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* This is Proft’s pollster, who was bringing back much the same numbers as other pollsters during the primary…
.@Fabrizio_Lee GE survey IL GOV race:
Generic ballot: Dem +2
Head-to-head: Pritzker +7
Among those who've heard of both: Bailey +3
Among Independents: Bailey +19
Biden approval: 43-56 (-13)
Right track/wrong track: 40-59 (-19)A tough but winnable race. A dogfight. @ilgop #twill pic.twitter.com/VQRIj6GR8B
— Dan Proft (@DanProft) June 29, 2022
Full memo is here. Right direction is 40 percent and wrong track is 59 percent. That’s obviously not great, but the result has vastly improved over the years. Back in 2018, after four years of Bruce Rauner, it was 9 percent right direction and 84 percent wrong track.
Also, will Bailey have the financial resources to take advantage of these numbers?
* Methodology…
Fabrizio, Lee & Associates conducted a survey of 800 likely 2022 general election voters from June 20th – 21st statewide in Illinois. The interviews were split 35% cell phone/35% SMS to web/30% landline phone, using live operators for the landline phone portion. Geography was matched to past voter turnout in recent midterm general elections. Gender, age, education, party affiliation, and race/ethnicity were matched to demographic profiles of likely voters based on the voter file, state data, exit poll and VoterCast data, and DataTrust modeling. Respondents were randomly selected from lists of known Illinois voters. The margin of error at the 95% confidence interval for 800 voters is ±3.46%.
The sample was light on Latinos, a bit too heavy on whites. Nothing that would hugely change things, though.
…Adding… Some of y’all are reading way too much into this poll. Polls are not necessarily predictive of voter behavior months from now. Polls can only tell you what people are thinking the moment they’re asked. If post-primary polls were totally reliable, Judy Baar Topinka would’ve beaten Rod Blagojevich in 2006. Instead, JBT lost by 10 points.
So, take a breath. And try to analyze this in the moment. Things change in politics all the time. And remember that Blagojevich buried Topinka in TV ads to reverse his early polling deficit.
…Adding… As noted in comments, this poll was taken before the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, so, again, everybody on all sides should just take a breath already.
…Adding… Also as noted in comments, this doesn’t include any post-primary “bounce” for Bailey.
posted by Rich Miller
Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:14 am
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As much as people have been acting like this race is predetermined. It is not. It will probably be closer than most think given the national mood. Turnout will be a factor, and Republicans are enthusiastic this year.
Comment by Ducky LaMoore Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:21 am
It will be interesting to see what this week’s J6C testimony will do to these numbers.
Are there Edgar Republicans in the 43% that are going to do the right thing and ensure the peaceful transfer of power for our children?
Comment by Lefty Lefty Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:22 am
Turn out the lights… the party’s over…
Fabrizio and Lee are legit pollsters. Pritzker is already at 50 and Bailey is at 43 which is probably his ceiling, will be a drag on the GOP in what should be a great year, congrats proft, line your pockets and tank GOP candidates. It’s what you’re good at.
Comment by Lord of the Fries Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:22 am
Bailey has had to deal with very little oppo and no serious attacks. His numbers only go down from here when people learn more about him.
Comment by Shrug Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:23 am
This isn’t going to be a rout like 2018, but JB is sitting at 50 in a Proft poll, and someone or something has to move him off that - whether millions in ads, events between now and November, etc. One thing for certain is the artillery barrage of Pritzker money is coming for Bailey, and it’s already started.
Comment by Ron Burgundy Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:23 am
Bailey could win in crazy red wave election where turnout in the city is depressed, but…he’s not going to win independents by 19 points.
Comment by Chicago Blue Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:25 am
It appears the Pritzker campaign understands that victory isn’t a foregone conclusion. This isn’t 2018, and it isn’t 2020 either.
The idea that the “normal” GOP voters will be turned off en masse by someone like Bailey is just wishful thinking. Put in the work and turn out your voters.
Comment by Excitable Boy Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:25 am
A 13 point lead, polling at 50%… nice “start”
I’d expect more and more … “education”… on who Bailey is, including how Bailey is dangerous to women’s health.
