ethics laws

use the term. See 5 U.S.C. § 7353 (2012) (federal gift ban); 5 C.F.R. § 2635.101 (same); 18

U.S.C. § 207 (2012) (federal postemployment restriction). The term is also used, without

definition, in the Illinois statute establishing the crime of intimidation. See 720 ILCS 5/12­

6(a)(6) (West 2016) (criminalizing acts of a public official who threatens someone that he will

“withhold official action” without lawful authority to do so).

¶ 34   Further, the term “official action” has been defined in case law and in legal dictionaries.

See, e.g., Black’s Law Dictionary 978 (6th ed. 1990) (“official action” defined as “[o]ne done by

an officer in his official capacity under color and by virtue of his office”); Ballentine’s Law

Dictionary 882 (3d ed. 1969) (“official act” defined as “[a]n act done by an officer in his official

capacity, under color and by virtue of his office”).

¶ 35   These examples are quite helpful in that they illustrate the undefined term “official

action” is ubiquitous in ethics laws and is even frequently used in criminal statutes, which



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require the highest degree of precision. But in the absence of a definitive precedent addressing

whether the term as used in these examples is unconstitutionally vague, they do not definitively

resolve the ultimate question before us.

¶ 36   Given the size and complexity of county government, it is not difficult to identify types

of action a citizen might seek from a county official that are even more innocuous than even the

marriage license and picnic permit examples about which the plaintiffs argue. But an ordinance

is not unconstitutionally vague “simply because one can conjure up a hypothetical dispute” over

the meaning of a term. People v. Greco, 204 Ill. 2d 400, 416 (2003) (citing Gem Electronics of

Monmouth, Inc. v. Department of Revenue, 183 Ill. 2d 470, 481 (1998)). “In addition to the

language used, consideration is given to the legislative objective” and the evil sought to be

remedied. People v. Blackwood, 131 Ill. App. 3d 1018, 1023 (1985); see also City of Collinsville

v. Seiber, 82 Ill. App. 3d 719, 725-26 (1980) (rejecting vagueness challenge because the terms in

question were “significantly explained in the context of the ordinance as a whole”). The Ethics

Ordinance is replete with references to goals such as honesty, avoiding the appearance of

impropriety, promoting fiduciary duty, promoting public rather than personal interests, recusal in

the case of conflicts of interests, eliminating nepotism, protecting whistleblowers, and financial

disclosure. Viewed in that light, the meaning of the term “official action” must be read as

applying to action requiring the application of discretion, such that an excessive campaign

contribution could be seen as facilitating a quid pro quo exchange between the official and the

requestor. That being the case, the term “official action” is not unconstitutionally vague.

¶ 37   Cases that strike down enactments as unconstitutionally vague are distinguishable. One

example on which plaintiffs rely is Morales, which concerned an ordinance prohibiting loitering

that was defined as “remain[ing] in any one place with no apparent purpose.” (Internal quotation



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No. 1-18-0654


marks omitted.) Morales, 527 U.S. at 47 (majority opinion). Indeed, the Court found such a

nebulous definition to be constitutionally infirm, noting:

                 “It is difficult to imagine how any citizen of the city of Chicago

                standing in a public place with a group of people would know if he

                or she had an ‘apparent purpose.’ If she were talking to another

                person, would she have an apparent purpose? If she were

                frequently checking her watch and looking expectantly down the

                street, would she have an apparent purpose?” Id. at 56-57 (opinion

                of Stevens, J., joined by Souter and Ginsburg, JJ.).

Here, in contrast, the challenged provisions of the Ethics Ordinance, read in proper context, do

provide sufficient guidance as to what is prohibited. See supra ¶ 32. Mindful of our supreme

court’s admonitions in Pooh-Bah Enterprises and Wilson that invalidation of an ordinance for

vagueness is “strong medicine” that should not be used except “as a last resort” when vagueness

“permeates” the text of the ordinance, we must reject this aspect of the plaintiffs’ vagueness

challenge.

