6 Republicans vie to unseat Pritzker
Send a link to a friend
[June 25, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
& JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
news@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Republican voters in Illinois
will choose from six candidates to challenge incumbent Democratic Gov.
JB Pritzker in the upcoming June 28 primary.
The field includes a conservative farmer and state lawmakers who is the
recent polling frontrunner, the mayor of Illinois’ second largest city,
a former state senator and three political newcomers.
Darren Bailey, 56, is a conservative state senator from Xenia, a small
town in southern Illinois about 40 miles northeast of Mt. Vernon, where
he owns and operates a farm.
Bailey was first elected to the Illinois House in 2018 and served one
term before deciding to run for an open Senate seat that was vacated by
the retirement of former Sen. Dale Righter, R-Mattoon. Not including
ceremonial resolutions, Bailey has been the chief sponsor of just two
bills that successfully became law in his time in office, one doubling
the fines for passing a school bus and another amending requirements for
becoming a firefighter.
In 2019, while still in the House, he joined a group of six other
Republicans in cosponsoring a resolution, which never received a vote,
that would have urged Congress to make the city of Chicago a separate
state. He’s since referred to the resolution as a “warning shot” meant
to show his displeasure with the policies in Chicago, and he said he no
longer favors separating the city from the state.
During one debate in this year’s gubernatorial race, Bailey repeated his
criticism of Chicago, referring to it as a “crime-ridden, corrupt,
dysfunctional hellhole.”
He is perhaps best known for filing lawsuits challenging Pritzker’s
COVID-19 mitigation orders. His attorney through that litigation was
Thomas DeVore, who is now a Republican candidate for attorney general.
The pair achieved brief success in a Clay County circuit court before a
Sangamon County appellate court overruled the decision that would have
freed Bailey from the orders.
In May 2020, his colleagues voted to remove him from the House chamber
for refusing to wear a mask in compliance with COVID-19 mitigations. The
House vote was 81-27 in favor of removing him from the remainder of the
day’s proceedings.
On the campaign trail, Bailey has stressed his opposition to abortion,
his support for Second Amendment gun rights, his conservative approach
to taxes and spending, and his strong support for law enforcement and
cracking down on crime.
Opponents, however, have pointed to his frequent votes to raise property
taxes while he served 17 years on a Clay County school board.
He planned to attend a weekend rally in which former President Donald
Trump will be in Quincy to endorse Congresswoman Mary Miller in her 15th
District primary, and he’s been courting Trump’s endorsement for months.
It was unclear Friday whether the former president would give it to him,
however.
His largest financial backer, Richard Uihlein who founded the shipping
supply company Uline, has given Bailey more than $9 million and spent
another $8 million with political action committees that have attacked
Bailey’s opponents.
Bailey’s running mate is Stephanie Trussell, a former radio talk show
host from Chicago.
Richard Irvin currently serves as Mayor of Aurora, Illinois’
second-largest city, where he was first elected in 2017. He was
reelected in 2021.
Irvin, 52, had previously run for that office twice before, in 2003 and
2009, losing both times. But in 2007, he was elected alderman at-large
on the Aurora City Council, the first Black candidate to hold the post.
Irvin enlisted in the U.S. Army shortly after graduating high school and
served in the Gulf War. He later earned a bachelor’s degree from Robert
Morris College in Chicago and a law degree from Northern Illinois
University.
After law school, he worked as an assistant state’s attorney in Cook
County. He has also worked in private practice.
In his bid for governor, Irvin is part of a “slate” of candidates
endorsed by billionaire businessman Ken Griffin, founder of the hedge
fund company Citadel, who has contributed $50 million to Irvin’s
campaign. Griffin, Illinois’ most prominent conservative political
donor, told employees this week that he was planning to move Citadel’s
corporate headquarters to Miami.
Irvin’s campaign so far has focused largely on crime. He has been
harshly critical of Pritzker for signing a criminal justice reform bill,
known as the SAFE-T Act, which, among other things, will eliminate the
use of cash bail starting next year. He has also criticized actions of
the Prisoner Review Board under the Pritzker administration as well as
Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx.
He has also touted his conservative approach to taxes and spending, as
well as his support for ethics reform in state government and his
criticism of the so-called “Madigan machine.”
The early polling frontrunner who has since faltered, Irvin has more
recently faced a barrage of criticisms from Democrats and Republicans
alike. The Democratic Governors Association has spent millions on attack
ads against him, as has a political action committee tied to Uihlein.
