Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Trump endorses Bailey in GOP primary for governor

- By Rick Pearson and Jeremy Gorner

MENDON, Ill. — Former President Donald Trump used a rural west-central Illinois fairground­s rally Saturday night to endorse Darren Bailey for the Republican nomination for governor in Tuesday’s primary as he also restated his backing for U.S. Rep. Mary Miller and took a victory lap for the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling overturnin­g Roe v. Wade.

“Darren is a farmer and he’s a fighter and he has been an outstandin­g warrior in the Illinois State Senate where he’s totally, totally respected by all of them,” Trump told a crowd of thousands at the Adams County Fairground­s near Quincy.

“He will crack down on the violent crime that is devouring our Democrat-run cities and restore the state of Illinois to greatness. Darren has my complete and total endorsemen­t,” Trump said, labeling first-term, reelection seeking Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker “one of the worst governors in America.”

Bailey, an ardent Trump supporter who has actively sought the former president’s endorsemen­t as the capstone for success in a six-way GOP primary race, said he will work to have Illinois welcome a new White House bid by Trump in 2024.

“Here’s the deal. I will not lie to anyone and I will not let anything go unnoticed. And when I see it, I will name it,” Bailey said after Trump told the story of Bailey plucking a misplaced hair out of the former president’s head during pre-rally picture taking.

“We have our work cut out for us here in Illinois, friends,” Bailey said. “I’ve made a promise to President Trump that in 2024, Illinois will roll the red carpet out for him because Illinois will be ready for President Trump.”

Trump lost Illinois by 17% of the vote in his winning bid for the presidency in 2016 and his losing reelection run in 2020.

Trump, who has often delayed endorsemen­ts unless he was sure of a candidate’s victory, predicted Bailey would “win the primary very big and you’re going to go on and win the election.”

Bailey, a 2020 Trump presidenti­al nominating delegate, comes from a downstate region of Illinois where voters have solidly supported the former president, and he has sought to cultivate their backing in his bid for governor as a base of support that has gradually grown across the state.

He’s also been the most demonstrab­ly outspoken critic of Pritzker, starting with lawsuits — ultimately unsuccessf­ul — that sought to block the Democratic governor’s pandemic mitigation orders while promoting an evangelica­l rural populist candidacy that decries the cultural policies of urban Chicago.

Bailey is in a field of candidates that includes Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin, investor Jesse Sullivan of Petersburg, businessma­n Gary Rabine of Bull Valley, former state Sen. Paul Schimpf of Waterloo and Hazel Crest attorney Max Solomon.

Trump’s visit also was aimed at bolstering turnout for Miller, whose freshman term has been buffeted by controvers­y, in a contest against five-term Republican U.S. Rep. Rodney Davis in the newly drawn 15th Congressio­nal District. The match up between Miller and Davis, an offshoot of Democratic redistrict­ing following the 2020 Census, is the only one between Republican congressio­nal incumbents in the state’s primary election on Tuesday.

Trump endorsed Miller on Jan. 1 and held a subsequent fundraiser for her at his Mar-a-Lago estate. But Davis has support from

much of the local GOP establishm­ent, including 31 of the district’s 35 county GOP chairmen as well as neighborin­g GOP Congressme­n Darin LaHood of Peoria and Mike Bost of Murphysbor­o.

“With Mary, you get to elect a fearless America First Patriot,” Trump said. “She’s an incredible woman, somebody I’ve gotten to know very well. She’s been with me from day one. No bad back statements, you know, saying bad things about me two years ago, three years ago, one year ago,” Trump said, adding she is “a warrior for our movement.”

Going on to attack the two

Republican­s on the House select committee investigat­ing Trump’s role in the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrecti­on at the Capitol, the former president told the crowd, “If you want to send a message to (Wyoming U.S. Rep.) Liz Cheney, (Illinois) U.S. Rep. Adam Kinzinger and (Democratic U.S. House Speaker) Nancy Pelosi and the fake news media, then this Tuesday you need to cast your vote for a truly wonderful person, Mary Miller.”

Miller said that “on behalf of the MAGA patriots in America,” she wanted to thank Trump “for the historic victory for white life in the Supreme Court” but did not elaborate on what she meant. A campaign spokespers­on said after the rally that Miller meant to say “right to life” but misspoke.

The court’s decision, Miller said, “would never have been possible if the Never-Trump RINOs had gotten their way,” — using the term to label Davis a “Republican In Name Only.”

After Trump’s speech, Davis predicted he’d win on Tuesday even as he sought to stress his support of the former president’s policies while in the White House.

“I’ve always said I’m proud of my conservati­ve record of working with Trump when he was in office. Together we protected the unborn, defended the Second Amendment, cut taxes, secured our border, supported our police and farmers, and so much more,” Davis said in a statement.

Trump also sought to take credit for the appointmen­t of three conservati­ve justices during his presidency and their role in the 6-3 decision Friday that overturned the court’s 1973 ruling that gave women the right to seek an abortion without undue government interferen­ce.

“The court handed down a victory for the Constituti­on, a victory for the rule of law and above all, a victory for life,” Trump said. Citing generation­s of the anti-abortion movement as well as constituti­onal conservati­ves, “your boundless love, sacrifice and devotion has finally been rewarded in full.”

The crowd chanted, “Thank you, Trump.”

Thousands of Trump supporters gathered inside and on the periphery of the fairground­s, not far from the Mississipp­i River bluffs across from Missouri, many sporting red “Make America Great Again” hats, some others wearing shirts proclaimin­g “Jesus is my savior. Trump is my president” and “God, Guns and Trump.”

Symbolizin­g the sway Trump still holds over Republican voters, Rhonda Goodwin of nearby Quincy, admitted to not knowing much about Miller’s two years in Congress but said the former president’s endorsemen­t was good enough for her.

“Anybody Trump endorses is probably going to be the winner,” Goodwin said. “I didn’t do a whole lot of my own research. I figured his people have vetted her way more than I ever could and if he’s endorsing her, that’s all I need.”

 ?? MICHAEL B. THOMAS PHOTOS/GETTY ?? Former President Donald Trump attends a Save America Rally at the Adams County Fairground­s on Saturday.
MICHAEL B. THOMAS PHOTOS/GETTY Former President Donald Trump attends a Save America Rally at the Adams County Fairground­s on Saturday.
 ?? ?? Darren Bailey, Republican candidate for Illinois governor, and U.S. Representa­tive Mary Miller have a word after receiving an endorsemen­t from Donald Trump on Saturday.
Darren Bailey, Republican candidate for Illinois governor, and U.S. Representa­tive Mary Miller have a word after receiving an endorsemen­t from Donald Trump on Saturday.

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