¶ 38   Plaintiff Norris makes a related argument that the Ethics Ordinance provides not even “a

hint” as to whether it restricts activities that he undertakes in a representational capacity, such as

when he represents an individual seeking a property tax assessment reduction. He contends that

in those cases, it is his client, not he, who is seeking “official action from the County.” He notes

that since section 2-585(b) of the Ethics Ordinance specifically singles out lawyers who are

contracted by the county to work on bond and financial matters and limits their campaign

contributions, the absence of a specific reference to lawyers working in other areas suggests that

the drafters intended that those lawyers are not subject to the campaign contribution limitations



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in section 2-585(b). This analogy is inapt. Section 2-585(b) covers a wide range of professionals,

not just lawyers. It also includes officers, directors, and partners of any firm contracted by the

county to work on bond transactions in nonlegal capacities, such as financial managers. These

persons and entities do not seek “official action” from the County—they work for the County.

And singling out bond professionals for campaign contribution regulation is eminently

reasonable because their fees can be enormous. See, e.g., Cook County Gov’t Bureau of Fin.

Official Statement, General Obligation Refunding Bonds, Series 2018, at 6 (Jan. 18, 2018),

http://opendocs.cookcountyil.gov/investor-relations/bond-statements/General_Obligation_

Refunding_Bonds_2018.pdf (noting issuance costs of over $800,000 on a $100 million bond

issue).

¶ 39      Norris’s argument that his clients, not he, are the ones seeking “official action” when the

clients hire him to appear before the assessor to seek an assessment reduction fares no better. Our

supreme court has explained as follows:

                 “[W]hen *** an attorney acts pursuant to the exercise of

                 independent professional judgment, he or she acts presumptively

                 as an independent contractor whose intentional misconduct may

                 generally not be imputed to the client ***. [Citation.] Individuals

                 more often than not seek the assistance of an attorney because they

                 are unfamiliar with the law and unable to perform the work

                 themselves. [Citation.] Therefore, an attorney usually pursues a

                 client’s legal rights without specific direction from the client, using

                 independent professional judgment to determine the manner and




                                                   18 

No. 1-18-0654


                 form of the work.” Horwitz v. Holabird & Root, 212 Ill. 2d 1, 12­

                 13 (2004).

Under this analysis, it is easy to conclude that an attorney retained to seek an assessment

reduction for a client is the one seeking “official action” as much, or perhaps more, than the

client.

¶ 40      We likewise reject the plaintiffs’ arguments that attorneys who are involved in litigation

against the state’s attorney and seek “official action” from her in the course of representing a

client fall within the restrictions of the Ethics Ordinance. They make the same arguments about

judges, whom they characterize as county officials. But these arguments are misplaced because

both the state’s attorney and judges are state, not county, officers. See Nelson v. Kendall County,

2014 IL 116303, ¶ 27 (state’s attorney is “part of the executive branch of State government”);

Ingemunson v. Hedges, 133 Ill. 2d 364, 369 (1990) (state’s attorney is a state, not county,

officer); Reed v. Kusper, 154 Ill. 2d 77, 86-87 (1992) (holding that because judges are elected

from judicial circuits, not counties, judicial candidates need not be included to form a “complete

slate” on a countywide candidates’ nomination petition).

¶ 41      Again, we note the plaintiffs are not challenging the Ethics Ordinance on an as-applied

basis. We express no opinion on whether the Ethics Ordinance would survive such a challenge if,

for instance, the Ethics Board took action against someone who sought innocuous or ministerial

“official action” from the county such as a marriage license or copy of a document. In sum, we

find that the Ethics Ordinance is not unconstitutionally vague.

¶ 42                              Due Process/Selective Enforcement

¶ 43      As part of their due process attack against the Ethics Ordinance, the plaintiffs argue that it

improperly gives the Ethics Board free rein to single out what it considers to be “high risk”



                                                   19 

No. 1-18-0654


agencies, such as the assessor for special audits to correlate campaign donors and law firms

practicing before the agency. They characterize this targeting of particular agencies as the ability

to act in a discriminatory and capricious manner by singling out certain officials on a “whim.”

