A look at the statewide races as election enters its final week
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[November 01, 2022]
By JERRY NOWICKI
& PETER HANCOCK
News@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – In the Tuesday, Nov. 8,
election, Illinois voters will cast a ballot on a state constitutional
amendment, every statewide constitutional office, every seat in the
General Assembly and, in 12 counties, a spot on the state’s Supreme
Court.
For more information about voting, including how to and where to cast an
in-person ballot on election day and prior to it, you can visit your
local election authority. You can find information for all local
election officials on the Illinois State Board of Elections website.
Information on where your Election Day polling place can be found here.
As of Monday, the Illinois State Board of Elections had reported 590,333
early votes had already been cast, including 362,604 mail-in ballots,
224,595 early in-person ballots and 3,134 grace period ballots.
Below is a brief summary of the statewide races. Links to other coverage
on the races and interviews with the candidates can be found here.
Governor’s Race
Gov. JB Pritzker is facing off against state Sen. Darren Bailey, a
Republican farmer from downstate Xenia. The candidates’ views diverge
widely on just about every topic, from abortion to state spending to
pandemic response to addressing gun crime. The Libertarian candidate is
Scott Schluter.
The candidates’ differences are demonstrated by Bailey’s voting record
on some of the major policy proposals backed by Pritzker. Bailey was a
“no” vote on almost all of them, saying in one public appearance that
he’d like to repeal “everything” Pritzker signed into law during his
first term in office.
Bailey voted against the state’s operating budget each year, saying it
contains wasteful spending. Pritzker, meanwhile, has cited those budgets
as the reason Illinois was able to pay down a backlog of unpaid bills
that ballooned to $16 billion under Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner, along
with other interest-accruing debt.
Bailey also opposed the legalization of marijuana and a $45 billion
public works infrastructure plan. The public works plan was funded by a
measure that doubled the motor fuel tax and increased license-related
fees, as well as a gambling expansion. Bailey voted against both
proposals.
He was one of just 13 lawmakers to vote against a measure capping
insulin prices for some insurance plans, and he voted “no” on increasing
the minimum wage to $15 hourly by 2025.
He also opposed the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act that increases
investment in renewable energy and aims to force fossil fuel producers
offline in Illinois over the next two decades, citing the bill’s upward
pressures on downstate energy prices as his reason for opposing it.
Pritzker’s refrain in recent debates has been that Bailey “has no plan”
for Illinois, and he has painted the Republican as a conservative
“extremist.”
Bailey, meanwhile, has focused his attention on crime, especially in
Chicago, taxes and state spending.
In a recent Springfield campaign stop, Bailey said his plan is to “come
in with a totally new approach to government because nothing's working
right.”
He said he believes there’s $10 billion to $15 billion of waste within
the state budget, although he hasn’t said what he would cut, aside from
arguing that administrative costs in public education are too high.
Those salaries are set by local school boards.
He frequently mentions his plan for a “zero-based budget,” which, he
said, means “accounting for every dollar that's spent.” He put the
responsibility for identifying the waste on the shoulders of
yet-to-be-named agency heads. And he said later in the debate he’d begin
identifying them the day after the election.
Bailey has also been a staunch opponent to every measure that expanded
abortion rights in Illinois in recent years, a point Pritzker has
frequently reiterated on the campaign trail. Despite endorsements from
the state’s anti-abortion groups, Bailey has recently said he wouldn’t
try to repeal state abortion laws, because he wouldn’t have the backing
in the Democratic-controlled General Assembly to do so.
He would, however, look to repeal a criminal justice reform known as the
SAFE-T Act, which passed in 2021 on slim Democratic majorities. Pritzker
has said he will look to pass an amendment to that bill when lawmakers
return to Springfield a week after the election.
Comptroller’s Race
In Illinois, the position of chief fiscal officer is that of
comptroller.
Democrat Susana Mendoza has been elected to that post twice, for a
partial term beginning in December 2016 before gaining reelection in
2018. She touts the reduction of a $16 billion bill backlog to a
standard 30-day billing cycle, the state’s largest-ever $1 billion
balance in its rainy-day fund and a pension payment that went $500
million beyond statutory levels in the current fiscal year as some of
her greatest accomplishments.
Her opponent, Shannon Teresi, is a newcomer to state politics and is the
McHenry County auditor. It’s an experience, she said, that will help her
root out “waste, fraud and abuse” in state government – one of her
most-repeated reasons for running.
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The major-party candidates for statewide
office are pictured in file photos. (Capitol News Illinois graphic)
The Libertarian candidate is Deirdre McCloskey.
Treasurer’s Race
The race for treasurer – the state’s chief investment officer – pits
two-term incumbent Michael Frerichs against Republican Tom Demmer, a
deputy minority leader in the General Assembly and House GOP point
person on budget issues. The Libertarian candidate is Preston Nelson.
Frerichs touts more than $1 billion in investment gains as his greatest
achievement while emphasizing his administrative work on returning
unclaimed property, a state college savings plan and other programs
overseen by the office.
Demmer has focused his race on being a statewide check on Democratic
power when it comes to tax and budget issues. He has frequently attacked
Frerichs for a comment he made in 2020 regarding a proposed graduated
income tax amendment: “One thing a progressive tax would do is make
clear you can have graduated rates when you are taxing retirement
income. And I think that’s something that’s worth discussion,” Frerichs
is quoted as saying in the Daily Herald.
The treasurer, meanwhile, has no formal role in setting tax policy and
Frerichs has frequently stated he does not support a retirement tax.
Secretary of State’s Race
Incumbent Secretary of State Jesse White is stepping down at the end of
his term, creating a vacancy in the office for the first time in 24
years.
The race to succeed him features Democrat Alexi Giannoulias, a former
state treasurer from Chicago, and Republican State Rep. Dan Brady, of
Bloomington. Each has a long list of initiatives they would like to
implement to modernize the office.
While Giannoulias has White’s endorsement, the outgoing secretary has
also spoken highly of Brady. And Brady has the endorsement of Republican
former governor and secretary of state Jim Edgar.
The Libertarian candidate is Jon Stewart.
Attorney General’s Race
Democratic Attorney General Kwame Raoul and Republican private practice
attorney Thomas DeVore differ starkly on a number of issues, with the
AG’s response to COVID-19 executive orders leading that list.
DeVore was a frequent challenger of the governor’s executive order
authority throughout the pandemic, while Raoul defended that authority
in court. But it’s not the only issue on which the pair differed.
In an hourlong discussion organized by the Illinois Associated Press
Media Editors earlier this year, DeVore defended his use of the private
lawsuit to go after individuals, including the governor and a special
education teacher, who he believes have defamed him.
Raoul, meanwhile, said it’s a waste of court resources. They also
differed on the SAFE-T Act, which DeVore wants repealed, and whether the
AG should be prosecuting public officials. The Libertarian candidate on
the ballot is Dan Robin.
Constitutional Amendment 1
Voters will decide on whether the state’s constitution will be amended
to give a right to workers to unionize. It reads:
SECTION 25. WORKERS' RIGHTS
(a) Employees shall have the fundamental right to organize and to
bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing for
the purpose of negotiating wages, hours, and working conditions, and to
protect their economic welfare and safety at work. No law shall be
passed that interferes with, negates, or diminishes the right of
employees to organize and bargain collectively over their wages, hours,
and other terms and conditions of employment and work place safety,
including any law or ordinance that prohibits the execution or
application of agreements between employers and labor organizations that
represent employees requiring membership in an organization as a
condition of employment.
(b) The provisions of this Section are controlling over those of Section
6 of Article VII.
Supporters of the amendment say it is needed to prevent future governors
and lawmakers from attempting to pass “right to work” legislation, which
former Gov. Rauner attempted to do. Right to work laws prohibit
employers from requiring membership in a labor union as a condition of
employment.
Opponents, meanwhile, argue that passage of the amendment would give
public-sector labor unions greater power, which could lead to more
expensive government contracts that create upward pressure on property
taxes.
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. |