Chicago Sun-Times

Iris Martinez gets the job done in primary win for job-rich court clerk’s office

- MARK BROWN markbrown@suntimes.com | @MarkBrownC­ST

In hindsight, it almost looks obvious that state Sen. Iris Martinez would have had the inside track in the Cook County Circuit Court clerk’s race as the only woman and only Latino candidate among four contenders.

That’s hindsight. Before the election, Martinez was practicall­y taken for granted as she ran a low-profile campaign that caused some to question whether she even seriously wanted the job.

Many had expected Martinez to drop out after Cook County Democratic leaders slated Board of Review Commission­er Michael Cabonargi over her to be the party’s favored nominee.

Yet not for the first time in her political career, it was Martinez who got the last laugh Tuesday with a 50,000-vote winning margin over her nearest challenger, Cabonargi.

In the process, she collected a political daily double, also winning election as the new 33rd Ward Democratic committeep­erson.

But it was her nomination to the position of court clerk, an office of little interest to the general public but a coveted prize in the political world, that cements Martinez as a new power player in Cook County politics.

Why do the politician­s care so much about the clerk’s office?

Because of the jobs. The Circuit Court clerk controls about 1,400 positions, some 100 of which are Shakman exempt and eligible for patronage hires. And if we’re being real, there are ways for the pols to get their people into those other jobs as well.

The clerk’s office has long been of particular interest to Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan. Some of his top precinct captains have worked there over the years through various administra­tions.

Madigan listed Cabonargi on his 13th Ward palm card that precinct captains circulated to voters to inform them of the ward organizati­on’s endorsemen­ts.

But interestin­gly, Madigan’s 13th was among the 29 city wards carried Tuesday by Martinez on her way to racking up a 36,000-vote lead in the city over former Cook County Commission­er Richard Boykin and 47,000 votes over Cabonargi.

She coupled that with a 3,000vote margin over Cabonargi in the suburbs and 32,000 over Boykin.

Despite being the party’s pick, Cabonargi carried just three of 50 city wards, as Hispanic and African American wards showed a preference for their own candidates. Boykin won 18 wards.

The fourth candidate, Jacob Meister, cast himself as the only true reformer in the race and finished a distant last.

But Martinez’s appeal to female voters cut across racial and ethnic lines to allow her to win most of the North and Northwest Side wards as well as party stronghold­s such as the 11th, 13th and 14th, where the Latina-woman combinatio­n proved stronger than the white ward bosses’ preference­s.

It was almost as if Martinez ran a rope-a-dope strategy, waiting until the campaign’s final week to air a television commercial that attacked Cabonargi and Boykin while ignoring the boring duties of the clerk’s office to cast herself as “a progressiv­e fighting for women’s health, raising the minimum wage and coverage for pre-existing conditions.”

With little fundraisin­g at her back, the Martinez campaign cobbled together enough money for an ad buy of just over $200,000, said one of her top campaign advisers, Victor Reyes, the lawyer-lobbyist who served as intergover­nmental affairs director to Mayor Richard M. Daley.

Reyes said the campaign benefitted from the fact that more people than usual were watching television to get the latest informatio­n about the coronaviru­s and saw the commercial.

Campaign finance records show her largest donation was $50,000 from the owners of the Chicago Wolves hockey team. But she also got substantia­l help from her Democratic Senate colleagues, including former Senate President John Cullerton, new Senate President Don Harmon and Sen. Heather Steans.

Winning the Democratic nomination is usually tantamount to election in heavily Democratic Cook County, and there’s no reason to believe this year will be any different for Martinez.

If elected, she will replace Dorothy Brown, who is stepping down after 20 years in office.

“Her entire career people have underestim­ated her,” Reyes said of Martinez, who has represente­d the Northwest Side in Springfiel­d since 1983.

I’ll have to admit I’m one of them.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? State Sen. Iris Martinez files her nominating petitions for the Cook County Circuit Court clerk’s race in November.
SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO State Sen. Iris Martinez files her nominating petitions for the Cook County Circuit Court clerk’s race in November.
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