Tuesday, September 21, 2010
 
sponsored by

GOP leaders hope 2010 is the new 1994

Send a link to a friend

[September 21, 2010]  SPRINGFIELD -- Heading into this November's general election, Illinois' Republican candidates are hoping 2010 is the new 1994.

HardwareBefore the 1994 statewide election, Illinois state government leaned Republican with Jim Edgar serving as governor. The six statewide offices were split, with Republicans Edgar, Bob Kustra and George Ryan serving as governor, lieutenant governor and secretary of state respectively.

Democrats Roland Burris, Dawn Clarke Netsch and Pat Quinn held the offices of attorney general, comptroller and treasurer respectively.

The General Assembly was split between parties as well. In the Illinois Senate, Republican James "Pate" Phillip served as president of the Senate, and the GOP had a five-seat majority over House Minority Leader Emil Jones Jr. and Democrats.

The Illinois House was a different matter, where Speaker of the House Michael Madigan and Democrats held firm control with a 16-seat majority over Republicans and House Minority Leader Lee Daniels.

Exterminator

The election in November 1994 changed the balance of Illinois state government. In January 1995, Republicans controlled all six statewide offices and held majorities in both legislative chambers.

Netsch, now a law professor at Northwestern University, lost in her bid to unseat Edgar as governor in 1994. She said voters' attitudes heading into this general election are similar to the ones she observed in 1994.

"There is a lot of anti-government feeling ... and the sense of frustration one picks up on part of the voters," she said.

Netsch said what happens in Illinois could reflect what is happening in national races, much like in the 1994 election, when Republicans seized control of the U.S. House of Representatives for the first time in 40 years.

Mike Lawrence, a longtime Statehouse observer, served as press secretary for Gov. Edgar and provided assistance to his re-election campaign in 1994.

Lawrence said straight-ticket voting is one mechanism that Illinois voters had in 1994 that might have helped Republicans win so convincingly in that election.

Straight-ticket voting, which was outlawed in 1997, allowed voters to select all candidates of one party on their ballot.

"Voters in Illinois could vote straight-ticket back in 1994. They can't do that today. When you do have a trend in favor of one party or the other, it typically is accentuated (with straight-ticket voting)," he said.

[to top of second column]

Lawrence also said that Edgar's influence as a popular incumbent may have contributed to a Republican sweep of statewide offices and majorities in both legislative chambers.

Republicans won't have the luxury of an incumbent at the top of the ticket in 2010. Sen. Bill Brady, R-Bloomington, is trying to unseat current Gov. Pat Quinn for the state's top post.

Brady is one of several GOP statewide candidates hoping to bring party balance to a state government controlled by Democrats.

Since 2006, Democrats have held all six statewide offices and majorities in both the state Senate and House.

But Denny Jacobs, a former Democratic state senator who served the Quad Cities, said Democratic voter turnout will drop for 2010. Jacobs suspects that thousands of voters who turned out for the 2008 election, when Barack Obama was running for president, won't be as energized for the 2010 slate of races.

"They've already said goodbye. The voting bloc that (Obama) brought in isn't going to be there this election," he said.

Jacobs also said that the mayoral race in Chicago may draw interest and fundraising away from statewide Democratic candidates.

Voters will have their say on Illinois' statewide races on Nov. 2.

[Illinois Statehouse News; By KEVIN LEE]

Library

< Top Stories index

Back to top


 

News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching and Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries

Community | Perspectives | Law and Courts | Leisure Time | Spiritual Life | Health and Fitness | Teen Scene
Calendar | Letters to the Editor