Gov. J.B. Pritzker secures a second term with easy win over Republican Darren Bailey

Gov. J.B. Pritzker secures a second term with easy win over Republican Darren Bailey
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Wealthy progressive Democrat J.B. Pritzker was elected to a second term as Illinois governor Tuesday, overwhelming the rural and religious-based conservative candidacy of state Sen. Darren Bailey after the governor spent millions of dollars in the primary for ads that helped nominate Bailey as his preferred challenger.

With 95% of the state’s precincts counted, Pritzker had 54% of the vote to 43% for Bailey amid indications Democrats had more than overcome concerns at the statewide level of a potential surge of anti-incumbent attitudes fueling Republicans, according to unofficial results. Pritzker also had significant leads in the Chicago area and among suburban voters who are a key determinant in statewide elections.

“To the people of Illinois: Thank you for placing your trust in me to carry our mission forward for four more years. I won’t let you down,” Pritzker told a crowd at his “thank you” party at the Marriott Marquis in the South Loop.

In his victory speech, Pritzker never mentioned Bailey or the often-divisive race but instead delivered a valedictory of his first term as governor before offering himself as a “happy warrior” to help lead the battles Democrats are waging nationally against Republicans allied with former President Donald Trump.

The broad reach of Pritzker’s address did little to dispel discussion of his interest in a bid for the 2024 Democratic presidential nomination if President Joe Biden does not seek a second term. Pritzker has said he intends to serve out a second term as governor and was backing Biden for a second term as president. In his speech Tuesday, he said he was “thrilled to spend four more years serving as your governor.”

“When I was making the decision to run for a second term as governor of Illinois, I asked myself if I was ready for the fight again because this is a moment requiring a steel spine for the years ahead as our nation’s fundamental ideas are under siege,” Pritzker said.

“To the fake patriots and their enablers: You don’t love the United States if you’re not willing to defend it against a man who would destroy it. Donald Trump is the modern embodiment of tyranny that our founders feared the most,” he said.

Pritzker also thanked his campaign for confronting and overcoming opposition from wealthy MAGA Republicans and “their teams of political grifters (who) spewed lies and innuendo.”

Bailey sought to comfort supporters at the Crowne Plaza Springfield by telling them, “There’s still room for a miracle, friends, still room for a miracle until all the votes are counted.” But later, in his six-and-a-half minute speech, he was choked with emotion as he acknowledged he had called Pritzker to concede defeat.

Bailey vowed to remain politically active, even though by running for governor he gave up his legislative seat, saying, “I will never stop listening to your voices. I can’t. My family depends on it.” Political associates of veteran U.S. Rep. Mike Bost of Murphysboro have privately expressed concerns Bailey is eyeing a primary challenge to the Republican congressman in two years.

Bailey didn’t address that, but said, “Republicans need to be the loyal opposition in Springfield, loyal to our state, loyal to our country, loyal to our constitution — but in opposition to the radical policies of the Democrats.”

The vanquished Republican also delivered a parting shot at the Democratic victor.

“Illinois can be better. Illinois must be better. Our leaders must be better. And J.B. Pritzker, you need to be better. You need to be better for Illinois. You need to be better for our children, and you need to be better for our grandchildren.”

The voting concluded more than a year and a half of campaigning that began with dissent over Pritzker’s handling of the deadly COVID-19 pandemic but evolved to address crime, safety, Trump, abortion, LGBTQ and civil rights, only to return at the end to COVID-19 mitigation concerns over child vaccinations raised by Bailey, whose candidacy was launched by opposing the governor’s mandates.

In a contest in which each man called the other divisive and extreme, the delineation between Pritzker and Bailey was very clear.

Pritzker, an entrepreneur and a billionaire heir to the Hyatt Hotels fortune, ran on a record of enshrining abortion rights in state law as a U.S. Supreme Court ruling returned the issue to the states. He vowed to protect LGBTQ and contraceptive rights against threats from Bailey and other conservatives.