How much dough is Uihlein gonna drop to bake this competitive,
Proft is really good at winning primaries. I’ll leave that there.
Comment by Oswego Willy Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:25 am
==Republicans are enthusiastic this year.==
Did you miss the massive Roe v. Wade protests all over the country last weekend? I’d say democrats are pretty enthusiastic too, all things considered.
Comment by So_Ill Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:26 am
A Morning Comsult poll for Politico…
“According to the June 24-25 survey conducted after the court’s ruling, 56% of Democratic voters said they are “extremely” or “very” enthusiastic about voting in the midterm elections, up from 48% in a survey conducted June 17-20. That week-over-week increase represents a slightly larger enthusiasm boost than was measured after the court’s draft Roe decision leaked in May.
The level of enthusiasm on the left is slightly less than the share of Republicans (58%) who expressed the same excitement about voting. The small margin is a relative rarity: In dozens of surveys conducted since September, Republicans have typically maintained a larger advantage on the question.
Women (44%) remain less motivated to vote in November than men (61%), though both figures increased from the previous survey.”
Enthusiasm…
I dunno, seems like abortion might be a big issue, the economy is still really big as well
How this poll figures with Illinois?
That I don’t have with this poll.
Link…
shorturl.at/dnCGS
Comment by Oswego Willy Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:32 am
After Bailey’s big win, I would expect him to poll well right now due to response bias (excited voters more likely to respond to a poll).
I’ll be interested to see what the numbers look like in 2 weeks
Comment by SpiDem Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:33 am
Bailey shouldn’t rely overmuch on his speaking voice. His graphics, photos OTOH can be strong.
If Jeannie starts speaking for Bailey, he gets stronger.
DeVore will be a drag on Bailey’s chances.
The differences in communications skills between the three is dramatic
Comment by walker Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:36 am
The challenge for Bailey is that he will now need to expand from beyond his base while being hampered by everything he’s said and done to establish that base.
Comment by Pundent Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:40 am
==Did you miss the massive Roe v. Wade protests all over the country last weekend?==
So they’ll be voting twice this year?
Comment by City Zen Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:43 am
I don’t think I would’ve predicted this result, but it seems pretty believable right now. People have mentioned a bunch of caveats about Bailey (primary bounce, relatively little oppo) and that’s all possibly true, but this is a bad year for Dems, so Bailey winning isn’t impossible.
Comment by Arsenal Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:43 am
===So they’ll be voting twice this year?===
I dunno what that exactly means, but if Pritzker is seemingly up 13 right now, once would do.
Comment by Oswego Willy Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:46 am
Currently a 7 point spread, huh?
Is there anything Bailey can tell voters about Pritzker that they haven’t already heard?
Because I have to think that there are still plenty of things that voters can hear about Bailey for the first time. And Pritzker certainly has the dough to make sure everyone hears them (ad nauseam).
Comment by Henry Francis Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:46 am
Pritzker got the match-up he wanted. Judging by recent elections, there is only so far Trumpism can go in this state.
Comment by Grandson of Man Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:46 am
“Head-to-head among those who have heard of both: Bailey +3″ - great starting point for Bailey. Pritzker has been filling up TV screens for quite a while - apparently, not making a positive impression .
Comment by Unstable Genius Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:47 am
How is 50 to 43 a 13 point lead?
Comment by The Abyss Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:47 am
I think Gov. Pritzker will win, but if he wins closely, I think the McCaskill strategy here was a failure. It is not worth it flirting with the crazies unless he really trounces Bailey
Comment by Three Dimensional Checkers Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:48 am
“I was under the impression there’d be no math”
My apologies, I’m working on something else right now, I got careless in that numerology.
My bad.
Comment by Oswego Willy Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:48 am
“ How is 50 to 43 a 13 point lead?”
Pretending the results are something that they are not. The same polls that showed Bailey up in the primary were paraded around like they were the sole truth, now they are ignored because it doesn’t fit the narrative anymore.
Let’s at least try and play consistent with stuff. Pritzker is up but don’t underestimate Bailey either. We’re in for a wild ride the next few months.
