Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

2018 Illinois gubernatorial election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2018 Illinois gubernatorial election
Remove ads

The 2018 Illinois gubernatorial election took place on November 6, 2018, to elect the governor of Illinois, concurrently with the 2018 Illinois general election and other midterm elections. Incumbent Republican governor Bruce Rauner ran for re-election to a second term in office,[1] but was defeated by Democratic nominee JB Pritzker. This was one of eight Republican-held governorships up for election in a state that Hillary Clinton won in the 2016 presidential election.

Quick Facts Turnout, Nominee ...
Remove ads

This was the second consecutive Illinois gubernatorial election in which the incumbent unsuccessfully sought re-election, and was also the first time that two consecutive governors have been elected without prior public office experience. Rauner was one of two incumbent Republican governors to be defeated for re-election in 2018, the other being Scott Walker in neighboring Wisconsin, who had lost narrowly to Tony Evers. In addition, Rauner had the worst defeat for an incumbent governor in any state since Ernie Fletcher's defeat in Kentucky's 2007 election. Rauner's 38.8% of the vote was the worst performance for an incumbent Illinois governor since 1912; he also received the lowest raw percentage of the vote for a Republican nominee since 1912. Pritzker flipped fifteen counties that had previously voted for Rauner in 2014.

Ultimately, Rauner lost in the most lopsided gubernatorial election since Jim Edgar was reelected in 1994. With Pritzker winning by a margin of 15.7%, this was the biggest gubernatorial margin of victory for a Democrat since 1932. This was the first gubernatorial election in the state since 2002 where the Democrat won a majority of the vote. Pritzker only won 16 out of Illinois's 102 counties. However, those counties account for more than half of the state's total population. Pritzker won the traditionally Democratic Cook County which includes the Chicago Metropolitan Area. Pritzker won in all but one of Chicago's collar counties, which had been more of a tossup in years prior. He was the first Democrat to carry DuPage County since 1932; meanwhile, Kane and Kendall counties had not been carried by a Democrat once during the 20th century. DeKalb County voted Democratic for the first time since 1972.

Pritzker also did well in other cities such as East Saint Louis and Champaign, and narrowly won in Peoria. Rauner did well in most rural areas of the state, but it was not enough to put a dent into Pritzker's lead.

Remove ads

Background

The primaries and general elections coincided with those for federal congressional races and those for other state offices. The election was part of the 2018 Illinois elections. Primary elections were held on March 20.

For the primary election, turnout was 25.76%, with 2,046,710 votes cast.[2][3] For the general election, turnout was 56.15%, with 4,547,657 votes cast.[4][3]

Remove ads

Republican primary

Summarize
Perspective

Candidates

Nominated

Eliminated in primary

Withdrew

  • William J. Kelly, radio host and perennial candidate (running as an independent)[8][9]
    • Running mate: Brian Leggero, candidate for mayor of Rockford in 2017[10]
    • Former running mate: Ray Tranchant, immigration activist[8][11]

Endorsements

Jeanne Ives
Illinois legislators

Local officials

Individuals
Local Republican parties
  • Chicago Republican Party[22]
  • Fremont Township Republican Organization[23]
  • Lake County Republican Assembly[24]
  • Rock Island County Republican Party[25]
  • Wauconda Township Republican Club[24]
  • Wheatland Township Republican Organization[26]
  • Wheeling Township Republican Organization[27]
Organizations
Newspapers and magazines
Declined to endorse in primary
Individuals

Campaign

A November 2017 Capitol Fax/We Ask America poll found that 83% of Republican voters had never heard of Ives.[34] Ives' campaign's fourth-quarter fundraising totals were around $500,000.[35] On February 28, 2018, Ives' campaign released a new book entitled The Governor You Don't Know: The Other Side of Bruce Rauner, authored by Chicago GOP chairman and Ives campaign chairman Chris Cleveland, with a foreword by conservative State Representative Tom Morrison.[36]

