Partly Cloudy
76°
Crystal Lake, IL
Partly Cloudy
Forecast »

Madigan’s wrath evident in suburban representative race

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

There’s nothing quite like the spectacle of Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan when he’s out to get somebody.

Just ask state Rep. Skip Saviano, R-Elmwood Park.

The two men used to be allies, even friends. Saviano supported Madigan’s daughter when Lisa ran for state attorney general. But then Lisa turned against Saviano’s political mentor, the late Rosemont Mayor Don Stephens, blocking his dream of building a local casino because, she claimed, he was tied to the mob. Saviano vowed revenge.

Even so, things eventually died down. Saviano kept the powerful committee chairmanship given to him by Madigan – one of only two Republicans bestowed with that privilege in the Illinois House, the other being one of Skip’s best friends.

But when Madigan cranked up his war against then-Gov. Rod Blagojevich, he eventually came to believe that Saviano, an old Blagojevich pal, had sided with the governor against him. That was the last straw. Before long, Saviano had lost his chairmanship. Then Saviano was given a new House district in the remap that was solidly Democratic. And then Madigan moved heaven and earth to find an opponent for the locally popular Saviano, finally persuading an almost totally unknown local Republican to switch parties and challenge the incumbent.

Madigan dumped hundreds of thousands of dollars into the campaign, forcing Saviano to work harder on his re-election than he ever has.

Saviano is a clever tactician himself, however. When Madigan lieutenant state Sen. Martin Sandoval, D-Chicago, disrupted a Latino candidates’ forum in Saviano’s district, Saviano finally got the Chicago media to pay some attention to his battle. Sandoval stood on a chair and then sat on the floor, all the while shouting that Latinos should never vote Republican. Sandoval eventually was escorted out of the church building by local police and, instead of apologizing the next day, called Saviano a racist. The Chicago media generally disdain covering local state legislative races, but that story was just too good to pass up.

Saviano ginned up the attention further by claiming that Sandoval’s actions had prompted the state’s lone Latino congressman, Luis Gutierrez, a Democrat, to endorse the Republican Saviano. Never mind that Saviano had already ordered that the Gutierrez endorsement direct mail pieces be printed before Sen. Sandoval crashed the forum. But, hey, it made for a good story.

Previous Page|1||

Reader Poll

What's your favorite campfire food?

s'mores
hot dogs
marshmallows
other