The governor also touted his fiscal management amid a pandemic environment, leading to six credit upgrades in contrast to the budget-less years of his one-term Republican predecessor, Bruce Rauner, and embarked on a massive public works program.

Bailey opposes abortion, except in cases where the life of the mother is in jeopardy, and has sharply attacked criminal justice changes aimed at racial justice as a threat to increased crime. Laws expanding gay rights were “wicked,” Bailey said.

In a tweet on Election Day morning, Pritzker said, “There’s too much at stake to let Darren Bailey and his extremist allies drag our hard-earned progress backward. Tomorrow, we protect our fundamental freedoms, we lift up working families, and we elect pro-labor, pro-choice, pro-civil rights candidates up and down the ballot.”

As has become his custom with his conservative evangelical Christian beliefs at the root of his campaign, Bailey said he and his wife, Cindy, fasted Tuesday “as we just count on God to deliver hope, to deliver restoration, to deliver a new day for Illinois.”

“Probably the best thing about this as Cindy and I sat and reflected this morning is we have absolutely no regrets,” Bailey said of the campaign as he delivered his nearly daily devotional on Facebook Live. “The stones have all been lifted.”

Pritzker effectively launched his reelection campaign in March of last year when he put $35 million of his own money into his campaign fund. He didn’t formally announce his bid for a second term until three months later.

At the time, Pritzker staked his reelection bid on his handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, leaning into his use of executive orders that shuttered businesses, closed schools to in-class learning and kept nonessential workers from going to the workplace. Many of the governor’s initiatives received pushback from Republicans who criticized Pritzker for operating like a “dictator.”

“I may not have gotten every decision right” in handling the pandemic, he acknowledged in a campaign announcement video. But, he said, at every step he “followed the science” to protect residents.

But the concept of running for reelection based on pandemic politics soon gave way to criminal issues and the governor’s signing into law of the Illinois Safety, Accountability, Fairness and Equity-Today, or SAFE-T, Act. GOP attacks on the law, especially provisions for suspected offenders to receive cashless bail unless ordered detained by a judge, put Pritzker in a defensive posture on a critical platform for many of his allies, especially Black lawmakers in Springfield.

The crime issue also overshadowed Pritzker’s efforts to portray himself as a strong fiscal steward in a state long known for its shaky finances even though he paid down a massive backlog of overdue bills to vendors providing state services that was racked up during a two-year budget impasse under Rauner.

In June, shortly before the state’s primary election where Pritzker faced no real opposition, the nation’s high court overturned its 50-year-old Roe v. Wade decision formalizing the federal right to obtain an abortion and sending the issue to the states to resolve. Pritzker, as many other Democrats did locally and nationally, latched onto abortion as a women’s rights issue under threat from Republicans and warned that other rights assisting racial and ethnic groups as well as the LGBTQ community could also be threatened.

A deadly mass shooting at a July Fourth parade just days later in Highland Park provided a platform for Pritzker to promote his support for a banning on military-style assault weapons and large-capacity ammunition magazines as well as enhanced background checks. The event also became one of many gaffes for Bailey, a gun-owner rights advocate who wants to repeal the state’s firearm owners ID card law required to purchase a firearm. In a July Fourth video, Bailey acknowledged the still-developing shooting incident but urged people to “move on” and “celebrate” the holiday while the suspected gunman was at large.

Unlike when he scored his initial blowout victory over Rauner, Pritzker now has a record as governor. He touted increases in the minimum wage and legalized marijuana among his first-term successes.

But for the most part, Pritzker never outlined a comprehensive second term agenda. He acknowledged inflation by delaying a scheduled gas tax increase until January and offered property tax relief checks and said he hoped to improve the state’s revenues to the point where he could make tax relief permanent.

He also said he would not seek a repeat of his unsuccessful first-term signature initiative — a graduated rate income tax indexed to higher wages to replace the state’s flat rate levy — after a proposed constitutional amendment was overwhelmingly defeated by voters in 2020.