Rauner and Ives held their first and only scheduled forum on January 29, before the Chicago Tribune editorial board."[37] Rauner largely ignored his opponent and focused on attacking Speaker Mike Madigan, comparing him to his likely Democratic challenger, J. B. Pritzker. Ives, on the other hand, attacked Rauner for being an ineffective governor and alienating social conservatives.[38] Shortly after the debate, conservative Lake Forest businessman Richard Uihlein donated $500,000 to Ives' campaign.[39]

Rauner and Ives were invited by the University of Illinois Springfield to debate a second time; Rauner declined the invitation.[40]

Ives released an ad titled "Thank You, Bruce Rauner" on February 3, 2018, in an attempt to challenge her opponent's commitment to conservative values. Her ad featured actors outfitted to portray a transgender woman, an anti-fascist protester wearing a hood and a bandana over his face, a member of the Chicago Teachers Union and a Women's March activist. After Ives' ad made its rounds on the internet, advocacy groups, some Republicans and Democrats lashed out against Ives, calling her video bigoted and offensive.[41][42] The ad increased Ives's profile and name recognition.[43] Three Chicago-area newspaper editorial boards came out against the ad: the Chicago Tribune said "The portrayals are demeaning;"[44] the Daily Herald said that Ives should take down the ad, which "attacks people of Illinois, not opponent",[45] and the Chicago Sun-Times wrote, "Jeanne Ives goes for the bully vote with her TV ad."[46]

Polling

More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
Hypothetical polling

Results

Despite a 14% decrease in Republican primary votes cast, Rauner increased his overall vote total by 9% compared to the 2014 primary. In 2018, he managed to capture a narrow majority of the votes, with 51.5%, in his victory over conservative Ives. By comparison, in 2014 Rauner only received 40.2% of the primary vote in his narrow win victory over Kirk Dillard, Bill Brady, and Dan Rutherford.

In 2018, Rauner did well in central Illinois compared to the Republican primary four years earlier, when he managed 30% in the downstate region and finished 2nd to Kirk Dillard. In 2018, he carried the region with 52%.

However, the result was still considered surprisingly close, and indicated widespread dissatisfaction with Rauner's governorship among more conservative Republicans.[53]

Thumb
Results by county
Map legend
  •   Rauner—60–70%
  •   Rauner—50–60%
  •   Tie
  •   Ives—50–60%
  •   Ives—60–70%
    [54]
More information Party, Candidate ...
Remove ads

Democratic primary

Summarize
Perspective
Thumb
Democratic candidates listed on a blank ballot

Candidates

Nominated

Eliminated in primary

  • Running mate: Jonathan W. Todd, social worker[60]
  • Tio Hardiman, former director of CeaseFire and candidate for governor in 2014[61]
  • Running mate: Ra Joy, nonprofit executive[65]
  • Running mate: Dennis Cole

Removed from ballot

  • Terry Getz, corrections officer (filed on November 29, 2017, but did so without a running mate or submitting any signatures)[67]

Withdrew

  • Running mate: Alex Hirsch, political operative
  • Running mate: Tyrone Coleman, mayor of Cairo

Declined

Endorsements

Daniel Biss
U.S. senators
U.S. representatives
Statewide officeholders
State senators
State representatives
Chicago aldermen
Other local officials
Organizations
Individuals
Newspapers
Withdrawn endorsements
Chris Kennedy
U.S. cabinet and cabinet-level officials
U.S. representatives
State legislators
Local officeholders
Individuals
Organizations
  • Iroquois County Democratic Central Committee[176]
  • Southern Illinois Democratic County Chairmen's Association[177]
Newspapers
Declined to endorse for the primary
U.S. representatives
Organizations
  • Madison County Democratic Party[183]

Forums

The Illinois LGBTQ Forum: The Democratic Candidates for Governor[184] was held on December 6, 2017, and organized by Affinity Community Services, the Association of Latinos/as Motivating Action (ALMA), the Equality Illinois Institute, and Pride Action Tank. Candidates who attended included Daniel Biss, Tio Hardiman, Ameya Pawar, J. B. Pritzker, and Chris Kennedy.

