Chicago Sun-Times

After mistakenly appointing lobbyist, gov taps former GOP Senate leader for ethics panel

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

Gov. J.B. Pritzker on Thursday appointed former Illinois Senate Republican Leader Christine Radogno to a newly formed ethics commission — after his administra­tion mistakenly appointed a former lobbyist to the post.

Legislator­s last month passed a resolution to create the Joint Commission on Ethics and Lobbying Reform to take up the many issues unearthed by federal investigat­ions into state Rep. Luis Arroyo, state Sen. Tom Cullerton, DVilla Park, and state Sen. Martin Sandoval, D-Chicago.

The governor on Wednesday named his four appointees to the commission, including former state Rep. Steven Andersson. Andersson was one of a dozen Republican­s who joined Democrats to vote for a budget and income tax hike in July 2017 over the objections of former Gov. Bruce Rauner.

Andersson, however, was a lobbyist until June 28. The resolution bars anyone who registered or worked as a lobbyist in the previous five years.

The governor’s office said Thursday it realized its error.

“Steve Andersson is a dedicated public servant and the administra­tion appreciate­s his willingnes­s to serve. However, given the requiremen­ts of the resolution, we will be submitting a different appointee,” Pritzker spokeswoma­n Jordan Abudayyeh said in a statement.

The governor’s office later announced Radogno’s appointmen­t to the commission. Radogno also served on Pritzker’s pension consolidat­ion task force earlier this year, which ultimately led to a consolidat­ion plan that combined roughly 650 suburban and downstate police and fire pension funds.

The ethics commission is composed of two appointees each from the four legislativ­e leaders, two from Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White’s office, two from Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office and four from Pritzker. That will most certainly ensure more Democrats than Republican­s on the panel, although only two of the governor’s appointees could be from his party.

The commission must submit recommenda­tions by the end of March. Pritzker also appointed Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton, Illinois Revenue Director David Harris and his general counsel Ann Spillane to the commission.

Arroyo is the latest legislator to come under federal scrutiny. The allegation­s against the 65-year-old Northwest Side Democrat revolve around his lobbying work in Chicago as manager of Spartacus 3 LLC.

And the sometimes dual role of lawmakers as lobbyists is coming into full view in light of the allegation­s. Although barred by law from lobbying state government, Arroyo — who resigned after being arrested — has been registered with the city of Chicago as a lobbyist since 2017.

Pritzker last month said he’s “absolutely committed” to looking into a ban on legislator­s also working as lobbyists. House Republican Leader Jim Durkin has been pushing a measure that would ban legislator­s, their spouses and immediate live-in family members from performing paid lobbying work with local government units.

Pritzker has also said the new commission should place a top priority on whether Democratic ward committeep­ersons are “picking replacemen­ts properly.”

“I made it clear from the beginning that I want to make sure that the people of the district get represente­d properly,” the governor said last month. “There’s no air of corruption around the person who gets appointed and also be elected.”

Arroyo resigned from the Illinois House on Nov. 1 after being charged with bribery, but he resisted calls from party leaders to step down from his post as the 36th Ward Democratic committeem­an.

Eligible committeep­ersons voted to appoint Eva-Dina Delgado to Arroyo’s former seat — with 30th Ward Ald. Ariel Reboyras voting as Arroyo’s proxy despite calls from state House Speaker Mike Madigan for Arroyo to butt out of the process.

The battle lines have already been drawn for that challenge.

Delgado took the oath of office last month after the committeep­ersons’ vote. And the Peoples Gas executive filed her official paperwork to take the seat with the House clerk.

 ??  ?? Gov. J.B. Pritzker
Gov. J.B. Pritzker
 ??  ?? Christine Radogno
Christine Radogno

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