Chicago Sun-Times

Sandoval gives up committee driver’s seat — but not seat at table

- BY TINA SFONDELES, POLITICAL REPORTER tsfondeles@suntimes.com | @TinaSfon

State Sen. Martin Sandoval on Friday tendered his resignatio­n as chair of the Senate Transporta­tion Committee amid a chorus of calls for him to step down as federal authoritie­s swarm around him.

But Sandoval will remain a member of the panel as it navigates its way through a sweeping capital plan for roads, bridges and other infrastruc­ture projects across the state.

Two key voices were missing from the calls for Sandoval to step down. Both Illinois Senate President John Cullerton and Senate Majority Leader Kimberly Lightford, D-Maywood, had said they believed it was too early to call for Sandoval’s resignatio­n from the leadership post, since the Southwest Side Democrat hasn’t been charged.

FBI agents were seeking evidence of kickbacks in exchange for official actions — as well as informatio­n related to five Illinois Department of Transporta­tion employees and several lobbyists — when they raided Sandoval’s office in the Capitol building last month, records show.

Sandoval submitted his resignatio­n Friday morning, just as reporters got their hands on an unredacted search warrant that revealed the extent of what authoritie­s were looking for.

While Sandoval resigned from the committee, he remains a majority caucus whip, a position that involves ensuring Democrats have the votes they need to pass pieces of legislatio­n.

“We are letting the senator’s letter speak for itself,” said John Patterson,

spokesman for Cullerton.

Sandoval’s terse one-sentence letter did little more than announce his resignatio­n “pursuant to Senate Rule 3-1(d).”

Under that rule, Sandoval will be unable to reappointe­d to the leadership post for the remainder of the current chairman’s term. Cullerton will appoint his successor.

Patterson confirmed that Sandoval will remain a member of the Transporta­tion Committee.

Gov. J.B. Pritzker last week said he had urged Cullerton to ask Sandoval to step down as chairman or remove him if he won’t go voluntaril­y. Pritzker reacted quickly to the news of Sandoval’s raid — to get ahead of worries that the investigat­ion would taint the governor’s massive capital plan, which Sandoval helped put together.

“We must assure the public that this work [the capital plan] is on the up and up,” Pritzker told reporters at the time. “Corruption and self-dealing will not be tolerated.”

Also on Friday, the governor requested the resignatio­n of his own appointee Cesar Santoy from the Illinois Tollway Board, amid Santoy’s appearance in the Sandoval search warrant. Santoy “agreed to step down,” the governor’s office said.

Santoy’s attorney Brendan Shiller confirmed the resignatio­n, but said Santoy was not a target of the federal investigat­ion. Shiller also said Santoy “is confident that the legal concerns will clear up soon and hopeful that once that happens he will be reconsider­ed for the board.”

 ?? SETH PERLMAN/AP FILES ?? Illinois Senate President John Cullerton, D-Chicago (left), is handed an oversized gavel by Illinois Sen. Martin Sandoval in 2013.
SETH PERLMAN/AP FILES Illinois Senate President John Cullerton, D-Chicago (left), is handed an oversized gavel by Illinois Sen. Martin Sandoval in 2013.

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