Former state senator, Republican AG candidate Schimpf to run for
governor
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[February 16, 2021]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Former state Sen. Paul
Schimpf, who spent four years representing the 58th District and was the
Republican Party’s candidate for attorney general in 2014, announced
Monday he will run for governor in 2022.
Schimpf made the announcement via videoconference at 10 a.m., beginning
a day of traveling the state with planned stops in Algonquin, Rock
Island and Morris Monday and Decatur, Morris and his hometown of
Waterloo Tuesday.
In his announcement, Schimpf sought to distance himself from Democratic
Gov. JB Pritzker on both issues of policy and life experience.
“My vision for Illinois involves a return to responsible government,
safe communities and economic growth in a free market,” he said. “We
need a governor who welcomes and insists upon legislative oversight of
his administration.”
A U.S. Naval Academy graduate and Marine Corps veteran, Schimpf was an
outspoken advocate for veterans in the Senate, serving as minority party
spokesperson on the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee. In 2005, Schimpf
served as the chief American advisor in the trial of Saddam Hussein in
Iraq. He rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel in the Marine Corps.
A biography distributed by Schimpf’s campaign emphasized that he wrote
an article in 2004 for the Military Law Review on “the need to establish
a victim-victim advocate evidentiary privilege within the Department of
Defense” in an effort to improve treatment of sexual assault victims.
Those practices were adopted in 2012.
Beginning in 2004, Schimpf was a judge advocate, or military attorney,
at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in San Diego, Calif. There, he served
as the head prosecutor, supervising other attorneys and litigating drug,
sexual assault and attempted murder cases, according to his campaign.
He was elected to the state Senate in 2017, retiring in January ahead of
his run for governor. He said his proudest accomplishment as state
senator was his work with a higher education working group that produced
legislative changes such as AIM High grants, which aim to provide
Illinois’ highest performing students with the means to remain in
Illinois for college.
He is an of counsel attorney with the law firm of Stumpf & Gutknecht
P.C. in Columbia, meaning he is not an equity partner in the firm.
“More important than all those experiences, however, is the perspective
that I will bring to the governor's office,” he said. “For far too long,
we have had literally governors who were either career politicians or
wealthy corporate executives who couldn't understand or empathize with
the struggles that the people of Illinois face.”
He touched on a number of issues that have been lynchpins of Republican
legislative dissent in recent years and weeks, noting a governor should
“give clear unambiguous support to the law enforcement community.”
He also addressed Illinois’ tax burden, quoting Ronald Reagan and
stating Illinois needs a governor who “understands those day-to-day
challenges that we all face” and who will “stand up to the entrenched
special interest groups that have done so much damage to our state.”
“I know what it feels like to wake up in the middle of the night
wondering how my wife and I are going to pay for our kids’ education, or
what the next property tax increase is going to do to our family
budget,” he said.
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Paul Schimpf, a former Republican candidate for
attorney general who retired as a state senator last month, on
Monday announced a bid for governor in 2022. (Credit:
Blueroomstream.com)
While Schimpf tied himself to popular Republican icon Reagan,
Illinois Democrats quickly sought tie Schimpf to a less popular,
more recent Republican elected official – ex-Gov. Bruce Rauner, who
presided over a two-year budget impasse which saw the state’s
backlog of unpaid bills balloon to over $16 billion.
Mary Morrissey, Executive Director of the Democratic Party of
Illinois, referred to Schimpf as a “Rauner/Trump acolyte” in a
statement.
“Schimpf was a consistent vote for Bruce Rauner’s catastrophic
agenda, even going along with his attempts to continue the historic
budget crisis that resulted in Illinois going 736 days without a
budget,” Morrissey said. “He supported Donald Trump’s re-election,
even after the former President failed at his central task of
keeping Americans safe by lying about the dangers of the coronavirus
and instead promoting conspiracy theories.”
Schimpf’s biography touted his vote against the compromise budget
which raised the state’s flat income tax and ended the two-year
budget impasse in 2017.
Kristina Zahorik, president of the Illinois Democratic County
Chairs’ Association, referred to Schimpf as “Rauner 2.0” and “a wolf
in sheep’s clothing.”
“Paul Schimpf has built a facade of being pro-labor and moderate,”
Zahorik said in a statement. “When given the opportunity to prove
that during his short time in the Illinois Senate, he opposed key
labor issues like supporting increasing the minimum wage. He also
consistently voted to extend the Rauner budget crisis that crippled
our state.”
Schimpf, however, emphasized an “every man” image, distancing
himself from the billionaire Pritzker and multi-millionaire Rauner.
He said he expects to do better than he did in his last statewide
run in 2014, when he challenged former Attorney General Lisa Madigan
as the Republican candidate. In that election, he lost by nearly
800,000 votes, gaining 37.8 percent of the vote.
“I did not have enough financial resources to get my message out,”
he said. “That is one of the lessons that I learned when I ran
statewide in 2014 for Illinois attorney general is that it doesn't
matter how good your message is, if you don't have the resources to
get it out, you will not be successful.”
His candidate committee, Citizens for Schimpf, had $149,529 cash on
hand as of Feb. 15, according to campaign database Illinois
Sunshine.
Still, Schimpf said, money can only go so far, and he cited the
failed Democratic presidential campaign of former New York City
Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
“You can't buy elections with money,” he said. “I know that Gov.
Pritzker has a lot of resources. I don't expect to be able to match
him dollar for dollar, but I do expect to be able to get my message
out with a lot of hard work. I do expect to be able to win this
race.”
The primary election for statewide office is scheduled for March 15,
and Schimpf joins businessman Gary Rabine, who is chairman and
founder of the paving, roofing and snow removal company Rabine
Group, in announcing their candidacies for governor.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
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