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		State reps counter Lt. Gov. candidate’s claim that ethics led Illinois 
		energy legislation
		[July 17, 2025]  
		By Jim Talamonti | The Center Square 
		(The Center Square) – With two members of the ComEd Four scheduled to be 
		sentenced next week, Illinois Democrats and Republicans differ on the 
		need for energy-related ethics reform.
 Sentencing is scheduled next Monday, July 21, for former ComEd CEO Anne 
		Pramaggiore after she was convicted of conspiracy, bribery and 
		falsifying records in connection with a scheme to bribe former Illinois 
		House Speaker Michael Madigan, D-Chicago. Ex-lobbyist and state lawmaker 
		Michael McClain, D-Quincy, is scheduled to be sentenced on Thursday, 
		July 24.
 
 Pramaggiore and McClain were convicted along with former ComEd lobbyist 
		John Hooker and contract lobbyist Jay Doherty in 2023.
 
 ComEd agreed to pay $200 million in 2020 to resolve a criminal 
		investigation into the years-long bribery scheme. As part of a deferred 
		prosecution agreement, ComEd admitted it arranged $1.3 million in jobs, 
		vendor subcontracts and payments to influence Madigan.
 
 The former speaker was sentenced last month to 7.5 years in prison and 
		ordered to pay a fine of $2.5 million after a federal jury convicted him 
		earlier this year on 10 counts of corruption.
 
 Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s candidate for lieutenant governor, former State 
		Rep. Christian Mitchell, D-Chicago, addressed a question about ethics at 
		a campaign stop with the governor in Chicago earlier this month.
 
		
		 
		“Listen, when we passed the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act (CEJA), we 
		led with ethics. The governor said ethics was his first principle, and 
		so we worked to make sure that how energy legislation was done, instead 
		of being done in a conference room of our largest energy provider, was 
		done in the light of day in large working groups. We made sure that we 
		ended the formula rates that ended up getting a lot of people in legal 
		trouble,” Mitchell said. 
		In 2018, Mitchell served as executive director of the Democratic Party 
		of Illinois under then-party chairman Madigan. He served with the former 
		speaker in the Illinois House from 2013-2019. Madigan was a state 
		representative from 1971-2021 and chaired the state’s Democratic Party 
		for 23 years.
 Pritzker signed CEJA into law in 2021. Among other things, the measure 
		incentivized renewable energy development, imposed carbon dioxide 
		emissions caps and provided for electric vehicle charging stations to be 
		installed along highways across the state.
 
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            Former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan walks out of the 
			Everett M. Dirksen U.S. Courthouse in Chicago on Wednesday, Jan. 3, 
			2024. - By Brett Rowland | The Center Square 
            
			
			 
            State Rep. Patrick Windhorst, R-Metropolis, said it was evident in 
			this year’s legislative session that the General Assembly’s 
			supermajority Democrats have no desire to pass meaningful ethics 
			reform.
 “The things that Mr. Mitchell pointed to in CEJA are very minor 
			changes to our ethics laws. They do not do really anything that I 
			think an objective observer would say is meaningful change to our 
			ethics laws,” Windhorst told The Center Square.
 
 The Illinois House GOP floor leader said the state’s ethics laws 
			have been shown, time and again, to be weak.
 
 “To me, putting ethics laws and reforms in place is about setting up 
			guardrails so elected officials and other state employees don’t get 
			close to illegal activity, let alone commit illegal activity,” 
			Windhorst added.
 
 State Rep. Paul Jacobs, R-Pomona, said he doesn’t see how CEJA would 
			help with ethics.
 
 “CEJA just is killing us for electricity. If we don’t produce as 
			much as what we used to produce, you’re obviously going to have to 
			buy it somewhere else. If we buy it somewhere else, then it’s 
			opening up, ‘Well listen, I can get this for you if you get this for 
			me.’ There are just too many things that would lead to unethical 
			behavior, I think. I don’t see how Mitchell could possibly think 
			that CEJA was going to help in ethics. I don’t understand it,” 
			Jacobs told The Center Square.
 
 Both Windhorst and Jacobs opposed CEJA in 2021, saying it punished 
			Southern Illinois utility providers and their customers.
 
			
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