Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

GOP GOV HOPEFULS: REVERSAL OF ROE SIGNALS ‘BATTLE FOR LIFE ... MOVES RIGHT HERE TO ILLINOIS’

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

Republican­s running for governor offered up prayers, thanks to former President Donald Trump and jabs at Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker — who has crowned himself “the most pro-choice governor in the entire nation.”

That was the celebrator­y GOP reaction Friday in the aftermath of the U.S. Supreme Court’s reversal of Roe v. Wade.

Former venture capitalist Jesse Sullivan responded with a Twitter video showing him holding his 5-month-old son Will, in which he declared with a smile, “What a beautiful day.”

“After decades of fighting to overturn Roe versus Wade, so many prayers around the nation, it’s finally here,” Sullivan says in the video. “Now, this battle for life in the front lines moves right here to Illinois. We need a governor who will stand proudly for life.”

Republican front-runner Darren Bailey called the Supreme Court decision “historic and welcomed.”

For nearly two months, Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin had resisted reporters’ requests for comment on the leaked draft opinion that foreshadow­ed the ruling, calling it “irresponsi­ble for us to hypothesiz­e and speculate on what the outcome will be.”

Irvin would say only that he’s “pro-life” while railing against the state’s revocation of a parental notificati­on abortion provision.

On Friday, Irvin offered a lukewarm response.

“As a pro-life Republican, I will continue to fight for every parent’s right to know if a minor child is having an abortion — a right J.B. Pritzker has outrageous­ly taken away,” Irvin said in a written statement. “With Democratic majorities in the Illinois General Assembly, this Supreme Court ruling will have no effect on the law in our state.”

It was the end to a pretty bad week for Irvin, whose main benefactor, billionair­e hedge fund founder Ken Griffin, announced Thursday he’s leaving Chicago — and his gubernator­ial candidate — for Miami.

Polls have for weeks shown Irvin trailing Bailey by double digits.

Even if a Republican can beat Pritzker in November, a GOP governor would likely have to face Democratic supermajor­ities in Springfiel­d, legislator­s who will fight to keep the state’s abortion laws on the books and even try to expand them.

It’s the reason Irvin’s campaign didn’t feel like he had to weigh in on the controvers­ial issue earlier — in addition to his challenge of trying to alienate neither conservati­ves he needs in the primary nor moderates he’s hoping to win over in November.

Pritzker has framed the Supreme Court decision as further proof the state needs to reelect a Democratic governor who will fight for abortion rights.

The Chicago Democrat has been campaignin­g on that support for months. He called himself “the most pro-choice governor in the entire nation” at a Chicago news conference on Friday. And the governor said he will call the General Assembly into special session in the coming weeks to “further enshrine” reproducti­ve protection­s.

Illinois and Minnesota are the only Midwestern states in which abortion laws likely won’t be affected by the ruling. And abortion providers in Illinois will see a huge influx of women coming from states that have outlawed the procedure.

Throughout the primary campaign, all of the Republican candidates except Irvin stressed their antiaborti­on stances in mailers and ads.

In April, Bailey, a state senator from Xenia, got the endorsemen­ts of anti-abortion groups Illinois Family Action, Illinois Federation for Right to Life and Illinois Citizens for Life. He vowed then he’d use the governor’s office as a bully pulpit to remove taxpayer-funded abortion and restore parental notificati­on in the state.

In a written statement Friday, Bailey said: “Unfortunat­ely, billionair­e J.B. Pritzker is an abortion extremist out of touch with the overwhelmi­ng majority of Illinoisan­s. He continues to push a radical agenda from taxpayer-funded abortion, late-term elective abortions and removing parental notificati­on.”

Bull Valley businessma­n Gary Rabine tweeted out his appreciati­on for Trump as he reacted to the news: “Thanks to President Trump for appointing conservati­ve justices that finally ended 50 years of abortion in the United States.”

And Hazel Crest attorney Max Solomon called himself “unapologet­ically and uncompromi­singly pro-life.”

“Today, our nation stood up for life — a turning point in our history,” Solomon said in an email. “May God bless the USA.”

Former state Sen. Paul Schimpf did not immediatel­y react to the news.

The Democratic Governors’ Associatio­n, which boosted Bailey’s campaigns among GOP primary voters with ads calling him “too conservati­ve,” on Friday dubbed the Republican­s as “completely out of touch with Illinoisan­s across the state.”

“This devastatin­g SCOTUS decision has left Democratic governors like Gov. Pritzker as the last line of defense to protect women’s access to safe, legal reproducti­ve care,” DGA spokeswoma­n Yael Sheinfeld said. “Voters will remember that at the ballot box.”

 ?? ?? Darren Bailey ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/ SUN-TIMES FILE
Darren Bailey ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/ SUN-TIMES FILE
 ?? ?? Jesse Sullivan
Jesse Sullivan
 ?? ?? Max Solomon
Max Solomon
 ?? ?? Paul Schimpf
Paul Schimpf
 ?? ?? Richard Irvin
Richard Irvin
 ?? ?? Gary Rabine
Gary Rabine

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