03781nam 2200469 450 991079577260332120230415192926.00-252-05348-6(MiAaPQ)EBC6887158(Au-PeEL)EBL6887158(CKB)21167322300041(OCoLC)1275432476(MdBmJHUP)musev2_98822(EXLCZ)992116732230004120230415d2022 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe House That Madigan Built The Record Run of Illinois' Velvet Hammer /Ray Long ; foreword by Charles N. Wheeler IIIChampaign, Illinois :University of Illinois Press,[2022]©20221 online resource (251 pages)Includes index.Print version: Long, Ray The House That Madigan Built Champaign : University of Illinois Press,c2022 9780252044472 Cover Page -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Foreword -- Preface -- Introduction: The Long Reign -- Part I: The Legend -- 1 Remap Victory -- 2 White Sox Miracle -- 3 Operation Cobra -- Madigan Loses the Speakership -- Part II: Power Plays and Political Flops -- 4 Historic Impeachment -- 5 Partisan Math -- 6 The Art of Persuasion -- 7 Pension Failure -- Photographs -- Part III: A Career Political Leader -- 8 A Patronage Army -- 9 Madigan and Madigan -- 10 The Politics of Money -- Part IV: Cracks in the System -- 11 Turning Point -- 12 Ups and Downs -- 13 Shams? -- 14 Marty's Campaign -- Part V: The Fall -- 15 Himself -- 16 Public Official A -- Epilogue -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Index."House Speaker Michael J. Madigan was a record setter, a political powerhouse and one of the most prominent architects of Illinois' destiny. The longest-serving legislative leader in U.S. history, Madigan saw his long reign come to an end, ironically 50 years to the day he first took the oath as a state representative in 1971, and 38 years since he first assumed the Illinois House speakership he'd held for all but two years since. In The Illinois House that Madigan Built, veteran Chicago Tribune investigative reporter and one-time Springfield bureau chief Ray Long unpacks the unprecedented political career of Mike Madigan with fascinating vignettes to mark its highs and lows. Madigan determined when taxes went up, what pension plan would pass, when it is time to approve gay marriage or ban the death penalty. He moved up the Illinois primary to help Barack Obama's race for president. He oversaw the first impeachment of an Illinois governor. Madigan ran his 13th Ward in Chicago with old-school discipline. His opponents noted that Madigan didn't just want to beat them; he wanted to crush their souls. Long traces Madigan's political genealogy to the legendary Chicago mayor, Richard J. Daley. and shows how his old-style patronage ways brought the speaker periodic scrutiny, including as part of the ComEd scandal that eventually cost him the speakership. This book is a balanced, authoritative, deep dive into a figure who not only built the House he led but, in a larger sense, built the house Illinoisans live in"--Provided by publisher.LegislatorsIllinoisBiographyChicago (Ill.)Politics and government1951-Chicago (Ill.)BiographyLegislators973.7092Long Ray1490559Wheeler III Charles N.MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910795772603321The House That Madigan Built3711985UNINA