Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

A far-right Republican leads race to be GOP candidate for governor of Illinois

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

The Illinois Republican Party has successful­ly avoided being dragged into the hard-right camp at the state level for decades. Those days may be over.

With relatively liberal Republican­s Jim Thompson, Jim Edgar and then George Ryan as governor, the state never embraced the sweeping policy changes that emerged from the “Reagan Revolution” and defined the national party for decades.

The Illinois AFL-CIO endorsed Thompson’s last reelection bid. The National Abortion Rights Action League endorsed Edgar’s first gubernator­ial run. Ryan campaigned to the left of his 1998 Democratic opponent on guns, abortion and gay rights. They were all from the “governing wing” of the party, eschewing the rabble on the far right and occasional­ly batting them off like flies.

While Bruce Rauner defined himself by his rabidly anti-union stance, he was prochoice enough to sign a bill that provided Medicaid funding for abortions. He never supported Donald Trump, even though the two shared several personalit­y traits.

That distance from the far right helped statewide Republican­s win general elections in moderate-to-liberal Illinois, particular­ly after the state leaned harder Democratic when Bill Clinton was elected president in 1992.

But if a recent Chicago Sun-Times/ WBEZ poll is even close to accurate, those days may finally be behind the party. And consequent­ly, their statewide fate will likely be sealed without a sea change in Illinois political behavior and demographi­cs.

The new poll has Sen. Darren Bailey trouncing the establishm­ent’s choice, Richard Irvin, by 15 points, 32-17. Bailey not only leads among Downstate Republican­s by 24 points, he’s also ahead in the suburbs. Another 27% were undecided, with Jesse Sullivan the only other candidate polling in the double digits (11%). This is the second poll in a row showing a Bailey lead. Hard-right activist and radio host Dan Proft released a poll at the beginning of last week showing Bailey with a seven-point margin.

Untenable for moderate Irvin

What has happened to Irvin and his $53 million war chest, most of it supplied by the state’s wealthiest resident Ken Griffin?

One huge factor is Gov. J.B. Pritzker, the Democratic Governors Associatio­n and Bailey along with his big-money backer Dick Uihlein, have so far managed to turn this race into the same sort of “traditiona­l” GOP primary that other, more conservati­ve states have seen for years and years, but that Illinois has generally avoided. They have reshaped the playing field, and it has become untenable for the more moderate Irvin.

After months of Irvin pounding Bailey for being some sort of closet Democrat, the Democrats, Bailey and Proft spent millions to prove without a shadow of a doubt that Bailey was a solid Trumpster.

And by deriding Bailey for being “too conservati­ve” for Illinois, the Democrats have

also apparently managed to so far convince many rank-and-file Republican­s they aren’t actually trying to advance Bailey’s candidacy (even though the Democrats are clearly doing that very thing).

The Irvin campaign claims the Democrats are on pace to spend $32 million against their guy, although their numbers show the Dems have “only” spent $15+ million so far. Uihlein has contribute­d $17 million to Bailey and Proft’s “People Who Play by the Rules PAC,” more than he’s ever done here. Uihlein’s big spending and the willingnes­s of the Democrats to literally spend whatever it took seems to have caught Irvin’s team by surprise.

Irvin spent $3.6 million on advertisin­g during the last week of May. By the first week of June, that spending had dropped to less than $800,000. The Irvin campaign allowed all of its Downstate broadcast

TV ads to expire last week. They’re now focusing solely on the Chicago media market.

The story from inside is that “regular” Downstate Republican­s are already with Irvin, so they want to focus on city, suburban and exurban Republican­s with more Illinois-style Republican messaging. But the party has clearly changed. They have only one narrow path out, and it’s pretty rocky and steep.

Irvin has taken to repeating a mantra that Pritzker is backing Bailey because he knows Bailey can’t win. But by doing so he’s essentiall­y making the Democrats’ own case that Bailey is “too conservati­ve” for Illinois. And that risks firing up the hardcore base even more.

 ?? ??
 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES ?? Conservati­ve state Sen. Darren Bailey (pictured) is leading Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin to be GOP candidate for governor.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES Conservati­ve state Sen. Darren Bailey (pictured) is leading Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin to be GOP candidate for governor.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States