Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan is
about to see two things he’s never seen before. And given he’s been in
the Statehouse since 1971, that’s saying something.
The first is the strength of his
majority.
Democrats have never held more than 72
seats in the 118-member Illinois House, with the high water mark coming
in 1991. The magic number required to put a constitutional amendment on
the ballot and override the governor’s veto is 71 votes.
As of Nov. 8, House Democrats are in
line for 73 House seats in 2019, possibly 74 – a new record. It will be
Madigan’s largest majority ever.
The second is the type of person who
will occupy the governor’s office.
Madigan has worked with two governors of
his own party since he was first elected House speaker in 1983: Rod Blagojevich
and Pat Quinn. These two men were not shrewd power brokers, to say the
least. Madigan could pinion both at will.
Enter billionaire Gov.-elect J.B.
Pritzker, who just spent more than $170 million to unseat Gov. Bruce
Rauner. That money is a total game-changer for Madigan’s Democratic
Party, which has traditionally relied on government worker unions,
trial lawyers and business interests who need special favors in order
to fill its coffers.
So far, Madigan has brought Pritzker
entirely into the fold. He knew Pritzker’s money would be a major boost
for his House candidates across the state.
But what happens when Pritzker goes from
candidate mode to manager mode? He will inherit a massive bill backlog,
a state that’s one notch above a junk credit rating and a budget that’s
already out of balance by $2 billion. He will not be able to raise
enough revenue to cover already-bloated spending and new promises in
the short term. Something’s got to give.
Government unions, for example, might
not get everything they want at every turn. These fractures will be
where Pritzker’s money becomes a double-edged sword for Madigan.
Those deep pockets could provide the
speaker covering fire to go against his traditional power base. But
Pritzker’s money could also offer Madigan’s House members the same
cover should they dare to go against the speaker.
For the first time ever in Madigan’s
speakership, Democratic lawmakers could have a real choice to seek
shelter elsewhere when a tough vote comes around.
One key factor in all this is what
Madigan wants beyond power: legacy. It’s clearly on his mind.
The day after polls closed, Madigan
released an odd personal statement under the Democratic Party of
Illinois letterhead. In it, he claims Republicans lost because they
tried to make the election a referendum on Madigan, but that strategy
backfired because the speaker is actually “a champion of smart economic
and social policies” and has provided “real, tangible economic benefits
to the people and families of this state.”
It’s completely out of touch with
reality. And Democrats know that.
Recall that in 2012, a political action
committee closely linked to Madigan paid for mailers attacking …
Madigan. The mailers were sent in support of a Democratic challenger
running against incumbent Republican state Rep. Skip Saviano. “A vote
for Skip Saviano is a vote for Mike Madigan!” said one. “Democrat
Speaker Mike Madigan calls the shots for Skip Saviano,” said another.
If voters actually love the speaker,
Senate Democrats must not have received the memo.
Three Democratic Senate challengers ran
a week’s worth of TV ads in September calling for term limits on
Madigan, before the Chicago Federation of Labor demanded they be taken
down. Of those three challengers, one picked up a Republican seat and
another is down just 12 votes with mail-in ballots left to be counted.
In Madigan’s own chamber, Democrat Anne
Stava-Murray pulled off a shocking upset in Chicago’s western suburbs
against incumbent Republican state Rep. David Olsen. Stava-Murray vowed
to vote against Madigan for House speaker.
Madigan remains a black eye for the
Democratic Party brand in Illinois. His House members are well aware of
that. But for now, they still need his protection.
Come inauguration in January, that could
change.
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