Politics & Government
Bruce Rauner Didn't Win the Election; Pat Quinn Lost It, Says Mike Madigan
Here's what Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan had to say about Gov. Bruce Rauner in a recent interview.

Back in May, when Gov. Bruce Rauner said he’d endure a government shutdown if the Legislature refused to pass his reform agenda, I wrote that I believed Rauner was overplaying the hand voters dealt him in the election.
Rather than viewing Rauner’s victory in November as an overwhelming endorsement by the electorate of Rauner’s big-picture political philosophy, I saw it more as voters reluctantly trying something different after 12 years of failure in Springfield.
Rauner won with 50.3 percent of the vote to Pat Quinn’s 46.3. A solid victory, but hardly a landslide when compared with other recent results. More importantly, 66.7 percent of voters had answered yes to an advisory question on immediately raising the minimum wage to $10 an hour while 63.6 percent gave thumbs-up to a question about a 3-percent additional income tax on incomes greater than $1 million. There’s probably no greater rejection of Rauner’s core political beliefs than voters’ overwhelming approval of those proposals.
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Last week House Speaker Michael Madigan, the man responsible for putting those questions on the November ballot, went a step further. Speaking to Statehouse reporter Jordan Abudayyeh of Springfield ABC affiliate WICS Newschannel 20, Madigan said he saw the election results not as a Rauner victory but as a Quinn loss…
To read the rest of this editorial and to see what else Madigan said in the interview, click here-->