Mike Madigan / Lance Yednock | Illinois State House of Representatives / Facebook
Mike Madigan / Lance Yednock | Illinois State House of Representatives / Facebook
Illinois House Speaker and Democrat Party Chief Michael Madigan (D-Chicago) gave $105,207 to Ottawa State House candidate Lance Yednock between July 15 and Aug. 15, state filings show.
The Madigan funding was disclosed in reports filed with the Illinois State Board of Elections (ISBE) by Friends of Lance Yednock, the campaign committee that supports Yednock’s race against Republican Jerry Lee Long in the 76th district.
The district covers all or part of Mendola, Arlington, Troy Grove, Cherry, Malden, Ladd, North Utica, Dayton, Ottawa, LaSalle, De Pue, Mark, Peru, Cedar Point, Standard, Granville, Tonica, Grand Ridge, McNabb, Kangley, Streator, Seatonville and Magnolia.
Madigan’s contributions to Yednock came from the campaign funds he controls, including his own committee, Friends of Michael J. Madigan, the Illinois Democratic Party and the Democratic County Chairman’s Association of Illinois.
Suburban vs. Chicago interests
Lance Yednock and other suburban Democrat State House candidates have faced criticism for their close ties to Madigan, who leads the Chicago caucus in Springfield.
Suburban Democrats from Cook, Lake, DuPage, Kane, McHenry and Will Counties taking money from Madigan have consistently supported his Chicago-favoring initiatives.
Last year, they provided key votes for Madigan to pass a 32 percent income tax hike and $17 billion bailout of Chicago Public Schools (CPS).
They also helped Madigan quietly change the state school funding formula last year to make it more pro-Chicago, diverting state money to CPS, which has lost 50,000 students over the past decade, from their own districts.
CPS leaders, who spend more than $20,000 per student annually, among the highest in the state, have faced criticism for how they are spending taxpayer money. That includes operating empty schools while routinely building brand new ones and using taxpayer funds to pay for meals for teachers and administrators.
More recently, payback for Madigan’s financial backing of their campaigns became more personal.
When three of Madigan’s most senior aides were accused of sexual harassment in June, it was suburban female legislators who protected the House Speaker from further investigation, rebutting calls for his resignation.
The Chicago Tribune called them “Me Too hypocrites.”
At the end of his current term, in Jan 2019, Madigan will have become the longest-serving House Speaker in U.S. history.
Madigan was first elected to the Illinois House in 1971 and first elected Speaker in 1983.