Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Mike Madigan’s political muscle weakens amid ComEd scandal

- RICH MILLER Rich Miller also publishes Capitol Fax, a daily political newsletter, and capitolfax.com. @capitolfax

It’s well known that the Illinois House Republican­s (along with pretty much all Illinois Republican­s) are using House Speaker Michael Madigan’s bad reputation to bludgeon their Democratic opponents.

Madigan has been enormously unpopular in Illinois. And he’s probably more unpopular now because he’s been in the news so much during the long federal investigat­ion into ComEd and the company’s resulting deferred-prosecutio­n agreement with the U.S. attorney in Chicago.

A special Illinois House investigat­ing committee has been impaneled to take testimony about the federal probe and consider whether to discipline Madigan for “conduct unbecoming a legislator,” which is helping to keep him in the news.

Add the more recent news about Democratic Rep. Stephanie Kifowit’s announceme­nt last week that she will run against Madigan for speaker in January, and it’s been a complete media circus for the longtime pol.

Kifowit has not yet identified any allies and isn’t exactly an odds-on favorite to defeat Madigan. She votes more conservati­ve than many in the House Democratic caucus. She was the only House “present” vote on the minimum wage increase bill, and she hired a public relations person who is raising money for the Republican opponent of Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx. That puts her at odds with her party, the Black Caucus and labor unions that fund the Democrats.

But the mere fact that she stood up and announced her bid is an indication that Madigan’s political strength is not what it used to be.

Anyway, the last time the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute polled Madigan’s job approval rating was last year. It found 71% disapprove­d of the way Madigan did his job while only 20% approved — a 51-point difference.

Those results weren’t all that different from the same poll’s question on whether Illinoisan­s supported a new state tax on retirement income. Seventy-three percent opposed it while 23% supported — a 50-point margin.

Normally, opposition to a retirement income tax is an easy layup for Illinois legislator­s in both parties. Just score some no-brainer points with the folks back home and move on to the next question.

But some brainiacs always want to start a “discussion,” and it often blows up in their faces.

This time, it’s blowing up in others’ faces. “One thing a progressiv­e tax would do is make clear you can have graduated rates when you are taxing retirement income,” Treasurer Michael Frerichs, a Democrat, told the Daily Herald back in June. “And, I think that’s something that’s worth discussion.”

Frerichs’ quote has opened the door to House Republican attack mailers in numerous districts against Democrats who voted “Yes” on the graduated income tax last year and also against Democratic House candidates in general.

“Mary Edly-Allen supports the tax hike amendment,” one recent HGOP mailer exclaimed about the freshman Democratic state representa­tive from Libertyvil­le. “Her Springfiel­d pals admit the amendment would open the door to a brand-new tax on retirement income. That means your pension, your 401(k) plan and your retirement plan would be taxed and sent straight to Springfiel­d.”

The mailers are being sent to other districts (Metro East and Southern Illinois, for example) where the tax is also not polling great. But, said one House Republican source of the tax issue, “We’re talking about that everywhere.”

The mailers have the added benefit of ginning up opposition to Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s “Fair Tax” constituti­onal amendment, which House Republican Leader Jim Durkin has vowed to defeat. So, it’s a twofer.

“Politician Janet Yang Rohr wants to tax your retirement income,” another Republican mailer warns about the Democratic opponent of Rep. Grant Wehrli, R-Naperville.

“Yang Rohr is backing the graduated income tax. This plan would not only raise taxes on the middle class but also on retirees. The state treasurer has admitted this is a tax on retirees. There’s no question that ordinary people will suffer. Protect your retirement. Vote ‘No’ on Janet Yang Rohr.”

To be fair, if Frerichs hadn’t said what he said, the Republican­s would’ve found another way to make the same argument. But Frerichs did make their easier.

And Pritzker can’t really complain about taking somebody’s mention of a graduated tax on retirement income and twisting it into an attack on all retirement income taxation because he did the very same thing in the 2018 Democratic primary. His top two Democratic opponents, Chris Kennedy and Daniel Biss, both tentativel­y supported a tax on upper-income retirees, but Pritzker distorted that into TV ads claiming the two wanted to tax all retirement income.

Karma can be problemati­c.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Speaker Michael Madigan is facing a House investigat­ion and withering criticism over his ties to a ComEd bribery scandal.
AP FILE PHOTO Speaker Michael Madigan is facing a House investigat­ion and withering criticism over his ties to a ComEd bribery scandal.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States