* I overslept this morning (either I slept through my alarm or it didn’t go off), so everything is running way, way behind schedule. There will be a late version of Capitol Fax for subscribers, but for now here’s my Sun-Times column…
‘The idea that Rahm Emanuel would be in the house gym . . . lobbying another congressman whether he had clothes on or not is the reason I wanted him to cut the deal to make the attorney general a senator in exchange for jobs, health care and no taxes,” Rod Blagojevich said earlier this week on WLS-AM.
As ever, Blagojevich was babbling about pure fantasy. The former governor was referring to his claimed plan to appoint Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan to Barack Obama’s vacant U.S. Senate seat back in 2008, right before he was arrested by the FBI for, among other things, allegedly trying to sell that seat to the highest bidder.
The impeached and ousted governor has used this Madigan cover story over and over to “prove” that he wasn’t trying to sell Obama’s seat.
A few days after a newspaper story appeared in December 2008 that Blagojevich was being wiretapped by the feds, I received a tip from a top source that Blagojevich was seriously talking about appointing Lisa Madigan. But let’s back up a bit.
The day before that wiretap story ran, Blagojevich was caught on federal recordings attempting to speed up a deal to appoint U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. to Obama’s seat in exchange for something “tangible upfront.”
“Some of this stuff’s gotta start happening now, right now, and we gotta see it. You understand?” Blagojevich instructs an aide to tell a Jackson intermediary. He then added an ominous warning: “You gotta be careful how you express that and assume everybody’s listening, the whole world is listening. You hear me?”
The day the story ran, wiretap transcripts show that Blagojevich tried to hide some of his dirty deeds, ordering an aide to “undo” the Jackson deal. (Jackson has not been charged with anything.)
Blagojevich knew he was under the gun, so I believe he concocted the Lisa Madigan appointment to give himself an alibi. He could then say that he wasn’t trying to sell a Senate seat, he was just trying to do what was best for the state.
Blagojevich has often pointed to the plan as a way to bring peace to Illinois politics. He and both Madigans — Lisa and her father, speaker of the House Mike Madigan — feuded for years. They totally despised one another. Blagojevich says the idea was to use the appointment to break loose his long-stalled (by Speaker Madigan) multibillion-dollar capital construction bill and his universal health-care proposal.
Balderdash.
First, Speaker Madigan hadn’t returned Blagojevich’s calls in months and wouldn’t even sit in the same room with him during closed-door legislative meetings. Madigan wouldn’t pass a $30 billion capital bill because he was worried that Blagojevich would try to steal everything that wasn’t nailed down. The universal health-care bill included a gigantic tax increase on businesses that Madigan staunchly opposed.
Attorney General Madigan was widely known to loathe the man she had been investigating for years until she turned over the case to U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald. And she had no interest in the Senate.
In other words, there’s absolutely no chance that this Lisa Madigan appointment deal could’ve been pulled off.
The impossibility of closing such a deal wouldn’t have meant much to Blagojevich if he was looking to establish an alibi, however. He could’ve just announced his decision with great fanfare and the federal case against him might have been undermined.
The FBI knocked on his door one cold December morning before he had a chance to make everything public, but that hasn’t stopped him from peddling this nonsense ever since. As usual with this guy, don’t believe a word.