The
Illinois Senate's Republican minority, numbering
just 22 of 59, gets no respect.
After
the 2000 election the Republicans had a 37-22
majority. However, the Democrats controlled the
2001 remap, and in the four subsequent elections,
in 2002, 2004, 2006 and 2008, the Democrats won 11
Republican-held seats and lost just one.
With
the Democrats' current super majority, the
Republicans are wholly irrelevant. Even in
overtime sessions, when a three-fifths majority of
36 votes is necessary to pass bills or override a
gubernatorial veto, the Democrats have the votes.
Among
big states, Republicans hold state senate
majorities in Florida, Texas, Ohio, Michigan and
Pennsylvania -- but only because they drew the
redistricting maps in 2001. Illinois' Republican
plight is mirrored in New York, where the 36-25
Senate majority in 2001 dwindled to a 30-31
minority in 2009.
The
reason for the Illinois collapse is simple:
Location, location, location. The Republicans have
no Chicago senators, and they are losing suburban
and Collar County districts and are not
compensating with Downstate pickups.
Because
of the remap, the Democrats gained six Senate
seats in 2002; because of demographic and
political changes, they lost one Downstate senator
in 2004, but they won five Republican seats in
2006, of which four were in the suburbs and one
was Downstate. Is 37 as high as they can go?
In
2010, because of staggered terms, 14 Democratic
seats and seven Republican seats are up for
election. Of the Republicans, incumbents Chris
Lauzen, John Millner, Dale Righter and Dale
Risinger are safe, Dave Syverson and David
Luechtefeld are at some risk, and appointed
Senator Kyle McCarter is at great risk.
Of
the Democrats, the four Chicagoans are secure, as
are two Cook County suburbanites and two senators
from the Joliet and Peoria areas. But five others
-- one suburbanite (Mike Noland), two from the
Collar Counties (Mike Bond and Toi Hutchinson) and
two from Downstate (Mike Frerichs and Deanna
Demuzio) -- are vulnerable.
For
the Republicans in Illinois, the 2010 election is
a battle for relevance. They must win the
governorship, gain a net of two Senate seats so
the Democrats cannot override a Republican
governor's veto and checkmate the 2011
redistricting. If the Democrats draw the map, the
Republicans could dwindle to fewer than 20 Senate
seats.
Here's
an early look at developing contests:
31st
District (Northern Lake County: Zion, Antioch,
Grayslake, Libertyville, Gurnee, Lindenhurst):
Democrat Mike Bond scored a huge upset in 2006,
capitalizing on a bitter Republican primary in
which 28-year incumbent Adeline Geo-Karis was
defeated. In a fit of pique, Geo-Karis then
endorsed Bond, who won by 1,112 votes, with just
50.9 percent of the vote. For 2010 the Republicans
recruited Suzi Schmidt of Lake Villa, a 22-year
Lake County Board member and the current board
chairwoman. Bond announced his candidacy for 10th
District congressman in April, but he withdrew in
late July after Democrat Julie Hamos entered the
race. He is now seeking reelection. "He's a
profile in cowardice," said one Republican
legislative operative. "He backed off from
one strong woman, and now he's going to be beaten
by another."
Bond
voted against a sales and income tax hike, but he
did vote to raise state officials' pay.
The
outlook: Bond is a relentless and energetic
campaigner, and he caught every possible break in
2006. He won't in 2010. Schmidt is favored.
22nd
District (Schaumburg, Streamwood and Hoffman
Estates in far western Cook County, Elgin, West
Dundee and Carpentersville in Kane County):
Democrat Mike Noland rode the 2006 Democratic
wave, fueled by demographic change, to a
2,778-vote victory, getting 53.9 percent of the
vote. Republican squabbling in Schaumburg and
Hanover townships, coupled with rapid Hispanic
growth around Elgin, has turned this once solidly
Republican bastion toward the Democrats. The
Republicans lost one area House seat in 2006 and
another in 2008.
But
Noland's irascibility, which critics deem to be
pomposity and self-righteousness, coupled with his
unabashed support for a state income tax hike, has
given the Republicans hope. They initially tried
to recruit a Hispanic candidate, focusing on Juan
Figueroa and Emmy Morales, who in 2009 were
candidates for the Elgin City Council. Both lost,
as Hispanic turnout was anemic. Two of the winners
were white men who ran on get-tough-on-immigration
platforms.
So
the Republicans have done an about-face. They've
apparently succeeded in recruiting former state
senator Steve Rauschenberger to run for his old
seat, which he held from 1992 to 2006, when he ran
for lieutenant governor. Known and respected as a
policy wonk and budget hawk, the Rauschenberger
name is still golden in the area. His sister,
Cindy Rauschenberger, won an Elgin City Council
seat in 2009.
