The looming void left by retiring Secretary
of State Jesse White has drawn an ambitious field of hopefuls — all
targeting the ethical missteps or perceived failings of their rivals.
A popular former state treasurer versus a trail-blazing, rising star
of the Illinois Democratic Party, as well as an esteemed South Side
alderman and a south suburban non-profit director?
Or is it an inept former banker versus a City Hall insider who
allegedly boosted her husband’s lobbying business, as well as a
desperate politician making baseless accusations and a political puppet
planted in the race to confuse voters?
It all depends on which
candidate you ask in the heated four-way Democratic primary race for
secretary of state, the party’s only statewide contest without an
incumbent vying for the nomination — forcing Illinois’ most powerful
Dems to pick sides.
The looming void left by retiring Secretary of
State Jesse White — long considered Illinois’ most popular elected
official after an unprecedented six terms — has drawn an ambitious field
of hopefuls looking to maintain Democratic control of the state’s most
public-facing office, responsible for driver services and most other
record-keeping.While former state Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias, Chicago City Clerk Anna
Valencia, Ald. David Moore (17th) and Homewood resident Sidney Moore all
agree that modernizing technology in the office would be their top
priority, they diverge on their characterizations of one another.
Giannoulias and Valencia have emerged as the perceived frontrunners
in the race, thanks to big-name party establishment endorsements and
hefty campaign contributions.
Those dollars — more than $4.4
million in the bank for Giannoulias and $1.1 million for Valencia at the
end of March, with hundreds of thousands more flowing in for each since
then — have helped them both flood the airwaves with ads.
Giannoulias,
who held the state treasurer’s office from 2007-11, has faced the same
questions that dogged his losing 2010 bid for Barack Obama’s U.S. Senate
seat, all surrounding his tenure as loan officer for his family’s
doomed Broadway Bank.
The institution approved loans to some with
alleged links to organized crime before it went under in the middle of
Giannoulias’ Senate campaign.“No one has ever accused me of doing anything unethical or remotely
untoward,” Giannoulias told the Sun-Times. “Like a lot of businesses in
the Great Recession, unfortunately, my family’s office didn’t survive.”
But
Valencia said Giannoulias and his family “left immigrant families
hanging,” arguing that the failure “raises major red flags” about his
ability to oversee one of the state’s largest offices.
Valencia,
who was appointed city clerk by former Mayor Rahm Emanuel in 2016 and
won a full term in 2019, has come under fire herself for hundreds of
emails sent from her city account, either to or regarding her lobbyist
husband and his clients.
NBC-5 Chicago reported
that Valencia failed to report her husband’s lobbying work on her city
ethics disclosures — the type of economic interest statements that would
fall under her purview as secretary of state. She has called it “an
honest mistake.”
“I certainly am not the first woman who has had to say that my
husband doesn’t speak for me,” said Valencia, who would be the first
woman and the first Latinx person to serve as Illinois secretary of
state.
“I wish I had been more careful with the mixing of my
personal and professional emails, but the experience has made me a
stronger person and a better public servant.”
Giannoulias hammered
Valencia over the controversy, arguing that because the secretary of
state oversees lobbyist registrations, “there can’t even be a scent of
anything improper.”
Ald. David Moore, running an energetic campaign with about $100,000
on hand, has tried to capitalize on the other candidates’ mud-slinging,
presenting himself as the only candidate without any ethical baggage to
lug into the general election.
“Voters want someone with good character and integrity, someone
who is there to serve them, who is a sound fiscal manager and who isn’t
looking for a political stepping stone,” said Ald. David Moore, an
accountant who has represented his South Side ward since 2015. “They
don’t see that from the other candidates. They’ve got a strong public
servant in me.”
Sidney Moore, meanwhile, has kept a lower
campaign profile, with no donations or expenses reported to the Illinois
State Board of Elections. He said he was inspired to run after his
driver’s license was suspended due to a series of parking tickets.Jesse White allowed it to happen,” said the executive director of the
non-profit Big Box Charities Inc. “The citizens of Illinois are tired
of expecting different results from the same politicians. They’ll see
there’s a candidate here who’s not just a politician.”
But the
alderperson with the same last name has suggested political shenanigans
were afoot with Sidney Moore’s entry into the race. Ald. David Moore
said “someone put him in the race to cause confusion for voters,” though
he acknowledged he doesn’t have evidence to back up the claim. “We all
know Chicago politics,” the City Council member said.
Sidney Moore said the alderperson was “grasping at straws. We run in
some of the same circles. He probably heard I was running. I think he
tried to jump in ahead of me.”
Giannoulias and Valencia said they scarcely know of the Homewood candidate and had nothing to do with his political aspirations.
For
his part, Sidney Moore says he’d prioritize upgrading technology in
driver services facilities to improve wait times. He also said he wants
to introduce self-service stations similar to kiosks that have sprung
up in Michigan.
Ald. David Moore, who is backed by U.S. Rep. Danny
Davis and numerous Chicago clergy leaders, said he wants to expand
online services to include car titling, and use libraries as satellite
DMV offices. He also wants to explore digital license plates, which have
been authorized in other states as a means of streamlining
registrations.
Valencia — who has the coveted endorsement of Jesse White among a
bevy of other elected officials including billionaire Gov. J.B. Pritzker
and U.S. Sens. Tammy Duckworth and Dick Durbin — said she’d expand
mobile services and flexible hours like she has in City Hall, setting up
shop in park district facilities and offering services on evenings and
weekends.
Giannoulias — backed by dozens of powerful labor groups
as well as U.S. Reps. Jesús “Chuy” García, Raja Krishnamoorthi, Bobby
Rush, Mike Quigley and more —said he wants to digitize drivers licenses
and state IDs, and introduce a mobile app to help cut down on lines.
The winner of the June 28 primary will advance to the general election against the Republican nominee, either state Rep. Dan Brady, R-Bloomington, or former central Illinois federal prosecutor John Milhiser.
Another
Jesse White will be on the ballot in November, too — a Libertarian
candidate from downstate Centralia, no relation to the retiring
secretary of state.