The relevant allegation in the complaint begins, “Because ‘official action’ is vague and

undefined, section 2-585(b) also results in impermissible selective enforcement of the Ordinance

in an arbitrary and discriminatory manner by the Board of Ethics.” The complaint then alleges,

on information and belief, that the Ethics Board “has not investigated whether any campaign

contributions in excess of the limits set forth in section 2-585(b) were made” to county officials

other than the assessor. The plaintiffs also raise this argument in response to assertions in the

Hakim affidavit explaining how the Ethics Board identifies potential contribution violators and

prioritizes its prosecutorial targets. But, as noted above, the plaintiffs make a facial challenge to

the Ethics Ordinance and the circuit court did not consider the Hakim affidavit. Nor do we.

¶ 44   But even taking these allegations at face value, we find them to be insufficient to

demonstrate a constitutional violation. Prosecutorial resources are not unlimited. No agency, or

prosecutor, can possibly prosecute every single offense that might occur in her jurisdiction.

Prosecutors have the virtually unrestricted discretion to prioritize as they see fit and select which

cases (or types of cases) they will pursue, because “the capacity of prosecutorial discretion to

provide individualized justice is ‘firmly entrenched in American law.’ ” McCleskey v. Kemp, 481

U.S. 279, 311-12 (1987) (quoting 2 Wayne R. LaFave & Jerold H. Israel, Criminal Procedure

§ 13.2(a), at 160 (1984)). The appellate court has explained this doctrine and its limitations, as

follows:

                “In fact, the exercise of some selectivity in enforcement is a

                necessary prerequisite of any modern system of criminal justice.



                                                  20 

No. 1-18-0654


                Nevertheless, prosecutorial discretion is limited by constitutional

                protections. The State may not deliberately base its decision to

                prosecute an individual on the constitutionally protected grounds

                of race, religion, or the exercise of first amendment rights.

                [Citations.] However, there is a presumption that any prosecution

                for violation of the criminal law is undertaken in good faith.

                [Citation.] To overcome this presumption and to justify the holding

                of an evidentiary hearing, the burden is on the defendant to present

                sufficient facts to make out at least a prima facie case of improper

                discrimination. [Citation.]” People v. Lewis, 73 Ill. App. 3d 361,

                364-65 (1979).

Based on these authorities, the Ethics Board may prioritize its prosecutorial focus as it sees fit, so

long as it does not do so by choosing its targets based on “constitutionally protected grounds”

such as “race, religion, or the exercise of first amendment rights.” See id. Nothing in the

complaint or the record before us shows that the assessor’s office was singled out for review

because of race, religion, or any other protected ground. It would be entirely reasonable for the

Ethics Board to concentrate its efforts, for instance, on candidates for offices such as the

assessor, whose discretionary decision-making can result in significant financial gains to

taxpayers, rather than on persons whose interactions with county officials are more innocuous

and less potentially lucrative. We therefore must reject this aspect of the plaintiffs’ claims.

¶ 45                           Freedom of Speech/First Amendment

¶ 46   The plaintiffs contend that the Ethics Ordinance’s campaign finance restrictions infringe

on their rights to freedom of political expression and association as guaranteed by the first



                                                  21 

No. 1-18-0654


amendment. In a series of cases, the United States Supreme Court has established a framework

that courts use to determine whether a particular restriction is constitutional.

¶ 47   In the first case, Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1 (1976), the Court examined the

constitutional implications of both limits on campaign contributions and on spending. The

Buckley Court recognized a relationship between political contributions and speech because

when a law restricts a candidate’s ability to spend money on his campaign, the campaign’s

message will necessarily reach a smaller audience. But the Court held that contribution limits are

subject to a somewhat lenient review because, unlike spending limits, they restrict speech only

marginally. Contribution restrictions are upheld if the government can demonstrate that they are

“closely drawn” to achieve a “sufficiently important” governmental interest. Id. at 25. Protecting

elections from corruption is such an interest. Id. at 27. The Buckley Court upheld the

constitutionality of a federal law limiting the amount that individuals could make to candidates

for federal office. Id. at 35. The Court noted that even though a contribution limit existed, the

contributor could still express additional support for a candidate by volunteering and speaking

about candidates and issues. Id. at 21. In determining whether the contribution limit was “closely

drawn,” the Court noted that limits that were set at too low of a level could impermissibly

impede constitutional rights of contributors and candidates. Id. at 82-83. Applying that test, the

Court upheld the limit at issue. Id. at 29.

