The Day

Former Illinois governor fought corruption in state

- By DON BABWIN

Chicago — Former Illinois Gov. James R. Thompson, whose prosecutio­ns of public officials — 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 AbilityLab 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 suffering heart problems. His longtime press secretary, serving as a family spokespers­on, confirmed the death to The Associated Press.

“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 first elected governor in 1976. He led the state through a recession in the 1980s and served four terms before leaving office 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.”

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