Chicago Sun-Times

SELECTIONS FOR STATE SENATE

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Today, the Sun- Times Editorial Board offers endorsemen­ts in nine Chicago- area races for the Illinois Senate.

22nd District

The departure of Sen. Mike Noland, D- Elgin, creates an open seat, for which we endorse Democrat Cristina Castro of Elgin. Castro has been building a public- service resume for the last eight years. She is accustomed to negotiatin­g and compromisi­ng with Republican­s as a commission­er on the Kane County Board, though we think she will find it much tougher to do so in Springfiel­d. For the last three years, she has served as a board member for the Illinois Housing Developmen­t Authority, a state agency that helps working- class families find financing to buy homes. Her opponent, Tracy Smodilla of Bartlett, is a self- made businesswo­man who has done admirable volunteer work but contradict­s herself on right- towork and minimum- wage issues.

23rd District

Editorial boards across Illinois constantly lament the absurdly large number of government units in this state, from mosquito abatement districts to street lighting districts to fire protection districts. What a waste of money. So when somebody actually does something about it, he or she deserves your support. Three years ago, Democratic Rep. Thomas E. Cullerton teamed up with Republican DuPage County Board Chairman Dan Cronin to push a bill through the Legislatur­e that allowed the county board to dissolve or consolidat­e 13 government units. That has saved the taxpayers of DuPage $ 80 million over three years. Gov. Bruce Rauner often cites this effort as an example of the kind of thing he’d like to see more of, though he doesn’t credit Cullerton by name. Cullerton also sponsored a bill, blocked by Republican­s, to abolish the office of lieutenant governor, another good idea. We endorse Cullerton, a former Villa Park mayor, over Republican Seth Lewis, an insurance agent from Bartlett.

25th District

Republican Jim Oberweis has found a pretty good fit for himself as a state senator. He has taken on a number of small- bore nonideolog­ical issues, such as ending a ban on Sunday auto sales and raising expressway speed limits, and found success, in part because he has worked across the aisle with Democrats. He’s a staunch conservati­ve in a conservati­ve district, and a strong supporter of Gov. Bruce Rauner’s pro- business “turnaround” agenda. At the same time, he seems more inclined than in the past— back when he was running for the U. S. Senate and the U. S. House— to eschew divisive rhetoric on social issues in favor of getting stuff done. He was an honest broker as a member of a bipartisan committee that worked, without success, on changes in workers compensati­on law. We endorse Oberweis, chairman of Oberweis Dairy and an entreprene­ur, over Democrat Corinne M. Pierog, a member of the St. Charles District 303 School Board.

26th District

Voters in this election face a clear ideologica­l choice, where a staunch social and economic conservati­ve is opposed by a candidate who holds more moderate social views. Our endorsemen­t goes to the Democratic moderate, Kelly Mazeski, a former North Barrington village trustee. We believe her nuanced views, especially on gun laws and abortion, better reflect the values of this Republican­leaning district. She supports tighter background checks on gun purchases, including at gun shows, and favors banning assault weapons such as the AR- 15 rifle. She also favors long prison sentences for illegal firearms trafficker­s. Her Republican opponent, Dan McConchie, who was appointed to this Senate seat earlier this year, has devoted most of his

working life to pro- life issues. He favors no further restrictio­ns on guns. Mazeski has a track record of working in a bipartisan manner, which Springfiel­d sorely needs. She has been a member of the Barrington Hills Plan Commission since 2010, and she served on the North Barrington Zoning Board of Appeals for 10 years.

28th District

Democrat Laura Murphy, a former member of the Des Plaines City Council, was appointed to this north and northwest suburban seat last year after the resignatio­n of Dan Kotowski, and she has earned the right to have voters return her to the General Assembly. Murphy thinks there is room for workers compensati­on reform— a goal of Gov. Bruce Rauner— but her background in the business end of alcohol and substance- abuse programs has taught her jail is not the treatment many people need. She favors closing loopholes that allow guns to slip into the hands of those who can’t legally buy them and believes the best way to bring good jobs to Illinois is to invest in the education of young people. Her opponent, Republican Mel Thillens of Park Ridge, a candidate for state representa­tive two years ago, a business owner and a board member of the Park Ridge Park District, is a staunch supporter of Rauner.

