Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Final US House endorsemen­ts: Budzinski, Underwood, King

-

This is the last installmen­t of the Tribune Editorial Board’s endorsemen­ts for U.S. House races in the Nov. 8 general election.

12th District

After Joe Biden won the 2020 presidenti­al election, then President Donald Trump’s loyalists ginned up a lawsuit in Texas in a spurious bid to overturn Biden’s legitimate victory. Many of Trump’s enablers in Congress signed onto a court brief in support of that half-baked effort, including U.S. Rep. Mike Bost, a Republican from downstate Murphysbor­o. The U.S. Supreme Court rejected the lawsuit, but Illinoisan­s should never forget the cynical refusal by Bost and other Trump backers to accept that the former president was undeniably defeated.

Bost’s Democratic opponent, Homer “Chip” Markel of Carbondale, is a retired Illinois correction­s officer who needs political experience at the local level before making the jump to Congress.

Bost has been this district’s representa­tive in Washington since 2015, but we cannot back him in this race. No endorsemen­t.

13th District

It’s not only the Republican candidate vying for this remapped downstate district who believes that Biden’s move to forgive college debt is a bad way to spend American taxpayers’ money.

“I don’t think that’s the best way to tackle college affordabil­ity,” Democrat Nikki Budzinski said during a candidates forum organized by Illinois Public Media this month. “I’m concerned about how we’d be paying for that type of initiative.” Budzinski thinks a better approach would be to allow students to refinance their loans the same way homeowners refinance their mortgages. That makes sense.

Budzinski’s resume includes working as Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s senior adviser on labor issues, as well as chief of staff for Biden’s Office of Management and Budget. Her moderate views and strong experience should appeal to voters in this district, which stretches from East St. Louis to Champaign and includes parts of Decatur and Springfiel­d. She’s also staunchly pro-abortion rights and an advocate of gun control measures such as a federal assault weapons ban.

Her Republican opponent, Regan Deering, is a Decatur philanthro­pist and granddaugh­ter of the late Archer Daniels Midland CEO Dwayne Andreas. Deering supported the Supreme Court’s overturnin­g of Roe v. Wade and doesn’t see a need for

any new gun control measures in the wake of recent mass shootings in Highland Park, Uvalde, Texas, and Buffalo. “I think we have good laws on the books,” she said during the forum. Budzinski is the best choice for this district, and gets our endorsemen­t.

14th District

Democratic incumbent Lauren Underwood from Naperville likes to tout her track record for getting things done in Washington — and she should.

After joining Congress in 2019, she has gotten 10 of her bills signed into law, six during Trump’s presidency and four under Biden. One of those bills made lower-cost, generic insulin available to patients more quickly. She also has been accessible to residents in this west suburban district, holding more than 40 town hall meetings to better understand constituen­ts’ concerns. She’s passionate­ly pro-abortion rights, and calls the work of the House committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrecti­on at the Capitol “outstandin­g.”

Her Republican opponent, Scott Gryder of Oswego, continues to dodge the question of whether he thinks Biden was legitimate­ly elected president. He told us that “in the rush to confirm the election of Joe Biden by interested parties, evidence of election irregulari­ties was not fully considered.” Gryder, who is chairman of the Kendall County Board, doesn’t do his party, or America for that matter, any favors by stoking doubt about the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election. Our endorsemen­t goes to Underwood.

15th District

It would be hard to find someone more ensconced in Trump’s camp than Republican incumbent Mary Miller from downstate Oakland. On Jan. 6, 2021, she voted against certifying the election of Joe Biden as president, falsely claiming the results were marred by election fraud. She also called the House effort to investigat­e the insurrecti­on on the Capitol on Jan. 6 a “sham,” and says the best way to combat authoritar­ian dictators is to “reelect Donald Trump.” That’s a ridiculous idea.

Miller’s opponent, Democrat Paul Lange, is a retired commoditie­s broker from Quincy waging a grassroots campaign. We make no endorsemen­t in this race.

16th District

When a politician makes a decision with potentiall­y disastrous ramificati­ons for American democracy, it can undermine everything else he or she has done in office. That’s the case with U.S. Rep. Darin LaHood, a Republican from Peoria.

We endorsed him in 2016, 2018 and 2020, viewing him as a principled, independen­t conservati­ve who called out Democrats for spending recklessly and backed free and fair trade agreements that were good for farmers in his district. But like his downstate GOP colleague, Mike Bost, LaHood signed on to a court brief in support of a specious, last-minute effort by Texas to overturn the 2020 presidenti­al election by invalidati­ng Biden’s victories in Michigan, Georgia, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin based on unfounded claims of fraud.

He also voted against impeaching Trump following the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrecti­on at the Capitol. To his credit, on Jan. 6 he voted to certify Biden’s election as president, and told us that overturnin­g the results “of the Electoral College would far exceed the power given to Congress and the vice president in the Constituti­on, establish poor precedent and usurp the will of the American people.” We commend him for that, but cannot countenanc­e his decision right after the election to join in Texas’ amicus curiae brief.

His opponent is Democrat Lisa Haderlein, a member of the far northwest suburban Harvard City Council who acknowledg­ed to us that she doesn’t “have all the answers, but I am compassion­ate and hardworkin­g.” The Tribune makes no endorsemen­t in this race.

17th District

Republican Esther Joy King, 36, says she can empathize with families struggling to endure the body blow delivered by rising inflation. She grew up in Juarez, Mexico, and for the first three years of her life, her family was homeless. She blames the Biden administra­tion’s spending policies for the shape that the economy is in right now. “People in northweste­rn and central Illinois are struggling and all the administra­tion can talk about is more spending,” she told us.

The East Moline lawyer’s impressive background includes working as an aid worker for women’s rights in Afghanista­n and serving as a member of the U.S. Army Reserve Judge Advocate General’s Corps. Her Democratic opponent, Eric Sorensen, is a 46-year-old former meteorolog­ist from Rockford who supports federal codificati­on of a woman’s right to an abortion and reforming Congress’ budgeting process to pare down the federal deficit.

That’s good, but our endorsemen­t in the 17th goes to the Republican, King.

 ?? JOHN J. KIM/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? 17th Congressio­nal District Republican candidate Esther Joy King welcomes volunteers to her campaign’s headquarte­rs on Sept. 15 in Moline.
JOHN J. KIM/CHICAGO TRIBUNE 17th Congressio­nal District Republican candidate Esther Joy King welcomes volunteers to her campaign’s headquarte­rs on Sept. 15 in Moline.
 ?? ARMANDO L. SANCHEZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? U.S. House District 13 candidate Nikki Budzinski at a campaign event at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign on Aug. 25.
ARMANDO L. SANCHEZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE U.S. House District 13 candidate Nikki Budzinski at a campaign event at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign on Aug. 25.
 ?? STACEY WESCOTT/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood talks with students about mental health concerns at Neuqua Valley High School on April 18 in Naperville.
STACEY WESCOTT/CHICAGO TRIBUNE U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood talks with students about mental health concerns at Neuqua Valley High School on April 18 in Naperville.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States