Comment by Politics commentator Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:00 am
=== Pretending the results are something that they are not.===
Sure, that’s it, lol
I am working on something else at the moment, and “13” is in reference to July 13th I am leaving for out of town and making (emailing) arrangements.
I made an error. There’s no conspiracy, for the love of Pete.
Comment by Oswego Willy Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:02 am
===now they are ignored because it doesn’t fit the narrative anymore.===
Who exactly is ignoring this poll?
Be specific
Comment by Oswego Willy Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:03 am
An incumbent at 50% at this point is devastating news for Bailey. That usually means he needs to 1.) Drive the Govs. numbers down but that doesn’t really bring his up… or 2.) Hope events drive the Govs numbers down.
Comment by Try-4-Truth Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:07 am
==“Head-to-head among those who have heard of both: Bailey +3″ - great starting point for Bailey.==
Nah. Informed ballot tests are heavily dusted with wishes.
Comment by Arsenal Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:12 am
I’m a conservative from Southern Illinois and have always voted in the GOP primary. I can’t imagine Darren Bailey as Governor or how that could remotely be a good thing. He will not have my vote.
Comment by SI Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:12 am
Dude, Willy apologized, let that go. Misreads happen.
Pritzker’s at 50, and 43 on the definites. So Bailey has to keep all of his probables just to tie, then win 7-6 on everybody else, including JB’s probables.
Problem is, everything Bailey has to do to keep his probables pushes away all of JB’s.
If you think a pro-gun, anti-choice, unfamiliar, downstate candidate staring down the barrel of the largest financial onslaught in state history can still win *every unsure voter in the state of Illinois*…well, more power to you, I suppose.
Comment by Concerned Observer Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:12 am
This is a winnable race…for some other candidate. All the Republican candidates had an uphill battle, but I can’t see how Bailey of all people will expand his appeal beyond the Republican base.
Comment by Benjamin Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:12 am
“If post-primary polls were totally reliable, Judy Baar Topinka would’ve beaten Rod Blagojevich in 2006.”
Very true. A single poll is merely a snapshot that will not really be relevant a week from now. But please stop reminding me the worst governor in Illinois history (tied) beat someone who would have been a wonderful governor.
Comment by Ducky LaMoore Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:12 am
Also, poll was taken pre-Roe decision from SCOTUS.
Comment by Liability Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:14 am
Did you miss the massive Roe v. Wade protests all over the country last weekend? I’d say democrats are pretty enthusiastic too, all things considered.
====
But nothing changes in Illinois. In fact, abortion becomes even more accessible in Illinois which counters the national democratic narrative likely lowering localized enthusiasm. Democrats voting in Illinois does nothing to change the national narrative. Democrats aren’t going to be motivated by just voting for JBP assuming he has it in the bag; this could be to their detriment.
On the flip side, suburban republicans will not be rushing to the polls to vote for Bailey. I won’t be and I’m a downstate Republican.
Comment by SI Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:15 am
===And remember that Blagojevich buried Topinka in TV ads to reverse his early polling deficit.===
This, this is everything.
What Rod did, as an incumbent too, was flip the script, using a video to help his “argument” too.
Bailey will need considerable resources going forward. In the last 24 hours I’ve seen the “Bailey abortion” ad 3 times. I will be surprised if Pritzker’s folks let up.
Being the “Fire Pritzker” guy while being outsider by an incumbent governor starting out at 50%, that’s a joke Bailey will need to figure out how to climb out of in this beginning.
Comment by Oswego Willy Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:17 am
Gop are enthusiast? 90% believe the big lie it’s sad
Comment by Publius Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:20 am
The political environment changed overnight several days after this poll was taken. Exactly why this is a snapshot in time, and one that was before the Supreme Court overturned Roe v Wade.
Comment by Suburban Guy Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:21 am
Few things: This poll was conducted before the primary (although we knew Bailey was GOP favourite) and before the Dobbs decision. I’m skeptical of methodology in using text response. Most polls I’ve taken over the phone take at least 15-30 minutes to complete because they need to get all of your demographic information. I also don’t trust partisan pollsters (R or D) as much as organizational (NPR, NBC, Quinnipiac) pollsters. So a 7 point deficit from a GOP Pollster isn’t the flex that Bailey and Proft really think it is.