29th District

Independen­t- minded and hardworkin­g Julie A. Morrison has the ability to see issues from the perspectiv­es of both parties, and no wonder: the Deerfield Democrat, who is finishing her first term as a state senator, is a former Republican who for 10 years was field director for former U. S. Rep John Edward Porter, R- Ill. She switched parties about a decade ago while she was supervisor of West Deerfield Township, a post she held for 15 years. As someone who grew up in Downstate Beardstown in Cass County, she also understand­s both sides of the perennial Chicago- Downstate rift. Here’s just one reason we endorse Morrison: To help end the state’s budget impasse, she called Gov. Bruce Rauner last year and sat down with him in his office to discuss solutions. She also introduced a short- lived bill that would have required the governor and legislativ­e leaders, whenever the Legislatur­e adjourned without a budget, to meet for one hour a week until they signed off on a spending and revenue plan. She opposes Rauner’s attempts to significan­tly reduce funding for state universiti­es, saying “it’s the last place we can cut” because universiti­es are a recruiting tool for the best and brightest talent. She also ran a bill to allow the consolidat­ion of some local government­s and voted for a two- year property tax freeze. Her Republican opponent in this north and northwest suburban district— a newcomer— is Benjamin Salzberg of Northbrook, a turnaround expert for corporatio­ns and a member of the Oakton Community College Board of Trustees.

31st District

Democratic incumbent Melinda Bush’s northern Lake County seat is a top target of the GOP this year. Voters, though, should stick with Bush, a moderate who is a former Grayslake village trustee and Lake County Board member. In Bush’s first year in the General Assembly, she co- sponsored a pension- reform bill that was never called but she believed would have passed constituti­onal muster. She subsequent­ly co- sponsored and carried “Lali’s Law,” which allows family members of someone at risk of a fatal heroin overdose to carry naloxone to such an overdose. She favors measures necessary to reducing gun violence, such as cracking down on straw gun purchases, tightening background checks, state licensing of gun dealers and ensuring mentally ill people can’t buy firearms. Her opponent in this northern Lake County district is Michael Amrozowicz of Gurnee, a retired Navy veteran and co- owner of a remodeling business who in 2014 was elected chairman of the Lake County Republican Party.

32nd District

For 13 years, Republican Pamela Althoff of McHenry has done a capable job of representi­ng this far northwest suburban district, and she deserves another two- year term, which she says will be her last. She worked with Democrats on a bill to reduce prison overcrowdi­ng, and she co- sponsored legislatio­n to require risk assessment as a condition of bail in some domestic violence cases. Democrat Melissa Coyne of Fox Lake, a small business owner who has been active in charity work and youth sports, was appointed by local party officials to run for this seat.

49th District

Democrat Jennifer Bertino-Tarrant of Shorewood supports issues she says are important to the middle class: collective bargaining and the requiremen­t of paying the prevailing wage to workers on government projects. As a former teacher, principal and a Will County regional superinten­dent of schools, she is a strong supporter of equitably funded public education, with the state shoulderin­g more of the load. She also wants to take another shot at pension reform, now that the Illinois Supreme Court has rejected the first attempt to rein in costs. Her Republican opponent is Michelle Smith of Plainfield, the board president in Plainfield School District 202. Smith is backed by Dan Proft’s Liberty Principles PAC, which in September broke the contributi­on limits in this far southwest suburban district.

 ?? SANTIAGO COVARRUBIA­S/ SUN- TIMES ?? Democrat Corinne M. Pierog is opposing incumbent Republican state Sen. Jim Oberweis.
SANTIAGO COVARRUBIA­S/ SUN- TIMES Democrat Corinne M. Pierog is opposing incumbent Republican state Sen. Jim Oberweis.
 ??  ?? Cullerton
Cullerton
 ??  ?? Mazeski
Mazeski
 ??  ?? Castro
Castro
 ?? SETH PERLMAN/ AP FILE ??
SETH PERLMAN/ AP FILE
 ??  ?? Murphy
Murphy
 ??  ?? Morrison
Morrison
 ??  ?? Bush
Bush
 ??  ?? Althoff
Althoff
 ??  ?? Bertino- Tarrant
Bertino- Tarrant

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