‘You’re a street fighter,’ Madigan confidant counseled former speaker:
wiretapped call
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[March 22, 2023]
By HANNAH MEISEL
Capitol News Illinois
hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com
CHICAGO – Facing a perceived betrayal during a make-or-break election
season in 2018, former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan called the
person he often sought counsel from: longtime friend and confidant Mike
McClain.
Several Democratic candidates running for the state Senate were using
lines in their campaign ads explicitly calling for “term limits for
leaders like Mike Madigan.” The candidates all used that same exact
phrase in materials paid for by a fund run by Madigan’s counterpart in
the other chamber of the legislature, then-Senate President John
Cullerton.
McClain advised Madigan to not do anything – at least for 24 to 48
hours, while the speaker’s “agents” stepped in to “give (Cullerton) body
blows,” according to a September 2018 recording of a wiretapped phone
call that was played for a federal jury on Monday in a case where
McClain and three others stand accused of bribing the former speaker.
As one of Madigan’s “agents,” he’d already sent Cullerton a text, he
told Madigan. But he advised Madigan to approach Cullerton about the ads
“sooner rather than later,” and gave him a vote of confidence.
“I mean, I know you got a law degree but you’re more of a street fighter
than anybody knows, except for maybe guys like me,” McClain told his
friend. “And if you want to put the squeeze on the guy you could hurt
him pretty badly.”
Eventually the ads were nixed from the air after pressure from
Democrats’ most consistent campaign funder, organized labor.
McClain, a longtime contract lobbyist for electric utility Commonwealth
Edison, is facing bribery and racketeering charges along with two other
former ComEd lobbyists – John Hooker and Jay Doherty – and the utility’s
former CEO, Anne Pramaggiore.
On Monday, jurors in the case heard 16 more recordings from McClain’s
wiretapped phone in 2018 and 2019, along with testimony from one of the
FBI agents charged with investigating Madigan as far back as 2014. They
also heard lengthy questioning of a ComEd executive not involved with
the alleged bribery, and a current Democratic House member.
State Rep. Bob Rita, D-Blue Island, testified that in the 18 years he
and Madigan overlapped in the House, he’d been loyal to the former
speaker. But he also pulled no punches when describing how the former
speaker exercised his power over both the Illinois House and through his
vast political reach as chairman of the state’s Democratic Party.
“Through fear and intimidation,” Rita said.
And when asked by Assistant U.S. Attorney Sarah Streicker if he’d
personally experienced that aggressive tactic, Rita responded, “yes.”
Rita, who was first elected to the House in 2002, now serves as the
chair of the House’s powerful Executive Committee, and in 2016 he
sponsored the Future Energy Jobs Act – one of ComEd’s signature
legislative initiatives at the heart of the government’s case against
the utility’s ex-lobbyists and CEO.
Prosecutors had also wanted to question Rita about his sponsorship of
major gambling expansion legislation, and in court filings had contended
Madigan once pointed to McClain in a meeting and told Rita, “he will
guide you.”
But Judge Harry Leinenweber prohibited the government from introducing
the gambling legislation issue to the jury, siding with the defense that
the testimony would be “prejudicial.”
Rita testified that Madigan “had total control” over both the Illinois
House and the state party, and one of the reasons for that political
control was that the speaker “was very good at raising money.”
Without Madigan’s political help, “it could be very, very difficult” for
a Democratic candidate to win a seat in the House, Rita said.
Rita’s testimony began late Monday afternoon and is expected to continue
Tuesday morning.
Earlier in the day, the jury heard lengthy testimony from Scott Vogt,
ComEd’s current vice president of strategy, energy policy and revenue
initiatives.
Prosecutors questioned Vogt to establish basic history for the jury
about ComEd’s business over the last two decades. Vogt went in depth
about how the utility had been preparing for possible bankruptcy in
2006.
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The Everett McKinley Dirksen U.S.
Courthouse is pictured in Chicago Monday as a federal trial of three
former Commonwealth Edison lobbyists and one ex-executive continued.
(Capitol News Illinois photos by Hannah Meisel)
ComEd’s financial position had been “dire,” Vogt said, as a result of a
rate freeze put into place alongside Illinois’ electricity deregulation
law in 2007. Because ComEd couldn’t increase what it was charging
customers in accordance with the cost of energy the utility was buying,
Vogt said ComEd couldn’t make investments necessary to improve
reliability for customers.
In 2006, ComEd executives were worried that a bill to extend the rate
freeze would pass the legislature. But the utility scored a win in
Springfield and ComEd was allowed to seek a rate increase in 2007, after
the original 10-year rate freeze expired.
But just because the rate freeze was over didn’t mean the utility could
get the rate increases it was seeking. ComEd went before the Illinois
Commerce Commission three times in the next five years and each of the
11-month processes yielded a rate increase far short of the $300 million
hike the utility requested.
ComEd’s 2007 rate increase case, for example, ended with the ICC only
approving an $8 million increase in electric rates – less than 3 percent
of what the utility said it needed. Their next attempt yielded $73
million in rate increases, still far short of the figure ComEd believed
was necessary.
ComEd’s lobbying efforts scored the utility a few more wins in the next
few years. Those included laws like the Illinois Power Agency Act in
2007 and a 2009 law that allowed the utility to recoup the costs of “bad
debt,” where ComEd had given up on trying to chase payments from
customers who hadn’t paid their electric bills. Both laws helped improve
ComEd’s bottom line.
But the utility’s fortunes really turned with the passage of the Energy
Infrastructure Modernization Act in 2011 – another of the laws central
to the government’s theory of ComEd’s alleged bribery scheme. Included
in that law, also known as “Smart Grid” legislation, was an overhaul of
the way consumer electric rates were calculated. The new process, known
as formula ratemaking, created a new tool for ComEd to recoup what it
said was the true cost of running and improving electric service for its
customers in northern Illinois.
Formula ratemaking, unlike traditional ratemaking, provided for more
stable revenues for the utility, Vogt said, and allowed ComEd to
massively upgrade its infrastructure and save customers money. Watchdog
groups dispute the utility’s claim and say the cost of energy has come
down across the board in the last decade.
Even so, Vogt touted formula ratemaking as having “tremendously
improved” ComEd’s financial picture and having allowed the utility to
invest in infrastructure and technology that has improved both costs and
reliability.
However, the 2011 law included a provision that automatically “sunset”
the formula rates a few years after they first took effect,
necessitating ComEd to go back to the General Assembly to ask for the
renewal of formula rates.
Toward the end of Vogt’s lengthy testimony on Monday, Assistant U.S.
Attorney Julie Schwartz asked Vogt “what control" the sunset provision
gave Madigan “over ComEd’s financial future.”
“A fair amount,” Vogt said.
Defense attorneys, however, tried to zoom out on the government’s
narrative, pointing to those earlier legislative wins in 2007 and 2009
that came before the formula rates in 2011 – when ComEd is first alleged
to have bribed Madigan.
Daniel Craig, an attorney for Pramaggiore, asked Vogt why Madigan didn’t
kill those earlier wins for ComEd.
“After scoring those big wins in the Illinois House in 2006 and 2007,
can you think of any reason why anyone at ComEd would think they needed
to start bribing Mike Madigan in 2011?” Craig asked Vogt.
Government attorneys objected to his question, and Leinenweber sustained
the objection.
“Nothing further,” Craig said.
The trail continues at 10 a.m. on Tuesday.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government. It is distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide, as well as hundreds of radio and TV stations. It
is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R.
McCormick Foundation.
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