Campaign money flowing freely in Illinois

State party leaders ante up funds for legislative races

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In this May 30, 2012 file photo, Illinois Speaker of the House Michael Madigan, D-Chicago, left, speaks with Illinois House Minority Leader Tom Cross, R-Oswego, behind the speaker’s podium on the House floor at the Illinois State Capitol in Springfield. Madigan, a master of maintaining his majority over the years, is spending more from his campaign funds on legislative races, two years after Democrats lost six seats. His campaign spending by far overshadows that controlled by Springfield’s other legislative leaders, including Cross. (AP)
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Madigan spokesman Steve Brown said House Democrats’ fundraising success is tied to their legislative success. Democratic leaders have been criticized for the state’s financial woes and last year’s income tax increase, but Madigan contends he’s had no cooperation from Republicans on fiscal problems.

And Democratic majorities passed landmark measures approving civil unions and abolishing the death penalty, among others.

“We’ve been on the right side of many issues over the last couple of years,” Brown said. “Maybe people respect and reward good government decision-making.”

At least, Madigan has a more hospitable atmosphere for collecting cash this time around.

David Morrison of the Illinois Campaign for Political Reform noted that in fall 2010, the ticket was led by an unsuccessful U.S. Senate candidate, Alexi Giannoulias, who lost to Republican Mark Kirk – in contrast to a ticket led by Obama this year. That fall, Democrats also had to deal with the shadow of the first corruption trial of former Gov. Rod Blagojevich, which ended in a hung jury in August on most charges against him but also with prosecutors’ vow to retry him, which was ultimately successful.

Republicans nationally pounded Obama’s Democrats in the midterm election and party chairman Madigan’s 22-seat House majority shrunk.

“It was a difficult environment,” Morrison said. “I would imagine the chair of the Democratic Party would want to staunch the bleeding and turn things around, so that could be what’s driving him this time.”

As in previous years, some of the funds are shifted between committees. For example, the Senate Democratic Victory Fund shows contributions of $1.9 million, but $1.6 million of that went to the Democratic Party of Illinois. The party fund paid mail costs for 17 Senate candidates because party committees get a discounted rate, Morrison said.

Leading the Senate’s list of Democratic Party fund recipients is Haine at $193,000 for mailing. But that’s a small portion of his $1.4 million total, according to the Campaign for Political Reform. Haine noted he’s raised most of his own money from a variety of business, labor, and other community interests. He said he needed it for the pricey cost of television time on St. Louis stations.

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