¶ 48   In a later case, the Court upheld a state law imposing contribution limits ranging from

$275 to $1000 on local and state candidates, again applying the “closely drawn” test and noting

that the amount of the limitation “need not be ‘fine tun[ed].’ ” Nixon, 528 U.S. at 388 (quoting

Buckley, 424 U.S. at 30). The key inquiry is whether there is evidence that the limit prevents




                                                 22 

No. 1-18-0654


candidates from accumulating enough resources for effective advocacy. Id. at 397 (citing

Buckley, 424 U.S. at 21).

¶ 49   In Randall v. Sorell, the Court struck down a Vermont law establishing a $400 limit on

contributions to local candidates in a two-year cycle because the limit was so low as to not be

“narrowly tailored.” 548 U.S. 230, 262-62 (2006) (opinion of Breyer, J., joined by Roberts, C.J.,

and Alito, J.). Unlike the Ethics Ordinance provision at issue here, which only applies to those

who seek “official action” from Cook County, the Vermont law applied to all contributors,

regardless of their interaction with the governmental body involved.

¶ 50   More recently, in McCutcheon v. Federal Election Comm’n, 572 U.S. 185, 220 (2014),

the Court struck down a federal limit on aggregate contributions to all campaigns by a single

contributor. The McCutcheon Court emphasized that the only interest it had found to be

legitimate for campaign finance restrictions was the prevention of quid pro quo corruption or its

appearance. Id. at 192. Nonetheless, that interest “may properly be labeled ‘compelling’

[citation], so that the interest would satisfy even strict scrutiny.” Id. at 199. This is because the

appearance of corruption threatens “ ‘confidence in the system of representative Government.’ ”

Buckley, 424 U.S. at 27 (quoting United States Civil Service Comm’n v. National Ass’n of Letter

Carriers, AFL-CIO, 413 U.S. 548, 565 (1973)).

¶ 51   The Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, sitting en banc, unanimously

rejected a first amendment challenge to a federal law that barred federal contractors from

donating to federal candidates. Wagner v. Federal Election Comm’n, 793 F.3d 1, 34 (D.C. Cir.

2015). The Wagner court followed the Supreme Court precedents outlined above and found that

the contribution bar was permissible in light of the need to prevent corruption and the appearance




                                                 23 

No. 1-18-0654


of corruption. The court drove home its point by citing a litany of Illinois corruption cases,

including those involving former Governors Ryan and Blagojevich. See id. at 15-16.

¶ 52   These authorities inexorably lead to the conclusion that the Ethics Ordinance’s $750

contribution limit is constitutional. Plaintiffs nonetheless argue that the limit is neither “closely

drawn” nor a reasonable fit because of the chronological sequence set forth in the Ethics

Ordinance. The Ethics Ordinance limits persons from donating to any county official after they

have already requested “official action.” The plaintiffs contend that the Ethics Ordinance

prevents neither the existence of, nor the appearance of, quid pro quo corruption because the

contributor has already requested the official action and therefore presumably has either obtained

the action or had his request for action rejected. We disagree. It is plain to see that an official

could certainly grant official action based on the possibility of a future contribution.

Additionally, one county official’s campaign fund may transfer money to another’s. 10 ILCS

5/9-1.13 (West 2016). Finally, criminal intent can be found based on a “ ‘course of conduct of

favors and gifts flowing’ to a public official in exchange for a pattern of official actions

favorable to the donor even though no particular gift or favor is directly connected to any

particular official act.” (Emphasis omitted.) United States v. Arthur, 544 F.2d 730, 734 (4th Cir.

1976) (quoting United States v. Baggett, 481 F.2d 114, 115 (4th Cir. 1973)).

¶ 53   Plaintiffs also argue that the Ethics Ordinance is overinclusive in that it prevents someone

who requests official action from one county official, such as the assessor, from contributing to

another county official, such as the Recorder of Deeds. The circuit court rejected this argument,

noting that because “numerous elected County officials work together to administer the real

property tax system on behalf of the County, even if the Assessor’s role may be outsized,” the

Ethics Ordinance reasonably limited persons seeking action from one official from contributing



                                                 24 

No. 1-18-0654


to another. And our supreme court’s decision in Blanchard v. Berrios, 2016 IL 120315, which

we discuss at length later in this opinion, adds further support to this conclusion. The Blanchard

court rejected Berrios’s contention that the county board could not empower an inspector general

to investigate Berrios’s office, noting that the county board funded the assessor’s office and that

the board had an interest “in discovering and averting corruption, fraud, waste, mismanagement,

unlawful political discrimination, or misconduct in all county offices.” (Emphasis added.)

