Going into the weekend, we might have bet a nickel, but not a whole dime, that the House would vote to override. Several downstate school officials had complained publicly that the governor's rival plan — his amended version of the bill — would hurt their districts. But on Saturday, the Illinois State Board of Education finally issued calculations that may make an override a much tougher vote for some House members of both parties: Rauner's plan evidently would give most districts not named CPS more money than would the Democrats' Senate Bill 1.