Thursday, September 09, 2010
 
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GOP momentum has Dems spending for Statehouse seats

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[September 09, 2010]  SPRINGFIELD -- If the Republicans have the momentum this election year, the Democrats in Illinois have the cash. And they're spending it.

HardwareAn examination of three close races for the state Legislature shows that while the polls may be close or even trending for the GOP, the Democrats are raising more and spending more.

But money-watchers at the Capitol say there is more to each race than just the race for dollars. And, as always, the candidate who spends the most money will not necessarily be the winning candidate.

But Cindi Canary, director of the Illinois Campaign for Political Reform, said it's difficult to win without spending.

"Money isn't everything," Canary said. "But without money it is almost impossible to get your message out to voters, to make sure your name is lodged in their brain and they know the kinds of things you stand for."

Democrats in two targeted races for the Illinois Senate and one targeted race for the Illinois House have, according to the most up-to-date records, outspent their Republican opponents by a wide margin.

Exterminator

In the 71st House District in the Quad Cities, Democrat Dennis Ahern has so far spent more than $58,000 to replace the retiring state Rep. Mike Boland, D-East Moline. Republican Rich Morthland has spent about $26,000 to do the same. The candidates' first 2010 report to the State Board of Elections showed that Morthland had over $25,000 on hand at the end of June while Ahern had just over $5,000. Neither candidate has released any spending reports since the end of June.

In the 49th Senate District, state Sen. Deanna Demuzio, D-Carlinville, has spent nearly $77,000 to hold on to her seat. Republican challenger Sam McCann has spent just less than $54,000 to try to take her spot in Springfield. The two had similar cash reserves at the end of June. Demuzio reported $73,932 on June 30, and McCann reported he had $79,513 on hand. They have also been silent about spending since then.

In the 40th Senate District, incumbent state Sen. Toi W. Hutchinson, D-Olympia Fields, has spent over $100,000 to keep what many politicos say is a vulnerable seat. Hutchinson spent $30,095 between July 2009 and the end of that year, and another $72,389 between January and the end of June this year. Her Republican challenger, Adam Baumgartner, has spent just over $46,000. But Hutchinson has another six figures to spend. Her latest report to the State Board of Elections showed she had $107,521 on hand. Baumgartner had just over $3,100. Both have aired TV commercials since that report and have been silent about their spending amounts.

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University of Illinois at Springfield political science professor Chris Mooney said no one should be surprised by the cost, or the races. He said open seats, like the Quad Cities race, and close races like the other two always attract attention and money.

"The parties focus their money. ... They're rational just like the donors are rational," he said. "Are they going to waste their money?"

He said the Hutchinson and Demuzio races are even more important to that strategy this year.

"Hutchinson (is) a Democrat in a fairly swing district. There's a lot of exurban and rural areas," Mooney said. "And Demuzio -- there's a lot of Democrats down there, more than you'd expect in most downstate districts. But it's still downstate and very conservative in a lot of places in that district."


Other races, particularly in the Chicago suburbs, are just as heated and even more expensive. Canary said some of the cost of these races is just the cost of buying ads in the state's varied media markets. But she said voters should always look online and ask where all that money is coming from.

"Money is very telling," Canary said. "One of the things that you can find out is, who are the most significant donors to your candidate? Do they represent specific industries or interests, and how do you feel about those industries and interests?"

Both Canary and Mooney say money is not inherently evil, but it is something that voters need to keep an eye on.

[Illinois Statehouse News; By BENJAMIN YOUNT and JENNIFER WESSNER]

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