Tuesday, November 09, 2010
 
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Races across the state are still up for grabs

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[November 09, 2010]  SPRINGFIELD -- The governor's race ended with a winner last Friday, but six days after Election Day several local, state and congressional races are still up for grabs.

HardwareGOP gubernatorial candidate Bill Brady conceded last week after Gov. Pat Quinn's lead grew to 20,000 votes. But several races, including key races in Illinois Senate District 22 and the 8th Congressional District, lack a clear winner.

The 8th Congressional race between incumbent Democrat Melissa Bean, D-Ill., and Republican challenger Joe Walsh is too close to call. Walsh, who has declared himself the victor, is up by 350 votes.

In the state Senate race in the 22nd District, incumbent Sen. Michael Noland, D-Elgin, is leading former Republican state Sen. Steven Rauschenberger by 400 votes.

Ken Menzel, Illinois State Board of Elections attorney, said all the races, including those with a declared winner, will have to wait for the local counties to produce a final tally.

"For the vast majority of the state, all of the counting will be done two weeks after Election Day, which this time around is the 16th, when the last of the absentee ballots can possibly be counted," he said.

Menzel said a few counties who missed the September deadline for sending out military ballots will be given extra time to report their results.

"We have a couple of jurisdictions where military ballot returns were extended for a couple of days, so we'll have a few jurisdictions here in Illinois that will go as late as the 19th," he said.

Willard Helander, the county clerk in Lake County, said the tight races in her area are creating more work for her, but she said she is used to the postelection craziness.

"Well, we're busy, but we always are postelection," Helander said. "People like to call and tell you that they couldn't find a parking place or they didn't like the way someone looked at them, so it's just the normal process."

Menzel said the official count from the State Board of Elections will come on Dec. 3.

For most candidates, who won't be sworn in until January, the vote certification process won't affect their term in office.

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But U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk, R-Ill., will have to wait until the vote is certified to go to Washington to serve out the last few weeks of President Barack Obama's term in the U.S. Senate. Former Gov. Rod Blagojevich appointed Roland Burris to the seat following Obama's presidential win, but the courts ruled that voters should pick Obama's successor in a special election included on last week's ballot.

Kirk was also elected to his own six-year term that will start in January. Kirk supporters are anxious to get Kirk seated in the U.S. Senate as quickly as possible, as his vote is important to any major piece of legislation Congress tries to pass in a lame-duck session.

Menzel said the date to certify the results for the special election has been moved up to make sure the transition is seamless.

"When the federal court ordered the special election be held, they ordered a declaration of results that would attempt to give the winner of that election as much time in the current Congress as possible without truncating the amount of time needed for absentee ballots to come in," he said.

[Illinois Statehouse News; By JENNIFER WESSNER]

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