Whitney Young High School hosted the first student-run gubernatorial debate in the United States on October 4, 2017. All seven then-current candidates attended, meaning Daniel Biss, Bob Daiber, Tio Hardiman, Chris Kennedy, Alex Paterakis, Ameya Pawar, and JB Pritzker.[185]

The Illinois chapter of progressive advocacy organization Our Revolution sponsored a forum at the Chicago Teachers Union headquarters on October 8, 2017. Candidates voiced similar opinions on single-payer health care, gun control, and the minimum wage, but differed on a hypothetical state deal with Amazon and relationships with powerful Illinois Speaker Mike Madigan.[186]

The Democratic candidates held their first televised debate on January 23.[187] All six candidates met again a week later on January 30. The debate was not televised but was uploaded to WSIL-TV's YouTube channel.[188]

Another debate was held on February 21, which was hosted by the University of Illinois Springfield.[40] Chris Kennedy did not attend due to a back injury, although all five other candidates participated.[189] Another major debate took place on March 1. It involved issues such as gun control, Blagojevich's tapes, sexual harassment, and relatability.[190] Another debate took place the next day in Springfield. The topics involved Madigan, sexual harassment, among other issues. The spotlight remained on the top contenders: Chris Kennedy, JB Pritzker, and Daniel Biss.[191]

Pritzker was criticized for refusing to commit to attend the only live-television debate planned outside the Chicago media market, prompting the debate's cancellation.[192] Biss and Kennedy gathered petition signatures to encourage the debate's continuation, and Biss commented that "JB is borrowing a page from the billionaire playbook, avoiding debates and shunning reporters who ask tough questions."[193] Another debate took place on March 14, revolving around topics including Pritzker's newly reported offshore holdings, Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan, and education. Kennedy and Biss both attacked Pritzker on the offshore businesses, Kennedy "saying it's like a job interview, and Pritzker lying to get the job", and Biss saying "Pritzker did that to avoid taxes".[194]

Polling

More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
Hypothetical polling

Results

Thumb
Results by county
Map legend
  •   Pritzker—70–80%
  •   Pritzker—60–70%
  •   Pritzker—50–60%
  •   Pritzker—40–50%
  •   Pritzker—30–40%
  •   Biss—40–50%
  •   Kennedy—30–40%
  •   Kennedy—40–50%
    [54]

Pritzker won 98 of Illinois's counties. Kennedy and Biss both won two counties each.

More information Party, Candidate ...
Remove ads

Third parties and independents

Summarize
Perspective

In order to qualify as an established party in Illinois, a candidate for said party must earn at least 5% of the vote in a statewide election. This last occurred in 2006, when Rich Whitney won 10% of the vote, allowing the Illinois Green Party to achieve such status. Established party status comes with benefits. For example, candidates of an established party needs only 5,000 voter signatures on its petitions to gain ballot access. For non-established parties this number is approximately 25,000.[206][207]

For the 2018 election, non-established parties did not need to run a full slate in order to qualify for ballot access.[208]

Conservative

Sam McCann, a longtime intraparty opponent of Bruce Rauner, resigned from the Republican Caucus to run for governor as a member of the newly created Conservative Party.[209]

Candidates

Libertarian

Kash Jackson was the Libertarian nominee. Libertarian nominees for governor, other statewide offices, and the General Assembly were chosen by the Libertarian Party of Illinois at a state convention on March 3, 2018, in Bloomington, Illinois.[210] Jackson appeared on the ballot.[211]

Candidates

Endorsements

Kash Jackson
Individuals

Unsuccessful

  • Matthew C. Scaro, entrepreneur and Libertarian activist[212]
  • Jon Stewart, retired professional wrestler, Republican candidate for the state house in 1998 and Republican candidate for IL-05 in 2009[212][218]

Independents

Removed from ballot

Withdrew

  • William J. Kelly, radio host and perennial candidate (subsequently ran on Constitution Party ticket, then withdrew)[8][9]
    • Running mate: Brian Leggero, candidate for mayor of Rockford in 2017[10]

Constitution

Nominee

William J. Kelly was nominated for governor and Chad Koppie, a member of the Kane County Regional Board of School Trustees, was nominated for lieutenant governor on the gubernatorial ticket of the Illinois Constitution Party. However, on June 5, 2018, Kelly dropped out and endorsed the third party campaign of Sam McCann.[224][225][226]

