This
is the Tribune Editorial Board’s fourth and final installment of
endorsements for contested Illinois House races in the June 28 primary.
89th District:
Republican
state Rep. Tony McCombie finds herself running in this district after 5
½ years as the 71st District’s lawmaker. We expect McCombie will do
just as well in the 89th. The former downstate Savanna mayor says
Illinois Democrats had a golden opportunity to enact robust ethics
reform after Michael Madigan stepped down as house speaker — and they
punted. What does McCombie say they should have done? Beef up the
authority of the legislative inspector general’s office. Put a stop to
the use of campaign funds by lawmakers to pay for their defenses in
criminal or civil cases involving corruption, sexual harassment or
discrimination claims. Ban lawmakers from lobbying state and local
officials. Running against McCombie is retired police officer Victoria
Onorato of Byron, who wants to eliminate the state’s firearm owners
identification card. “They are coming for our guns,” her website says.
We endorse McCombie.
91st District:
This
central Illinois district has an open seat. In the Democratic primary,
Karla Bailey-Smith is a 54-year-old painter from Bloomington who
believes restorative justice, in which offenders are rehabilitated
through reconciliation with victims and the community, should play a
strong role in tackling violent crime. That’s something we have agreed
with in the past. Her opponent, Sharon Chung, is a professional
violinist and McLean County Board member. She opted not to take part in
our endorsement process. Bailey-Smith is endorsed.
In
the GOP primary, James Fisher, 64, is a retired farmer from Hudson who
says state government is bloated with bureaucracy and needs to get
leaner. He also says Illinois will continue to struggle with job growth
as long as it remains one of the highest taxed states in the country.
But he wants to get rid of Illinois’ FOID card, and we think that would
imperil, rather than improve public safety. His opponent, Scott Preston
from Normal, runs a small business and is a member of the Normal City
Council. We make no endorsement in this race.
95th District:
GOP
state Rep. Tim Butler of Springfield speaks our language. He has
consistently fought to consolidate duplicative local government,
particularly at the township level. Should taxpayer money pay for a
township clerk when a county clerk does the exact same job, and likely
more efficiently? We like the bill he introduced that would take
millions of dollars in Russian investments out of Illinois pension
funds. Butler says Senate President Don Harmon, a Democrat from Oak
Park, held up the bill. Not good. Butler’s opponent, Kent Gray of Leland
Grove, was on a Springfield-area community college board for 18 years,
and in 2020 was co-chairman of the Trump campaign’s Illinois finance
committee. His views on governance align with Butler’s, but we like
Butler’s experience and give him our endorsement.
96th District:
The
winner of the GOP primary in this Decatur-area district faces
Democratic incumbent Sue Scherer. Prescott Paulin, a 36-year-old defense
consultant from Decatur, describes himself as the only candidate in
Illinois who advocates for moving the state toward Web3 technology.
That’s a concept that entails a new internet service built with
decentralized blockchains. Think Bitcoin. His opponent, Lisa Smith of
Blue Mound, is a pediatric nurse practitioner who says sky-high taxes
are driving people and businesses out of the state. She also says, if
elected, she would push an education agenda that’s pro-school choice.
Smith is endorsed.
105th District:
This
redrawn central Illinois district has an open seat. The incumbent,
Republican Dan Brady, decided to run for secretary of state. Four
candidates are vying in the GOP primary, and there’s no candidate
running on the Democratic side. Donald Ray Rients of Benson is an
infrastructure analyst with State Farm. Like us, he believes the path to
pension reform comes with a referendum asking voters to amend the state
constitution so that future benefit growth is reduced to affordable
levels, while current earned benefits are left intact. He also backs a
referendum asking voters to approve a state constitutional amendment
that would establish an independent citizens commission to carry out
decennial remapping. Also running: Mike Kirkton from Gridley, CEO of his
family business and a Livingston County Board member; Woodford County
Chief Deputy Sheriff Dennis Tipsword; and Kyle Ham, former executive
director of the Bloomington-Normal Economic Development Council. Rients
is endorsed.
112th District:
The
Democratic incumbent, Katie Stuart of Edwardsville, is running
unopposed in her primary. On the Republican side, Jennifer Korte, 47, is
a stay-at-home mother from Edwardsville who wants to save taxpayer
money by consolidating school districts and duplicative local
government. But she also believes there was enough voter fraud in the
2020 presidential election to overturn the results. Simply put, she’s
wrong about that. Our attempts to reach out to Korte’s opponent, Joe
Hackler of Granite City, were unsuccessful. We make no endorsement in
this race.
114th District:
Kevin
Schmidt is a chiropractor from downstate Millstadt who supports school
choice and wants to look for ways to streamline and consolidate levels
of local government. “They’re repeating themselves,” he said during a
recent League of Women Voters forum. “One level of government is doing
the exact same thing that another level of government is doing.” His
opponent, Kevin Dawson, is a lawyer and Mascoutah County Board member
who says Illinois “doesn’t have a revenue problem. It has a spending
problem.” We think Schmidt is the better choice to face Democratic
incumbent LaToya Greenwood of East St. Louis in the November election.
Schmidt is endorsed.
117th District:
Republican
Ron Ellis is a commissioner on the Williamson County Board, and he
thinks he’s got the right template for stemming the exodus of jobs,
businesses and people from southern Illinois. That template, he says, is
Williamson County. While other southern Illinois counties are seeing
their populations and revenue drop, Williamson is thriving. County
government was able to spark job growth through tax breaks for local
businesses. Residents of the 117th District might benefit from the
Williamson County approach. We endorse Ellis over Patrick Windhorst of
Metropolis, who currently is the GOP state lawmaker for the 118th
District.
118th District:
Paul
Jacobs was elected to the Illinois House in 2020. He currently has the
115th District seat, but with the remap is now running in the 118th
District. The Pomona Republican believes it’s high time that Springfield
starts to exhibit some fiscal responsibility and implement
across-the-board cuts in state government. He also says Democrats need
to curb their pork-laden spending sprees — a problem that bloats the
budget and translates into ever-rising taxes. He’s running against Aaron
Smith of Marion, vice chairman of the John A. Logan College board.
We’ve endorsed Jacobs before, and endorse him again.
The Tribune makes no endorsements in the 87th, 90th, 93rd, and 98th primary races.