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		Businessman Gary Rabine announces run for governor
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		[April 01, 2021] 
		By TIM KIRSININKASCapitol News Illinois
 tkirsininkas@capitolnewsillinois.com
 
 
  SPRINGFIELD – Businessman Gary Rabine on 
		Tuesday announced he will seek the Republican nomination for governor in 
		2022, becoming the third candidate to officially enter the field. 
 The suburban entrepreneur held a pair of kickoff events in Schaumburg 
		and Woodstock on Tuesday, lobbing criticisms at incumbent Gov. JB 
		Pritzker over the state’s property taxes and pandemic-related business 
		closures.
 
 The 57-year-old businessman is the owner and founder of Rabine Group, a 
		national exterior services company specializing in commercial paving 
		projects.
 
 Rabine is also an advisory board member and donor for Turning Point USA, 
		a conservative non-profit aimed at promoting conservative principles on 
		college campuses across the country, as well as an active member of the 
		Young Presidents’ Organization and the Republican Governors Association.
 
		
		 
		
 The announcement touted his entrepreneurial experience, saying that he 
		would bring a business-centric approach to create jobs and “let the 
		private sector thrive”.
 
 “We will lift up businesses and help develop the safest practices,” 
		Rabine said. “We will treat our small businesses and the millions of 
		jobs they create as the valued customers they all are to us.”
 
 Rabine said that he would assemble a team of “the best economic minds” 
		to establish an Illinois recovery plan with the goal of creating “50,000 
		jobs or more” per year by 2024. A reversal of what he says is an exodus 
		of businesses and residents.
 
 Although property taxes are set by local units of government, Rabine 
		said he would aim to cut property taxes by at least 50 percent by 2024 
		as part of his campaign platform.
 
 “We don't need to be the lowest taxes in the country, we just need to be 
		competitive,” Rabine said.
 
 Rabine said that Pritzker, who he called a “California trust fund 
		billionaire,” bought the governorship and closed thousands of businesses 
		with his COVID-19 executive orders.
 
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			Businessman Gary Rabine announces his candidacy for 
			governor at Bull Valley Golf Club in Woodstock Tuesday. Rabine is 
			the third candidate to announce they will seek the Republican 
			nomination for Governor in 2022. (Credit: facebook.com/garyrabineillinois) 
            
			 
            When asked by the Chicago Tribune Tuesday whether he accepted the 
			results of the 2020 presidential election, Rabine told the paper, 
			“I'm not smart enough to understand what was the end result, whether 
			it was stolen or not, and I would never say that.” 
            His comment drew backlash from the national Democratic Governors 
			Association and the Illinois Democratic County Chairs’ Association 
			Tuesday, with both organizations releasing statements condemning the 
			remarks.
 DGA Deputy Executive Director Wendi Wallace called the remarks 
			“dangerous” and said the comment “should disqualify him from running 
			for governor.”
 
 “Rabine's entrance into the race ensures the GOP primary will be an 
			all-out brawl to fight for the most conservative voters,” Wallace 
			said in the statement. “Illinois voters are not looking for a return 
			to the Trump administration, and they’ll reject Rabine and anyone 
			who shares his values at the ballot box.”
 
 IDCCA President Kristina Zahorik echoed the concerns.
 
 “Gary Rabine is either clueless or part of the conspiracy theory 
			crew who don’t believe Joe Biden was legally elected President,” 
			Zahorik said in a statement. “Either one is disqualifying to serve 
			as an elected officeholder.”
 
            
			 
			Rabine joins former state Sen. Paul Schimpf, of Waterloo, and 
			surrent state Sen. Darren Bailey, of Xenia, as the currently 
			declared candidates in the Republican primary. The primary election 
			is scheduled to take place on March 15, 2022.
 Editor's note: This story has been updated to reflect that Rabine's 
			comment on the results of the 2020 election was obtained in a 
			one-on-one interview between Rabine and the Chicago Tribune.
 
 Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan 
			news service covering state government and distributed to more than 
			400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois 
			Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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