Illinois' fiscal crisis is similar in scope and severity to Greece's, yet not a peep is heard about the debt crisis facing US states in the MSM.  
Illinois’ financial problems are forcing it to choose between its pensions and its teeth. 
Governor Pat Quinn says the state needs to face its “rendezvous  with reality” and tackle its dysfunctional budget habits. Top of the  list, Mr Quinn says, is to slash spending on Medicaid, a federal  programme that provides healthcare to poor Americans.
To save a system he says is “on the brink of collapse”, Mr Quinn  proposes cutting $2.7bn from Illinois’ $11.5bn Medicaid bill. Few would  dispute that the state needs to change its behaviour. Last year,  Illinois underfunded Medicaid by $2bn as it struggled with debts  totalling more than $280bn, an $86bn hole in its public pension funds  and a $9bn backlog of unpaid bills.
The Medicaid tab has grown since the financial crisis, which  pushed more people into poverty. In 2007, 2.1m Illinois residents were  eligible for the low-income programme. Today, 2.7m qualify – 1.7m of  them children, according to the state’s department of healthcare and  family services.
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