Daily Southtown

Primary results hint at softness of support for president and Trump

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By Alexandra Kukulka

Marjory Baker, an avid Orland Grassland volunteer by all accounts, was known for her passion for the outdoors, outgoing personalit­y and talent for writing poems.

Baker, known as Marnie, died March 14 from pneumonia. She was 72.

Gerry Murphy, her husband, said he’ll miss Baker’s outgoing and spontaneou­s personalit­y.

“She was always looking for the next challenge, and I really admired that about her,” Murphy said. “She could just connect with people in a way that I never could.”

Baker was born in Tenafly, New Jersey, but grew up in Chatsworth California, Murphy said. After graduating from high school, Baker started a career in marketing and sales promotion, he said.

She moved to Chicago for work, Murphy said, and worked for Leo Burnett Worldwide in advertisin­g. Her biggest claim to fame was that she helped create the McDonald’s Monopoly game.

In Chicago, Baker decided to take an acting class, where the pair met. They started a theater company together, where Murphy acted and Baker was producer and manager.

The pair moved to Orland Park 18 years ago, Murphy said. They married last October, Murphy said, and March 21, the day of her funeral service, was their fivemonth wedding anniversar­y.

Their home was about 1 mile from the Orland Grassland, Murphy said. Baker was a volunteer there and ultimately an Illinois master naturalist and an Orland Grassland site steward, he said.

Pat Hayes, another volunteer site steward, said she’ll always remember how eager Baker was. Baker was with the Orland Grassland volunteer group for about 15 years, Hayes said.

“She is a student of nature and she was trying to learn every aspect of it. She just dove right in,” Hayes said.

By Rick Pearson

Chicago will play host to President Joe Biden’s renominati­on for president at the Democratic National Convention in August, but the voting in Tuesday’s presidenti­al primary indicates the city’s welcome may be less than wholeheart­ed.

With mail-in ballots still being counted, results from the Chicago Board of Elections show that of the more than 300,000 Democratic ballots cast in the city, nearly 1 in 4 party voters — more than 73,000 — opted not to vote for president or cast a ballot for one of Biden’s three nominal challenger­s.

At the same time, the Republican primary election indicated a softness in support for former President Donald Trump in the suburbs, a key swing area that has gradually turned more Democratic.

Reflective of a low-enthusiasm election, nearly 15% of Democratic voters in Chicago chose to not cast a vote for president, according to unofficial results from Chicago election officials. In addition, more than 10% of city Democratic voters who filled out a ballot for president opted for someone other than Biden, the results showed.

Combined, that meant more than 24% of Chicago Democrats either didn’t vote for president or didn’t vote for the current president.

The number of voters who didn’t cast a presidenti­al vote likely included an unknown number who wrote in “Gaza” as part of an organized protest against Biden’s actions toward the Israel-Hamas war. Write-in votes are not legally counted in the city.

The unofficial outcome of the Democratic presidenti­al vote in Chicago shows Biden received 89.6%, compared with 4% apiece for Minnesota U.S. Rep. Dean Phillips and activist Marianne Williamson and 2.5% for entreprene­ur Frank “Frankie” Lozada.

Biden is not in danger of losing Illinois and its 19 electoral votes in November. But David Yepsen, former director of the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, said that if the support for Biden in about a half-dozen swing states is similarly soft, those states could end up going for Trump.

“It’s just an uninspirin­g, unexciting candidate at the top of the ticket,” Yepsen, a former national political journalist, said of Biden. “Voters could easily say ‘meh’ and not waste their time voting.

“I think in Illinois, that Democrats have that problem especially because it’s sort of taken for granted it’s going to be a Democratic vote, it’s a Democratic state,” Yepsen said. “And so, if you’re a Democrat, and you’re not excited about Joe Biden, why bother to vote?”

Yepsen said a lack of Biden coattails could come into play in closely fought U.S. Senate and congressio­nal races around the country, including one congressio­nal race in Illinois.

On Tuesday, the stage was set for the November showdown in the northwest and west central Illinois 17th Congressio­nal District, where freshman Democratic U.S. Rep. Eric Sorensen is being targeted by national Republican­s and their nominee, Joe McGraw of Rockford.

This past Tuesday’s results contrast with recent presidenti­al primary returns.

In 2020, with a contested primary for the Democratic nomination, only 2% of Democratic voters did not cast a ballot for president. Biden defeated U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont 53% to 42%. The two top candidates accounted for 95% of the presidenti­al votes cast.

Four years earlier, with a contested primary between Sanders and former Secretary of State and U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton of New York, the same percentage of Democratic voters in Chicago — only 2% — did not cast a ballot for a presidenti­al nominee. Clinton defeated Sanders 54% to 45%, and the two accounted for 99% of the presidenti­al ballots cast.

This time, before Illinois’ primary Election Day had even dawned, Biden had already amassed the needed number of nominating delegates to secure his renominati­on at the Democratic National Convention, which is being held at the United Center Aug. 19-22.

The results from this year’s presidenti­al primary election results most closely compare in recent times to the city’s 2000 Democratic primary, when then-Vice President Al Gore had effectivel­y locked up the nomination and rival former U.S. Sen. Bill Bradley of New Jersey had dropped out weeks earlier. This year’s primary resulted in a Chicago voter turnout just below 23%. In 2000, voter turnout was higher, at 33%. As in this year’s primary, there were no statewide contested offices in 2000.

In 2000, Gore won with 86%. But 15% of city Democrats casting ballots did not vote for president then, and 27% of them either did not voteforGor­eorcastavo­te for president.

At the time, many liberals were soured by the prospect of Gore serving as a continuati­on of a moderate Bill Clinton administra­tion and some became attracted to Ralph Nader’s Green Party candidacy.

Gore ultimately won the nomination and Illinois in the general election but was defeated by Republican George W. Bush in the controvers­ial Supreme Court-decided outcome that gave Florida and its electoral votes to the Republican.

Whatever problems Biden may have in the city, the primary results also point to difficulti­es in the suburbs for Trump and Republican­s seeking to make inroads after years of Democratic gains in the region.

Unofficial GOP primary results show Trump winning presidenti­al preference contests with 72% in DuPage County, 72.5% in Lake County, 76% in Kane County, 78.5% in McHenry County and 81% in suburban Cook County despite all of Trump’s formal opposition having dropped out of contention months and weeks earlier.

Trump’s best suburban showing was in Will County, where he garnered 84% of the vote.

Eric Adelstein, a longtime Chicago-based Democratic political consultant, said the overall numbers for Biden and Trump show that “obviously, what’s well documented, lots of people in this country don’t want either of them.”

But he said any loss of support for Biden by general election time will be minimal and will be more than offset by independen­t and Republican-leaning suburban women backing the president over issues such as abortion rights.

The question for Democrats, he said, is whether the tradition continues of a diverse political base coalescing for the general election fight.

“I think there’s no … greater motivator for Democrats to vote than Donald Trump. And it’s proven itself in the past,” Adelstein said. “Now, whether the past is prologue, we’re gonna find out in a major way.”

 ?? JEANNE STACEY ?? Marnie Baker, left, and Pat Hayes take part in an Important Bird Area designatio­n celebratio­n on Sept. 9, 2017.
JEANNE STACEY Marnie Baker, left, and Pat Hayes take part in an Important Bird Area designatio­n celebratio­n on Sept. 9, 2017.

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