Comment by Hot Taeks Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:21 am
Many here have stated they distrust this polling and I’m inclined to agree. However, what will be evident is that JBP and team are taking this potential threat very seriously. Rich pointed out yesterday that 2022 may be JB’s first of two races against “Donald Trump.”
Comment by SI Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:23 am
“So a 7 point deficit from a GOP Pollster isn’t the flex that Bailey and Proft really think it is.”
I somewhat disagree. This poll is out there for fundraising. It is a “look look look look we have a chance, give us money” poll. Being 7 points down against an incumbent at 50% isn’t a good poll. But they could have started in a lot worse territory.
Comment by Ducky LaMoore Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:25 am
==But nothing changes in Illinois.==
Has Bailey already conceded that?
Because if not, good luck convincing pro-choice voters to rest easy.
And if so, good luck convincing pro-life voters to come out for him.
Comment by Arsenal Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:28 am
== Did you miss the massive Roe v. Wade protests all over the country last weekend? ==
== I dunno, seems like abortion might be a big issue, the economy is still really big as well ==
Abortion is probably less of an issue in Illinois on the D side with the current laws on the books and almost guaranteed future control of the Legislature
== he’s not going to win independents by 19 points. ==
I think you might be misjudging the level of voter anger with the current course of everything. Events between now and election could make a huge difference. We’ll see … that’s why we hold the actual election.
== DeVore will be a drag on Bailey’s chances. ==
Fully agree. Kim would have been much better for Bailey.
If Bailey has the money, it’s going to be a horse race.
Comment by RNUG Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:28 am
The upcoming election should be better than Rauner vs. Pritzker, in terms of more closely representing the voters’ will. Bailey wiped out his competition, Rauner barely beat Ives.
Comment by Grandson of Man Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:28 am
“Abortion is probably less of an issue in Illinois on the D side with the current laws on the books and almost guaranteed future control of the Legislature.”
Errr…it’s really not. I’m in my early 30s and every person my age I talk to knows that the safety in IL could quickly change. They know that voting to keep pro-choice politicians in is the only way IL stays pro-choice.
It is a huge issue for people who can become pregnant, especially those who do not ever wish to be pregnant or expand their family.
Comment by M Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:41 am
So looking at the “Independent” voters, I wonder how many of these are former Republicans who no longer support the current party (a few percent perhaps), and how many are Tea Party radicals who do not claim a party affiliation because they hate the party leadership (like DeVore suggests about himself), but will never, ever, ever vote for Pritzker. I am sure some of these are just independent minded voters. But I bet not all are, and those that are not surely lean Republican.
Comment by H-W Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:45 am
The argument in Illinois on abortion could be (and sermingky signaled by Planned Parenthood) that Bailey and Republicans are dangerous to women’s health.
Now, if Bailey wants to say abortion is “settled” here in Illinois, here’s the sitch to that.
1) pro-life folks will likely call that a cop-op and force Bailey to be more pro-life
2) Pritzker’s Crew will continue to run this same as I’ve seen three times in the last 24 hours, warning women and others of the“dangers” Bailey is.
It’s the worst default to claim it’s “settled” in Illinois AND be a Republican.
Then again, it’s worse to fully embrace what Bailey is seen saying, in his own words, in Illinois?
We’ll see.
Comment by Oswego Willy Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:47 am
In the General, a voter has more choice than in the Primary and their party choices cannot be tracked. So, will Republicans vote straight down the line, especially if oppo to Bailey continues to point out how out of step he is with even some in his own party? Will folks vote for him as a proxy/protest vote against the current state and federal administrations, regardless of how that might actually result (if he should win) in a weakening of our state government through inaction and an further division between parties (and within the Republican party itself)? Or, will folks vote (or not vote at all for certain offices) based on how influential the Jan 6th hearings may be on the national level between now and Nov. 8th, and whatever else the Pritzker campaign “lifts the veil” on Bailey these coming days/weeks/months. I still see the deck stacked against Bailey, especially if voters on the Republican side leave the Governor selection blank in November.
