Convictions haven’t changed the Madigan method of ruling Illinois – Wirepoints

Former Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan is a man who needed blind loyalists to hold his power in Springfield over the last 40 years. Tim Mapes played that role well. Mapes was Madigan’s longtime chief of staff and held other titles as he worked alongside Madigan to control the Illinois House of Representatives and Democratic Party of Illinois.

In being found guilty of federal corruption charges in late August, Mapes joined senior two executives of ComEd and Springfield insiders Mike McClain and Jay Doherty — the “ComEd 4.” They are likely headed to prison because they helped Madigan run a corrupt political and governmental enterprise. The U.S. Attorney’s office in Chicago has alleged it’s a criminal racketeering organization. Madigan goes on trial in April for allegedly using his power to steer business to his lucrative property tax appeal practice and to shake down ComEd and AT&T for favors benefiting him and his political organization.

House Speaker Chris Welch and Senate President Don Harmon

With some of the pillars of Illinois political culture for the last 50 years crumbling around them, you would think that the current leadership of the General Assembly might reflect on these developments and change their ways.

Nope.

Madigan and Maps may be gone from the Capitol, but many of their methods are still faithfully followed in the General Assembly.

For example, in a May 16, 2018, phone call between Mapes and McClain intercepted by the FBI and played for jurors during the trial, they discuss that the state budget that rank-and-file members of the General Assembly expected to vote on in a few days has not even been written yet despite the looming end of the fiscal year. In the budget enacted last May, even Democratic members openly complained on the floor of the House that they were not being included in the process of writing the state’s budget.

When the ComEd scandal broke, Madigan named Rep. Chris Welch (D-Chicago) to chair the special committee that would investigate charges against Madigan. Welch brazenly refused to conduct any meaningful investigation. Later, as it became clear that Madigan would not retain the speakership, it was with Madigan’s blessing that Welch succeeded him. It’s no wonder Welch has continued Madigan’s ways on ethics and elections too.

Madigan was never shy about helping the members of his family to benefit from his powerful position. He steered insurance business to his son. He got his wife appointed chair of the Illinois Arts Council. But Madigan’s biggest act of nepotism was one that also largely shielded him from state law enforcement scrutiny: He engineered the election of his daughter Lisa Madigan to the office of Attorney General.

Welch wasted no time emulating Madigan in this regard. Only a year after becoming Speaker, Welch’s wife, Shawnte Raines-Welch, announced her candidacy for Cook County Judge from a subcircuit in the area Welch represents. Raines-Welch defeated three others in the Democratic primary election despite being found “not qualified” by the Illinois State Bar Association.

Welch played a large role in fundraising for his wife’s campaign, reportedly soliciting his colleagues in the House Democratic caucus personally.

After Judge Raines-Welch won her election in November 2022, she was owed $50,000 from a loan she made to her own campaign committee. On December 1, 2022, two things happened: Welch’s campaign committee transferred $50,000 to his wife’s campaign committee, and Judge Raines-Welch’s campaign committee paid back the personal loan she had made to her campaign. Viola! Campaign loan disappears.

Madigan’s legacy of heavy-handed rule is not confined to the House chamber. Senate President Don Harmon (D-Oak Park) patterns his staff structure on the Madigan model and is just as active in thwarting efforts to reform gerrymandering and big money in judicial elections.

Harmon’s chief legal counsel is Giovanni Randazzo. Like Mapes, Randazzo holds other titles in the state Senate staff structure: Parliamentarian, the Ethics Officer, and the Freedom of Information Officer. In an irony only possible in the swamp of Springfield, as Ethics Officer, Randazzo reviews and certifies his own Statement of Economic Interests – a document that high ranking state officials are required to file.

Like Mapes before him, Randazzo also moonlights doing political work for campaign committees controlled by Harmon to the tune of over $50,000 in fees in the last three years.

Don Harmon picked up the ball where Madigan left off when it came to making sure the Supreme Court stayed under Democratic control after Madigan crony Thomas Kilbride was defeated for retention to the Illinois Supreme Court. While Harmon presided over the Illinois Senate in 2021, Democrats drew new Supreme Court districts for the first time since 1963.

As the 2022 election approached with two downstate Supreme Court seats open, Harmon’s operatives formed an Independent Expenditure committee called All for Justice. The contributions to All for Justice ranged from $3,000 to $500,000 and were almost exclusively from labor unions, trial lawyers, and Harmon and other State Senate Democrats. This campaign funding on-demand is right out of the Madigan playbook.

All for Justice filed the reports for the contributions it received, but not the required disclosure reports on its expenditures it was making – namely, television commercial time for the two Democratic Supreme Court candidates. State campaign finance and ethics expert Kent Redfield told the Chicago Tribune that the failure to file these expenditure reports as required under state law “denied the public, the news media and the people who participated in the campaigns full knowledge of what’s going on.”

All the while, in a trademark Madigan-style move, Welch, Harmon and Gov. JB Pritzker teamed up to gerrymander the Illinois General Assembly district boundaries and deny Illinoisans competitive campaigns for the House and Senate for the next 10 years. Never mind that Pritzker campaigned for Governor in 2018 on a pledge to veto any map that was not drawn fairly.

During the Mapes trial, jurors heard an FBI agent liken Madigan to a head of a mafia family in the secretive, closely guarded way he ran his vast enterprise. Indeed, Madigan is now under indictment for federal racketeering charges of the kind normally associated with some of Chicago’s most notorious organized crime figures. The 106-page indictment filed by federal prosecutors alleges that Madigan ruled his criminal enterprise by use of threats, intimidation, and extortion. It’s truly chilling stuff.

