Political
realignments occur regularly. When Democrats
consistently win in historically Republican areas
such as northern metropolitan suburbs or the
Republicans consistently win in historically
Democratic areas such as the Deep South it's not
an aberration.
But
there's a new factor: "unalignment." The
American electorate is divided into thirds:
Democratic, Republican and unaligned independents.
For the latter group, which is mostly white,
affluent, suburban and secular, voting Republican
is neither cool nor acceptable.
Hard-core
Democrats disdain Republicans as macho, warlike,
tight-fisted, mean-spirited, intolerant, bigoted
and dictatorial. That's expected. Hard-core
Republicans deride Democrats as a bunch of
Pillsbury doughboys -- squishy soft on national
defense and terrorist issues and obsessed with
creating a Utopia on earth. That's expected.
What's
unexpected is that independents, driven by the
"politics of culture," have turned
strongly against the Republicans. For them, issues
such as abortion rights, gun control, gay rights
and immigration reform resonate, and Republicans
are on the wrong side. The traditional Republican
issues, tax cuts, spending cuts and reduced
government, have utterly no appeal. Government is
now good.
Republicans
can thank Bill Clinton for the change. Back in the
1990s, Clinton declared that spending was an
"investment;" taxes were not
"wasteful," or squandered on the poor or
undeserving, but instead were seed money for a
product which would pay future dividends, namely,
a better educated populace, better medical care,
better infrastructure, better national security,
and people bought it.
Through
the Reagan Administration and into the 1990s, the
Republicans championed themselves as the party of
limited government, lower taxes, reduced spending
and a strong national defense. They practiced the
"politics of economics," meaning to
minimize taxes on the "haves," to
minimize spending on the "have nots,"
and to restrain government expansion. "Tax
cut" was the magic phrase, as it put money in
the pockets of voters.
But
the prosperity of the 1990s, the prodigious
spending of the Bush Administration and the Iraq
War have shredded the Republican message. Affluent
suburban voters, who have a net worth of $1
million or more, who live in homes valued at
$500,000 and up, are contemptuous of "tax
cut" rhetoric. They no longer perceive local,
county, state or national government as inept,
intrusive or irrelevant. Like Starbucks,
government provides specific services, from which
they derive specific benefits. They can afford the
tax burden.
Voters
expect essential services, such as education,
police protection, street maintenance, mass
transit and refuse disposal, but they want more.
They demand Internet access in libraries, sports
and crafts programs at park districts, landscaping
and tree planting on public property; in short,
they want their city or neighborhood to have an
ambiance, a vibrancy and pleasantness, which only
local government can provide. They expect their
county government to provide health care, their
state government to provide Medicaid and
transportation subsidies, and their federal
government to provide social security and a
plethora of other subsidies.
They
also expect a multitude of social services. For
every problem, another government agency is the
solution.
Democratic
politicians have been quick to understand that
their task is not to restrain government spending,
but rather to enlarge it and direct it to their
community. Saddled with the Iraq War and an
unpopular president, Republicans have become
culturally repugnant and economically irrelevant
to "swing" voters. Democrats running for
local office portray themselves as sensible,
reasonable and enlightened. After 9/11, the
Republican "macho" position was
gratefully embraced. Now, 6 years later,
"sensitivity" is ascendant.
The
Democrats have a 37-22 majority in the Illinois
Senate. Of the 59 districts, 17 are in Chicago
(all held by Democrats), 21 are in the suburbs and
Collar Counties (with Democrats holding a 11-10
edge), and 21 are Downstate (with Republicans
holding a 12-9 edge). Just a decade age,
Republicans held almost all the suburban
districts.
The
Democrats have a 67-51 majority in the Illinois
House. Of the 28 Chicago seats, one is held by a
Republican. Of the 45 suburban and Collar County
districts, Republicans hold 24. Of the 45
Downstate seats, Republicans hold 26.
The
question for 2008 is not whether Democrats will
win more Republican-held suburban seats, but how
many. Here's an early look at possible turnovers:
26th
Senate District (western Lake County, including
Libertyville, Mundelein and Lake Zurich; eastern
McHenry County, including Wauconda and Cary; and
Barrington in Cook County): This district went
60.1 percent for Bush in 2004, and has always had
a Republican state senator. Incumbent Bill
Peterson, first elected in 1992, is retiring.
Republicans are nervous. Their candidate is Dan
Duffy, a wealthy Barrington businessman who has
pledged to spend at least $50,000 of his own
money. The Democrat will be Round Lake Mayor Bill
Gentes.