Comment by Anon221 Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:48 am
This was taken before the primary, so it doesn’t include the traditional ‘bounce’. Bailey would likely poll a little higher today.
That said, it also doesn’t include those who didn’t believe a rational party would actually nominate Bailey & DeVore.
Comment by northsider (the original) Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:48 am
abortion may be on the books in Illinois but there are things that can be done and undone and there is also a Supreme Court race that could change things. I trust no one with an R next to their name because of reproductive issues. Trust none of them.
Comment by Amalia Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:48 am
===This was taken before the primary, so it doesn’t include the traditional ‘bounce’. Bailey would likely poll a little higher today.===
It also doesn’t factor in Toe being overturned.
It’s a snapshot in a moment that has passed. It’s still a snapshot all the same.
Comment by Oswego Willy Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:50 am
This is just one poll. Anyway, Bailey has a long way to go. I don’t know what his plans are to make up the vote he will not get in Cook County.
Comment by Steve Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 10:50 am
If I found this polling memo around the office, I’d appreciate it as a hilarious joke. Bailey is +19 with independents?
If someone I paid gave this to me, I’d have some real questions about methodology. Bailey +3 with voters who have heard of both? How does Pritzkers name ID compare to Bailey? Is it so low that the people who heard of both are solidly GOP voter?? How are we defining independents?
I’d only publish this junk if I was trying to make a case to donors and was desperate for social media to spread my questionable numbers.
If the Governor’s internals look like this then Illinois is not the place I thought it was.
Comment by Candy Dogood Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 11:00 am
I’m curious as to if/when the RGA fully jumps in. I know they’ll do rudimentary work & advertising - and they raised $75 million last year and $33 million in Q1 this year - but they’re not going to go all-out if they determine that Michigan, Nevada, and Wisconsin (and maybe even Pennsylania) are better bets.
Comment by Sports Stooge Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 11:18 am
The poll may have been before the Dobbs opinion was released, but that one wasn’t a surprise. I know an actual opinion is a lot more real than a leaked draft, but the writing was on the walls for over a month.
Comment by SAP Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 11:34 am
===I know an actual opinion is a lot more real than a leaked draft, but the writing was on the walls for over a month.===
If an opinion is different than a leak, how can the result be the same in a poll?
Comment by Oswego Willy Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 11:35 am
=Abortion is probably less of an issue in Illinois on the D side with the current laws on the books and almost guaranteed future control of the Legislature.=
Abortion became an Achilles heel for Bruce Rauner and that was obviously well before the SCOTUS ruling. But what also sank Rauner was his willingness to admit “I’m not in charge.” So whether it’s abortion or any other topic Bailey can’t concede that there’s nothing he can do to change the course of this state. Otherwise, why vote for him?
Comment by Pundent Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 11:43 am
Several things. 1) the onslaught against Bailey will be massive and sustained. By the time people start voting, nobody will be confused as to who Darren Bailey is. 2) As several people have mentioned, this poll is pre-Dobbs and pre-Primary. Frankly, it’s pretty pointless. 3) Pritzker won’t beat Bailey by 25, but I’d be shocked if the margin was less than 10. There’s a massive amount of crazy Darren Bailey video out there and his views just aren’t in line with Illinois voters. 4) And then there’s Devore. Oh, boy. I hope there’s just a bit of money to show people what crazy really looks like. Oh, boy.
JB by 12.
Comment by New Day Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 11:44 am
Oh, and one more thing. Anyone who thinks abortion won’t be a big issue for suburban voters this year doesn’t understand suburban voters. This will be a very big voting issue here.
Comment by New Day Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 11:45 am
I think Bailey has a chance but it is a slim chance. We’ve had Republican Governor’s before like Thompson & Edgar but they were moderates, not unabashedly conservatives like Bailey. Even if Bailey becomes Governor it’s really doubtful that he could Illinois a pro life state. Pro choice women won’t see it that way though, they will come out and vote against Bailey anyway. Inflation is a problem across the country, a lot of voters know that we’re not experiencing these economic issues because of anything JBP has done. Bailey will win sparsely populated Counties in Southern Illinois for all the good it will do him but JBP is going to get elected again.
