Illinois House Republicans

10/09/2025 | News release | Distributed by Public on 10/10/2025 13:06

Veto Session Begins October 14

Veto Session Begins October 14

October 9, 2025

On October 14, 2025, the Illinois General Assembly returns to Springfield after the summer adjournment period comes to an end.

The annual Veto Session, for decades, was used by lawmakers to consider voting to override vetoes leveled by the governor on bills that were passed during the previous spring Session. In recent years, the Veto Session has been used by Democrats to ram through tax increases, erode Second Amendment Rights, and pass new legislation unrelated to veto action. Governor Pritzker has vetoed very few bills in recent years, as Democrats hold supermajorities in both the House and Senate, and rarely pass legislation that would see the governor exercise his veto authority.

This year's Veto Session is likely to see Democrats work to move on an "omnibus" energy package that is guaranteed to raise already sky-high electricity prices. A looming mass-transit "fiscal cliff" may be addressed through the implementation of any of a number or a combination of unpopular and costly tax increases like a $1.50 per-delivery tax hike on items like Amazon purchases and food delivery services.

Sadly, Democrats' tax hike proposals that could come up during the Veto Session don't stop with a delivery tax. A new service tax had also been floated in the spring. Over eighty everyday services like parking, haircuts, dry cleaning, and even oil changes would be subject to the new service tax. Even very costly projects like home repairs could be taxed under the proposal that has been put forward, potentially adding hundreds or thousands of dollars in costs for residents.

"We expect the service tax conversation to come back during Veto Session this fall," said Deputy House Minority Leader Norine Hammond. "This is a clear sign that Illinois families and small businesses are going to be asked to do more to fill the void for Democrats' failed financial stewardship of our government. A service tax will drive up the cost of living even more for Illinois families."

Unfortunately, the Veto Session is also often a time when fresh legislation, that really has no place being considered during the annual gathering of lawmakers, is rushed through the process.

Illinois citizens would be smart to stay tuned closely to the actions of the General Assembly. The first day of the fall Veto Session is Tuesday, October 14, lasting through Thursday, October 16. The second week of the Veto Session begins on Tuesday, October 28, and concludes on Thursday, October 30.

Interested citizens can follow all the action by visiting ilga.gov/House/AudioVideo.

Illinois House Republicans published this content on October 09, 2025, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on October 10, 2025 at 19:06 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]