Id. ¶ 33.

¶ 54    Therefore, we reject the plaintiffs’ contentions that the Ethics Ordinance violates their

first amendment rights.

¶ 55                                   Home Rule Authority

¶ 56    The plaintiffs contend that the Ethics Ordinance is an improper exercise of the county’s

home rule powers because it infringes on matters over which the state has exclusive control and

does not pertain to the county’s government and affairs.

¶ 57    Article VII, section 6(a) of the Illinois Constitution designates Cook County as a home

rule unit of government and grants it certain powers pertaining to its government and affairs. Ill.

Const. 1970, art. VII, § 6(a). The section provides, in part, as follows: “Except as limited by this

Section, a home rule unit may exercise any power and perform any function pertaining to its

government and affairs including, but not limited to, the power to regulate for the protection of

the public health, safety, morals and welfare; to license; to tax; and to incur debt.” Id. Article

VII, section 6(i), governs the interplay between home rule and state authority, and provides in

relevant part the following: “Home rule units may exercise and perform concurrently with the

State any power or function of a home rule unit to the extent that the General Assembly by law

does not specifically limit the concurrent exercise or specifically declare the State’s exercise to



                                                  25 

No. 1-18-0654


be exclusive.” Ill. Const. 1970, art. VII, § 6(i). Section 7 of the Statute on Statutes (5 ILCS 70/7

(West 2016)) similarly provides as follows: “No law *** denies or limits any power or function

of a home rule unit, *** unless there is specific language limiting or denying the power or

function and the language specifically sets forth in what manner and to what extent it is a

limitation on or denial of the power or function of a home rule unit.”

¶ 58   In their preemption argument, plaintiffs concede that the General Assembly has not

specifically expressed that it was exercising exclusive control over the area of campaign finance

so as to trigger a home rule preemption under article VII, section 6(i). Instead, they rely on case

law holding that preemption may be implied by the State’s extensive regulation of a particular

field because state law is so complete and extensive that the topic is solely part of the state’s

government and affairs as opposed to those of the home rule unit. See, e.g., City of Chicago v.

StubHub, Inc., 2011 IL 111127, ¶ 36 (holding that extensive state regulation of auctioneers

preempted city’s requirement that Internet ticket brokers collect its local ticket tax).

¶ 59   “Whether a particular problem is of statewide rather than local dimension must bedecided

not on the basis of a specific formula or listing set forth in the Constitution but with regard for

the nature and extent of the problem, the units of government which have the most vital interest

in its solution, and the role traditionally played by local and statewide authorities in dealing with

it.” Kalodimos v. Village of Morton Grove, 103 Ill. 2d 483, 501 (1984) (citing Ampersand, Inc. v.

Finley, 61 Ill. 2d 537, 539-41 (1975), and 7 Record of Proceedings, Sixth Illinois Constitutional

Convention 1621-22, 1652-57 (report of the Committee on Local Government)).

¶ 60   In early cases interpreting the home rule provisions of the Illinois Constitution, our

supreme court frequently applied the Kalodimos test and upheld local home rule ordinances

against challenges that they regulated in areas in which the state had a traditionally exclusive



                                                  26 

No. 1-18-0654


role. See, e.g., County of Cook v. John Sexton Contractors Co., 75 Ill. 2d 494, 511 (1979)

(rejecting challenge to municipal zoning ordinance); City of Evanston v. Create, Inc., 85 Ill. 2d

101, 112-13 (1981) (rejecting challenge to a municipal landlord-tenant ordinance).

