On the morning of Dec. 8, 2008, Rod Blagojevich awoke to the
FBI at his front door. On Wednesday, the former governor addressed throngs of
reporters on the same stoop.
“I’m returning home today from a long exile a freed political prisoner,” he
said.
“I want to say again to the people of Illinois who twice elected me governor: I
didn’t let you down.”
President Donald Trump’s commutation of Blagojevich, whatever one thinks of the
original 14-year sentence, sends a discouraging message to more than 12 million
Illinoisans still living under the crooked state government Blagojevich left
behind while imprisoned.
Illinois’ political leadership learned nothing from the Blagojevich nightmare.
And now it may be coming back to bite them.
On the same day Blagojevich celebrated his comeback, the Chicago Sun-Times
reported Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan was named in an IRS subpoena
delivered to the small Chicago suburb of Merrionette Park.
The subpoena demanded copies of village contracts with Madigan political foot
soldier and former Commonwealth Edison lobbyist Raymond T. Nice, and appeared to
be searching for evidence of ghost-payrolling. The subpoena further demanded
village officials turn over all correspondence with Madigan, his former chief of
staff and other members of his inner circle.
Remember, the current federal corruption investigation sweeping Illinois centers
in part on Madigan’s political operation possibly securing no-work contracts for
the speaker’s allies through ComEd. He has not been charged with any wrongdoing.
Also on the same day Blagojevich celebrated his comeback, the Illinois budget
address was delivered by a governor catching federal heat for cheating on his
property taxes, and who once pressed Blagojevich to give him an appointment to
statewide office.
In 2017, the Chicago Tribune published recordings from FBI wiretaps showing
now-Gov. J.B. Pritzker told Blagojevich he was “really not that interested” in
Barack Obama’s vacant U.S. Senate seat. Rather, he was interested in being
appointed Illinois treasurer.
“Ooh, interesting,” Blagojevich said during the November 2008 phone call. “Let’s
think about that. You interested in that?”
[ to
top of second column] |
“Yeah,” Pritzker responded, “that’s the one I would
want.”
Blagojevich later asked Pritzker for a campaign
contribution as they discussed the possible appointment. From 2002
to 2006, Pritzker and his wife donated at least $140,000 to
Blagojevich’s campaign, according to the Chicago Tribune.
“Illinoisans have endured far too much corruption,” Pritzker’s
statement on the Blagojevich commutation read, “and we must send a
message to politicians that corrupt practices will no longer be
tolerated.”
But those practices are tolerated.
Following Blagojevich’s impeachment and indictment, an Illinois
ethics task force traveled the state, brought together stakeholders
and experts and issued a 95-page report full of reform
recommendations.
One section of the report included proposals to address “structural
problems” that lead to corruption and inefficiency in Illinois state
government. The report recommended three structural changes: pass
nonpartisan legislative district maps, install term limits for
legislative leaders, and make changes to the House and Senate rules
curbing the power of leadership.
A decade later, Madigan’s House of Representatives has not adopted
any of those reform recommendations. And Pritzker isn’t asking him
to.
Illinoisans sick of business as usual have a choice: pick up and
leave or stay and fight.
The fight is worth it. Reforms are within reach. But they will not
happen without average Illinoisans taking three simple steps:
Finding out who their representatives are in Springfield;
Demanding real change, not just a few new transparency rules,
through calls and emails;
Voting accordingly.
Blagojevich showed no remorse for his behavior.
Without your voice, neither will Springfield.
Click here to respond to the editor about this article
|