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"Rahm Emanuel is probably the most polarizing figure for our base, the Republican base, in the state,' said Pat Brady, who is no relation to the Republican gubernatorial candidate. "So every time he comes out and starts talking about what he's going to do as mayor it motivates our people to get out." Democrats disagree. The way they see it, the buzz about the mayor's race, with so many candidates and campaign workers knocking on doors collecting signatures to get on the ballot, will energize residents to vote in November. And in a city as overwhelmingly Democratic as Chicago, that can only help Quinn and Giannoulias. "We had to wake people up from their political slumber and this is doing it," Sen. Dick Durbin said. History may be on the Democrats' side. Political observers point to 1982 when the November election for governor coincided with a similarly wide open Chicago mayoral race in which candidates tried to drum up support for an election months away. "You had the tribal factions in Chicago, the white ethnics, African Americans, the North Side, the South Side machine all looked at the general election sort of like spring training for the mayoral election" the next year, Wheeler said. That meant far more Chicago voters turned out than expected, he said, and Democrat Adlai Stevenson came within a just more than 5,000 votes of what would have been a stunning upset after trailing Republican Jim Thompson in the polls by double digits.
Chicago's political machine is not nearly as powerful as in 1982 but Wheeler said the candidates still may want to use the November election as a "dress rehearsal." Democratic committeemen in various city wards will have added incentive to get voters to the polls: Prove to the candidates that they are worth being taken seriously and courted. "The higher the number the bigger player they will be in the mayoral race," said Scott Cisek, political director for the Cook County Democratic Party. But even Durbin said everybody is guessing at just what the mayor's race will mean to the statewide races. "Anybody who tells you they know the answer is just making it up," he said. "This (a wide open mayor's race) happens in Chicago every other generation ... and an off-year election with a president from Chicago, that's never happened before."
[Associated
Press;
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