Democratic
state Sen. Emil Jones III resigned from his leadership post and
committee chairmanship Wednesday, a day after he was hit with federal
bribery charges that again pushed public corruption to center stage as
Gov. J.B. Pritzker and fellow Democrats seek to keep control of state
government in the November election.
At
a campaign event Wednesday morning on the Far Northwest Side, Pritzker
sought to portray pervasive political corruption in Illinois as a
bipartisan problem rather than one endemic to Democrats.
“We’ve
seen Democrats and Republicans all across the state get in trouble for
not living up to the standards of public service that demand integrity,”
Pritzker told reporters. “And so it’s disappointing, terribly
disappointing, and it reminds us all that all the ethics work that we do
on new ethics legislation needs to keep going, that this isn’t
something you do one and done.”
Pritzker
pointed to ethics overhauls he’s signed into law after previous
scandals as evidence that Democrats are taking the issue seriously,
though good-government groups have criticized those efforts as
half-measures. A measure he signed last year prompted the resignation of the legislature’s top watchdog, who said it rendered her office a “paper tiger.”
Pritzker
has not called for Jones to resign from his $72,906-per-year Senate
seat, a point his Republican opponent in the Nov. 8 election, state Sen.
Darren Bailey of Xenia, noted in a Twitter post Wednesday.
“When
will we get serious about anti-corruption legislation?” Bailey wrote.
“JB should demand Sen. Jones step down, but he won’t. Pritzker hides
from accountability when it comes to his party & administration. I
don’t care what party you belong to, it’s time to clean house in
Springfield.”
The federal charges against Jones
allege he accepted a $5,000 bribe from a red-light camera company
executive to block unfavorable legislation and then lied to the FBI.
They are the latest in a string of corruption charges and convictions
for current and former Democratic state lawmakers and political
operatives that include the landmark indictment in March
of former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan, longtime chairman of
the state Democratic Party, on bribery and racketeering charges.
Jones,
of Chicago, has been in the Senate since 2009, when he took the seat
previously held by his father, former Senate President Emil Jones Jr.,
Madigan’s longtime Senate counterpart and sometimes political adversary.
The
younger Jones, who is to be arraigned Friday, was charged in a criminal
information rather than an indictment, an indication he may intend to
plead guilty.
In
addition to stepping down from his unpaid position as a deputy leader
for the Senate Democrats, Jones resigned his $11,098-per-year position
as chairman of the Senate Licensed Activities Committee and an unpaid
vice chairmanship of the Public Safety Committee, all at the request of
Senate President Don Harmon, according to letters from the Oak Park
Democrat to the secretary of the Senate.
Jones
is the ninth sitting or recent member of the General Assembly to be
charged with federal crimes since Pritzker took office in January 2019,
all but one of them Democrats. That list includes five of Jones’ former
Senate colleagues — Democrats Martin Sandoval, Thomas Cullerton, Terry Link and Annazette Collins and Sam McCann,
a onetime Republican who ran for governor in 2018 under the
Conservative party banner — along with Madigan and former Democratic
state Reps. Luis Arroyo and Eddie Acevedo.
The Tribune has reported that two other Democrats — state Sen. Elgie Sims of Chicago and state Rep. Thaddeus Jones of Calumet City — are under federal investigation.
And
that doesn’t include the list of local officials and political
operatives who have been charged since a wide-ranging corruption
investigation became public with the Sept. 24, 2019, federal raid on
Sandoval’s Springfield office.
Asked
for examples of recent political corruption among GOP officials in
Illinois, Pritzker’s reelection campaign responded with list that
included the conviction of former Bloomingdale Township Highway
Commissioner Robert Czernek, who pleaded guilty in March to accepting $282,000 in kickbacks,
and the resignation last year of a former Winnebago County coroner who
pleaded guilty to felony charges including theft from the government and
official misconduct.
The
list also included a member of the City Council in downstate Paris who
was arrested in 2020 on sexual assault and abuse charges and two Senate
GOP staffers who were charged with misdemeanors the same year for
allegedly resisting arrest after they were found drinking beer at the
Illinois Capitol.
dpetrella@chicagotribune.com