Former Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan sentenced to 7.5 years in prison
A jury convicted Madigan earlier this year of conspiracy, bribery, and wire fraud in a high-profile corruption trial.
He was also ordered to pay a $2.5 million fine.
The jury could not reach a decision on six of the 23 counts against him, including an overarching racketeering conspiracy charge, after deliberations that lasted more than 10 days. Ultimately, he was convicted on 10 counts of bribery, conspiracy, and wire fraud.
Acting U.S. Attorney Morris Pasqual called it a 'historic' conviction, ranking high among top public corruption cases tried in Chicago's federal courthouse. He said that Illinois residents have a right to trust in their government.'
The trial, which began in October, featured more than 60 witnesses, including a congresswoman, business leaders and former state legislators.
Madigan, 83, served as House speaker for more than 30 years, becoming the longest serving U.S. legislator, and earned the nickname the 'Velvet Hammer' for his forceful yet quiet leadership style.
He left political office in 2021 while under investigation and was indicted the following year.
First elected to the Legislature in 1970, Madigan was speaker of the state House from 1983 to 2021, except for two years when Republicans were in control. He set much of Illinois' political agenda by deciding which legislation would be voted on and by controlling several campaign funds. He also oversaw political mapmaking.
Among his crimes: Madigan used his influence to pass legislation that benefited companies like ComEd, which gave kickbacks, jobs, and contracts to Madigan loyalists in return.
Rep. John Cabello (R-Machesney Park) reacted to the sentencing, saying, 'I hope the entirety of his trial sends a message to every corrupt politician watching: The people of Illinois deserve better—not the corrupt cesspool Madigan and his cronies created. Sadly, there are currently 57 state lawmakers, including those from the Rockford area, who received funding from or maintain ties with Madigan. Another reason that Illinois needs real ethics reform now.'
Rep. Joe Sosnowski (R-Rockford) said, 'No one is above the law. Speaker Madigan was found guilty of gaming the system for personal gain. The people of Illinois expect more from their leaders and deserve an ethical state government. We need to stop the culture of pay-to-play politics that has allowed corruption to run rampant in Illinois for decades'.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hill
7 minutes ago
- The Hill
Congress sends bill codifying $9B in DOGE cuts to Trump's desk
House Republicans late Thursday night approved the first batch of cuts made by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), sending the $9 billion package to President Trump's desk in a big victory for the GOP. The legislation — which claws back already-approved federal funding for foreign aid and public broadcasting — cleared the chamber in a mostly party-line 216-213 vote less than one day after the Senate passed the measure. Trump is expected to sign the bill soon, as Republicans face a Friday deadline to enact the cuts or release the funds to the organizations they were appropriated for. The package takes aim at the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which funds NPR and PBS — two outlets that Republicans have labeled as biased — as well as the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), which DOGE targeted early in the Trump administration. Republicans see the bill as a critical 'test run' for the party, as Trump administration officials have already indicated they aim to send multiple special requests to Congress to claw back more funding if the first package makes it through. The request initially sent by the White House, known as a rescissions package, called for $9.4 billion in cuts to federal funding previously approved by Congress, including $8.3 billion for USAID and foreign aid, as well as more than $1 billion in public broadcasting funds. But the White House ended up agreeing to exempt the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), which was established under former President George W. Bush in 2003 and totaled about $400 million, after those cuts became a critical point of contention for moderate GOP lawmakers. Republicans said they also reached a deal with the administration seeking to shield tribal stations from cuts to the Corporation For Public Broadcasting. Republicans in both chambers have voiced strong support for the overall package and say the cuts are overdue. Many in the party have long scrutinized the scope of funding for foreign aid and accused public radio and television of political bias. But the proposal also saw some resistance from Senate GOP appropriators earlier this week. The skeptics scolded the administration for trying to make an end run around the normal appropriations process and complained the request didn't have enough information, particularly when compared to the last rescissions request approved by Congress under former President George H. W. Bush. Senate Appropriations Chair Susan Collins (R-Maine) specifically singled out a proposed $2.5 billion in cuts to the Development Assistance account. She noted in a statement that the account 'covers everything from basic education, to water and sanitation, to food security,' but said lawmakers still lacked key details as to how those programs would be affected. White House budget chief Russell Vought told reporters on Thursday that the administration 'gave the same amount of detail and information that previous rescissions packages had.' 'This is the same level of detail that appropriators do when they provide a bill,' he argued. 