Jurors see list of Madigan’s job recommendations given to newly elected
Gov. Pritzker
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[December 06, 2024]
By Hannah Meisel
CHICAGO – In the weeks following now-Gov. JB Pritzker’s November 2018
victory over one-term Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner, powerful Illinois
House Speaker Michael Madigan busied himself preparing for a brand new
administration after years of conflict with governors of both parties.
One of his first priorities was finding jobs for his political allies.
Less than a week after Election Day, Madigan’s chief of staff sent an
initial list of names to Pritzker’s campaign, which had already begun
putting together a transition team for work leading up to inauguration
in January 2019. Madigan was also trying to arrange an early December
meeting for the two Democrats. The two kept a healthy distance from one
another during the 2018 campaign while Republicans tried to paint the
billionaire candidate as the longtime speaker’s puppet.
But before that meeting, then-Chicago Ald. Danny Solis visited the
speaker’s office on Chicago’s Southwest Side. In the post-Thanksgiving
meeting, the alderman told Madigan that he’d decided not to run for a
sixth full term on city council in the February 2019 election.
It was a reversal of what Solis had been telling Madigan for five months
since he first requested the speaker’s help in eventually getting him
appointed to a lucrative position on a state board post-retirement. He’d
envisioned that might happen in 2021, halfway through his next term.
Madigan immediately recognized the disclosure as an implicit request to
speed up plans to get Solis an appointment.
“You should get me, like, a resume,” the speaker said. “Because I want
to have a meeting with Pritzker the week after next.”
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2024/Dec/06/images/ads/current/napa_sda_HFH_2024.png)
A federal jury saw the exchange last week in a secretly recorded video
Solis made toward the end of his 2 ½ years working undercover as an FBI
cooperator. Prosecutors allege Madigan promised to help Solis get
appointed to a board seat in exchange for the alderman continuing to
introduce him to real estate developers whom he could recruit as clients
for his property tax appeals law firm.
Solis spent more than 23 hours on the witness stand before he departed
Madigan’s corruption trial Tuesday afternoon. The trial is in its
seventh week of testimony and, despite earlier warnings it might last
until mid-January, prosecutors on Wednesday indicated they may rest
their case as early as next week.
In the Nov. 23, 2018 body camera video, Madigan comes into frame only a
few times. But the smiling face of Rauner – the speaker’s political
nemesis – appeared in much of the footage, in the form of a custom
punching bag in Madigan’s office.
“I want to let Pritzker know what’s coming,” Madigan continued,
referring to the recommendation he’d promised to Solis. “Now, that
doesn’t have to be in writing. I can just verbally tell him, ‘Look as we
go on with these boards and commissions – ’ and I’ll monitor what goes
on with the boards and commissions. We’re doing that already. We’re
sending names over.”
Madigan’s list of recommendations eventually grew to 85 names according
to a version the jury saw Wednesday from July of 2019. Madigan’s former
chief of staff Jessica Basham, who testified Wednesday, maintained the
list.
Prosecutors showed Basham several iterations of the list, including
three from February of 2020. Solis’ name did not appear on any of the
versions. By that time, though, Solis’ legal troubles were well-known
after the Chicago Sun-Times revealed Solis’ FBI cooperation in late
January 2019.
Prosecutors did not show the jury any version of the list dated to
November or December of 2018 while Basham testified Wednesday. But they
might ask about those earlier versions when they call U.S. Rep. Nikki
Budzinski for testimony early next week. Budzinski was a Pritzker
campaign advisor and then a senior staffer in his administration before
she ran for Congress in 2022.
On cross-examination, Madigan’s lawyers showed Basham an Oct. 2019
version of the list of recommendations from the speaker’s office, which
had grown to 91 names. Attorney Dan Collins pointed out Basham’s
handwritten notations all over the pages, which indicated who had
ultimately been appointed.
At the end of the three-page list, Basham noted that 43 of the 91
recommendations had been taken up by the Pritzker administration – a
“47% success rate,” she wrote.
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![](../images/120624PIX/news_b10.gif)
A list former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan’s chief of
staff Jessica Basham maintained of recommendations he’d made to JB
Pritzker in late 2018 and 2019 as the new governor staffed up his
administration. Basham was called to testify in Madigan’s corruption
trial Wednesday. (Screenshot from court documents)
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2024/Dec/06/images/ads/current/werth_lda_HFH_2024.png)
“Did you ever witness Speaker Madigan taking any adverse action toward
Gov. Pritzker because one of his recommendations was not acted on?”
Madigan attorney Dan Collins asked.
“No,” Basham responded.
Basham’s list indicated that 17 of the 91 names on the list were
recommendations from others, including then-House Majority Leader Greg
Harris, D-Chicago, and state Reps. Sue Scherer, D-Decatur, Will Davis,
D-Homewood, and Lisa Hernandez, D-Cicero.
Five of those recommendations came from Emanuel “Chris” Welch, who
succeeded Madigan as House speaker in 2021. Welch recommended his wife
and mother for jobs that they did not ultimately get, but one of his
recommendations did get an appointment, the list indicated.
And a couple recommendations came from retired Statehouse lobbyist Mike
McClain, Madigan’s longtime confidant and co-defendant in the current
trial.
Basham said she didn’t know Madigan’s relationship to each one of his
recommendations, but many on the list are well-known in Springfield
circles. Among the former legislators and other government appointees
was Madigan’s wife Shirley, who’d long been chair of the Illinois Arts
Council. Under the Pritzker administration, she was reappointed to that
role. The governor removed her from her position after the speaker’s
March 2022 indictment.
Other evidence shown to Basham on Wednesday included handwritten notes
Madigan and Basham took while they met with Pritzker on Dec. 4, 2018.
They discussed several major policy initiatives, according to the
meeting notes. At the top of their agenda was a graduated income tax,
which Pritzker had made a central campaign promise. Madigan helped push
a proposed constitutional amendment to allow the tax change through the
General Assembly in May 2019. To take effect, though, voters had to
approve the amendment in November 2020.
Voters, however, rejected what Pritzker branded as the “Fair Tax” after
opposition groups spent millions tying the idea to Madigan. By then, the
speaker had been named “Public Official A” in charging documents in July
2020 alleging ex-lobbyists and executives of electric utility
Commonwealth Edison bribed the speaker. One of those ex-lobbyists was
McClain, who was indicted in the weeks following the November 2020
election and convicted along with his former colleagues last year.
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2024/Dec/06/images/ads/current/flossie_sda_BASKETBALL_2024.png)
The second item on the notes from the Madigan-Pritzker meeting was a
hike in the state’s minimum wage, which Pritzker secured in February
2019, signing a bill gradually increasing minimum hourly pay to $15,
which will take final effect on Jan. 1, 2025. It was the new governor’s
first major policy win.
Other discussion items from the meeting – including legalizing
recreational cannabis, green-lighting sports betting and authorizing a
major infrastructure plan – were enacted during Pritzker’s first
legislative session in spring 2019.
But some policies they discussed never materialized. One was a “public
option to buy into Medicaid,” which only three states have so far done.
Madigan also floated ideas to raise salaries for agency directors “to
help w(ith) recruitment” and totally reconstitute some state boards,
meaning the governor could start fresh with all new appointments,
according to Basham’s notes and testimony.
Lawmakers indeed approved salary hikes for agency directors during their
lame duck session before a new General Assembly was seated and Pritzker
was inaugurated in January 2019.
They also approved legislation to reconstitute the scandal-plagued board
of the Illinois TollwayState Toll Highway Authority, which was the one
entity Basham had noted as an example on her meeting notes. Pritzker
appointed an all-new Tollway board in February 2019.
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