SPRINGFIELD, Ill. — Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker said taxpayers "don't deserve a political circus" on Thursday when he gave powerful House Speaker Michael Madigan a choice: Answer questions about a federal bribery investigation which implicates him, or give up the gavel after three decades of iron-grip control.
It was the strongest statement yet from the Democratic governor, coming a day after federal prosecutors delivered bribery and conspiracy indictments on Madigan's closest confidant and three others in an ongoing probe of a decade-long scheme involving ComEd. The utility giant has admitted handing out $1.3 million in no-work lobbying jobs and sub-contracts to Madigan allies in exchange for favorable legislation. Court documents in the investigation have not named Madigan but identify him by title.
"If Speaker Madigan wants to continue in a position of enormous public trust with such a serious ethical cloud hanging over his head, then he has to, at the very least, be willing to stand in front of the press and the people and answer every last question to their satisfaction," Pritzker said at the end of his daily briefing on the COVID-19 pandemic in Chicago.
"We are at an incredibly difficult moment in our state," the governor said. "We are all overwhelmed with decisions of life and death, and economic distress. The people of Illinois do not deserve a political circus on top of that."
Pritzker's demand came hours after three more House Democrats withdrew support from Madigan's continued control of the House, first in a joint statement by suburban Chicago Reps. Sam Yingling and Jonathan Carroll, and later from progressive Chicago Rep. Will Guzzardi. It brings to 15 the number of Democrats who have indicated an unwillingness to return the gavel to Madigan when a new General Assembly convenes in January.
If the number holds, the longest-serving leader of a legislative body in U.S. history would be two votes shy of the 60 he needs for a 19th term.
"From the beginning of my career, I thought the system was broken but I was determined to work within the system to do the best I could for the community I represent," Guzzardi, who began his House career with a 2014 primary victory over a Madigan-preferred incumbent, said in an interview. "It's reached the point now that there is no more working within the system. It's too broken and too corrupt and it has to change."
The 78-year-old Madigan was mentioned again Wednesday in bribery and conspiracy indictments that landed on Michael McClain of Quincy, Madigan's close friend and once the Statehouse's most powerful lobbyist; Anne Pramaggirore of Barrington, former CEO of ComEd parent Exelon; lobbyist and former ComEd executive John Hooker of Chicago; and Jay Doherty, a consultant and former head of the City Club if Chicago.