For Bailey, his candidacy represented an improbable rise for a wealthy downstate farmer and businessman whose political success had largely been confined to his home region of southeastern Illinois.

Bailey was a member of what became known as the “Eastern Bloc,” a group of ultraconservative Republicans who contended the region’s conservative values were being dismissed by progressive policies backed by Pritzker and Chicago politicians. Bailey and the group went so far as to introduce legislation that would separate Chicago from the state in favor of having its own state.

In his campaign for governor, both in the primary and general election, Bailey repeatedly referred to Chicago — the state’s largest city and Illinois’ economic engine — as a “hellhole” and an “unruly child.” And he warned that liberal policies had spurred violent crime and demoralized law enforcement in the city and that it would spread throughout Illinois with the SAFE-T Act and its provision of cashless bail that is supposed to take effect on Jan.1.

Bailey, a state senator from Xenia, won an Illinois House seat in 2018 and was elected to the Illinois Senate two years later.

During his brief tenure, Bailey became the most activist politician battling Pritzker’s COVID-19 pandemic restrictions, including an unsuccessful court challenge to the governor’s powers to issue emergency orders. During a pandemic legislative session, Bailey was ordered removed from the makeshift House floor at the Bank of Springfield Center for refusing to wear a face mask. He returned a day later, wearing a mask.

Bailey’s challenge to Pritzker over pandemic mitigation became a springboard for his candidacy for the Republican nomination for governor, which he announced in February 2021, lashing out at the “political elites” and the “donor class,” while maintaining his constituency of “marginalized people have been ignored” by government.

Educational mandates for the teaching of the roles of people of different racial and ethnic backgrounds and of gays, he said, demonstrated Chicago and liberal idealism interfering with Downstate cultural values.

“Now, right in the heartland of America, Illinois has become a stronghold for this evil, wicked stuff,” he proclaimed.

Bailey entered the primary as an underdog facing Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin, who received $50 million in backing from billionaire Ken Griffin, who founded Citadel investments.

But Pritzker devoted much of his advertising to savaging Irvin and giving Bailey a backhanded leg up by labeling him as too “extreme” for Illinois to rally the core right Republican base. Pritzker also contributed to the Democratic Governors Association, which echoed the governor’s Bailey ads resulting in more than $34 million to help Bailey win nomination.

In the closing days of the primary campaign, Griffin folded his cards and moved to Miami as an Irvin candidacy, overcoached to avoid controversy, lost steam. Bailey won the primary with 57% of the vote in a six-way contest while Irvin finished third.

Bailey also was assisted in the final days of the campaign by an endorsement from Trump, which he had actively sought. At an Adams County Fairgrounds rally with the former president, Bailey said, “I’ve made a promise to President Trump that in 2024, Illinois will roll the red carpet out for him because Illinois will be ready for President Trump.” Trump lost Illinois by 17 percentage points in 2016 and 2020.

Bailey sought to move away from Trump in the general election and instead sought to make the issue of crime his signature issue, attacking Pritzker, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx for failing to curb outbreaks of violence.

Though Bailey was vastly outspent by Pritzker, who pumped $150 million into his reelection campaign fund, the Republican did gain an ally in Richard Uihlein, the conservative billionaire megadonor who founded the Uline office supply and packaging firm.

Overall, Uihlein backed Bailey with $54 million, though all but $12 million went to an independent expenditure political action committee, the People Who Play By the Rules PAC, run by right-wing radio host Dan Proft of Naples, Florida.

The PAC’s most recent ads attempted to suppressturnout for Pritzker from Black voters, a core Democratic constituency.

Proft also was involved in sending political mailers disguised as newspapers to thousands of homes in Chicago, featuring distortions and misinformation about Pritzker, some stoking racial fears.

Bailey, in a Sept. 8 appearance on Proft’s radio show, said the faux newspapers “are full of facts and truth.”

Jake Sheridan reported from Springfield.

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