¶ 61   Even in StubHub, where the court invalidated a home rule enactment under an implied

preemption theory, the court cautioned that the result was an exception to the general rule. To

determine if a home rule unit is blocked from legislating in a particular field absent an express

preemption, the “threshold” and “narrow” question is whether the subject is one “where the state

has a vital interest and a traditionally exclusive role.” StubHub, 2011 IL 111127, ¶¶ 23, 25

(calling the test “settled law”). The rule is not a “ ‘free-wheeling’ ” one, invalidating local

measures because of the “mere existence of comprehensive state regulation.” Id. ¶ 25 (quoting

Kalodimos, 103 Ill. 2d at 502). The StubHub court also stated that implied preemption only

applies “ ‘in the clearest cases of oppression, injustice, or interference by local ordinances with

vital state policies.’ ” Id. ¶ 22 (quoting David C. Baum, A Tentative Survey of Illinois Home Rule

(Part I): Powers and Limitations, 1972 U. Ill. L.F. 137, 156-57 (1972)). “That is, because the

legislature can always vindicate state interests by express preemption, only vital state interests

would allow a court to decide that an exercise of home rule power does not pertain to local

government and affairs.” Id. (citing David C. Baum, A Tentative Survey of Illinois Home Rule

(Part II): Legislative Control, Transition Problems, and Intergovernmental Conflict, 1972 U. Ill.

L.F. 559, 573 (1972)).

¶ 62   Before StubHub, the supreme court had consistently refused to strike down home rule

measures based on implied preemption, stating: “We decline to depart from historical precedent

and adopt an implied preemption doctrine of home rule authority in Illinois.” Village of

Bolingbrook v. Citizens Utilities Co. of Illinois, 158 Ill. 2d 133, 142 (1994). In his StubHub



                                                  27 

No. 1-18-0654


dissent, Justice Thomas noted that StubHub “marks the only time in this court’s history that this

court has ever invalidated an ordinance under section 6(a) solely on the basis of state regulation.”

(Emphasis in original.) StubHub, 2011 IL 111127, ¶ 71 (Thomas, J., dissenting). Nonetheless, we

are bound to follow StubHub, and we will examine plaintiffs’ arguments in light of not only

StubHub, but also of the case law following it.

¶ 63      A few years after it issued the StubHub decision, our supreme court revisited the issue of

local preemption in Palm v. 2800 Lake Shore Drive Condominium Ass’n, 2013 IL 110505. Palm

involved a Chicago ordinance that, among other things, required condominium boards to provide

documents to owners within 3 days even though state law allowed the boards to provide them

within 30 days. Id. ¶ 23. In Palm, the court again emphasized that a home rule enactment is

invalid only if it conflicts with state law to such an extent that the two cannot logically remain in

force simultaneously. Id. ¶ 42. And “[u]nder section 6(i), home rule units may continue to

regulate activities even if the state has also regulated those activities.” Id. ¶ 32. In fact, nothing in

Illinois’s home rule jurisprudence conceptually prohibits a home rule unit from regulating a

particular type of human conduct more strictly than the state. For example, both the state and

home rule unit can tax the same product, with the result that the sale is subject to both taxes. See

Mulligan v. Dunne, 61 Ill. 2d 544, 551 (1975) (upholding concurrent state and county liquor

taxes).

¶ 64      The Palm court rejected the condominium board’s argument that the Chicago ordinance

was irreconcilable with state law, stating that “A more restrictive ordinance leaves the statute

intact and enforceable.” Palm, 2013 IL 110505, ¶ 39. This mirrors the situation before us. The

Election Code limits contributions to $5600, but the Ethics Ordinance limits them, in some

circumstances, to $750. The Ethics Ordinance is “more restrictive” than the Election Code, but



                                                   28 

No. 1-18-0654


the ultimate result is that the lower limit governs within Cook County. Since Cook County’s

limit is lower than the State’s, a candidate who complies with both limits, as he must, can do so

without running afoul of either. Plaintiffs nonetheless argue that because the General Assembly

has specifically enacted limits on campaign contributions, the state has staked out an exclusive

role for itself in that area. Again, we disagree. Cook County, exercising its home rule authority,

has simply taken the concept of campaign contribution limitations established in article 9 of the

Election Code and made it stricter.

¶ 65   The plaintiffs characterize the Ethics Ordinance provisions as only dealing with elections,

and they also contend that state law establishes a comprehensive scheme, giving the state

exclusive control over all matters concerning elections. They rely on article III, section 4, of the

Illinois Constitution, which requires that “[l]aws governing voter registration and conduct of

elections shall be general and uniform” (Ill. Const. 1970, art. III, § 4), and section 5 of that

article, which vests the State Board of Elections with “general supervision over the

administration of the registration and election laws throughout the State” (Ill. Const. 1970, art.

