Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Young progressiv­es, Trump-affiliated Republican­s big winners in elections

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

The four Illinois legislativ­e leaders did not have a spectacula­r primary day. House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch lost three incumbents to primary challenger­s. Senate President Don Harmon lost an appointed incumbent and an open seat race. And House Republican Leader Jim Durkin lost two incumbents and came up short in some other races. Senate GOP Leader Dan McConchie came away with one ding.

On the other hand, it was a pretty darned good day to be a young progressiv­e Democrat or a Donald Trump/Darren Bailey-affiliated Republican. State Rep. Delia Ramirez bested well-funded Chicago Ald. Gil Villegas (36th) in the 3rd Congressio­nal District primary by a mind-boggling 42 points — the same margin as Republican Bailey achieved in the governor’s primary.

All of Welch’s defeated incumbents were bested by talented challenger­s from their left. Rep. Mike Zalewski, D-Riverside, helped found a caucus for moderate Democrats and voted against repealing the Parental Notificati­on of Abortion Act. His ties to former Speaker Michael Madigan helped for years, but not this time, when they were effectivel­y used against him. Zalewski is a strong legislator, a friend to most and is actually beloved by many progressiv­e legislator­s, but the winds and the super hard-charging Abdelnasse­r Rashid got him.

Rep. Denyse Wang Stoneback, D-Skokie, was elected as a progressiv­e two years ago, but alienated the gun law reform lobby as well as many colleagues and others during her tenure. The Gun Violence Prevention PAC went after her with a vengeance because she walked away from a landmark bill that G-PAC had negotiated. She’d also alienated her own state senator, Ram Villivalam, and he and a host of area politicos pushed hard for Kevin Olickal, who basically ran on Stoneback’s 2020 progressiv­e platform.

The Associated Press has declared U.S. Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia’s ally Norma Hernandez the winner over Rep. Kathy Willis, D-Addison. Hernandez ran a Chuy-style campaign — lots of family and friends networking, non-stop door-knocking and making sure progressiv­e Latinos got to the polls.

Senate Democrats and their allies spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to back appointed Sen. Eric Mattson, D-Joliet, against progressiv­e Will County Board member Rachel Ventura, but Ventura won by 15 points, even though she raised only $19,000 all year. This is, needless to say, a big loss. After Sen. John Connor decided to run for judge, the Dems and local pols engineered Mattson’s candidacy and his eventual appointmen­t to Connor’s seat, believing that Ventura could put the district on the bubble this November if she won.

The Dems also supported Lamont Williams against Willie Preston in an open seat race. Preston was up by 8 points when he declared victory. The Williams campaign had a bunch of oppo on Preston and never used it. The Illinois Network of Charter Schools spent heavily for Preston, who had a host of endorsemen­ts, although his claimed endorsemen­t by Secretary of State Jesse White proved to be false.

House Republican Conference Chair David Welter, R-Morris, and freshman Rep. Mark Luft, R-Pekin, both lost. The Bailey campaign and people like Jeanne Ives put a big target on Welter’s back. Welter’s opponent Jed Davis was also a very hard worker and won by 9 points with all votes counted except what was still in the mail.

Durkin also backed Arin Thrower in the primary to take on Rep. Suzanne Ness, D-Crystal Lake. But Thrower is trailing the much more rightward Connie Cain by just 64 votes.

Jennifer Korte, another Bailey/Ives candidate backed to the hilt by Sen. Jason Plummer, R-Edwardsvil­le, is defeating GOPsupport­ed Joe Hackler by a 34-point margin for the right to take on Rep. Katie Stuart, D-Edwardsvil­le. The Durkin crew thought Korte was too far-right to have a chance against Stuart. Now they’re stuck with her.

Of the five House Republican­s endorsed by Bailey, four won, with only Kent Gray losing badly to Rep. Tim Butler, R-Springfiel­d.

Bailey supported two Senate Republican candidates. One won. Bailey-backed Sen. Win Stoller, R-East Peoria, beat the Jim Durkin-backed Brett Nicklaus by about two points. Durkin jumped into this race for Nicklaus after Travis Weaver announced against Luft as a way of pushing back against the Senate Republican­s and Weaver’s father, whom he blamed for the younger Weaver’s candidacy.

The Senate Republican­s backed a candidate who ended up with bad opposition research trouble, so they got out of the race.

Also, the ultra-conservati­ve Chicago Fraternal Order of Police endorsed three conservati­ve and not all that talented challenger­s to sitting Democratic legislator­s and all three incumbents won by huge margins.

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 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? Delia Ramirez, who won Illinois’ 3rd Congressio­nal District Democratic primary, speaks after voting Tuesday in Humboldt Park.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES Delia Ramirez, who won Illinois’ 3rd Congressio­nal District Democratic primary, speaks after voting Tuesday in Humboldt Park.

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