Late last Thursday night I
was chasing a story about the rumored retirement of state Rep. Barbara
Flynn Currie, Illinois’ first female House Majority Leader, when I got a
text message from a high-level employee of Attorney General Lisa
Madigan.
She asked if
she could call me Friday morning about something her boss was doing that
day. I said of course, and went back to work.
A few minutes later, Leader Currie finally returned my repeated calls and texts and I forgot all about the AG Madigan request.
Back
in 1979 when Currie started her first term, Chicago’s House delegation
was packed with very conservative white men. But now, “I don’t feel as
if I’m leaving a void” by retiring, the liberal legislator from
Chicago’s liberal Hyde Park neighborhood told me Thursday night. The
city’s delegation these days is filled with “fresh, bright, able,
progressive people,” Currie said.
Currie
had a difficult time that night singling out a favored highlight of
what will be 40 years in the House and 20 years as Majority Leader by
the time she retires. Instead she ticked off a long list of subjects,
ranging from early childhood education, to civil rights and civil
liberties, women’s issues, environmental issues, freedom of information,
school funding and even the impeachment of Rod Blagojevich.
Currie says her stamina and energy isn’t what it used to be and it was time to “do something different.”
Currie
took a lot of grief when House Speaker Michael Madigan made her his
Majority Leader. Some of her fellow independent liberals viewed her as a
sellout to party machine hacks.
Downstate
legislators were upset that Madigan had picked a fellow Chicagoan
instead of maintaining geographic balance by choosing someone from their
ranks. And conservative Democrats, some of whom were uncomfortable with
a female Majority Leader, viewed her as too much of an intellectual who
was always championing politically “dangerous” ideas like
state-regulated needle exchange programs to prevent the spread of AIDS
among intravenous drug users.
But
she has shown over time that she could effectively work within the
system without losing her liberal street cred, and Speaker Madigan is
now far more open to liberal causes than he was before he elevated
Currie to the second chair. Illinois, for instance, now has five needle
exchange centers. Also, as the country has shifted to a partisan divide
between urban/ suburban versus exurban/rural, Downstate Democrats have
been disappearing and losing some influence within the caucus.
I
finished talking with Currie and went to bed. The next morning after
I’d written the story about her and done a couple of blog posts, my
phone rang. It was that same Lisa Madigan employee who’d texted me the
night before. I’d completely forgotten about it.
“Hold on a second,” the staffer said, “Lisa wants to talk to you.”
I instantly knew what it was.
This was no routine call.
The attorney general informed me that she wasn’t running for reelection or any other office next year.
“I’m ready to move on to a new challenge,” she said when I asked why.
Attorney
General Madigan talked about running for governor more than once in the
past, but she took herself out four years ago, saying she wouldn’t run
as long as her father, Speaker Madigan, was in office.
But
AG Madigan told me she doesn’t regret not having the opportunity to run
for governor. “I ran for attorney general because I believed this
office would be the greatest opportunity to help people,” she said,
flatly denying that she got out because she feared she might lose
reelection because of her infamous father’s horrific poll ratings.
She didn’t rule out a future run for office and pointedly refused to rule out a bid for governor beyond 2018.
But
if a Democrat defeats Gov. Bruce Rauner next year, that’ll put Madigan
out of the running for maybe eight more years. I can’t say I blame her
for getting out now. She’s also been mentioned as a possible Chicago
mayoral candidate, but I was told in no uncertain terms she wouldn’t run
for mayor in 2019. It really sounded to me like she was looking forward
to a private sector career.
And
what about Speaker Madigan, who’s been in office almost forever?
Several people close to him have recently retired. And then came
Majority Leader Currie’s announcement. And then his own daughter. But I
can’t find anyone who has a convincing argument that he’ll actually hang
up his spurs any time soon. He still seems to be enjoying himself.