Ill. speaker, AG have stormy past with governor
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By DON BABWIN
Associated Press Writer
CHICAGO (AP) - Long before Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich was
arrested on corruption charges, House Speaker Michael Madigan
compared him to a tumor and suggested ways to impeach him.
Before that, the governor had called Madigan - a fellow Democrat
- a ``George Bush Republican'' and sued him for instructing
Democratic lawmakers to stay home when the governor ordered them to
work.
The tortured relationship between the two is getting a public
airing now that Madigan and his daughter, state Attorney General
Lisa Madigan, have emerged as key players in determining the future
of the embattled governor. The speaker has appointed a panel to
consider impeachment, while his daughter has asked the state's
highest court to remove Blagojevich from office, claiming he is
unfit to serve.
Both have tried to sound measured in their public comments about
the proceedings, but the distrust between the Madigans and the
governor runs deep.
The relationship started to sour not long after Blagojevich
finished taking the oath of office in 2003. After seemingly
agreeing on a budget plan with Democratic lawmakers, he went home
and vetoed big chunks of it.
``Speaker Madigan is someone who has operated in an atmosphere
when a public official gives his word, it's kept,'' said Mike
Lawrence, former director of the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute
at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale. ``One of the things
that particularly annoyed him is he felt the governor was not good
to his word.''
The son of a Democratic precinct captain and ward superintendent
on Chicago's southwest side, Madigan has been a member of the House
since 1971 - serving as speaker for 25 years save two years when
Republicans took the majority.
After what happened with Blagojevich's first budget, Madigan and
other lawmakers insisted that the governor sign ``memorandums of
understanding'' with them to get his promises on paper.
Madigan, a slight man who shows little emotion in public, also
has been offended by the bombastic, glad-handing Blagojevich's
personal behavior. That was apparent at the 2004 funeral of state
Sen. Vince Demuzio.
``Madigan told me ... Blagojevich was late, he kept the priest
awaiting and then he didn't even go to the cemetery,'' said Charles
Wheeler, head of the Public Affairs Reporting program at the
University of Illinois at Springfield. ``He bopped in, held up the
Mass, and you could just tell that to Madigan it was the protocol
equivalent of mooning the congregation.''
But Blagojevich hit one of Madigan's biggest nerves - his
sensitivity to suggestions that he got his daughter her job and
calls the shots for her - in 2004, after Lisa Madigan shut down
Blagojevich's plan to mortgage the state's Chicago headquarters.
She said the move was unconstitutional, but Blagojevich accused her
of retaliating against him on her father's behalf.
``I don't want to get involved in a family deal here but, you
know, it's her father,'' Blagojevich said. ``I've got two
daughters. I hope they back me on stuff that I do.''
Lisa Madigan has long been considered a top contender for
governor in 2010. A former state senator, she was elected the
state's first female attorney general in 2002 and re-elected in
2006.
The mortgage issue is far from Lisa Madigan's only dustup with
Blagojevich. She and other statewide officers met with the governor
in 2003 to talk about their budgets and thought they had reached an
agreement on cuts. Soon after, Blagojevich publicly doubled those
cuts.
Lisa Madigan's office also investigated allegations of hiring
fraud under Blagojevich but halted that investigation in 2006 at
the behest of federal prosecutors. At the time, she released a
letter from U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald that said his probe
had yielded credible witnesses related to ``very serious
allegations of endemic hiring fraud'' - adding to the governor's
public woes.
The relationship between Michael Madigan and Blagojevich hit a
low this summer when The Associated Press reported that Madigan was
circulating a memo to legislative candidates instructing them on
how to publicly call for hearings to impeach the governor.
``One thing we learned from the (imprisoned former Gov.) George
Ryan case is that we should excise a tumor when it is first
discovered; not leave it in the body to continue to spread and do
further harm,'' the memo stated.
12/16/08 15:18
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