The
outlook: The Republican base is strong in Kane
County, so the key is Cook County. Noland can be
tarnished as a tax hiker. Against anybody except
Rauschenberger, Noland would win. Toss-up.
52nd
District (Downstate: Champaign, Urbana, Danville,
Rantoul): By combining a liberal college town with
rural Republican territory, the Democrats made the
Senate district competitive. When incumbent Rick
Winkel retired in 2006, the Republicans nominated
Judy Myers, a former state senator from Danville.
She faced former Champaign County auditor Mike
Frerichs and independent liberal Joe Parnarauskis.
The result was exceedingly close:
27,149-26,607-1,894, with Frerichs squeezing out a
542-vote triumph.
Frerichs
voted for the income tax hike, arguing that it
gave 8 percent property tax relief, even while
raising the income tax by a third. A pro-tax
posture, however, won't hurt him in
Champaign-Urbana. Republicans have yet to unearth
a credible opponent. Frerichs is favored.
40th
District (Southeast suburban Cook County: Chicago
Heights, Steger and Lynwood; east Will County:
Crete, Monee, Peotone and University Park; east
Kankakee County: Kankakee and Bradley; and east
Iroquois County): The Democratic incumbent is Toi
Hutchinson, a black woman appointed to replace
Debbie Halvorson, who was elected to Congress in
2008. Halvorson had been a senator since 1996.
The
district has evolved from solidly Democratic to
hopelessly Democratic. It is about 25 percent
black, with most of that vote concentrated in Cook
County and around Kankakee. Hutchinson is a former
Olympia Fields village clerk and Halvorson's
congressional chief of staff; her base is Cook
County. She is against a third airport in Peotone.
Her fund-raising, less than $10,000, is
unimpressive. Will County, where Halvorson lives,
wanted the seat, but Kankakee and Cook County
Democratic officials backed Hutchinson. Will
County Board member John Anderson may oppose her
in the 2010 primary.
The
Republicans tried to recruit the sheriffs of
Kankakee and Iroquois counties to run for senator,
but both declined. There are serious racial and
geographic divisions here. The outlook: Hutchinson
may not survive the primary, but a Democrat will
hold the seat.
49th
District (Downstate: Carlinville, Jacksonville and
Taylorville in the rural area just north of East
Saint Louis): The Democrats have held this seat
since 1974, when Vince Demuzio beat longtime
Republican Junie Bartulis. Demuzio won every
election thereafter, and he died in 2004. His
replacement was his widow, Deanna Demuzio, who got
59.7 percent of the vote in 2008, and her
replacement in waiting is her son, Vince Demuzio,
the director of the Illinois Secretary of State
police. Macoupin County is the Demuzios' -- and
the Democrats' -- base. If Deanna Demuzio retires
in 2010, the Republicans have a shot.
51st
District (East and north of East Saint Louis,
including Vandalia and Decatur): Frank Watson, the
district's 26-year senator and the Republican
minority leader, resigned in 2009 after a stroke.
His replacement, businessman and anti-tax activist
Kyle McCarter, hails from Madison County in the
East Saint Louis suburbs. The Democratic candidate
is Macon County board member Tim Dudley of
Decatur, where unions are strong. McCarter's
company outsources a lot of manufacturing to
China. The outlook: Democrats will demonize
McCarter as anti-union, and Dudley will get a huge
Macon County vote. A sure Republican seat is now a
toss-up.
34th
District (Winnebago County: Rockford, Loves Park,
rural areas): Incumbent Republican Dave Syverson,
who has served since 1993, won by 6,011 votes in
2006 (with 55.8 percent of the vote), beating
county Democratic chairman Dan Lewandowski, who is
running again in 2010. The outlook: The well liked
Syverson is a solid favorite.
10th
District (Northwest Side, Harwood Heights,
Norridge): Rumors are swirling that incumbent
Democrat Jim DeLeo, age 58, may retire. With 26
years of legislative service, the last 18 as he
senator, DeLeo would get a full pension and make
mega-bucks as a restaurant-industry lobbyist. If
DeLeo quits, expect a Democratic primary between
former Harwood Heights mayor Peggy Fuller and 36th
Ward sanitation superintendent John Donovan Jr.,
who would be backed by the Banks-DeLeo 36th Ward
machine. Donovan would win.
The
top Republican recruit for an open seat would be
Alderman Brian Doherty (41st). There is a
precedent: In 1972 Republican 41st Ward Alderman
Ed Scholl beat Democratic Senator Bob Egan, but he
lost to Egan in a 1974 rematch. Why would Doherty
give up a secure aldermanic seat for a job that
pays less, with a 2-year term? The only active
Republican candidate is retired Chicago police
officer Chester Hornowski.
My
prediction: The Republicans will gain two Senate
seats.