Chicago Sun-Times

BIG BUCKS FOR BRUCE

Illinois’ richest man, Kenneth Griffin, writes a $ 20 million check for Rauner campaign

- BY TINA SFONDELES Political Reporter Email: tsfondeles@suntimes.com Twitter: @TinaSfon

Hedge fund founder Ken Griffin — the richest man in Illinois — has contribute­d $ 20 million to Gov. Bruce Rauner’s re- election campaign, making it the second- largest individual contributi­on in state history.

The $ 20 million contributi­on was reported on May 15, according to a filing with the state Board of Elections.

Griffin’s contributi­on is also the second- largest individual contributi­on in Illinois history, according to the Illinois Campaign for Political Reform. Of the top 20 largest contributi­ons in Illinois, Rauner and Griffin make up 16 of them.

“Governor Rauner cares deeply about the future of our state and making it a better place to live and work. He has the winning plan to create jobs, improve our schools and put Illinois on the right path forward,” Griffin said in a statement about the contributi­on.

Griffin, the founder of Citadel LLC, has been Rauner’s top contributo­r, behind the governor himself. Records show Griffin has previously contribute­d nearly $ 13.6 million to Rauner’s campaign fund since 2014.

Griffin contribute­d $ 5.6 million to Citizens for Rauner during the governor’s campaign and $ 8 million after Rauner was elected. Last August, he donated $ 1 million to Liberty Principles, a super PAC supporting Republican­s. He also gave $ 3 million to Leslie Munger’s campaign. The Rauner appointee failed to stave off Democrat Susana Mendoza for comptrolle­r.

Rauner had $ 50.5 million on hand in his campaign fund through March 31. That’s more than 17 times as much as his five major Democratic challenger­s combined. He now has $ 70.5 million.

Rauner and state Sen. Daniel Biss are the two gubernator­ial candidates reporting more than a million dollars of campaign cash on hand, according to the first major campaign report filed in April with the state’s Board of Elections.

Businessma­n Chris Kennedy fell just shy of that mark, with $ 907,427.61 on hand when the reporting period closed at the end of March.

And billionair­e venture capitalist J. B. Pritzker beefed up his total with $ 7 million out of his own pocket after the filing period closed.

It’s all a sign of just how expensive the primary race — a long 10 months away — may become.

For Pritzker and Rauner, the vast majority of their campaign cash comes from their own pockets, signaling the increasing­ly important role self- financed campaigns are playing in Illinois politics.

Rauner contribute­d $ 50 million to his campaign in December.

In a statement, the Pritzker campaign called Rauner a “failed governor who has put politics over governing and passing a budget for our state.”

“Now, his special- interest friends are back to bail him out and ensure his Koch brothers agenda gets a second life. Before once again dumping money into Rauner’s campaign, Ken Griffin donated $ 100,000 to Donald Trump’s inaugural,” Pritzker spokeswoma­n Galia Slayen said. “It’s clear that Ken Griffin and Rauner’s spe- cial- interest allies want to force the Rauner- Trump agenda on our state, which attacks our working families and is decimating our economy.”

State Solutions, an arm of the Republican Governors Associatio­n, also on Wednesday released another Rauner TV ad. Rauner began appearing in ads in March, showing the unpreceden­ted nature of the 2018 race for governor in that Rauner — who’s expected to have no serious challenger in the GOP primary — is on TV months before incumbent candidates for governor normally appear in television commercial­s.

Rauner, however, has said the ads have nothing to do with his hopes of being re- elected. Instead, they’re focused on getting a state budget deal passed.

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 ?? MARIA CARDONA/ SUN- TIMES ?? Gov. Bruce Rauner’s re- election campaign fund now has $ 70.5 million on hand.
MARIA CARDONA/ SUN- TIMES Gov. Bruce Rauner’s re- election campaign fund now has $ 70.5 million on hand.

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