Chicago Sun-Times

GOP doesn’t want nobody Dems ( might have) sent

- MARK BROWN Follow Mark Brown on Twitter: @ MarkBrownC­ST Email: markbrown@suntimes.com

Steven Graves won’t let go.

In the Illinois primary election held March 15, 2016, the Mount Greenwood real estate broker was elected 19th Ward Republican committeem­an, defeating opponent Danny Carbol by a vote of 2,115 to 1,873. Or so he thought. A month later, Graves received a letter from the Cook County Republican Party.

“I thought it was to congratula­te me,” Graves said.

Instead, the letter informed Graves he would not be allowed to serve as GOP committeem­an.

Party officials informed him he was in violation of a new party bylaw barring anyone from serving in the post if they had voted in another party’s primary in the previous eight years.

The bylaw had been approved March 9, just a week before the election— and after the early voting period was already underway.

Graves, who readily admits voting regularly in Democratic primaries until 2014, later learned he was among 13 Republican committeem­en removed from office on the same basis.

The eight- year rule was interprete­d to extend only to March 2008, which spared anyone who voted in the presidenti­al primary held that year in February. An additional 13 current GOP committeem­en took Democratic ballots in that election— presumably to vote for or against Barack Obama. That group included current county GOP Chairman Sean Morrison and former Chairman Aaron Del Mar.

Republican officials say they took action against Graves and others to thwart what they contend was a concerted Democratic attempt to infiltrate their party for the purpose of controllin­g appointmen­t of election judges.

Nearly a year and a half later, Graves is among at least five of the deposed committeem­en still pursuing court cases in hopes of being reinstated.

In one such case now under review by the U. S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals, District Judge Milton Shadur ruled Republican­s acted within their First Amendment freedom of associatio­n right to select their own leaders when they ousted the 29th and 36th Ward committeem­en.

If it’s that easy to thwart the will of the voters, Graves laments, why even hold public elections for political party positions?

I met Graves for the first time Monday outside the courtroom of Cook County Circuit Judge Margarita Kulys Hoffman, who could rule on his lawsuit in September.

Graves has been emailing me updates on his case for the past year while growing increasing­ly frustrated.

“I won the election fair and square. They should be asking me how I did it. Instead, they kicked me to the curb,” Graves said.

Graves acknowledg­ed he is a former 19th Ward Democratic precinct captain and an ex- employee in the Cook County assessor’s office, both under former assessor and Democratic Party boss Thomas Hynes.

But Graves said he soured on the Democrats.

“I say the Democratic Party left me,” he said. As to why he would want to be committeem­an, an unpaid party post with little clout in 21st- century Chicago politics, Graves said: “I wanted to increase the voice of the 19th Ward Republican­s.”

“He’s not trying to pull a fast one,” chimed in his wife, Susan, a hairdresse­r who worked on his campaign and joined him in court.

“He’s not a plant,” said his lawyer, Kevin Sterk.

Chicago Republican Chairman Christophe­r Cleveland casts doubt on Graves’ sincerity and said the GOP’s goal is to block election fraud by Democrats. If Democrats masqueradi­ng as Republican­s are allowed to pick election judges, GOP candidates and voters will have no protection against fraud in some polling places, he said.

“What are we supposed to do here, just lay down?” Cleveland asked.

The Cook County GOP has long been a refuge for opportunis­tic Democrats, some of whom are indeed Democratic Party plants.

I just have trouble with the idea that the voters’ choice can be so easily nullified.

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Steven Graves
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