Chicago Sun-Times

DURBIN WINS REELECTION BID

Senator fends off long-shot candidates for 5th term

- BY NADER ISSA, STAFF REPORTER nissa@suntimes.com | @NaderDIssa

Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, the state’s most recognizab­le politician and the Senate’s second-highest ranking Democrat, has fended off four long-shot candidates in a race that was never considered competitiv­e to win his fifth consecutiv­e term in the seat.

On what he said was his most “unusual” election night in four decades in Washington, Durbin held 52% of the vote as of 11 p.m. Tuesday with incomplete returns reporting. The senator’s GOP opponent, former Lake County Sheriff Mark Curran, sat at 41% and Chicago businessma­n Willie Wilson drew 4.1%. Two other candidates were below 2% each.

Durbin declared his win early Tuesday evening, telling reporters on a video call that “this is the most unusual victory speech I’ve ever given, sitting in my home in Springfiel­d, staring into an iPad.” He called the scene “sedate” as he sat alone in his living room instead of a packed election night party.

Illinois’ senior senator said his post- election priority is to hammer out a long-awaited second coronaviru­s relief package next week that has stalled in Congress in recent weeks.

Durbin has served as a prominent national voice against President Donald Trump, supporting the president’s impeachmen­t last winter and airing campaign ads this fall that featured his opposition to Trump, largely ignoring his opponents in the race.

Curran, a former Democrat turned Republican, pegged himself as “truly an independen­t” in his campaign to remove the longtime senator from Washington. The former sheriff has supported Trump but has also disagreed with the president on immigratio­n issues.

Curran refused to concede late Tuesday on a video call with reporters but acknowledg­ed “it doesn’t look good right now.” He went on to attack Durbin’s record in Washington.

“Dick Durbin’s going to meet his maker soon enough,” Curran said. “If I was Dick Durbin I wouldn’t dance too much with this victory because he’s not done right by the people of Illinois, and he’s going to be judged on that by the ultimate judge.”

Wilson, meanwhile, is less than two years removed from a Chicago mayoral campaign that grew his notoriety and was backed in his Senate campaign by the city’s largest police union and has also supported Trump.

Wilson, who tested positive for COVID-19 in the final stretch of the campaign, told the Sun-Times on a call Tuesday night that he was “not at all” conceding, holding out hope for a comeback victory.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH/AP POOL ?? Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., speaks in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 14.
SUSAN WALSH/AP POOL Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., speaks in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 14.

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