Madigan machine moves heaven and earth
POLITICS | Rich Miller
There’s nothing quite like the spectacle of Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan when he’s out to get somebody.
Just ask state Rep. Skip Saviano, R-Elmwood Park.
The two men used to be allies, even friends. Saviano supported Madigan’s daughter when Lisa ran for state attorney general. But then Lisa turned against Saviano’s political mentor, the late Rosemont Mayor Don Stephens, blocking his dream of building a local casino because, she claimed, he was tied to the mob. Saviano vowed revenge.
Even so, things eventually died down. Saviano kept the powerful committee chairmanship given to him by Madigan – one of only two Republicans bestowed with that privilege in the Illinois House, the other being one of Skip’s best friends.
But when Madigan cranked up his total war against then Gov. Rod Blagojevich, he eventually came to believe that Saviano, an old Blagojevich pal, had sided with the governor against him. That was the last straw. Before long, Saviano had lost his chairmanship. Then the Republican Saviano was given a new House district in the remap which was solidly Democratic. And then Madigan moved heaven and earth to find an opponent for the locally popular Saviano, finally convincing an almost totally unknown local Republican to switch parties and challenge the incumbent.
Madigan dumped hundreds of thousands of dollars into the campaign, forcing Saviano to work harder on his reelection than he ever has.
Saviano is a clever tactician himself, however. When Madigan lieutenant state Sen. Martin Sandoval, D-Chicago, crashed and disrupted a Latino candidates’ forum in Saviano’s district, Saviano finally got the Chicago media to pay some attention to his battle. Sen. Sandoval stood on a chair and then sat on the floor, all the while shouting that Latinos should never vote Republican. Sandoval was eventually escorted out of the church building by local police and, instead of apologizing the next day, called Saviano a racist. The Chicago media generally disdains covering local state legislative races, but that story was just too good to pass up.
Saviano
ginned up the attention further by claiming that Sandoval’s actions had
prompted the state’s lone Latino congressman Luis Gutierrez, a
Democrat, to endorse the Republican Saviano. Never mind that Saviano had
already ordered that the Gutierrez endorsement direct-mail pieces be
printed before Sen. Sandoval crashed the forum. But, hey, it made for a
good story.
Not to be
outdone, Madigan ordered up the printing of a flier featuring photos of
his candidate, Kathleen Willis, and Congressman Gutierrez. “Luis
Gutierrez and Kathleen Willis, Fighting for our families and our
concerns!” the text underneath the photo read.
But
the wildest move of the entire campaign came when a political action
committee with obvious ties to Madigan popped up out of nowhere and sent direct mailers to Republicans blasting Saviano for being Speaker Madigan’s puppet.
“A
vote for Skip Saviano is a vote for Mike Madigan!” blared one of the
PAC’s mailers. The piece informed voters that Madigan had appointed
Saviano to a committee chairmanship, claimed Saviano had contributed
money to Madigan’s campaign committee and “voted six times to make
Madigan Speaker of the House!” “Democrat Speaker Mike Madigan calls the
shots for Skip Saviano,” screamed the other mailer, which featured a
photo of the two men with their arms around each other.
The
political action committee was formed Oct. 15. Its treasurer appears to
work at a law firm run by the Melrose Park village attorney, who was
once recommended for the Justice village attorney position by none other
than Speaker Madigan. One of the PAC’s top contributors gave $5,000 to
the new group on Oct. 19 – less than two weeks after the company
contributed $10,000 to Speaker Madigan. Another company gave three
contributions to Madigan’s committees totaling over $6,000 just ten days
before it gave the new PAC $1,500.
I’ve seen some crazy stuff in my day, but this one pretty much took the cake.
Madigan’s
people have insisted for years that Republican attempts to sully his
name have not worked. But then they got behind what appeared to be a
pro-Madigan group that attacked Madigan in order to help defeat a
Republican state Representative. To put it another way, the Democrats
took the Republican Party’s ubiquitous “Fire Madigan” mantra and turned
it against a Republican legislator.
Unnofficial
election results on Tuesday had Saviano losing to Willis 47-53.
Madigan’s brilliant payback scheme seems to have worked, and it
confirmed that his name truly can be toxic.
Rich Miller also publishes Capitol Fax, a daily political newsletter, and CapitolFax.com.