Chicago Sun-Times

REPUBLICAN­S HANG A RIGHT

State GOP moves to embrace conservati­ve wing

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

Facing calls to resign over his handling of sexual harassment allegation­s within the party, Mike Madigan faced no opposition this year in being elected the longestser­ving chairman of the Illinois Democratic Party.

But after Gov. Bruce Rauner eked out a contentiou­s and very narrow victory over state Rep. Jeanne Ives in the March primary, the Illinois Republican Party the GOP governor has bankrolled announced it would split leadership posts as a way to unify a political party that has seen its fair share of dissension.

The shift is also a way to bolster Republican support ahead of a redrawing of legislativ­e boundaries in 2020.

Rauner’s handpicked leader, Illinois Republican Party Chairman Tim Schneider, will share a leadership post with Lake County Republican Party Chairman Mark Shaw, in a plan to restructur­e the party and refocus efforts on “grassroots and county- level organizing dedicated to reelecting Governor Rauner and the statewide Republican ticket.”

Schneider, who is also a Cook County commission­er, said in a statement that this year’s gubernator­ial election “might be the most consequent­ial one in our state’s history,” while urging the party to be “more organized than ever before” to defeat Democrat J. B. Pritzker.

But Shaw was a bit pointed with the reasons he was chosen: “Many conservati­ves sent Governor Rauner a message in the primary. On the night of the primary, Governor Rauner said he heard them, and I heard them — loud and clear,” Shaw said in a statement. “But Republican­s must focus on the issues that unite us and the election ahead of us. Conservati­ves in Illinois must come together to reelect Governor Rauner, or we won’t have a voice in state govern- ment for the next decade.”

Schneider will serve as chairman while Shaw will serve as cochairman and lead conservati­ve and grassroots outreach. Shaw will also run for president of the Illinois Republican County Chairmen’s Associatio­n. The changes were announced late Tuesday, but both positions are subject to party votes on Saturday in an organizati­onal meeting in Springfiel­d.

Rauner’s campaign said the governor “is committed to bringing together all Republican­s so we can defeat Pritzker in November.”

Rauner spent about $ 37 million in the March primary and won by just 2.8 percent. Ives launched her campaign last fall, feeding off the conservati­ve backlash against Rauner’s decision to sign legislatio­n expanding public funding of abortion, a move that alienated much of his Republican base as the “ultimate betrayal.”

Ives on Wednesday called the leadership announceme­nt “an encouragin­g about face by Rauner and his surrogates,” while expressing doubts about the evolution of the agreement.

“If this compromise elevates the party’s conservati­ve base in terms of both policy views and party leadership, that would be good,” Ives said in a statement. “If this compromise turns out to be the typical surrender Republican Rauner play of buying people off with money and titles, that would not be good. While I’m guardedly optimistic, I’ll reserve judgment to see how the deal operates in practice.”

 ?? PHOTO FROM LAKECOUNTY­REPUBLICAN­S. COM ?? Gov. Bruce Rauner ( left) with Lake County Republican Chairman Mark Shaw.
PHOTO FROM LAKECOUNTY­REPUBLICAN­S. COM Gov. Bruce Rauner ( left) with Lake County Republican Chairman Mark Shaw.

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