III, § 5). These clauses, plaintiffs suggest, demonstrate that election regulation is exclusively

reserved to the state and foreclose the ability of a home rule unit to regulate campaign finance.

But the mechanics of running elections—registering voters, scheduling election dates,

administering polling places—are one thing. Running for office in the campaign arena is another

entirely. Like the need to guard against the appearance of quid pro quo corruption, it is

quintessentially local in character. The supreme court has rejected the notion that the uniform

election clause in section 4 of article III precludes home rule units from enacting election-related

regulations. Upholding a local measure to hold nonpartisan elections for municipal officers, the

court held that section 4 “is concerned with registration and the mechanical procedures for



                                                  29 

No. 1-18-0654


holding elections, not with the partisan or nonpartisan nature of the election, which more closely

concerns the manner of selecting officers.” Boytor v. City of Aurora, 81 Ill. 2d 308, 315 (1980)

(citing 7 Record of Proceedings, Sixth Illinois Constitutional Convention 2343-60 (report of the

Committee on Suffrage and Constitution Amending)). Like the Boytor court, we reject the notion

that the challenged ordinance deals with election “registration and mechanical procedures”

exclusively governed by the Election Code. Accordingly, we agree with the circuit court’s

finding that “[l]ocal governmental units, therefore, may enact their own laws governing

campaign finance for local elections so long as they do not touch voter registration or the

mechanical procedures for holding elections.”

¶ 66   Another recent case from our supreme court illustrates why the county’s action is well

within its home rule powers. In Blanchard, 2016 IL 120315, the court considered a case brought

by the Cook County Inspector General (IG) after Assessor Berrios refused to cooperate with an

IG investigation on the basis that the county’s home rule powers did not extend to the ability to

grant the IG authority to investigate a separate countywide elected official following the county’s

enactment of the “IG Ordinance.” Id. ¶¶ 3, 7 (citing Cook County Code of Ordinances § 2-281

et seq. (approved July 31, 2007)). Among other things, he contended that the Property Tax Code

(35 ILCS 200/1-1 et seq. (West 2014)) demonstrated state preemption in the area of property tax

assessment administration. Blanchard, 2016 IL 120315, ¶ 35. That argument parallels the

argument Berrios makes here that the state Election Code preempts the county Ethics Ordinance.

¶ 67   The Blanchard court rejected Berrios’s position. After reciting the stated goals of the IG

Ordinance, which were to “detect, deter and prevent corruption, fraud, waste, mismanagement,

unlawful political discrimination or misconduct in the operation of County government,” the

Blanchard court held that “it is clear that Cook County has an interest in discovering and



                                                30 

No. 1-18-0654


averting corruption, fraud, waste, mismanagement, unlawful political discrimination, or

misconduct in all county offices.” (Emphases added and internal quotation marks omitted.)

Id. ¶¶ 32-33. The court further stated, “Preserving the integrity and efficient operation of its

offices is a charge that lies with the county and the Board, as manager of all county business. The

IG Ordinance provides the county with the means of addressing possible corruption, fraud, and

other specified types of malfeasance within its offices.” Id. ¶ 33. Therefore, the Blanchard court

held that the “achievement of this goal falls within the police power granted to home rule units

‘to regulate for the protection of the public health, safety, morals and welfare’ ” under the home

rule provision of the Illinois Constitution. Id. ¶ 32 (quoting Ill. Const. 1970, art. VII, § 6(a)).

¶ 68    The Blanchard court also rejected Berrios’s argument that an implied preemption

precluded Cook County from investigating his office. The court explained that

                  “[t]he Assessor has not pointed to any statutory provisions that

                reflect a statewide interest in detecting corruption and fraud in

                county offices. As noted above, Cook County has the most vital

                interest in preserving the integrity and efficient operation of its

                offices. The IG Ordinance furthers that interest by allowing the

                Inspector General to investigate possible corruption, fraud, and

                other types of malfeasance.” Id. ¶ 35.