'They say this is the amount that we're providing, or they have a rescission, and they put the amount of rescission, same thing that they do.' He added that he respected people 'who are making the argument,' but he disagreed, noting the Office of Budget and Management worked with House appropriators while crafting the request. Some Republicans have also warned the president's use of the rare tool to secure cuts to funding previously approved by Congress risks further eroding trust between both parties as lawmakers ramp up their annual funding work. Vought said Thursday that another rescissions package is 'likely to come soon,' though he stopped short of offering specifics as to what programs could be on the chopping block. Senate Democrats have warned the passage of this rescissions package and further efforts by the Trump administration to claw back funding with GOP-only votes threaten already fragile bipartisan negotiations to hash out full-year government funding bills. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) earlier this month said passage of the rescissions package 'would be an affront to the bipartisan appropriations process.' 'That's why a number of Senate Republicans know it is absurd for them to expect Democrats to act as business as usual and engage in a bipartisan appropriations process to fund the government, while they concurrently plot to pass a purely partisan rescissions bill to defund those same programs negotiated on a bipartisan basis behind the scenes,' he continued, later adding: 'This is beyond a bait and switch – it is a bait and poison-to-kill.' At the same time, Vought also told reporters Thursday that the annual appropriations process 'has to be less bipartisan.' He added that the power of the purse remains with Congress, but he continued: 'It's a ceiling. It is not a floor. It is not the notion that you have to spend every last dollar of that.' Sen. Patty Murray (Wash.), top Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Committee, told The Hill shortly after his comments that Vought was 'absolutely wrong.' 'We have the power of the purse here, and we are not going to stand back and let the administration erode that.' With less than 20 legislative days on the calendar ahead of a Sept. 30 government shutdown deadline, both chambers are running behind in marking up and pushing their annual funding bills across the floor — increasing the likelihood that Congress will have to resort to a stopgap measure to keep the lights on and buy time for lawmakers to finish their funding work. But it remains an open question as to what that stopgap could look like. Asked if House GOP leadership has begun discussing plans for a short-term funding patch, House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) told The Hill on Wednesday: 'No, we haven't talked about that.' 'We want the appropriations process to work and ultimately to get an agreement in a negotiation with the Senate, as the Senate finally starts passing bills,' he said.


USA Today
7 minutes ago
- USA Today
House passes Trump's cuts to public broadcasting, foreign aid; next stop president's desk
The GOP-led House gave final approval to the spending bill just ahead of a Friday midnight deadline otherwise the money under the law must be spent. WASHINGTON − President Donald Trump's push for $9 billion in spending cuts − slicing into public broadcasting stations PBS and NPR, as well as the United States' foreign aid efforts − crossed the Congressional finish line just after midnight on July 18 and soon will hit the Republican's desk for signature into law. The House approved the measure, in response to Trump's official request, in a 216-213 party line vote. Two Republicans voted no on the second-term president's plan, which represents just a fraction of the almost $200 billion that Trump's Department of Government Efficiency claims to have saved the federal government. A bulk of the cuts in the legislation strips away funding authorized by a previous law for foreign aid, including peacekeeping efforts and global health initiatives. More: Elmo and AIDS prevention: What is Congress targeting in their spending cuts? Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought said the amounts being slashed represent "wasteful and unnecessary spending," in the White House's formal request to Congress. Around $1 million will be taken from public broadcasting, including PBS and NPR. Local stations, which are much more reliant on federal grants than their national counterparts, are expected to bear the brunt of that lost funding. Congress barely met their July 18 midnight deadline to get the bill approved, otherwise the current funding would remains in place. The Senate passed its version of the spending cut bill earlier in the week after Republicans including Sen. Susan Collins successfully saved funding grants for AIDS prevention .


Politico
8 minutes ago
- Politico
House passes public media, foreign aid clawbacks after Epstein scramble
The president's budget director said Trump is likely to send more cutbacks requests to Congress 'soon.' House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) walks to a vote at the U.S. Capitol July 2, 2025. (Francis Chung/POLITICO via AP Images) | AP By Katherine Tully-McManus and Jennifer Scholtes 07/18/2025 12:07 AM EDT Six months into Donald Trump's presidency, Congress finally codified a small piece of the hundreds of billions of dollars his Department of Government Efficiency pinpointed as 'waste.' House Republicans gave final approval just after midnight Friday to Trump's proposal to claw back $9 billion in public media and foreign assistance, greenlighting the Senate's changes to the measure that will bake in proposed DOGE cuts to public media and foreign aid. The package now heads to the president's desk. The House's 216-213 vote to clear the Senate-amended package comes less than 24 hours after the Senate voted to tweak the administration's original proposal that would have cut an additional $400 million from the global AIDS fighting program, PEPFAR. Senate Republicans also added language vowing that certain food assistance programs would be protected, and staved off impacts to other food aid, maternal health, malaria and tuberculosis-related initiatives.