Chicago Sun-Times

RAUNER LAWYER URGES MENDOZA TO KEEP PAYING STATEWORKE­RS

- BY TINAS FONDELES Political Reporter Email: tsfondeles@suntimes.com Twitter: @TinaSfon

Gov. Bruce Rauner’s top lawyer on Monday urged Illinois Comptrolle­r Susana Mendoza to keep paying state workers, even if a temporary order requiring the paychecks is tossed out.

And the Republican governor’s lawyer also asked the comptrolle­r to retain her own independen­t counsel to fight off fellow Democrat Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan’s motion to halt state employee pay.

Madigan last week filed court papers seeking to stop state workers’ pay by the end of February unless a spending plan is approved. Her request seeks to dissolve a preliminar­y injunction that allowed tens of thousands of state workers to be paid during the impasse, which has threatened or stalled funding to a variety of entities.

Many viewed the Madigan filing as a power play and questioned its timing. In the filing, she argues that the order to continue state workers’ pay “has removed much of the urgency for the Legislatur­e and the governor to act on a budget.” But the Rauner administra­tion last week urged her to reconsider, and without naming her father, Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan, questioned whether her filing is meant to create a “crisis.” Rauner has been trying to encourage a Senate “grand bargain” plan — crafted by Illinois Senate President John Cullerton and Illinois Senate Republican Leader Christine Radogno— because it includes a revenue package and some of the governor’s preferred reforms.

The Senate leaders say they want to take action on those bills as soon as next week.

The Rauner administra­tion’s letter, sent Monday, appears to be away to push Mendoza to take a stance on the attorney general’s filing. Rauner spent millions to try to help his appointee, Leslie Munger, fend off Mendoza in the November election . Mendoza, a vocal critic of Rauner’s, last week placed blame on the potential for state workers to lose their pay on the governor’s shoulders alone. And the Democratic comptrolle­r has said she’ll abide by any court orders.

In a letter written to Mendoza’s chief legal counsel, Rauner’s general counsel Dennis Murashko writes that Mendoza should follow in her predecesso­r’s footsteps in retaining independen­t counsel and present in court arguments why state employees’ pay should not be stopped.

Munger retained her own counsel in 2015 and asked the attorney general to join with her in seeking an agreed court order to let state workers get paid. Madigan maintained that federal law required the national minimumwag­e rate be paid to “essential” state workers during the impasse. But state officials said it would take a long time to determine which employees would qualify as “essential” and get the lower pay.

At the time, the Rauner administra­tion criticized Madigan, saying state employees deserved their full paychecks.

Madigan sought clarificat­ion from a Cook County judge about what bills could be paid during the impasse. Unions filed suit in St. Clair County to require the comptrolle­r to pay union member wages in the absence of a spending plan. Days later, a temporary restrainin­g order was issued, requiring that all state employees be paid their full wages in the absence of a budget.

The motion filed by Madigan last week specifical­ly notes that Mendoza does not join in the lawsuit.

“After all, dissolving the TRO would leave the matters entirely in Comptrolle­r Mendoza’s hands,” Murashko wrote. “There will be no court order telling her what to do or not to do. Murashko asks that Mendoza comply with federal and state laws until Madigan has specified which employees “are not necessary to fulfill these duties and must be sent home.”

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Comptrolle­r Susana Mendoza speaks at the Illinois State Capitol in Springfiel­d in December.
AP FILE PHOTO Comptrolle­r Susana Mendoza speaks at the Illinois State Capitol in Springfiel­d in December.
 ??  ?? Lisa Madigan
Lisa Madigan

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