The
issue will be government. Duffy will run against
Democratic incompetence in state government in
general, and against Governor Rod Blagojevich in
particular, stressing corruption and fiscal
issues. Gentes will run as a local official who is
capable of "bringing back the bacon" -
meaning state funding for local projects. A
generation ago, Gentes would have been toast. Now,
he has appeal. The outlook: Duffy is a narrow
favorite.
33rd
Senate District (Park Ridge, Des Plaines, Mount
Prospect, Elk Grove): The deft positioning and
campaigning skills of Democrat Dan Kotowski got
him elected in 2006 by 1,434 votes, and he will be
tough to dislodge in 2008.
Kotowski
is a career do-gooder, having worked for various
gun control groups. He moved from Chicago to Park
Ridge, and began his senate campaign in early
2005, going door-to-door. In this historically
Republican district, which Bush carried in 2004
with just 50.5 percent, party organizations have
collapsed. There are no precinct captains on the
street, and voters have no inclination to join
either party.
In
2006, the appointed incumbent, Republican Cheryl
Axley of Elk Grove, ran an insipid campaign.
Kotowski ignored social issues like abortion and
gay marriage, trumpeted gun control, refused to
endorse Blagojevich, and promised to be a
"responsive and accessible" senator.
Since he was in the precincts, and Axley wasn't,
he won.
For
2008, Elk Grove Township clerk Mike Sweeney is the
Republican nominee. The outlook: Now that
Energizer Bunny Kotowski is in office, he's
unbeatable.
27th
Senate District (Palatine, Prospect Heights,
Arlington Heights, Inverness, north Hoffman
Estates, south Buffalo Grove): Republican Wendell
Jones, a staunch conservative who succeeded Peter
Fitzgerald (who was elected U.S. Senator in 1998),
retired in 2006, and Republican Matt Murphy barely
kept the seat. The Jewish vote in Buffalo Grove
gives Democrats a base.
A
social conservative, Murphy beat liberal
Republican Rita Mullins, Palatine's mayor, in the
primary, and then topped Democrat Peter Gutzmer by
just 3,183 votes (52.6 percent). Gutzmer is
running again in 2008. The outlook: Unlike 2006,
Gutzmer will be heavily funded. If Republicans
cannot save an incumbent like Murphy in a 52.7
percent Bush district (2004), then all hope is
lost. Murphy will win.
65th
House District: If Republican incumbent Rosemary
Mulligan were any more liberal, she'd fall off the
left end of the political spectrum. First elected
in 1992, when she beat anti-abortion firebrand
Penny Pullen, Mulligan is adamantly pro-abortion,
pro-gay rights, and pro-gun control. Yet she faces
a tough race in 2008 against Democrat Aurora
Austriaco, an attorney who will run to Mulligan's
left.
The
focus: guilt-by-association. Austriaco will be
funded by Springfield Democrats and trial lawyers,
and will play the "party" card, tarring
Mulligan with the party of Bush. And Austriaco
will align herself with Kotowski, who will easily
carry her district, the east half of his senate
district. The outlook: Mulligan was unopposed in
2006, and got 65.9 percent in 2004. She will win
with 55 percent in 2008, after spending a bundle.
66th
House District (Elk Grove, Mount Prospect, Rolling
Meadows): Like Mulligan, incumbent Republican
Carolyn Krause, a former Mount Prospect mayor, has
served since 1992, and is a moderate on social
issues. She is retiring in 2008, and Republicans
have a primary between Elk Grove Village trustee
Christine Prochno, who is endorsed by village
mayor Craig Johnson and Krause, and challenger
Laurie Bartels. The Democrat will be Mark Walker,
who lost a 2005 bid for Wheeling Township
supervisor, and who is employing a "Kotowski
strategy" for 2008, working precincts daily.
The outlook: Walker will attempt to piggyback on
the Kotowski campaign, but Elk Grove is also the
base of Sweeney (as it was of Axley). Prochno is
favored, but will lose if she campaigns like Axley.
56th
House District (Schaumburg, Roselle, Hanover
Park): Unlike those long-ago Tareyton cigarette
ads proclaiming the smoker would "rather
fight than switch," Republican incumbent Paul
Froelich decided he rather switch than fight. An
ardent Reaganite, a foe of abortion rights and gay
marriage and the Schaumburg Township Republican
committeeman, Froelich said he was "horrified
with Bush," insisted that his "values
aren't changing," and switched to the
Democrats last summer.
Democrats
don't want him. Republicans now hate him. The
Republican organization collapsed. The outlook:
Froelich will lose.