New faces receive appointments to Illinois Senate
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[February 09, 2021]
By SARAH MANSUR
Capitol News Illinois
smansur@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD — Two new Democratic Senators
were sworn in Saturday to fill vacancies in the Illinois General
Assembly.
Doris Turner, a former Springfield city councilperson, and Mike Simmons,
former policy director for Mayor Rahm Emanuel, are also the two newest
members of the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus.
The two Democratic appointments to the Senate follow the recent
selections of Adriane Johnson, Cristina Pacione-Zayas and Sally Turner
to vacancies in the 30th, 20th and 44th Senate Districts, respectively.
They’ve replaced retiring senators through appointments from party
officials.
Mike Simmons
Simmons fills the vacancy left by former Sen. Heather Steans, who
resigned at the end of January from her seat representing the 7th Senate
District on Chicago’s north side.
He was chosen by the Democratic committeemen and committeewomen from the
Chicago wards that comprise the 7th Senate District.
He is the first openly gay person to serve in the Illinois Senate, the
first person of color to represent Chicago’s north side lake front
district and first Ethiopian-American to serve in the General Assembly,
Simmons wrote in a statement on social media.
Simmons beat out Rep. Kelly Cassidy, D-Chicago, who was the first to
state her intention to seek the seat. Cassidy, who is committeewoman for
the 49th ward, had a proxy represent her during the selection process.
In his written statement, Simmons thanked Steans for “her extraordinary
record of progressive accomplishments,” and he also thanked Cassidy for
“her steadfast leadership and commitment to equity for the people of
Illinois.”
“I thank my family, the community and the local Democratic leadership
for placing their confidence in me,” Simmons wrote in the statement. “I
am excited to partner with Rep. Kelly Cassidy, Leader Greg Harris, the
Illinois Legislative Black Caucus and our elected officials within and
surrounding District 7 to bring outstanding public service to our
neighborhoods and fight for everyday people from all backgrounds,” he
wrote.
In her own statement issued Saturday after the vote, Cassidy
congratulated Simmons and pledged “to continue to be a relentless voice
for our values in the Illinois House of Representatives.”
Simmons is the founder and CEO of Blue Sky Strategies, a firm
specializing in “equitable urban planning, youth empowerment, government
accountability, and anti-racist public policy,” according to the
website.
He also serves as the deputy director of the My Brother’s Keeper
Alliance, an initiative of the Obama Foundation that seeks to build
“safe and supportive communities for boys and young men of color where
they feel valued and have clear pathways to opportunity,” the website
states.
Before that, he worked as a deputy commissioner in the city of Chicago’s
Department of Planning and Development, and as policy director under
Rahm Emanuel’s administration.
Doris Turner
Doris Turner will finish out the term of former Sen. Andy Manar, who
resigned last month as Senator of the 48th Senate District in central
Illinois to take a job as a senior advisor for Gov. JB Pritzker.
She was appointed Saturday by the Democratic county chairs of the 48th
Senate District. The 48th Senate District includes all or parts of
Christian, Macon, Macoupin, Madison, Montgomery, and Sangamon counties.
She served on the Sangamon County Board before her election to the city
council in 2011, and will step down from her role as Sangamon County
Democratic Party chair, said Dan Kovats, who is first-vice chair of the
Sangamon County Democratic Party.
Turner, out of eight total candidates, was the unanimous choice of the
six county chairs on Saturday, according to a press release. Kovats was
the Sangamon County chair proxy for Turner.
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In the release, Doris Turner described the Senate appointment as an
honor of a lifetime.
“We are facing a difficult road ahead as our state rebuilds from the
devastation of COVID-19. The gravity of this will weigh on me every
day as I work to get our kids back in school and our businesses
reopen. From Bunker Hill to Decatur and everywhere in between, it’s
time to roll up our sleeves and get to work,” she said.
Sally Turner
On the other side of the aisle and unrelated to Doris Turner,
Republicans chose Sally Turner, a former Logan County clerk, to fill
the vacancy created by former Sen. Bill Brady’s resignation in
December.
She was chosen last month by Republican County chairs of Logan,
McLean, Menard, Sangamon and Tazewell counties. Parts or all of
those five counties comprise the 44th Senate District.
Turner served six terms as Logan County clerk, beginning with her
first election to the post in 1994. Before that, she was a juvenile
probation officer and then spent six years as a paralegal in the
Office of the Logan County State’s Attorney.
“My focus is to bring financial stability and economic growth to
Illinois by fighting for lower taxes, balanced budgets and smarter
government,” Turner said in a press release. “While holding tight to
my conservative values, I will work across the aisle to find common
ground beneficial to the people I represent and the State of
Illinois.”
Cristina Pacione-Zayas
Another recently-named Senator has been seated since December.
Cristina Pacione-Zayas was selected by Cook County Democratic Party
committee members the fill the vacancy in the 20th Senate District
left by former Sen. Iris Martinez, who was elected to serve as clerk
of the Cook County Circuit Court in November.
The 20th Senate District covers neighborhoods on the northwest side
of Chicago.
After her appointment to the seat, Pacione-Zayas stepped down from
her role as associate vice president for the policy and leadership
department at the Erikson Institute, an early childhood development
organization in Chicago.
Pacione-Zayas said she looks forward to applying child development
science to policy making in the General Assembly.
“You can count on me to help fellow legislators ‘find the baby’ in
the work, and to advance an anti-racist framework that dismantles
systemic racism and economic exploitation so we can all thrive,” she
said in a statement.
Adriane Johnson
Johnson, who most recently served on the Buffalo Grove Park District
Board, has been serving in the General Assembly since October, when
she was appointed by Lake County Democratic Party officials to fill
the seat left vacant by the resignation of Terry Link, who had
represented the 30th Senate district since 1997.
Link resigned in September, shortly before he pleaded guilty in
federal court to a felony tax evasion charge for underreporting his
income by more than $73,000 on his federal and state tax returns
from 2012 through 2016.
Johnson is the first Black representative of the 30th Senate
District, which covers a large swath of the northern suburbs in Lake
County.
She is president of the Buffalo Grove-Lincolnshire Chamber of
Commerce, serves as chair of the Illinois Association of Park
Districts' Board of Trustees, and is a member of the Buffalo Grove
Board of Fire and Police Commissioners.
“I’m truly honored and humbled by this entire experience,” Johnson
said in a news release. “We have a lot of important issues to tackle
this year, and I’m ready to serve the residents of the 30th
District.”
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