Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Gov. ‘Big Jim’ Thompson fought corruption, fraud

- Don Babwin

CHICAGO – Former Illinois Gov. James R. Thompson, whose prosecutio­ns of public officials – including a predecesso­r – helped catapult him to become the state’s longest-serving chief executive, has died. He was 84.

Thompson, known as “Big Jim,” died shortly after 8 p.m. Friday at the Shirley Ryan Ability Lab in Chicago, his wife, Jayne, told the Chicago Tribune and the Chicago Sun-Times. The Tribune, citing a police report, reported Thompson had been recovering there for several weeks after suffering heart problems.

“It was very sudden,” his wife told the Tribune. “I was told that his heart simply stopped.”

Thompson was a prosecutor known for taking on Chicago’s Democratic machine in a state infamous for political corruption when he was first elected governor in 1976. He led the state through a recession in the 1980s and served four terms before leaving office in 1991.

A moderate Republican from Chicago, he worked across the political aisle to push through the constructi­on of miles of highways and rebuild scores of bridges. He had a hand in the expansion of Chicago’s McCormick Place convention center and the constructi­on of what is now the United Center, home to the NBA’s Bulls and the NHL’s Blackhawks. He also helped put together a plan to help the White Sox get a new stadium to head off a potential move to Florida.

“He was always willing to take the call and make the call to the other side of the aisle,” said longtime press secretary Jim Prescott. “He never demonized the other side.”

His work earned him praise from Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker, who issued a statement saying Thompson “was known to treat people he encountere­d with kindness and decency” and that he “set an example for public service of which Illinoisan­s should be proud.”

As a prosecutor in the Cook County

State’s Attorney’s Office and later as U.S. attorney, the 6-foot-6-inch Thompson had become known for anti-corruption cases, including the prosecutio­ns of major figures in the Democratic machine that had dominated Chicago politics for half a century. That reputation followed him into office, where he pushed to make political appointmen­ts based on talent, rather than based on past political or financial support.

“One of the things he will be most remembered for was getting away from making patronage appointmen­ts for top positions in state agencies and bringing in people based on their expertise,” said Kent Redfield, professor emeritus of political science at the University of Illinois-Springfield. “He really helped shape the modernizat­ion and profession­alism of state government.”

After he was appointed U.S. attorney for the northern Illinois district by President Richard Nixon, Thompson and his staff uncovered sweeping voter fraud in 1972, an effort that led to 83 indictment­s and 66 conviction­s or guilty pleas. He headed prosecutio­ns that led to the conviction of a powerful Chicago alderman and Democratic former Gov. Otto Kerner Jr., by then a federal appeals judge. He also took part in the investigat­ion of Republican Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, who eventually pleaded no contest to tax evasion.

 ?? SETH PERLMAN/AP FILE ?? Former Illinois Gov. James Thompson was known as “Big Jim” during his career as the state’s longest-serving chief executive.
SETH PERLMAN/AP FILE Former Illinois Gov. James Thompson was known as “Big Jim” during his career as the state’s longest-serving chief executive.

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