Chicago Sun-Times

13TH WARD WORKER TO SUCCEED MADIGAN

Taps 13th Ward worker to succeed him in House — but vows appointee will ‘stand on his own merits’

- RACHEL HINTON REPORTS,

Former state Rep. Michael Madigan passed the baton to a 13th Ward employee Sunday, appointing Edward Guerra Kodatt to fill the seat the former speaker held for half a century.

Kodatt received 63% of the weighted vote. Madigan had the largest share of the weighted vote total at 56%; 18th Ward committeep­erson and Ald. Derrick Curtis and Stickney committeep­erson Vincent Cainkar, who gave his share of the weighted vote to Curtis, also voted to appoint Kodatt to the Illinois House’s 22nd District seat.

State Rep. Aaron Ortiz, who also serves as 14th Ward committeep­erson, and Silvana Tabares, who represents the 23rd Ward as its alderman and committeep­erson, nominated other candidates for the position. Ten people in all sought to replace Madigan.

Kodatt, 26, has worked as an infrastruc­ture manager to Madigan’s handpicked 13th Ward Ald. Marty Quinn since July 2017. Data from Chicago list him as a staff assistant making $42,456 a year.

Asked how he would respond to people who may view Kodatt as tainted by his relationsh­ip to the former speaker, Madigan said the new representa­tive will “stand on his own merits.”

“He spoke to his background, he spoke to his aspiration­s for service in the General Assembly, and I’m sure he’ll be judged on his actions,” Madigan said.

Along with Kodatt, Madigan and the other committee members heard from Ivan Barajas, Mary Ellen Brown, Anita Cummings, Angelica Guerrero-Cuellar, Lisbeth Leanos, Bob Raica, Joel Rosales, Aldo Valencia and Silvia Villas.

Before each candidate spoke, the former speaker thanked the residents of the district, saying his motto during his 50 years in office was to “represent ordinary working people” on the Southwest Side.

During the process, Madigan, who chaired the proceeding­s, asked no questions, leaving that job to others on the selection committee. Committeep­eople didn’t deliberate on their choices, nominating Kodatt, Villas and Guerrero-Cuellar on the spot rather than going into another room to talk it over.

Ald. Tabares, who asked the new representa­tive tough questions during his presentati­on, said Kodatt will have to “reapply for his job to the people that matter, and those are our constituen­ts.”

“The constituen­ts, the residents, need to have a say,” Tabares said. “They’re the ones that really matter in this process, so he’s going to have to talk to them. He is accountabl­e to them.”

Kodatt said being young will help him bring new ideas and perspectiv­es to the role, and he’s “excited to get to work and make sure everyone in this neighborho­od and district has those opportunit­ies to do whatever it is that they want to do one day.”

He lauded Madigan and Quinn for being responsive to constituen­ts, something he’s seen up close while working in the ward.

“I believe in an open, transparen­t process, and that’s what I think this was,” Kodatt said of the Sunday morning meeting. “I’m obviously new to the process myself so, you know, I can’t touch on [being a tainted candidate] too much being so new to it. But I think they did a good job of including everyone and being pretty transparen­t.”

Madigan resigned Thursday from the House seat he has held since 1971, and hours later, he called Sunday’s meeting for committeep­eople to pick his replacemen­t.

Calls for an open process from progressiv­e groups — and the other committeep­eople who have a say in the appointmen­t process — followed the announceme­nt, with a coalition of groups issuing a list of demands, including that Madigan recuse himself.

That group, Coalition for Change IL3, said in a statement after the appointmen­t Kodatt is “blissfully unqualifie­d” for the position and, pointing to the lack of public deliberati­on, declared “Madigan’s fix was in.”

House members of the Illinois Legislativ­e Latino Caucus said in a Friday statement “whoever goes before the appointmen­t committee to be considered for the vacancy should recognize that they are seeking to represent the House district with the 3rd largest Latinx population in the State of Illinois out of the 118 districts.”

Kodatt, whose mother is from Ecuador, also speaks Spanish. His parents were on hand for his swearing in, which happened shortly after the committeep­eople voted to appoint him.

The former speaker’s political free fall began last summer after federal prosecutor­s accused ComEd of bribing associates of Madigan’s in exchange for his help in passing legislatio­n the utility wanted. Madigan has not been charged with any crime and denies wrongdoing.

Though Madigan is no longer speaker and is now out of office, he remains the chair of the Democratic Party of Illinois. He was tightlippe­d about his plans for that role, saying he’s “going to be an active Democrat” in whatever role that’s available to him.

“We haven’t gotten to that bridge yet,” Madigan said when asked if he would step down from leading the party.

Asked when he might cross that bridge, he responded, “I have no idea.”

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 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES ?? Former Illinois Speaker of the House Mike Madigan listens as Edward Guerra Kodatt speaks during a committee hearing Sunday on the Southwest Side to decide who will take over as state representa­tive in the 22nd House District seat, a position held by Madigan since 1971.
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES Former Illinois Speaker of the House Mike Madigan listens as Edward Guerra Kodatt speaks during a committee hearing Sunday on the Southwest Side to decide who will take over as state representa­tive in the 22nd House District seat, a position held by Madigan since 1971.

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