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In a move that has probably fatally poisoned an
already supertoxic Illinois Statehouse atmosphere, the wife of House
Speaker Michael Madigan’s chief of staff, Tim Mapes, was fired from
her state job.
The firing came on the day after all four legislative
leaders met with Gov. Rod Blagojevich for the first time in months. The
meeting was arranged by House Republican Leader Tom Cross and was
specifically designed to persuade the five men to set aside their personal
and political differences and work together on solving the state’s
numerous problems. The Democrats, who control all of state government, have
been fighting like cats and dogs this year, and just about nothing is
getting resolved. Madigan left that meeting early, saying that he had
another engagement, but all of the leaders, including Madigan, described
the talks as positive and the governor was quoted as saying it was one of
the best meetings of the year. Apparently peace on Earth and goodwill
toward men lasted less than 24 hours. Bronwyn Rains worked for the state on contract for 24
years. Rains is a child psychologist whose contract was renewed July 1. She
was not a political appointee and had begun working for the state before
she and Mapes were married. Her current contract with the Department of
Human Services, according to her husband, involved rating eligibility of
applicants for Social Security disability payments. Mapes, Madigan, and the rest of his top staff had
managed to keep the firing a secret for days, but it spilled out last week
after Madigan met with Cross and Senate Republican Leader Frank Watson. The
two Republicans asked for the sitdown and once again tried to smooth things
over between Madigan and his fellow Democrats so that they could move
forward with a much-needed multibillion-dollar capital-projects plan. The
Republicans were reportedly stunned into silence when Madigan told them
what had happened with Mapes. This isn’t the first time that Blagojevich and
his chief of staff, John Harris, have gone after a House Democrat’s
relative. They fired the uncle of Rep. John D’Amico from his state
job after D’Amico strayed from the Blagojevich playbook. The brother
of the House Democrats’ “budgeteer,” Rep. Gary Hannig,
was let go after his contract expired. Rep. Eddie Acevedo’s brother
was dismissed and the brother of Rep. Careen Gordon was recently demoted.
And the carnage hasn’t been limited to the
governor’s office. Several months ago, Senate President Emil Jones
reportedly persuaded utility giant ComEd to fire a bunch of contract
lobbyists with close ties to Madigan. But taking action like this against the wife of
Madigan’s most trusted aide is wholly unprecedented at the
Statehouse. Not only is she Mapes’ wife; she’s also the
political version of a noncombatant. The political honor code dictates that
family members are not to be messed with. After trying three times to explain the firing, the
Department of Human Services finally claimed that the federal government
made them do it. But the DHS’s story is so full of mysterious holes,
the timing of the dismissal is so questionable, and the governor’s
office has told so many lies that even if this one is true nobody will ever
believe it. Plus, any explanation the governor’s office
provides, no matter how legitimate it may sound, will simply not be trusted
in Room 300 — Madigan’s suite of Statehouse offices.
Madigan’s press spokesman labeled the administration’s
explanation “an absolute lie,” which was not unexpected. Nobody
with real power trusts anybody else with real power in Springfield these
days.
And that, not the DHS response, is the most important
aspect of this story. The three Democratic leaders (Madigan, Blagojevich,
and Jones) believe that they are engaged in a fight to the political death,
so they’re always on the lookout for tiny slights — and this
thing is way beyond tiny. It probably doesn’t help matters that some of the
governor’s top guys have been heard chuckling and bragging to
intimates about the firing. Madigan, contacted after the story leaked, did not want
to speak about the situation on the record, but the man was angrier and
more thoroughly disgusted than I have ever seen him. If you think that the Madigan-Blagojevich fight was
bad before, you ain’t seen nothing yet.
Rich Miller publishes
Capitol Fax, a daily political newsletter, and thecapitolfaxblog.com
This article appears in Oct 4-10, 2007.