[to top of second column]
|
The Republican candidates for governor are pictured
in Capitol News Illinois file photos. From left to right, they are
Richard Irvin, Darren Bailey, Jesse Sullivan, Paul Schimpf and Gary
Rabine. Not pictured is Max Solomon.
His latest response to the Democratic money being spent in the GOP
primary is that Gov. JB Pritzker is trying to trick voters into giving
him an easier primary opponent, repeating several times that “a vote for
Darren Bailey is a vote for JB Pritzker.”
On abortion, Irvin has called himself “pro-life,” with exception for
rape, incest and life of the mother. He also said he would look to
reinstate parental notice of abortion requirements.
His running mate is state Rep. Avery Bourne, a Republican from
Morrisonville, one of the most outspoken opponents of abortion in the
General Assembly.
Jesse Sullivan is a political newcomer in Illinois. He is the founder
and CEO of the venture capital firm Alter Global. He now lives in
Petersburg, a small town in Menard County that is about 25 miles north
of Springfield.
His campaign has tried to push the narrative that he’s surging in recent
weeks, rolling out endorsements such as state Rep. Ryan Spain, R-Peoria,
who had previously backed Irvin.
Sullivan has campaigned primarily as a religious conservative who
supports a plan called “universal school choice,” which would offer
parents “backpack scholarships” to send their children to any school
they choose, whether it be public, private, religious or charter.
He said when a leaked draft of the supreme court decision overturing the
landmark Roe v. Wade was published, he dropped to his knees and prayed.
He also says he wants to ban political contributions from teachers
unions, limit the kinds of materials that can be used in sex education
and forbid instruction in sexual orientation and gender identity in
grades K-3. That’s part of his “Power to the Parents” agenda which has
been the backbone of his late push for publicity in an effort to gain
ground in the race.
Many of the problems facing society, he has said, stem from a lack of
“faith and fatherhood.”
His running mate is Kathleen Murphy, a former communications director
for Jeanne Ives, the former state representative who unsuccessfully
challenged then-Gov. Bruce Rauner in the 2018 GOP primary.
Paul Schimpf is a former state senator from Waterloo, in Monroe County,
about 30 miles south of St. Louis. He was elected in 2016 and served in
the state Senate for four years.
Born at Scott Air Force Base in the Metro East area, Schimpf, 51,
graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy and served in the Marine Corps
from 1993 to 2013. While in the Marine Corps, he earned a law degree
from Southern Illinois University and served for a time as a judge
advocate, or military attorney.
In 2005, he was deployed to Iraq and served as the chief American
advisor to prosecutors in the trial of Saddam Hussein.
In 2014, Schimpf ran unsuccessfully for attorney general, losing to
incumbent Democrat Lisa Madigan. Two years later, he ran successfully
for the state Senate, defeating former Lt. Gov. Sheila Simon.
On his campaign website, Schimpf primarily touts his promise to fight
political corruption in state government, criticizing Pritzker for not
standing up to former House Speaker Michael Madigan, who was indicted
earlier this year on corruption charges.
Receiving the endorsement of the Chicago Tribune, Schimpf has talked
about empowering local school boards and making homeschooling and
private schooling more accessible as part of his “Parents Bill of
Rights” platform.
His running mate is McHenry County Board member Carolyn Schofield.
Gary Rabine is the founder and owner of the Rabine Group, a network of
companies that specialize in paving, roofing and other kinds of exterior
work.
His pitch has been that his business experience makes him the candidate
to “turn around” Illinois, and, along with Sullivan, he has pushed for
creating an option in state law to allow Chicagoans and Cook County
residents to recall State’s Attorney Kim Foxx.
Rabine has touted unspecified pension reform as a remedy for high
property taxes, which are levied by local governments and not the state,
noting he’d like to “crush” them to the national average.
His running mate is Palatine Township Highway Commissioner Aaron Del
Mar.
Max Solomon is a Hazel Crest attorney and immigrant from Nigeria who has
taken some of the most conservative stances in the GOP field, such as
saying he would call in the National Guard to Chicago “yesterday,” that
he believes “life begins before we were formed,” and he does not believe
Joe Biden was rightfully elected president in 2020.
He hasn’t reported much fundraising, with his last two disclosures
including loans from American Express and Capitol One amounting to
$7,500.
His running mate is Latasha Fields, a Chicago resident who is active in
a number of home schooling and parental rights organizations.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government that is distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |