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A Bigger Enemy than Democrat Money and the MSM
Illinois Review ^ | November 11, AD 2022 | John F Di Leo

Posted on 11/11/2022 3:09:33 PM PST by jfd1776

It is estimated that 100,000 people leave the state of Illinois every year. It is difficult to know exactly what this means, as people move in as well as move out, and many of the incoming are either illegal immigrants or illegal aliens.

But one thing is certain: the hundred thousand who depart each year are workers, employers, taxpayers. The very people you need for not only a functioning economy but also a functioning republic.

For an electoral process to work, for it to produce elected officials with the right mentality to run the government in a fashion conducive to an ever-increasing standard of living for its constituents, the majority of the electorate has to have skin in that game.

Looking at results like the Illinois 2022 midterms produced, it is understandable if one comes to the quick conclusion that Illinois is over… that Illinois has passed the point of no return.

But that is a snap judgment, not entirely born out of the facts.

It is too soon for a full, objective analysis of Illinois‘s performance in the midterms. There will be polling data worth studying in detail, and more can be learned. But there are some things we know already:

THE FAILED STATE

Illinois is on track to becoming a failed state.

It already was, of course, in many ways. Illinois has been a sanctuary state for a decade, inviting criminal illegal aliens in by the hundreds of thousands, to increase, at best, our welfare burden, and at worst, our growing crime wave. And Illinois is on an economic death spiral, bleeding taxpaying individuals and businesses at the same time it is going into ever-greater government debt, by refusing to reform a bureaucratic hiring system and pension system that are both utterly unsustainable.

Every election is a chance to turn this around; in most elections, as in this one, Illinois misses that chance and makes it all worse.

THE PARTY PROBLEM

It is no surprise to anyone that the Illinois state Republican party is ineffective. Ever since campaign finance reform began in the 1970s on the national scene, state parties have had a rough time with it. The more affluent a society gets, the more our political lobbies, on both sides, can grow to the strength of parties in their own right.

We have unions, especially the SEIU and the various teachers' unions, with greater strength than the Democratic party. We have business-oriented PACs and single-issue associations which could just as easily wield more strength than the Republican party. In some states they do.

Here in Illinois, however, the Democratic party and its allies have grown steadily in power and reach, while those on the right have tended to diminish.

Why? Why has the Illinois Republican coalition become so ineffective over the years? Those shifting population numbers and demographics certainly play a part in it. But they don’t tell the whole story.

While the Illinois Republican party, much like the national Republican party, in fact, has often had some solid leaders… the majority of its leaders have been poor, seemingly more interested in infighting between the conservative and liberal wings of the Republican party than in defeating Democrats.

The Republican party in Illinois is also known, even more so than the national, for forcing its candidates to campaign as individuals. While Illinois has plenty of personally-popular individual Democrats, the Democrat brand in Illinois - as a brand - is as foul as anywhere in the country, the ripest political target imaginable. Why doesn’t the Illinois Republican party ever concentrate on that?

Why doesn’t the Illinois Republican party run party identification advertising, to compete with the Democrats? A single ad - a commercial on YouTube or radio, or a highway billboard, tying our state's crime problems to the Democrats as a group would do infinitely more help than the thousands of expensive candidate flyers that flood our mailboxes each year.

But Illinois Republicans don’t do that, do they? If they have a million dollars to spend, they write a stack of $20,000 checks to each individual candidate.

Why? To be generous, we may tell ourselves that they think the candidates can use the cash best themselves. But to be cynical, we are more likely to conclude that the party leaders want their future officeholders to remember who signed those $20,000 checks. This party's leaders sure seem to value gratitude over victory.

This was an incredibly expensive race, even for the Republicans. And we have nothing to show for it in Illinois, nothing at all, for a reason: we made our state rep, state senate, county board, and congressional candidates spend a mint on direct mail, without giving them the support that they needed in broad party outreach to the public mind.

THE HARD NUMBERS

As Illinoisans watched the returns come in Tuesday night, there are some things we don’t know, and we will never know. We don’t know how many of those votes were real and how many were fabricated. How many were conscious residents casting ballots intentionally, versus how many were nursing homes, college dorms, apartment buildings, and cemeteries, farmed for their names and cast by precinct captains, landlords, nursing home administrators, or bureaucrats? There is no way to know.

But we do know how many hard numbers were published in each race. We know the percentages, as they showed up on our television screens and scarred our memories.

We know that we were told that Pritzker and Duckworth would skate to victory with 60-40 landslides. Scary predictions.

We know that, in fact, incumbent Democrat Tammy Duckworth was reelected with 56%. We know that incumbent billionaire democrat JB Pritzker was reelected with 54%.