Withdrew

Green Party

The Green Party ran a slate of statewide candidates in 2006 and 2010, but failed to be placed on the ballot in 2014[228][229] and declined to run any statewide candidates in 2018.[230]

Remove ads

General election

Summarize
Perspective

Bruce Rauner had been rated as one of, if not the most, vulnerable governor running for re-election in 2018 by Politico and the National Journal.[231][232] Following his surprisingly narrow primary win, Rauner offered former state senator Karen McConnaughay, attorney general nominee Erika Harold, Chicago Cubs co-owner and Republican National Committee Finance Chair Todd Ricketts and Illinois Republican Party Committeeman Richard Porter the chance to replace him on the ticket, with the promise that he would continue to fully fund the campaign using his personal wealth.[233] Rauner consistently trailed Pritzker in the polls by large margins, and the race was rated as a likely Democratic win by all major election prognosticators.

Endorsements

Bruce Rauner (R)
U.S. governors
Illinois state senators
Illinois state representatives
County officials
Local officials
Organizations
Newspapers
JB Pritzker (D)
Former U.S. executive branch officials
U.S. cabinet and cabinet-level officials
U.S. senators
U.S. representatives
Statewide officials
State senators
State representatives
Local officials
Individuals
  • Mike Barone, chair of the Jackson County Democratic Party[271][272]
  • Brenda Britton, chair of the Richland County Democratic Party[271][282]
  • Karamo Brown, television personality and activist[283]
  • Dennis Fisher, chair of the Shelby County Democratic Party[271][272]
  • Paul "Snow" Herkert, chair of the Calhoun County Democratic Party[271][272]
  • Gary Johnson, chair of the Jasper County Democratic Party[271][272]
  • Phillip Matthews, chair of the Alexander County Democratic Party[271][272]
  • Jack Mazzotti, chair of the Christian County Democratic Party[271][272]
  • Shirley McCombs, chair of the Menard County Democratic Party[271][272]
  • Jimmy Naville, chair of the Greene County Democratic Party[271][272]
  • Keith Niewohner, chair of the Adams County Democratic Party[271][272]
  • John Penn, chair of the McLean County Democratic Party[271][272]
  • Dan Sidwell, chair of the Bond County Democratic Party[271][272]
Organizations
Newspapers
Kash Jackson (L)
U.S. governors
State representatives
Organizations
Individuals
Withdrawn endorsements
  • David Williams III, 2019 Independent candidate for Chicago's 48th ward and political activist[307][308]

Debates

More information Dates, Location ...

Predictions

More information Source, Ranking ...
Notes
  1. Bob Daiber with 1%; Tio Hardiman and Robert Marshall with <1%
  2. Tio Hardiman with 2%; Bob Daiber, Robert Marshall, Terry Getz, and other with 1%
  3. Tio Hardiman with 2%; Bob Daiber and Robert Marshall with 1%
  4. Tio Hardiman and Bob Daiber with 2%; Robert Marshall with 1%
  5. Bob Daiber and Tio Hardiman with 1%
  6. Tio Hardiman and Robert Marshall with 1%; Bob Daiber with 0%
  7. Kurt Summers with 7%
  8. The Fox News Midterm Power Rankings uniquely does not contain a category for Safe/Solid races

Fundraising

More information Campaign finance reports as of June 30, [update], Candidate (party) ...

Polling

More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
Hypothetical polling

with Jeanne Ives and J. B. Pritzker

with Bruce Rauner and Chris Kennedy

with Bruce Rauner and Daniel Biss

with Bruce Rauner and generic Democrat

with Jeanne Ives and Chris Kennedy

with Bruce Rauner and Dick Durbin

Results

More information Party, Candidate ...

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

By congressional district

Pritzker won 13 of the 18 congressional districts, with the remaining five going to Rauner. Each candidate won two districts that elected representatives of the other party.[343]

More information District, Rauner ...
Remove ads

See also

Notes

    References

    Loading content...
    Loading related searches...

    Wikiwand - on

    Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

    Remove ads