This analysis is equally apt here, since the stated purpose of the Ethics Ordinance includes the

precise types of interests that the Blanchard court found were properly within the county’s home

rule powers to address as matters pertaining to the county’s “government and affairs.”

¶ 69    Adding further support to the county’s position that the Ethics Ordinance is valid is the

State Ethics Act, which strictly prohibits state officials from receiving certain gifts from persons



                                                  31 

No. 1-18-0654


seeking “official action” from them. 5 ILCS 430/1-5, 10-10 (West 2016). 2 While the State Ethics

Act does not directly regulate the amount of campaign contributions, it does prohibit state

officials from soliciting or receiving campaign contributions at certain times and locations,

characterizing them as “prohibited political activities.” Id. §§ 1-5, 5-15. Section 70-5(a) of the

State Ethics Act mandates that all units of local government, including Cook County, “adopt an

ordinance or resolution that regulates, in a manner no less restrictive than Section 5-15 and

Article 10 of this Act, *** the political activities of officers and employees of the governmental

entity.” Id. § 70-5(a). The State Ethics Act requires local governments, whether they are home

rule or not, to adopt ordinances that regulate political activities “in a manner [that is] no less

restrictive.” (Emphasis added.) Id. This significantly undermines plaintiffs’ argument that the

state has staked out an exclusive claim to regulate in the field of campaign contributions. See

also Ill. Att’y Gen., A Guide to the Implementation of the Model Ethics Ordinance, at 5,

http://www.ag.state.il.us/government/ethics_ordinance_guide.pdf (stating “it is clear that the

[State Ethics Act] is intended to provide Governmental Entities with all of the power necessary

to effectuate the General Assembly’s purposes”). It also at least suggests that even non-home­

rule units may have authority to regulate campaign finance in the same manner as the Ethics

Ordinance.

¶ 70   Accordingly, the circuit court correctly held that the Ethics Ordinance was not an

improper exercise of the county’s home rule powers.




       2
          We note that the State Ethics Act, like the Ethics Ordinance, contains no definition of
“official action,” which also supports our conclusion that the term is not so abstruse that it is
unconstitutionally vague.
                                                  32 

No. 1-18-0654


¶ 71                                 Self-Funding Candidates

¶ 72   Section 9-8.5(h) of the Election Code “lifts the caps” imposed by section 9-8.5(b) in races

where a candidate or family member has donated more than $100,000 to the candidate’s

campaign. 10 ILCS 5/9-8.5(h) (West 2016). In those races, the non-self-funding candidate is no

longer subject to the $5600 contribution limit. The plaintiffs argue that the $750 limit in section

2-585(b) of the Ethics Ordinance “revoke[s]” this benefit to non-self-funding candidates and thus

impermissibly conflicts with state law. Cook County argues that the plaintiffs waived this

argument because they conceded the point below. Waiver aside, the plaintiffs’ argument is

without merit. The two provisions do not conflict with each other. Section 9-8.5(h) provides that

when the State Board of Elections posts a notice of self-funding on its website, “all candidates

for that office, including the public official or candidate who filed a Notification of Self-funding,

shall be permitted to accept contributions in excess of any contribution limits imposed by

subsection (b).” (Emphasis added.) The cap-lifting provision in section 9-8.5(h) of the Election

Code thus refers only to the state limits imposed by section 9-8.5(b) and does not affect any

locally imposed limits.

¶ 73   Therefore, we must reject plaintiffs’ arguments that the Ethics Ordinance is flawed

because another candidate in Berrios’s race was a “self-funding” candidate whose contributions

to his own campaign “lifted the caps” in the subject race.

¶ 74   We note that the plaintiffs have made no argument that the fines the Ethics Board

imposed are excessive, nor that the facts as determined by the Ethics Board were incorrect or

unsupported by competent evidence. While the complaint mentions the Ethics Board charges and

the manner in which the board resolved them, the plaintiffs only requested a declaratory

judgment that the Ethics Ordinance is unconstitutional and an injunction against its enforcement.



                                                 33 

No. 1-18-0654


The plaintiffs state that they have challenged the Ethics Board’s final rulings in a separate 


administrative review proceeding.


¶ 75                                      CONCLUSION


¶ 76   For these reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court.


¶ 77   Affirmed. 





                                                 34 

