Chicago Sun-Times

Ives joins Sanguinett­i in GOP race for Casten’s seat

- LYNN SWEET D.C. DECODER lsweet@suntimes.com | @lynnsweet

WASHINGTON — Former State Rep. Jeanne Ives, a West Point graduate whose failed run for governor highlighte­d her conservati­ve anti-Rauner credential­s, jumped in the 6th Congressio­nal District GOP primary on Thursday, setting up a fight with Rauner’s lieutenant governor, Evelyn Sanguinett­i.

The matchup will be the biggest GOP primary for Congress in Illinois. With no fanfare, Ives filed a Statement of Candidacy with the Federal Election Commission on Thursday.

Sanguinett­i and Ives will battle for the nomination to take on freshman Rep. Sean Casten, D-Ill., a Downers Grove resident who in a

2018 upset beat former Rep. Peter Roskam, 53.58% to 46.42%.

The sixth congressio­nal district hugs Chicago’s western and near southern suburbs and includes parts of Cook, Kane, DuPage, McHenry and Lake counties.

Casten is a major GOP 2020 target.

Ives, who lives in Wheaton — as does Sanguinett­i — challenged former Gov. Bruce Rauner and Sanguinett­i in the 2018 Republican primary, losing her governor bid with Rauner getting 51.53% to her 48.47%

After her defeat, Ives said on her website, “The popular revolt against Illinois’ political ruling class fell just a bit short.” Ives comes from the anti-GOP establishm­ent pro-Trump wing of the party while Sanguinett­i is a more centrist conservati­ve.

Whether this primary evolves into a replay of the hard-hitting Rauner primary contest remains to be seen. What is different is that Ives’ military credential — something not in particular play in the governor primary — is relevant in a run for Congress. Ives’ husband, Paul, was in her West Point class of 1987. Ives, a captain, outranked her husband, who was a lieutenant.

In a statement, the Sanguinett­i campaign

said, “We welcome Jeanne to the race and look forward to showing why Evelyn is the conservati­ve with the best chance to beat Casten.”

The Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee said in a statement that the Illinois 6 primary with Ives’ entry has turned “into a full-blown Civil War.”

Casten’s campaign manager Chloe Hunt said in a statement, “Jeanne Ives and Evelyn Sanguinett­i both embrace an extreme partisan ideology that would deny a woman’s right to choose and raise our health care costs, they both strongly support President Trump, and they both are wildly out of touch with the concerns of the 6th Congressio­nal District.

“Sean Casten is a businessma­n and a scientist — not a politician — so he’s focused in Congress on listening to his constituen­ts and delivering for them by working to lower health care costs, reduce taxes, and tackle the existentia­l threat of climate change.”

In a bit of a preemptive strike against Ives, Sanguinett­i released on Monday the names of 40 Republican­s who back her, including Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill.; former Sen. Mark Kirk, R-Ill.; former Rep. Judy Biggert, R-Ill., former Lt. Gov. Corinne Wood; DuPage County Board Chair Dan Cronin and a group of GOP township committeem­en — all influentia­l in a Republican primary.

With the entry of Ives, Sanguinett­i will have to decide if she pulls herself to the right and if she runs with — or from — President Donald Trump, whose name will be at the top of the ballot. If Sanguinett­i turns right, it will make it harder to beat Casten, allied with House centrist Democrats.

As of June 30, Casten has $899,888 cash on hand. Sanguinett­i, who jumped in the race in April, has $69,890 cash on hand. Rauner donated $2,800 as did his wife, Diana, who gave $2,800. Sanguinett­i also loaned her campaign $5,000.

Roskam update

The law firm of Sidley Austin LLP announced this week that Roskam joined the firm’s Government Strategies group as a partner.

 ??  ?? Rep. Sean Casten
Rep. Sean Casten
 ??  ?? Evelyn Sanguinett­i
Evelyn Sanguinett­i
 ??  ?? Jeanne Ives
Jeanne Ives
 ??  ??

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