William Katz:  Urgent Agenda

HOME      ABOUT      OUR ARCHIVE      CONTACT 

 

 

 

 

GOP AIMS FOR OBAMA'S SENATE SEAT – AT 8:48 P.M. ET:  After Massachusetts, the seat most coveted by Republicans is the one vacated by President Obama in Illinois, and now held by machine hack Roland Burris, who isn't running because he knows he'd get three votes, five on the outside.  The GOP has a shot, as reported by the Chicago Tribune:

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. - The Illinois race for an open Senate seat may be the biggest political battle of 2010, at least when it comes to bragging rights.

This is the seat held by Barack Obama before he moved to the White House. It would be a major victory for Republicans to take the president's old seat out of the Democratic column in a state that, on paper, is strongly Democratic.

To pull off that coup, Republican leaders are backing Mark Kirk, a commander in the Naval Reserve and five-term congressman with moderate views on issues like gun control and abortion.

Kirk faces some quiet rumbling in his own party, but it hasn't dented him:

Kirk outrages some conservative activists, who consider him a traitor to fundamental Republican principles, but that hasn't translated into significant support for any of his rivals in the primary. One group recently canceled a debate because it couldn't find evidence that any of Kirk's opponents reached even 5 percent in opinion polls.

The Dems have a bit of a talent shortage:

There's more competition in the Democratic primary race, and more vulnerabilities.

State Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias is the apparent front-runner based on name recognition and fundraising. He also oversaw an investment program that lost $150 million that Illinois families had set aside to pay for college. It doesn't help that his only other job was with his family's troubled bank.

Make him secretary of the treasury.

David Hoffman, former prosecutor and inspector general for the city of Chicago, may be Giannoulias' most aggressive challenger, but he hasn't had the money to reach most voters.

Cheryle Jackson, head of the Chicago Urban League, has a natural political base as the only black candidate in the field. She also was a high-ranking aide to disgraced former Gov. Rod Blagojevich, something that opens her to questions about ethics and judgment.

Yeah, I'd say so.  That's a safe statement.

Attorney Jacob Meister has presented himself as an outsider, someone who is more in touch with business owners than with politicians. He, too, lacks the money for a major campaign.

And the gorilla in the room:

Complicating things even further, this particular Senate seat is entangled in the Blagojevich scandal.

The former governor is accused of, essentially, trying to sell the seat and name the buyer as Obama's replacement. Even after his arrest, Blagojevich went ahead and appointed Roland Burris to the seat. Burris gave conflicting, incomplete answers about how he came to get that appointment, which triggered an ethics investigation and made Burris so unpopular that he decided not to run for a full term.

COMMENT:  Kirk may not suit all Republican tastes, but this is a time for practicality.  He's a solid guy, respectably conservative, with a fine record and a strong record, especially on national defense. 

The last GOP senator from Illinois was Peter Fitzgerald, who didn't run for reelection.  The last significant Republican senator from the state was the unspeakable Charles Percy, who was a Republican in name only, and a man who yearned to be accepted by the Eastern establishment.  His daughter, Sharon Percy, is married to Democratic Senator Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia.  To Percy, it's the Rockefeller thing that counts.

We're backing Kirk.

January 22, 2010