With the recent convictions in the ComEd 4 and Mapes trials as a preview of what’s to come in the Madigan trial scheduled to start on April Fool’s Day, Madigan must be approaching that day with dread that he will spend his golden years in a federal penitentiary.

Expect no more solace than that. Illinois House Speaker Chris Welch and Senate President Don Harmon have made Madigan’s ways standard operating procedure.

-Mark Glennon and Ted Dabrowski

22 Comments
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Truth Seeker
2 years ago

Nothing will change until they are all sitting in jail – which is most likely not happening.

Wally
2 years ago

The last honest, respectable IL Democratic office holder was Sen. Paul Simon. However, he died in 2003. Now, try to name a similar Republican.

Steve H
2 years ago
Reply to  Wally

Jum Edgar?

Pensions Paid First
2 years ago
Reply to  Steve H

You mean the guy that gave us the Edgar Pension ramp that put us deep into debt? Sure he didn’t go to jail but kicking the debt can down the road so that others can pay while he is out of office is hardly respectable.

debtsor
2 years ago

Edgar said he voted for Biden. So he’s a Democrat.

nixit
2 years ago

Judge Raines-Welch actually loaned her campaign $100,000 (filing a notification of self-funding, just like her husband does every election cycle) and her husband made two separate $50,000 contributions to her campaign. So Speaker Welch basically paid off her entire $100K loan with campaign contributions to his personal PAC which has the caps blown off. That’s how they roll.

Last edited 2 years ago by nixit
SadStateofAffairs
2 years ago
Reply to  nixit

Absolutely right on. The politically connected will always manipulate the system to enhance their own benefits and money is the grease that continues to move the gears inside Illinois. Truly a Hydra of sorts because cutting off it’s heads makes it grow even bigger. Preckwinkle controls everything coming in and out of Chicago and rarely gets the blame for Kim Foxx but the blame squarely falls on her shoulders. Chicago citizens are too stupid to understand how it works or part of the very problem they created by patronage. This system now cannot survive without robbery of our taxpayer dollars.… Read more »

Tom Paine's Ghost
2 years ago

Pritzker has replaced Madigan as the snakehead to the Democrat machine. He has kept the control apparatus in place because it works for Dictators and Tyrants. Instead of the hard work of raising money Pritzker simply spends his daddy’s money so that now virtually EVERY Democrat in Illinois is wholly owned by Pritzker. Meet the new boss; same as the old boss.

Giddyap
2 years ago

IL Dems are all Crooked and Corrupt

Riverbender
2 years ago

All of the above brought to us by the voters of Illinois.
As for Madigan at his age I don’t think he will see a day in jail. The continuances and legal mechanizations from favorable judges will outlive him.

jajujon
2 years ago
Reply to  Riverbender

Ah, but his reputation will be permanently marred and history will remember him as a corrupt, evil politician who lined his own pockets and those of his cronies. There will be a special place for him in the afterlife. As evasive as he’s been legally in this life, he wasn’t very smart about the real long (eternal) term. That should eat away at him for the rest of his days.

Pat S.
2 years ago
Reply to  jajujon

I doubt it; the man has no conscience. He and his cronies are morally bereft. Madigan likely sleeps like a baby and laughs at his prosecution.

Expect continuance after continuance.

Da Judge
2 years ago

Da Dem King Mikey Madigan headed to Marion next year.

Corrupt, lying POS Illinois Dem!!

Hello, Indiana!
2 years ago
Reply to  Da Judge

Don’t bet on it. MM’s age, health and just about anything else that can be pulled out of a hat will be used to keep him out of the klink, get the minimum sentence or do a drastically reduced sentence in some open air prison that most of us would call a country club.

SadStateofAffairs
2 years ago
Reply to  Da Judge

He still controls so much political machinery inside Illinois that he has others who can steer this case so the old man himself never serves one day behind bars. Absolutely corrupt yes. Not many principled people left inside Illinois. The massive patronage army and his money are like a criminal cartel.

Former Illinois Wimp
2 years ago

I’ve commented about it before, but it bears repeating. The insanity that exists in Illinois does not exist in all other states (despite what a few others here would have you believe). Some states don’t tax your income. Some states don’t promote the killing of the unborn. Some states don’t have serious debt problems. Some states don’t have real estate taxes bigger than your mortgage. Some states get little, or no snow. Some states are increasing their population. Some states are attracting new business. Some states don’t pit the races against each other. Some states are trying to give their… Read more »

Steve H
2 years ago

Well said. Already heading to Florida at end of the year!

Former Illinois Wimp
2 years ago
Reply to  Steve H

Good choice. Just be aware of the home insurance situation before buyng.

Freddy
2 years ago

Also Steve needs to check to see if hurricane insurance is included and what the deductible is. Many insurers are pulling out and depending on location and value of the property insurance can be well over $5K per year.

Steve H
2 years ago
Reply to  Freddy

New construction so closer to $3k (no flood insurance needed). Older house could be considerably more. More than Illinois, but well worth it!

Elaine S.
2 years ago

Agree with everything you listed, except that I kinda like having a little snow once in a while or around Christmas. It’s the tornadoes that I could do without. Unfortunately just about every red state is in Tornado or Hurricane Alley but you gotta take the bad with the good, I suppose.

Steve H
2 years ago

Move along, nothing to see here 🧑‍🦯🐑

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