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Davis, the congressman, says he's running for president of the Cook County Board, which is the agency that runs the state's most populated county that includes Chicago. At least two lesser-known black candidates are interested in running: the Rev. Anthony Williams possibly as an independent and entrepreneur Eric Wallace as a Republican. But Republican party officials have rallied around U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk, a white, five-term congressman from Chicago's north suburbs. Kirk said Tuesday that the question for voters isn't a candidate's race but who can best represent all Illinois residents. "This seat is not owned by any one particular group," he said. America has had only six black senators, two during Reconstruction following the Civil War and four since the 1960s. The first black person to hold the Illinois seat was Carol Moseley Braun, who won it in 1992 and lost it six years later to Republican Peter Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald didn't seek re-election, and Obama captured the seat in 2004, trouncing another black candidate, conservative Republican Alan Keyes. Then came Burris. Those three senators, particularly Obama, have given the seat special significance for some black voters and leaders. It represents both important progress toward political equality and the long road that still lies ahead
-- after all, it's just one seat out of 100. "If you ask anybody on the street 'Should this be a black seat?' they'll tell you yes without even having to stop and think about it," said Timuel Black, a retired college professor and Chicago activist. However, black leaders are careful not to imply that a black candidate is more deserving of the seat. "This is no question that diversity in the U.S. Senate is lacking," said U.S. Rep. Barbara Lee, a Democrat from California who heads the Congressional Black Caucus, in an e-mail statement. "It is up to the people of Illinois to decide who represents them."
[Associated
Press;
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