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		Bailey wins GOP nomination to challenge Pritzker
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		[June 29, 2022]  
		By JERRY NOWICKI& PETER HANCOCK
 Capitol News Illinois
 news@capitolnewsillinois.com
 
 
  State Sen. Darren Bailey, who gained 
		statewide notoriety challenging Gov. JB Pritzker’s pandemic executive 
		order authority in court, will be the incumbent’s challenger in the 
		November general election. 
 As of about 9 p.m. Tuesday, Bailey had carried more than 55 percent of 
		the GOP vote from a field of six candidates, while tallies were 
		unofficial.
 
 “Tonight our movement sent a clear message to the establishment and the 
		political elites: We will not be ignored,” Bailey said in a victory 
		speech just before 9 p.m.
 
 Bailey, a farmer from downstate Xenia, gained the endorsement of former 
		President Donald Trump over the weekend. He surged late in the race 
		behind at least $17 million in funding – either directly to his campaign 
		fund or to political action committees attacking his opponent – from 
		Republican megadonor and shipping supply magnate Richard Uihlein.
 
 Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin, the early frontrunner in the race who 
		received $50 million from another GOP megadonor, Citadel founder Ken 
		Griffin, conceded about 8:25 p.m.
 
 The battle of billionaire benefactors which ended in Bailey’s nomination 
		drew national attention, largely because a campaign committee that has 
		received funding from Pritzker – the Democratic Governors Association – 
		spent approximately $26 million to influence the Republican primary, 
		largely on ads attacking Irvin and emphasizing Bailey’s conservative 
		record.
 
 The Irvin campaign pegged the total anti-Irvin or pro-Bailey spending by 
		Democrats around $36 million, with Pritzker’s campaign spending $6.5 
		million and the Democratic Party of Illinois spending $3.6 million.
 
 In a Tuesday night concession speech, Irvin wished Bailey well, later 
		saying, “the Republican Party must be a party of policies, not 
		personalities.”
 
 
		
		 
		“You know, our background, our record and our message were so 
		compelling, so overwhelmingly likely to prevail in November, JB Pritzker 
		and the Democratic Party spent the most amount of money in the history … 
		meddling in a Republican primary to take us down,” said Irvin, a combat 
		veteran who would have been the first Black nominee for Illinois 
		governor from either major political party.
 
 As the tides shifted toward Bailey in recent weeks, Irvin adopted a new 
		line of attack, repeatedly saying “a vote for Darren Bailey is a vote 
		for JB Pritzker,” arguing that the governor put his dollars behind 
		Bailey because he judged him as the weakest candidate.
 
 Bailey earlier in the campaign didn’t disagree with the take that 
		Pritzker viewed him as a weak candidate, but he warned Pritzker to “be 
		careful what you wish for.” He has stated his intent to reshape the 
		state’s GOP as a more conservative entity, including by endorsing 
		primary challengers of incumbent Republican state lawmakers.
 
 “We're all here because we know that Illinois is in trouble,” Bailey 
		said Tuesday night. “Decade after decade of mismanagement in 
		Springfield. Back-to-back billionaire governors who don't understand the 
		struggles of working people. And where has that gotten us? Nowhere.”
 
 Jesse Sullivan, a Petersburg venture capitalist who along with Irvin was 
		carrying about 15 percent of the GOP primary vote as of 9 p.m. said he 
		called Bailey on Tuesday night to say he was glad to lose to a man of 
		faith.
 
 “Now it’s all of our job to get behind Darren and make sure that we go 
		and try to beat JB Pritzker,” he said.
 
 Bailey’s nomination sets up a general election contest pitting 
		Pritzker’s progressive track record against a candidate who is far to 
		the right of previous leaders of the state’s Republican party.
 
 Pritzker, meanwhile, has touted Illinois’ firmer fiscal footing since he 
		became governor, pointing to a $1 billion contribution to the state’s 
		“rainy day” fund, an added $500 million pension payment beyond statutory 
		levels and about $900 million spent to pay down other interest-accruing 
		health insurance debts.
 
 
		
		 
		“Four years ago I told you that we’d reverse the fiscal damage that 
		Bruce Rauner did to this state, that I would end his hostage taking of 
		the budget, reverse his credit downgrades and improve our state's 
		finances,” Pritzker said in a Tuesday night speech that concluded just 
		before 10 p.m. “Today we've had four balanced budgets in four years. We 
		put a billion dollars in the state's rainy day fund. We reduced our 
		state's pension liability and now we've received six credit upgrades.”
 
 Bailey is expected to continue his criticism of Pritzker over the issues 
		of rising crime, high taxes and support for law enforcement, while 
		abortion rights will also be a central issue.
 
 During his first term, Pritzker signed a sweeping abortion rights bill, 
		the Reproductive Health Act, as well as legislation repealing a law 
		requiring abortion providers to notify the parents of a minor child 
		seeking an abortion.
 
