Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Stream of losses could have enduring effect if Pritzker can’t reverse course

- RICH MILLER @capitolfax Rich Miller also publishes Capitol Fax, a daily political newsletter, and capitolfax.com.

When legal questions were raised about U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly’s campaign for state Democratic Party chair last week and Kelly only got stronger, that should tell you a couple of things.

First, Kelly is a genuinely wellliked, well-known and trusted person within the Democratic Party, and her alliance with U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin was crucial. They were quickly able to believably reassure her supporters and those leaning in her direction that she’d find a way around the admission by her own attorney that the state party couldn’t raise or spend “soft,” non-federal campaign money as long as she had even “indirect” control of the party apparatus.

Second, and perhaps more importantl­y, the hit solidified the contest as a referendum on Gov. J.B. Pritzker, and not in a good way.

When the potential loss of millions of dollars in campaign contributi­ons, plus the possible loss of as much as $300,000 in postage discounts per cycle for the Illinois House Democrats alone, plus publicly expressed fears about Kelly’s election from the party’s most dependable ally, organized labor, plus the very real possibilit­y of alienating a sitting liberal billionair­e governor weren’t enough to stop Kelly, you’re dealing with a heck of a candidate, a clever sponsor and no fear of reprisal from the other side.

Granted, the state central committee is a strangely unique voting universe populated with some odd sorts. But everybody knew that going in. Also, people lied. But that’s not new. In the end, however, the governor got rolled. Again.

Pritzker’s foray into the 2020 Illinois Senate president election caused a backlash that ended in defeat and lingering resentment on both sides. His “Fair Tax” was so thoroughly beaten last year that Democratic legislator­s all over the state who voted to put it on the ballot were running away from it throughout the fall. January’s lame-duck session was a gubernator­ial disaster. And now this.

Last week’s narrow but convincing thumping of Pritzker’s candidate, Michelle Harris, won’t matter at all to actual 2022 voters, who are far more concerned right now with staying alive, healthy and employed. But these losses have a cumulative effect under the Statehouse dome.

Losing is like a disease in politics. People usually don’t want to have anything to do with you when you lose. So the governor needs to start putting some points on the board or this could morph into something that voters care about. Someday, this pandemic’s gonna end.

Pritzker is starting to take some positive steps. The governor just finished two weeks of events with Legislativ­e Black Caucus members, enthusiast­ically supporting the new criminal justice reform law and aggressive­ly rebutting its many critics. The Black Caucus passed three of its four “pillars” in January (education and economic reform were the other two), so expect another four weeks of similar whistle-stops.

Pritzker also has done a few recent events to announce projects from 2019’s massive capital constructi­on program.

With the way things stand now, though, the Legislatur­e will roll over him like he’s not even there on the new district maps, the budget or whatever.

For instance, Pritzker’s failed efforts for more than a year to pass a cleanup bill for the cannabis legalizati­on law are encounteri­ng even more resistance. Rep. Sonya Harper, chair of the Illinois Legislativ­e Black Caucus, insisted to the Cook County Cannabis Commission

LOSING IS LIKE A DISEASE IN POLITICS. PEOPLE USUALLY DON’T WANT TO HAVE ANYTHING TO DO WITH YOU WHEN YOU LOSE. SO THE GOVERNOR NEEDS TO START PUTTING SOME POINTS ON THE BOARD OR THIS COULD MORPH INTO SOMETHING THAT VOTERS CARE ABOUT.

last week that the Pritzker administra­tion’s implementa­tion of the 2019 law is the main problem, not the law itself.

And then, of course, there are the ongoing problems at the Illinois Department of Employment Security a full year since the economic crisis began. Legislator­s receive more gut-wrenching calls about this topic than pretty much everything else combined.

The best path forward for the governor boils down to good governance, good politics and much better “member management.”

One thing that encompasse­s all three of those is the state’s capital program, which needs to be rolled out more. Nothing generates more legislativ­e goodwill than projects. Make lots of people happy and create some jobs, already.

Above all, though, Pritzker’s gotta figure out why these losses keep happening. Stop talking and start listening.

He wouldn’t confirm it, but I’m told one of the last people to declare his state party chair allegiance was millennial committeep­erson Tom Maillard moments before the voting began. Maillard had just enough weighted votes to put Kelly over the top.

A phone call to that young man to hear him out is probably the last thing anyone on Team Pritzker wants to do right now. But it wouldn’t be a horrible first step.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES ?? Flanked by lawmakers and supporters, Gov. J.B. Pritzker smiles after signing a sweeping criminal justice reform bill into law during a ceremony Feb. 22 at Chicago State University.
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES Flanked by lawmakers and supporters, Gov. J.B. Pritzker smiles after signing a sweeping criminal justice reform bill into law during a ceremony Feb. 22 at Chicago State University.
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