Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Madigan might be wise to step down — but first, shame on ComEd.

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For the sake of Illinois and the important public policies that he himself has fought for, Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan should consider stepping down. The stakes are just so high.

At a time when Illinois is fighting a deadly pandemic, struggling to revive an economy that was in trouble even before COVID-19, and is months away from voting on a badly needed graduated income tax, the state — to our thinking — can ill afford even the slightest perception of compromise­d leadership. Madigan must decide whether he can continue to lead effectivel­y, or whether his presence is a distractio­n from the agenda that he and his state Democratic Party support.

But as we read the stunning “statement of facts” that prosecutor­s laid out Friday that implicated Madigan — but didn’t formally charge him with any crimes — our focus also sharpened on the company that admitted to a series of outrageous bribery schemes: electricit­y giant ComEd.

The power company admitted to using lobbyists to shower jobs, contracts and payoffs all over Springfiel­d for the sole purpose of gaining favor with Madigan, who denies any wrongdoing but, at minimum, is standing in a bad storm.

ComEd’s criminal conduct is clear and undisputed, and almost comical in its audacity, breadth and sheer enthusiasm.

It’s a wonder — and a shame — that ComEd has only been fined — $200 million — and nobody as of now will be going to prison. The U.S. attorney’s office has deferred criminal charges against the company and its executives for three years, provided they “fully and truthfully cooperate” in the investigat­ion of other “individual­s or other entities.” The stock price for ComEd’s parent company, Exelon, closed more than 3% higher in the wake of the news.

It’s a wonder as well, we suppose, that ComEd, a pillar of the Chicago community, could try to work Springfiel­d like a criminal enterprise so aggressive­ly for so long. If nothing else good has come of this, the utility has served up an excellent object lesson in the dangers of tissue-thin regulation­s on political lobbying in Illinois.

We would hope that every big corporatio­n calls a Zoom meeting next week with their armies of lobbyists to review basic ethical guidelines.

Is ComEd an outlier? We actually rather doubt it. The whole lobbying game, at some level — in Springfiel­d or Washington — is to make deposits in the favor bank, solicited or unsolicite­d. Let this be a warning to all companies operating in Illinois, and to all lobbyists: You’re long overdue to clean up your acts.

Which takes us back to the speaker. Madigan’s critics have always insisted that he cares about nothing other than power and money, a view we have thought to be overly cynical.

We have seen the speaker stand up for working people — for organized labor, a higher minimum wage, better funding for public schools and a fairer income tax. We have seen him defuse an anti-union governor, Bruce Rauner, who held a destructiv­ely extreme free-market view of the world and spent tens of millions of dollars on attack ads to attempt to vilify the speaker.

Over eight years, according to the U.S. attorney’s office in Chicago, ComEd made more than $1.3 million in payments to Madigan-tied consultant­s who did little or no work in an effort to win Madigan’s all-important support for legislatio­n worth more than $150 million to the utility company. That legislatio­n included electricit­y rate increases.

When ComEd hired ghost workers — people paid to do no work — they were Madigan “workers,” the company told the feds. When ComEd subcontrac­ted to certain select vendors, they were Madigan “associates.” When ComEd made direct payoffs, they were to Madigan “allies.”

Did Madigan directly accept any cash? Did he directly arm twist lawmakers to vote certain ways? So far, the U.S. attorney’s office has provided no direct evidence of that, but the investigat­ion continues.

The sad truth is that this ComEd scandal has been bubbling up in Springfiel­d for a couple of years, with huge parts of it previously reported by the media.

And real harm has already been done. Last year, for example, a strong piece of legislatio­n that could have done wonders for both the environmen­t and your wallet, the Clean Energy Jobs Act, failed even to come up for a vote in Springfiel­d precisely because nobody wanted to touch anything having to do with ComEd.

Where’s all this going next? We suspect we’ll learn soon enough.

 ?? JUSTIN FOWLER/THE STATE JOURNAL-REGISTER VIA AP, FILE ?? Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan.
JUSTIN FOWLER/THE STATE JOURNAL-REGISTER VIA AP, FILE Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan.

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