		He is also calling a special session of the General Assembly in the 
		coming weeks to focus on legislation protecting access to abortion, a 
		move he announced moments after the U.S. Supreme Court released a 
		decision overturning the landmark 1973 ruling in Roe vs. Wade.
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			Republican nominee for governor, state Sen. Darren 
			Bailey of Xenia, is pictured during a victory speech Tuesday night 
			in downstate Effingham. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com) 
            
			
			
			 
		On Tuesday night, the governor led his supporters in a chant of “we will 
		not go back.”
 Bailey, by contrast, is a conservative who opposes abortion rights and 
		has been endorsed by some of the state’s most prominent anti-abortion 
		groups.
 
 The pair’s previous disagreements on pandemic response and executive 
		authority will also likely play a role in the campaign, as will Bailey’s 
		endorsement from Trump and nationwide rising inflation and gas prices.
 
 Pritzker touted his pandemic response Tuesday night, his backing of 
		marijuana legalization, and added funding for state police and violence 
		prevention programs.
 
 
		
		 
		He also gave a window into the line of attack he’d employ in the coming 
		months against the candidate that his dollars helped to propagate in the 
		primary.
 
 “A few days ago, Donald Trump came to our state and he did what he does 
		best – spew bile on the ground and hope that it takes root in our soil. 
		And proudly standing by his side was the Republican nominee for governor 
		of Illinois, Darren Bailey,” Pritzker said. “Let me be clear, someone 
		who seeks out and accepts the endorsement of a racist, misogynistic, 
		homophobic, xenophobic, twice impeached former president does not 
		deserve to come anywhere near the state's highest office.”
 
 Pritzker had a nominal primary challenger in Chicago area nurse Beverly 
		Miles, but that race was called in Pritzker’s favor about a half hour 
		after polls closed with Pritzker carrying more than 90 percent of the 
		vote unofficially.
 
 Secretary of state
 
 For the first time in nearly a quarter century, Democratic Secretary of 
		State Jesse White was not on the ballot Tuesday, having announced his 
		retirement after six terms.
 
 On the Republican side, state Rep. Dan Brady had a wide lead over former 
		central Illinois prosecutor John Milhiser, pulling more than 
		three-quarters of the vote as of 10:30 p.m.
 
 Brady, of Bloomington, is a funeral director by profession and a partner 
		in the funeral home firm Kibler-Brady-Ruestman. He served as McLean 
		County coroner from 1992 until he was elected to the Illinois House in 
		2000, rising to the post of assistant minority leader.
 
 The Democratic winner was Alexi Giannoulias, a former state treasurer 
		from 2007 to 2011 and unsuccessful candidate for U.S. Senate in 2010. 
		After public life, from 2012 to 2018, he held a job in wealth management 
		at the Chicago office of Bank of New York Mellon, and in 2019 he 
		announced the formation of his own private investment company, Annoula 
		Ventures. He said he wouldn’t be involved with that private investment 
		vehicle if elected secretary of state.
 
 
		
		 
		Giannoulias had a lead of about 120,000 votes with 60 percent of votes 
		recorded as of about 10:30 p.m.
 
 The office is primarily known for administering motor vehicle services – 
		driver’s licenses and vehicle registrations – but it reaches far beyond 
		that. The Illinois secretary of state is also the state librarian, which 
		provides services to public libraries throughout the state. It also 
		manages the state archives, serves as the state’s official recordkeeper, 
		administers lobbying laws and operates its own police force.
 
 The major issues in the race will largely center on modernization of the 
		office and shortening wait times at driver services facilities.
 
 Attorney general
 
 Southern Illinois attorney Thomas DeVore’s lead in the Republican 
		primary for attorney general was substantial enough that Deerfield 
		attorney Steve Kim conceded just after 10:30 p.m.
 
 DeVore was the attorney who represented Bailey in his lawsuits 
		challenging Pritzker’s COVID-19 mitigation orders while Kim had the 
		backing of megadonor Ken Griffin and a late endorsement from former 
		Illinois Gov. Jim Edgar.
 
 DeVore had a lead of about 60,000 votes with 60 percent of votes counted 
		as of 10:30 p.m.
 
 He will go on to face incumbent Democrat Kwame Raoul, who did not have a 
		primary opponent.
 
 Treasurer & Comptroller
 
 Neither’s party’s voters had a choice in the treasurer’s race or for 
		that of state comptroller Tuesday.
 
		
		 
		ncumbent Comptroller Susana Mendoza, of Chicago, had no primary 
		challenger, while McHenry County Auditor Shannon Teresi ran unopposed on 
		the GOP side. 
 Treasurer Michael Frerichs, of Champaign, ran unchallenged to retain the 
		role as the state’s chief investment officer, while state Rep. Tom 
		Demmer, R-Dixon, had no challenger on the GOP side.
 
		
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		service covering state government that is distributed to more than 400 
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		Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |