Candidates make final push to get out the vote
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[November 08, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker was crisscrossing the state
Monday while his Republican challenger, state Sen. Darren Bailey,
focused on the Chicago suburbs as they both made their final pitches to
voters ahead of Tuesday’s general election.
Pritzker, along with other Democrats at the top of the ticket, held
get-out-the-vote rallies at union halls in five cities aiming to
increase turnout among labor voters. That included pleas for passage of
the so-called Workers Rights Amendment that would guarantee employees
the right to engage in collective bargaining.
“To protect our fundamental freedoms, to lift up working families, we
have to elect pro-labor, pro-choice, pro-voting rights, pro-civil rights
Democrats up and down the ticket, right?” Pritzker called out to a
cheering crowd in Springfield.
The tour also made stops in Marion, Caseyville, Moline and Rockford.
Joining Pritzker were U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth, Lt. Gov. Juliana
Stratton, Attorney General Kwame Raoul, state Treasurer Michael Frerichs
and Comptroller Susana Mendoza, as well as local candidates for state
legislative races.
As he has through most of the campaign, Pritzker focused on the
accomplishments of his first term, including balancing the state budget,
earning multiple credit upgrades on the state’s bond rating, passing a
$45 billion infrastructure package and enshrining reproductive health
care rights, including abortion access, as a “fundamental right” under
state law.
If elected to a second term, he told reporters during an impromptu news
conference afterward, he would propose free college tuition for people
at or below the median income, growing new jobs in the state and
continuing to balance the budget in order to build up the state’s cash
reserves.
“I know it sounds a little boring to talk about that,” he said. “But
balancing the budget is perhaps the most important thing that we can do
going forward if you want to lower taxes in the state, if you want to
pay for the services that people need, and education, which is so
vitally important for our future.”
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Gov. JB Pritzker speaks at a
get-out-the-vote rally in Springfield Monday. (Capitol News Illinois
photo by Peter Hancock)
Bailey, meanwhile, spent Monday morning campaigning with GOP attorney
general candidate Thomas DeVore, criticizing the Pritzker administration
for its handling of the COVID-19 pandemic and lodging new accusations
that Pritzker is secretly planning to impose vaccine mandates on school
children.
“JB Pritzker uses our kids to make political points,” Bailey said at a
rally in Oak Brook. “He locks schoolchildren out of their classrooms,
and he tries to twist their tender minds with ideology in his quest to
be the most left-wing governor in America. Now his minions are looking
to impose vaccine mandates on our children.”
Pritzker, however, said he had no plans to mandate any vaccine
requirements, saying Bailey was “lying” in “a desperate attempt to win
some votes.”
“There’s absolutely nothing that’s happening that’s out of the ordinary.
He’s just making things up,” Pritzker said when asked about Bailey’s
allegation.
Bailey took part in numerous lawsuits against the Pritzker
administration over its COVID-19 mitigation orders. DeVore served as his
attorney in those suits.
As of Monday, according to the State Board of Elections, nearly 1.2
million ballots had already been cast in the election, either by mail or
at in-person polling sites. Regular polling sites will be open from 6
a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday.
The Pritzker campaign is hosting an election night watch party Tuesday
night at the Marriott Marquis Hotel in Chicago. The Bailey campaign will
gather at the Crowne Plaza Springfield convention center in Springfield.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government. It is distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide, as well as hundreds of radio and TV stations. It
is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R.
McCormick Foundation. |