"The races have been unusually nasty and focused not on the issues
but the personalities," said Jim Nowlan, a former state lawmaker who
now works with the University of Illinois' Institute of Government
and Public Affairs. Indeed.
Questions about inflated military service, fiscal integrity after
the failure of a family bank, basic competence and a sketchy budget
plan have dogged the candidates for U.S. Senate and Illinois
governor in television, Internet and radio ads -- while clogging the
airwaves with a persistent negativity on top of the dismal lingering
of the recession and Illinois’ $13 billion budget deficit.
"If voters were depressed before the campaign started, I imagine
they're really depressed now," said Kent Redfield, a professor of
political science at the University of Illinois Springfield.
But the race was still on Monday, as gubernatorial candidates
Gov. Pat Quinn and his Republican challenger state Sen. Bill Brady
of Bloomington both scheduled fly-arounds of the state. Brady
started in Chicago and was slated to visit Springfield, Champaign
and Cahokia before ending with a rally in Wheaton. Quinn began in
Chicago and planned visits to Rockford, the Quad Cities, Peoria,
Champaign, Cahokia and Carbondale before ending back in Chicago.
U.S. Senate hopefuls Democratic Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias and
Republican congressman Mark Kirk were making similar whirlwind tours
of the state to grab the votes of those still undecided.
However, 586,349 voters have already decided and voted during the
state's early, absentee and grace period voting, according to Rupert
Borgsmiller, assistant executive director of the Illinois State
Board of Elections.
"We still have in-person absentee voting today, so the numbers
could go up," Borgsmiller said.
He expects a total turnout of around 50 percent of the state's
7.4 million registered voters, in keeping with tallies of past
gubernatorial elections. The 2006 contest of now-convicted Democrat
Gov. Rod Blagojevich and Republican former Treasurer Judy Baar
Topinka saw 48.6 percent of voters turn out, Borgsmiller said.
He noted the highest turnout for a gubernatorial election since
1978 came in 1982, when 65 percent of registered voters turned out
for the contest of Republican Gov. Jim Thompson and Democratic
former U.S. Sen. Adlai Stevenson III.
"All of the parties have been working on get-out-the-vote, and
tomorrow we'll find out who did the best job," Borgsmiller said.
But when voters do get out and vote, they don't necessarily have
the best candidates to choose from, Redfield said.
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Kirk's questionable military service and Giannoulias' failed
family bank may have created fodder for negative political ads, but
also raised doubts among voters.
"No one is running through walls to vote for either one of these
candidates," Redfield said. "There is not a lot of enthusiasm out
there."
A Public Policy Polling survey on Monday had Kirk leading
Giannoulias 46-42 percent for President Barack Obama's old Senate
seat.
Quinn and Brady appear to be faring no better.
"You've got two accidental candidates," Redfield said, referring
to the conservative Brady's slim 193-vote primary win over state
Sen. Kirk Dillard of Hinsdale and the liberal Quinn's elevation to
governor from lieutenant governor in early 2009 after Blagojevich
was impeached, convicted and thrown out of office by lawmakers.
"What are the chances that even one of these guys would be a
nominee, and now we have both of them," Redfield said.
Quinn is pushing a 1-percentage-point -- or 33 percent --
increase in the state's income tax to primarily fund education,
while Brady is calling for a 10 percent across-the-board cut in
state government and placing the State Board of Education under the
governor's control.
The same survey had Brady leading Quinn 45-40 percent.
The recession and an anti-incumbent mood among voters have
Democratic officeholders nervous -- "Democrats are going to get
killed, it's just how many," Redfield said -- but he still expects
Democrats to hang on to control of the legislature since the state's
map of legislative districts was drawn by Democrats.
But once the election is over, voters may start holding their
breath, as the re-elected or newly elected switch from campaign mode
to governing mode -- we hope.
"I'm sure the race has been all about winning and not about
governing," Nowlan said. "Precious little thought has been given to
governing."
[Illinois
Statehouse News; By MARY MASSINGALE]
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