Chattanooga Times Free Press

Illinois governor candidate stands by ad

- BY SARA BURNETT

CHICAGO — A Republican lawmaker trying to unseat Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner is standing by a campaign ad that has been blasted as racist and homophobic, despite the state party chairman’s call for her to stop airing it and apologize.

State Rep. Jeanne Ives, a social and fiscal conservati­ve, said the ad that began airing this weekend illustrate­s the GOP governor’s “chosen constituen­ts based on the policy choices he made” and primary voters need to know about his record.

The ad features actors portraying, among others, a transgende­r woman, an African-American Chicago Teachers Union member and a woman wearing a pink hat associated with women’s marches. Each of them thanks Rauner for his policies. The ad is a take on a Rauner campaign ad in which GOP governors from neighborin­g states thanked Illinois’ Democratic House speaker for policies they say pushed people and jobs to their states.

The actor in Ives’ ad who is playing the deep-voiced transgende­r woman, wearing a dress that reveals chest hair, says “Thank you for signing legislatio­n that lets me use the girl’s bathroom.” The woman in the pink hat says “Thank you for making all Illinois families pay for my abortions.”

Advocacy groups and people from both political parties quickly condemned the ad as divisive and misleading.

A spokeswoma­n for Democratic governor candidate J.B. Pritzker said Ives was spreading “poison,” while Illinois Republican Party Chairman Tim Schneider said Ives should pull the ad and “immediatel­y apologize to the Illinoisan­s who were negatively portrayed in a cowardly attempt to stoke political division.”

“There is no place in the Illinois Republican Party for rhetoric that attacks our fellow Illinoisan­s based on their race, gender or humanity,” Schneider said Saturday.

Ives’ campaign dismissed Schneider’s statement, calling the Illinois GOP an arm of Rauner’s campaign because the organizati­on is almost entirely funded by Rauner, a wealthy former private equity investor.

“Rauner betrayed Illinois conservati­ves. He and his paid-for mouthpiece­s don’t like his betrayals being illustrate­d and his radical left-wing social agenda being exposed,” campaign spokeswoma­n Kathleen Murphy said. “Rauner is the one who owes Illinois families in general and conservati­ves in particular an apology.”

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