Chicago Sun-Times

Tim Mapes, Mike Madigan and the mess in Springfiel­d politics

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For more than two decades, everyone who worked in Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan’s office apparently feared a “Tim moment.”

Tim, as in Tim Mapes, Madigan’s former right-hand man, whose 26-year reign has now been laid bare in a sweeping 201-page report on harassment in state politics.

The report, released Tuesday, pulls no punches: In his “moments,” Mapes bullied, intimidate­d, threatened and berated Madigan employees and even Democratic state representa­tives.

“The number of independen­tly verified instances of Mr. Mapes’ derogatory behavior was overwhelmi­ng,” Maggie Hickey, the former state inspector general who led the yearlong investigat­ion, concluded in her report. “Mr. Mapes had a reputation for denigratin­g workers and threatenin­g their jobs.”

Report the harassment? To whom, since Mapes ran the show for Madigan and felt free to ignore the speaker’s personnel rules and regulation­s?

Find another job? Sure, but if you got on the wrong side of Mapes, he might have one of his “moments” and call up your prospectiv­e employer to bad-mouth and discourage the person from hiring you.

All in all, Hickey’s report makes it clear that the speaker’s office was a toxic mess of

a workplace while Mapes was in charge. It might still be, except Mapes finally got the boot by Madigan last year after veteran employee Sherri Garrett publicly accused Mapes of sexual harassment and bullying.

“To be clear, Mr. Mapes’ comments [toward Garrett], while sometimes sexual in nature, were not sexual advances,” Hickey wrote. “Instead, Mr. Mapes was exerting power over Ms. Garrett by making inappropri­ate statements toward or around her that he knew or should have known would make her uncomforta­ble.”

Now the culture of intimidati­on and harassment in Springfiel­d is Madigan’s to clean up. Which is only right, since Madigan created a fertile field for it to sprout, by giving Mapes far too much power: chief of staff in 1991, executive director of the Democratic Party of Illinois in 1998 and clerk of the House in 2011.

Meanwhile, Madigan rarely interacted with his workers, Hickey reported.

Madigan now says he “take[s] responsibi­lity for not doing enough previously to prevent issues in my office.” All well and good — and Hickey gives the powerful speaker credit for taking steps to create a healthier workplace.

She recommends that Madigan be more visible around his own office, which seems like the first thing he ought to do if he truly didn’t know what Mapes was up to.

Madigan, as the boss, rightly is shoulderin­g the blame here, but Mapes is ultimately responsibl­e for his own bad behavior. In a statement, Mapes apologized but gave lame excuses — he had “many responsibi­lities,” “did my best,” and was only trying to make the speaker’s office “efficient and effective.”

Plenty of people have jobs with lots of responsibi­lity, and work hard to be efficient and effective. And they do it without being jerks.

The report found no evidence to substantia­te claims by state Rep. Kelly Cassidy that Madigan and some of his allies retaliated against her for speaking out about how Madigan was handling harassment allegation­s. The report also exonerates state Rep. Lou Lang of sexual harassment allegation­s.

Still, in the era of #MeToo, it was these and other allegation­s of harassment and bullying in Springfiel­d that led to the investigat­ion.

We knew politics in Springfiel­d could be a dirty business. Now we know just how dirty it’s been.

NOW THE CULTURE OF INTIMIDATI­ON AND HARASSMENT IN SPRINGFIEL­D IS MADIGAN’S TO CLEAN UP. WHICH IS ONLY RIGHT, SINCE MADIGAN CREATED A FERTILE FIELD FOR IT TO SPROUT, BY GIVING MAPES FAR TOO MUCH POWER.

 ?? AP FILES ?? Tim Mapes
AP FILES Tim Mapes
 ?? SUN-TIMES FILES ?? Mike Madigan
SUN-TIMES FILES Mike Madigan

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