As the price of gas has skyrocketed, candidates are reminding voters who voted to double the motor fuel tax in 2019.
“We’re not the party of Trump,” Senate Republican Leader Dan
McConchie told an interviewer a couple of months ago. “I’m in the
Republican Party and the party of Lincoln. And at the end of the day,
the important thing is that we’re standing up for ideas and ideals and
not a personality. And that is what the Republican Party has been about
for decades, and what I believe we’re going to be going forward.”
At least as far as the Illinois governor’s race goes, that now seems less likely.
As
you undoubtedly know by now, state Sen. Darren Bailey (R-Xenia) did not
appear to be gaining traction until the GOP primary battlefield was
reshaped as a referendum on former President Donald Trump by big money
pumped in from billionaire Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Republican
billionaire Dick Uihlein.
The question now is whether that Trump
referendum will move down the ballot. Two polls showed a very tight
Republican attorney general primary with huge numbers of people who
can’t decide between Ken Griffin-backed Steve Kim and outlandish,
far-right COVID attorney Tom DeVore, who has been endorsed by Bailey.
And Trump and Bailey have both endorsed U.S. Rep. Mary Miller over
fellow Republican U.S. Rep. Rodney Davis.And what about the state legislature?
While the House Republican Organization is formally staying out of
the race in the open 87th District primary, House GOP Leader Jim Durkin
has contributed $5,000 to candidate Mary Burress.
And a committee
controlled by Durkin ally Rep. Avery Bourne (R-Morrisonville) has maxed
out to Burress with a $59,900 contribution. Burress, the Tazewell County
treasurer, is running against Tazewell County Board member and
physician William Hauter.
The reason I mention this is that
Burress is one of the only House Republican candidates I can find who is
openly touting her support for former President Trump. “Mary Burress is
the pro-Trump Republican working to make Illinois great again,”
declares a headline on one mailer, which also features a photo of her
next to the former POTUS.
With Bailey surging and a recent Chicago
Sun-Times poll showing Trump still very popular with party members, it
would seem to be a no-brainer for conservative Republican candidates to
publicly attach themselves to one or the other or both in their
advertising and social media posts.
Bailey has decided to take the initiative. And there are some
unifying threads here: Durkin and the 2019 gas tax hike that Durkin
eventually supported.
“We’ve got a whole list of
anti-establishment reformers who we’re going to be endorsing in the next
24 hours,” a top Bailey official told me late last week.
Included
on the list is Sen. Win Stoller (R-East Peoria). Stoller is up against
Brett Nicklaus, who is backed by Durkin and others close to him.
There’s
no love at all between Bailey and Durkin. The two clashed often when
Bailey was in the House, and Durkin fully backed Richard Irvin. Both
Durkin and Irvin’s running mate Rep. Avery Bourne voted to double the
motor fuel tax in 2019, something Bailey often pounds home on the
campaign trail as the price of gas has skyrocketed.
Bailey doesn’t seem to have any ideas about how to repair and upgrade
our woefully dilapidated infrastructure without that money, but nobody
seems to care.
Bailey also endorsed Republican Don Debolt over
Sen. Steve McClure (R-Springfield), who voted for the gas tax increase
as well. And Bailey’s backing former GOP Rep. John Cabello in his race
against a candidate backed by a trade union that pushed hard to raise
the gas tax. Cabello voted “no.”
Kent Gray is running against Rep.
Tim Butler (R-Springfield), who voted with his party leadership on the
gas tax. Gray has not raised a lot of money, has a thick opposition
research file, and Butler hasn’t taken any chances by spending big and
campaigning hard. If Bailey’s coattails can drag Gray across the line …
whew.
Bailey’s also supporting Travis Weaver against Rep. Mark
Luft (R-Pekin), who wasn’t around for the gas tax vote but is backed
heavily by Durkin and some unions. And he’s supporting Rep. Dave
Welter’s opponent Jed Davis. Welter (R-Morris) is in House Republican
leadership, so you already know where he was in 2019.
That was one tough vote in 2019. It took guts to take it, and I
still think, despite the prices, it was the right thing to do for the
state’s future. We’ll see if Bailey tries to connect those tax dots in
voters’ minds or whether, as time expires, he’ll just try to win these
races with his personality alone.