Government The government of Cook County is primarily composed of the
Board of Commissioners headed by the President of the County Board, other elected officials such as the
Sheriff,
State's Attorney, Treasurer, Board of Review, Clerk, Assessor, Recorder,
Circuit Court judges, and Circuit Court Clerk, as well as numerous other officers and entities. Cook County is the only
home rule county in Illinois. The
Cook County Code is the
codification of Cook County's
local ordinances. Cook County's current
County Board president is
Toni Preckwinkle. The
Circuit Court of Cook County, which is an Illinois state court of
general jurisdiction is funded, in part, by Cook County, and accepts more than 1.2 million cases each year for filing. The
Cook County Department of Corrections, also known as the
Cook County Jail, is the largest single-site jail in the nation. The
Cook County Juvenile Detention Center, under the authority of the Chief Judge of the court, is the first juvenile center in the nation and one of the largest in the nation. The Cook County Law Library is the second-largest county law library in the nation. The Bureau of Health Services administers the county's public health services and is the third-largest public health system in the nation. Three hospitals are part of this system:
John H. Stroger, Jr. Hospital of Cook County,
Provident Hospital, and
Oak Forest Hospital of Cook County, along with over 30 clinics. The Cook County Department of Transportation is responsible for the design and maintenance of roadways in the county. These thoroughfares are composed mostly of major and minor arterials, with a few local roads. Although the County Department of Transportation was instrumental in designing many of the expressways in the county, today they are under the jurisdiction of the state. The
Cook County Forest Preserves, organized in 1915, is a separate, independent taxing body, but the Cook County Board of Commissioners also acts as its Board of Commissioners. The district is a belt of of forest reservations surrounding the city of Chicago. The
Brookfield Zoo (managed by the Chicago Zoological Society) and the
Chicago Botanic Garden (managed by the Chicago Horticultural Society) are located in the forest preserves. Cook County is the fifth-largest employer in Chicago. In March 2008, the County Board increased the
sales tax by one percent to 1.75 percent. This followed a quarter-cent increase in
mass transit taxes. In Chicago, the rate increased to 10.25 percent, the steepest nominal rate of any major metropolitan area in America. In
Evanston, sales tax reached 10 percent and
Oak Lawn residents pay 9.5 percent. On July 22, 2008, the Cook County board voted against Cook County Commissioner's proposal to repeal the tax increase. In 2016, Cook County joined Chicago in adopting a $13 hourly minimum wage. Cook County Board chairman John Daley called the wage hike "the moral and right thing to do." In June 2017, however, nearly 75
home rule municipalities passed measures opting themselves out of the increase.
Politics Cook County has more
Democratic Party members than any other Illinois county and it is one of the most Democratic counties in the United States. Since 1932, the majority of its voters have only supported a
Republican candidate in a Presidential election three times, all during national Republican landslides–
Dwight Eisenhower over native son
Adlai Stevenson II in 1952 and 1956, and
Richard Nixon over
George McGovern in 1972. In 1984,
Walter Mondale won Cook County with 51% of its vote despite losing in a landslide nationally to native Illinoisan
Ronald Reagan. In 2020, 74 percent of the county voted for
Joe Biden and 24 percent voted for
Donald Trump. In 1936, with
Franklin D. Roosevelt receiving 1,253,164 votes in the county, Cook County became the first county in American history where a candidate received one million votes. The
Cook County Democratic Party represents Democratic voters in 50
wards in the city of Chicago and 30 suburban
townships of Cook County. The organization has dominated County,
city, and
state politics since the 1930s. The last Republican mayor of Chicago was
William Hale "Big Bill" Thompson, who left office in 1931 with a record of corruption. The most successful Republican candidate for mayor since then was
Bernard Epton, who in 1983 came within 3.3 percentage points of defeating Democrat
Harold Washington. The county's
Republican Party organization is the
Cook County Republican Party. The last Republican governor to carry the county was
Jim Edgar in his
1994 landslide. The last Republican senator to do so was
Charles H. Percy in
1978.
Secession movements To establish more localized government control and policies which reflect the often different values and needs of large suburban sections of the sprawling county,
secession movements have been made over the years which called for certain townships or municipalities to form their own independent counties. In the late 1970s, a movement started which proposed a separation of six northwest suburban townships, Cook County's
panhandle (
Barrington,
Hanover,
Palatine,
Wheeling,
Schaumburg, and
Elk Grove) from Cook to form
Lincoln County, in honor of the former U.S. president and Illinois resident. It is likely that
Arlington Heights would have been the county seat. This northwest suburban region of Cook was at the time moderately
conservative and has a population over 500,000. Local legislators, led by State Senator Dave Regnar, went so far as to propose it as official legislation in the
Illinois House. The legislation died, however, before coming to a vote. In 2004,
Blue Island mayor Donald E. Peloquin organized a coalition of fifty-five south and southwest suburban municipalities to form a new county, also proposing the name
Lincoln County. The county would include everything south of
Burbank, stretching as far west as
Orland Park, as far east as
Calumet City, and as far south as
Matteson, covering an expansive area with a population of over one million residents. Peloquin argued that the south suburbs are often shunned by the city (although Chicago is not bound or required to do anything for other municipalities) and he blamed the Chicago-centric policies of Cook County for failing to jumpstart the somewhat-depressed south suburban local economy. Pending sufficient interest from local communities, Peloquin planned a petition drive to place a question regarding the secession on the general election ballot, but the idea was not met with success. In arguing against the Lincoln County proposal, others noted several of the cities involved had power structures, law enforcement, or
de facto "mayors for life" often accused in the press, or civilly or criminally charged with,
political corruption,
cronyism, and
nepotism, and themselves being the main factor in their depressed economies rather than anyone in Cook County government. The opposition decried that their true reason for joining the secession effort was to start with a 'clean slate' with a new county government by design less willing to enforce responsibility against their abuses of power. Talk of secession from Cook County amongst some outlying communities again heated up in mid-2008 in response to a highly controversial 1% sales tax hike which has pushed the tax rates across the county communities up amongst the highest in the nation. Some border towns in particular had been outraged, as people can take their business across the county border (paying, for instance, 7% in Lake County instead of Palatine's 9.5%). The secession issue eventually died down from the nominal tax increase. In 2011, two downstate Republican state representatives,
Bill Mitchell of the 87th district and
Adam Brown of the 101st district, proposed statehood for Cook County. Mitchell said that Chicago is "dictating its views" to the rest of the state and Brown added that Chicago "overshadows" the rest of Illinois. ==Infrastructure==