Comment by The Dude Abides Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 11:50 am
==I think Bailey has a chance but it is a slim chance.==
I think it also depends on “a chance to do what?” Win? Yeah, that’s slim. Get within 5? Not as slim. Within ten? Probably pretty strong, really. Post up an occasional poll that freaks out the libs? A near certainty.
Comment by Arsenal Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 12:15 pm
As I’ve said before, the problem for IL Republicans is that IL is about five percentage points more Democratic than Wisconsin.
In WI this race could be a nail-biter. In iL Bailey basically needs to catch every break or those last five percentage points, might as well be Mt Everest.
Comment by ZC Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 12:20 pm
== As I’ve said before, the problem for IL Republicans is that IL is about five percentage points more Democratic than Wisconsin. ==
Uh, you’re off by a factor of about three or four.
Comment by Mike Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 12:41 pm
As people get to know Bailey, and Pritzker will have a lot to do with the narrative, how will he close the gap? Regardless of the current circumstances it’s hard to envision how Bailey becomes more likeable or appealing as things progress. He’s moved from being a sideshow to the big top. There’s nothing in his past that suggests he’ll do particularly well under the spotlight.
But maybe the larger question is where does the ILGOP, such as it is, see itself in this race? Is Bailey viewed as an aberration or the future of the party? There’s a whole bunch of establishment Republicans who clearly backed the wrong horse. Will they now become part of team Bailey, with all the baggage that entails, or let him go it alone?
Comment by Pundent Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 12:52 pm
When Bailey loses and the state map is color coded for the red counties he won and the blue counties JB won, Bailey’s supporters will absolutely go crazy(ier).
Can’t wait.
Comment by don the legend Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 1:15 pm
Abortion restrictions, book banning, whitewashing history, limiting LGBTQ rights, attacking teachers and other public sector employees are all on the agenda for the IL MAGAT run GOP. JB will ensure everyone is well educated about that agenda.
Comment by Norseman Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 1:38 pm
Pundent - Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 9:40 am:
The challenge for Bailey is that he will now need to expand from beyond his base while being hampered by everything he’s said and done to establish that base.
Late to the conversation here but that is a great comment. Kudos
Comment by Paddyrollingstone Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 3:50 pm
It’s easy to say abortion won’t matter in Illinois because it’s already protected. First of all, as was alluded to in other posts, there’s still areas where Illinois can change things. Also, there will be federal offices on the ballot in November & this is a battle that will also play out in DC as well. We’ll have to see how things will go in Congress over the next months, but that is something that the Democratic Party could use to get the vote out. I’m going to take an educated guess and say that people who are coming out to vote because of that issue aren’t going to skip state offices, in fact they’re probably going to vote straight Democratic.
Comment by MyTwoCents Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 4:15 pm
Bailey’s challenges are further compounded by one of his main governing pillars. That is, the rest of the state should secede from the City of Chicago. Now if and when he says, “I didn’t mean it” how will his base react? And when voters in Chicago and metro areas hear this nugget for the first time, how will they react to it?
Comment by Pundent Thursday, Jun 30, 22 @ 4:43 pm
Low voter turnout is inevitable come November. Always is in a non-presidential year. That’s a benefit for Bailey.
JB and crew are going to run with the abortion issues as top dog. They’ve already started. That will resonate but people will want way more than Roe to vote for someone. The GA is still going to be Dem so you can’t Executive Decision abortion restrictions..
IB needs to focus on accomplishments and why he should stay Gov. Remind people of Roe but do not make it the whole campaign.
Focus on economy and jobs. Reducing the government bloat, reducing property taxes, jobs, attracting people to Illinois etc.
Winning issues are the key. IRoe is only on factor. And while vocal is it out sally the only factor?
Comment by Frank talks Friday, Jul 1, 22 @ 1:21 am