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Chicago Tribune
Chicago Tribune
Politics
Dan Petrella

As Bailey seeks to weaken Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s Black support, governor launches new ad with endorsement from Obama

CHICAGO — A new TV spot from Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker touts an endorsement from former President Barack Obama just as the governor’s opponents are seeking to weaken his support among Black voters.

“Illinois will always hold a special place in my heart,” Obama says in the 30-second ad, which began airing Friday on TV stations statewide. “You believed in me before anyone else did. And you believed in J.B. Pritzker too.

“He’s made Illinois a national leader on so many issues we care about: raising the minimum wage, protecting voting rights, cracking down on the sale of illegal guns.”

Obama, who along with former first lady Michelle Obama cast his ballot Monday at the early voting site in the Loop, also says in the ad that he was proud to vote for Pritzker’s reelection because he “signed a landmark law protecting a woman’s right to choose,” a reference to a 2019 state law that enshrined access to abortion as a “fundamental right” in Illinois.

Obama doesn’t mention Pritzker’s Republican challenger, conservative state Sen. Darren Bailey, who was endorsed in the primary by former President Donald Trump.

The commercial’s release comes after Bailey and his allies have sought to tamp down enthusiasm among Black voters for the first-term governor.

“Black people should not vote for J.B. Pritzker,” former WLS-Ch. 7 reporter Charles Thomas, who is Black, says in an ad from a Bailey-aligned political action committee called People Who Play By The Rules.

The PAC, run by right-wing radio show host Dan Proft of Naples, Florida, is paying Thomas $50,000 as a consultant, State Board of Elections records show.

In their final debate of the campaign on Tuesday, Bailey at least twice pointed to purported antipathy toward Pritzker in Chicago’s “Black neighborhoods.”

“They are fed up,” Bailey said, claiming the governor doesn’t visit neighborhoods like Washington Park on the South Side when shootings occur.

During a news conference after a mass shooting in Washington Park last month, Bailey said, “J.B., how many more Black families have to mourn before you recognize that Black lives really do matter?”

Asked at the debate what the phrase “Black Lives Matter” means to him, Bailey responded, “It means that every life matters.

“And unfortunately, J.B. Pritzker during his four years in office has created so much division and hate in this state with racial ideas and ideology,” he said.

Obama has been actively campaign for Democrats in other states, including neighboring Wisconsin and nearby Michigan, ahead of the Nov. 8 general election. His endorsement of Pritzker in an ad rather than during an in-person appearance is an indication the former president and other Democrats aren’t deeply concerned about the governor’s reelection chances.

The endorsement comes as little surprise, despite some interesting history between the two.

When Obama entered the 2008 presidential campaign, Pritzker’s sister, Penny Pritzker, was an early supporter and his campaign’s national finance chair. She would go on to become his first Commerce secretary.

J.B. Pritzker, however, backed Obama’s rival for the Democratic nomination, then-U. S. Sen. Hillary Clinton of New York.

Obama also played an important role in jump-starting the political career of Pritzker’s running mate, Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton. While still in the White House in 2016, he took the rare step of cutting a TV and radio ad supporting Stratton in her successful Democratic primary bid to unseat incumbent South Side state Rep. Ken Dunkin.

The billionaire governor’s campaign fund on Friday transferred $2 million to the Democratic Party of Illinois, state campaign finance records show. That’s on top of $2 million transferred to the party last week and brings Pritzker’s total contributions to the state party during the current election cycle to $8.5 million, more than double the nearly $3.2 million he gave in 2018.

While much of that money is being deployed to support Democratic candidates in down ballot races, the party reported spending more than $1 million on mailings and fliers for Pritzker’s campaign

(Chicago Tribune’s Rick Pearson contributed to this report.)

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