Chicago Sun-Times

7 REPUBLICAN­S VYING FOR U.S. SENATE

Hope to take on ‘formidable’ incumbent Duckworth

- BY JON SEIDEL, FEDERAL COURTS REPORTER jseidel@suntimes.com | @SeidelCont­ent

Seven Republican­s are trying to harness a national sense of anger and frustratio­n in bids for their party’s U.S. Senate nomination, with the goal of knocking first-term incumbent Tammy Duckworth out of office two years after she was short-listed for vice president.

Duckworth, a Democrat, is described as a “formidable candidate” even by major Republican fundraiser Ron Gidwitz. But Democrats barely managed to gain control of the Senate in the 2020 elections, so every seat will count as Republican­s try to take it back.

The candidates for the Republican nomination are Casey Chlebek, Peggy Hubbard, Robert “Bobby” Piton, Jimmy Lee Tillman II, Anthony W. Williams, Kathy Salvi and Matthew “Matt” Dubiel.

Salvi’s campaign appears to have the fundraisin­g edge with more than $300,000 raised, but $250,000 of that came from Salvi herself, campaign finance records show. Gidwitz, a finance co-chair of the National Republican Senate Committee, has told the Sun-Times he is backing Salvi.

Piton is Salvi’s closest fundraisin­g competitor, with $168,510 raised. He kicked in $25,000 of that, though.

Salvi, of Mundelein, lost a six-way 2006 GOP primary bid for Congress. Hubbard and Chlebek also sought to challenge U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin two years ago.

Two thirds of GOP voters are undecided this time around, according to a Sun-Times/ WBEZ Poll conducted last week. Salvi and Hubbard were the only two candidates with double-digit support — just barely, at 10% each.

Chlebek, Hubbard and Dubiel spoke to the Chicago Sun-Times about the campaign. The other candidates either did not respond to messages seeking comment or could not be reached.

Illinois’ June 28 primary will take place a few days after the one-month anniversar­y of the killing of 19 children in an elementary­school shooting in Uvalde, Texas.

On Sunday, 20 senators — 10 from each party — expressed support for a framework responding to the mass shootings, offering some measured firearm restrictio­ns and efforts to beef up school safety and mental health programs.

When asked what he could do in the Senate to try to prevent another deadly school shooting, Dubiel, of Naperville, stressed the need to “get to the facts and get to what happened.” He insisted that “it’s hard to do that in the wake of an event.”

But he rejects the notion that “to fix the problems of the few we have to limit the freedoms of the many.”

Rather, Dubiel said “I want a toxicology report of every single mass shooter” as part of an effort to find out “what is going on with the people that are perpetrati­ng these atrocities.”

Hubbard, of Belleville, told the Sun-Times that “our gun laws are fine” but “we’re not enforcing them and we’re not using our mental health facilities.”

By contrast, Chlebek of Lake Forest said “there’s no place for guns in a school” and that the country should “apply strict measures and enforce them as far as getting permits to guns.”

The campaign websites and social media accounts of most other candidates are vague on the topic. But Piton’s website is clear: Referring to the Second Amendment, he wrote, “I 100% agree with this Amendment as it stands and DO NOT SUPPORT any rules or restrictio­ns.”

Piton, who was active in the Cyber Ninja election audit in Arizona, also continues to call for a “full nationwide audit” of the 2020 elections and “new elections for every politician that is wrongfully in their position.” He is from Geneva.

While Illinois voters went solidly for Democrat Joe Biden in 2020, Piton’s views could have some traction among Republican­s. The Sun-Times/WBEZ Poll found that 67% of the state’s GOP voters believe Donald Trump actually won the election.

Asked whether it’s possible for a Democrat — Biden or otherwise — to legitimate­ly win the White House in 2024, Hubbard said, “I don’t see another Democrat getting into the White House for at least another eight years.” She said there’s “too much damage that has been done.” Chlebek said either side could prevail.

Dubiel said he “didn’t think it was possible” in 2020 and “it happened anyway.” He also went on to call Biden and his administra­tion “an issue of national security” in part because “I don’t think that Joe Biden is mentally capable of leading or governing.”

As for the other candidates, Tillman’s website says “Biden’s absolute failures on the world stage have endangered Americans’ security, reduced America’s credibilit­y and standing, and weakened the world in extraordin­ary ways.” Tillman is from Chicago.

Salvi’s says “we are crippled by one-party rule” in Springfiel­d and Washington, D.C., adding that “partisan politics and radical agendas prevail over the best interests of the people of Illinois.”

 ?? ??
 ?? CAMPAIGN FLYER, FACEBOOK, RICH HEIN/SUN-TIMES, FACEBOOK, FACEBOOK, TYLER PASCIAK LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES; PROVIDED ?? Republican Senate candidates: (top row, from left) Anthony W. Williams, Robert “Bobby” Piton, Jimmy Lee Tillman II, Matthew “Matt” Dubiel, and (bottom row, from left) Kathy Salvi, Peggy Hubbard and Casey Chlebek.
CAMPAIGN FLYER, FACEBOOK, RICH HEIN/SUN-TIMES, FACEBOOK, FACEBOOK, TYLER PASCIAK LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES; PROVIDED Republican Senate candidates: (top row, from left) Anthony W. Williams, Robert “Bobby” Piton, Jimmy Lee Tillman II, Matthew “Matt” Dubiel, and (bottom row, from left) Kathy Salvi, Peggy Hubbard and Casey Chlebek.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States