Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

GOP GOV RACE NOW A DON DEAL?

Bailey, who already had double-digit leads in multiple polls, gets Trump’s endorsemen­t

- BY TINA SFONDELES, CHIEF POLITICAL REPORTER tsfondeles@suntimes.com | @TinaSfon

Calling Darren Bailey “the man to take on and defeat one of the worst governors in America,” former President Donald Trump on Saturday endorsed the downstate farmer in the GOP gubernator­ial primary race — a boost in the waning days of what has become a heated and expensive contest.

“Darren is a fearless supporter of the Second Amendment and a tireless champion of religious liberty,” Trump said at a “Save America” rally in Mendon. “He will crack down on the violent crime that is devouring our Democrat-run cities and restore the state of Illinois to greatness. Darren has my complete and total endorsemen­t.”

Taking the stage briefly — and nabbing the ultimate GOP photo opp — Bailey voiced his support for a Trump 2024 presidenti­al run.

“I’ve made a promise to President Trump that in 2024, Illinois will roll the red carpet out for him because Illinois will be ready for President Trump,” Bailey, a state senator from Louisville, said to cheers.

Trump’s Illinois rally was intended to boost U.S. Rep. Mary Miller, a Trump loyalist and member of the House Freedom Caucus whom he endorsed in January.

Miller faces U.S. Rep. Rodney Davis in the newly drawn 15th Congressio­nal District, pitting two Republican­s against each other after a Democratic-led redistrict­ing process. Trump framed the race as MAGA versus RINO, Republican In Name Only, since Davis proposed an independen­t commission to investigat­e Jan. 6.

Bailey had been seeking Trump’s endorsemen­t for months. The state senator met with Trump last year and snapped a photo with the former president at an April fundraiser. That photo was blasted on Bailey’s Facebook page — and later was used in ads paid for by the Democratic Governors’ Associatio­n.

Trump has been a factor in the race, with candidates Jesse Sullivan, Gary Rabine, Paul Schimpf and Max Solomon all campaignin­g on their support. Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin has lacked clarity on whether he supports Trump. In May, WTTW-TV reported on text messages it obtained in which he called Trump “an idiot” and a “bigoted racist.” Irvin has said he doesn’t remember sending the text messages.

With just two days to go before the primary, the endorsemen­t may not make a huge dent. Bailey for weeks has been leading multiple polls by double digits.

It could make a difference in the general election, as Gov. J.B. Pritzker will use the endorsemen­t against Bailey, should he prevail. Hours before Trump’s rally, Pritzker’s campaign blasted out a video of the governor calling Trump “a narcissist who values power over principle and seeks out darkness over light.”

The campaign said Trump’s visit was an attempt to prop up far-right extremists running for office — even though Pritzker himself paid for ads to help boost Bailey’s campaign with ads calling him “too conservati­ve.”

“We stand with the people who barred the doors of the Capitol on Jan. 6th — not the ones who were trying to knock them down,” Pritzker said in the video. “And any candidate who refuses to speak out against Trump’s Big Lie has no business running for office. Not in Illinois.”

Trump took many jabs at Pritzker over his COVID-19 mandates, calling him a “disaster” and blaming him for everything from crime to people leaving the state. The two have endured a years long public feud.

And Pritzker has been positionin­g himself for a potential 2024 presidenti­al bid, which is likely prompting further ire from Trump.

Trump has endorsed about 200 primary candidates this year, and candidates he’s endorsed in contested races have won more times than they’ve lost, according to a New York Times analysis.

The visit came a day after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, aided by the three conservati­ve justices Trump nominated. Associate Justices Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett all sided with the majority opinion to bring an end to the constituti­onal right to have an abortion.

Trump called the decision “a victory for the rule of law and above all, a victory for life.”

 ?? ?? Former President Donald Trump endorsed State Sen. Darren Bailey in the GOP gubernator­ial primary race on Saturday in downstate Mendon.
Former President Donald Trump endorsed State Sen. Darren Bailey in the GOP gubernator­ial primary race on Saturday in downstate Mendon.

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