Chicago Sun-Times

At Durbin’s D.C. event for Lightfoot, GOP Rep. Rodney Davis swings by — and has bold political prediction

- Lsweet@suntimes.com LYNN SWEET | @lynnsweet

WASHINGTON — Mayor Lori Lightfoot is in D.C. through Friday, kicking off her visit on Tuesday night with a dinner Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., hosted for the delegation in his Capitol office, and to my surprise — since usually only Democrats show up at this sort of thing — in walked GOP Rep. Rodney Davis.

Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, it’s been ages since the delegation dined together. Pre-COVID, Durbin hosted lunches about once a month, and as the years flowed by, most of the regular attendees have been the delegation’s Democrats.

Earlier Tuesday, Davis made it official, announcing he would run again for the U.S. House and not jump into the governor’s race. There was a friendly vibe as he bantered with Rep. Robin Kelly, chairwoman of the Democratic Party of Illinois, and others; that might not have been possible if he was making a bid to defeat Gov. J.B. Pritzker.

After a group photo, Davis didn’t stick around for the dinner because, he told me, he was hosting a fundraiser for his congressio­nal reelection campaign. Before he left, Davis made a bold political prediction, and I’ll get to that in a few paragraphs, so stay with me.

And speaking of fundraisin­g — Lightfoot’s trip here is mainly for government business. But she does have two fundraiser­s planned, one on Wednesday and another event on Thursday.

Lightfoot flew to D.C. for a series of meetings in the Capitol and White House related to the pandemic and figuring out more details on how the Biden administra­tion intends to distribute the money in the $1 trillion infrastruc­ture bill.

There will be gobs of rules and strings attached; that’s how these things work. Still, the state of Illinois as a whole will get $17 billion with hundreds of millions — there is no price estimate yet — eventually flowing to the city of Chicago and related agencies, such as the CTA.

I asked Lightfoot about her priorities for the infrastruc­ture cash: expansion of the CTA Red Line from 95th to 130th streets, speeding up lead water pipe removal in the city and bringing broadband access to internet deserts in the city.

“Broadband access is also really important in the city . ... A lot of people talk about it as being a rural issue; it is an urban, city issue, and it is definitely a big issue for us in Chicago,” Lightfoot said, especially on the South Side.

Lightfoot on Wednesday has meetings at the Commerce Department and with Susan Rice, President Joe Biden’s White House Domestic Policy Council director.

Lightfoot was also invited to the White House Wednesday event marking World AIDS Day. There is a giant red ribbon on the north entrance to the White House.

The Chicago Sun-Times has also learned that while in Washington, Lightfoot will meet with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and White House senior adviser and infrastruc­ture coordinato­r Mitch Landrieu.

Rodney Davis on that 14-3 Democratic map: Not so fast

Davis was the only Republican to show up at Durbin’s dinner, and he mingled with the Democrats — Lightfoot, Kelly, Sen. Tammy Duckworth, Rep. Jan Schakowsky, Rep. Danny Davis and Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia. Rep. Raja Krishnamoo­rthi arrived after Davis left.

State Democratic mapmakers designed a congressio­nal map they hope will yield 14 Democratic and 3 Republican districts, seats needed if the Democrats are to retain control of the House. Pelosi has only a threeor four-member edge, so it won’t take a lot in 2022 to flip the House.

Not so fast on that 14-3 outcome Democrats are claiming they will have, Davis told me.

“My first preference was to run for reelection,” Davis said. “But in the end, I didn’t set the political battlefiel­d; it was the Democrats in Springfiel­d.”

Some of those 14 districts have Democratic supermajor­ities; the Democratic edge in two or three other districts outside of Chicago is much thinner, and I asked Davis — we were out of earshot from the others — about their potential as swing districts.

“I’ll be happy to say very loudly here, we are going to compete in a lot more districts than what the Democrats in Springfiel­d who drew this map thought we would,” he said.

I asked Davis if he had GOP recruits. “Working on that every day,” he replied.

The balancing act will be to recruit a Republican who could survive a GOP primary where allegiance to former President Donald Trump will be an issue — and still be appealing to Democratic crossover or swing voters. Exhibit A: Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., a leading Trump critic is not seeking another term. He would have had a hard time winning a primary.

Said Davis, “I’m just looking forward to being able to be a chair in the next Congress when we take the majority.”

 ?? LYNN SWEET/SUN-TIMES ?? Mayor Lori Lightfoot kicks off her D.C. visit with an Illinois lawmakers dinner in Sen. Dick Durbin’s Capitol office. From left, Sen. Tammy Duckworth, Rep. Jan Schakowsky, Rep. Danny Davis, Lightfoot, Durbin, Rep. Robin Kelly, Rep. Rodney Davis and Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia.
LYNN SWEET/SUN-TIMES Mayor Lori Lightfoot kicks off her D.C. visit with an Illinois lawmakers dinner in Sen. Dick Durbin’s Capitol office. From left, Sen. Tammy Duckworth, Rep. Jan Schakowsky, Rep. Danny Davis, Lightfoot, Durbin, Rep. Robin Kelly, Rep. Rodney Davis and Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia.
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