Those are strong percentages. But not insurmountable ones. In the right year, with the right candidates, the right campaigns, the right messaging, and the right confidence from the public, they were winnable.

But we were told that they were not winnable - by people to whom we should never have listened - from the beginning.

Donors were discouraged from even considering Darren Bailey and Kathy Salvi in Illinois. As soon as they were selected in our primary, the republican party structure and many of its voters gave up on them. Instantly.

We will never know how much money the Democrats spent in Illinois to win those percentages. One commonly-cited number was 38 billion dollars for Pritzker versus 2 billion for Bailey. To come that close, being outspent 20 to 1, is pretty darned good.

Perhaps we shouldn’t have given up on them, after all?

And let’s look at the U.S. House seats that we lost on Tuesday. Eric Sorenson beat Esther Joy King, 52 to 48. Lauren Underwood beat Scott Grider 54 to 46. Sean Casten beat Keith Pekau, also 54 to 46.

A lot of us were given the impression that our statewide races were going to be a 60-40 or even 65-35 blow out election for the Democrats. As a result, what happened?

Republican voters stayed home.

A SELF-FULFILLING PROPHESY

And this is the real problem with the Illinois election of 2022. Some percentage of Republican voters and donors, probably a large percentage, sat out the election this year.

Bitter voters and donors who had supported others in the Republican primary convinced themselves that Bailey and Salvi had no chance, so they gave up. They didn’t donate, they didn’t put out yard signs, they didn’t walk precincts, and they didn’t even vote.

“If the gubernatorial nominee and the Senate nominee have no chance, then what would be the point?”

What these disheartened or bitter pessimists didn’t realize was that there are races that matter - down-ballot - which we can win, and ordinarily do win, even if we lose at the state-wide level.

There are enough Republicans to elect state reps, state senators, and congressmen in Illinois.

JB Pritzker has so much money, if he saw his poll numbers dropping, he probably could have poured more money into his own race in the closing weeks and still won, maybe, no matter what.

But that would not have been the case for those down-ballot races.

If Illinois Republican voters had turned out in their normal numbers, Illinois would not have had the bloodbath at the congressional and state legislative, and county levels that we saw this year.

There was a red wave across this country. Not quite as big as had been predicted, but a wave nevertheless. Maybe that wave would not have carried Illinois' state constitutional offices… But even if that’s the case, there’s no reason why Republicans couldn’t have beaten Underwood, Casten, and Sorenson. There’s no reason why we couldn’t have seen some decent pick-ups in Springfield.

In the final analysis, defeatism and pessimism are together a much bigger enemy than Democrat money and biased mass media.

The national mood is such that the Republican victories on Tuesday have been dampened by the media narrative that there was no red wave at all. Guess what? Illinois is a fundamental reason for that narrative.

If Illinois had picked up a couple of GOP congressmen on Tuesday - which it certainly could have - that fact alone would have colored Tuesday night's reporting. And that might even have inspired more defeatism on the left side of the aisle, as the night wore on, and as concentration moved to the west coast.

Everything matters in politics. Everything.

Every state, every congressional district, every state rep district. Every county board seat.

Maybe Cook County is gone like they tell us. Maybe it’s too late to save. But the rest of the state? Oh no.

The Democrats didn’t beat Republican candidates downstate this time. Republican defeatism did.

Copyright 2022 John F Di Leo

John F. Di Leo is a Chicagoland-based trade compliance trainer and transportation manager, writer, and actor. A one-time county chairman of the Milwaukee County Republican Party, he has been writing regularly for Illinois Review since 2009.

A collection of John’s Illinois Review articles about vote fraud, The Tales of Little Pavel, and his 2021 political satires about current events, Evening Soup with Basement Joe, Volumes One and Two, are available, in either paperback or eBook, only on Amazon.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; Miscellaneous; Politics
KEYWORDS: 2022midterms; illinoiscombine; illinoispolitics; redwave; selfpromotion
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To: jfd1776

A major part of the problem : ‘...either illegal immigrants or illegal aliens ...”

SAME, SAME dummie !


21 posted on 11/11/2022 4:44:07 PM PST by A strike (LGBFJRoberts)
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To: jfd1776

I’m so glad I escaped the land of high taxes, corruption and ridiculous mandates (IL) last year.

The ILGOPe won’t lift a finger to help any candidate who is actually conservative. They’d rather lose and they’re getting pretty good at it.


22 posted on 11/11/2022 5:00:25 PM PST by BuchananBrigadeTrumpFan (If in doubt, it's probably sarcasm)
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To: redrhino47

NP. You guys actually flipped quite a few seats to the gop didn’t you? The governor’s race though...extremely disheartening.


23 posted on 11/11/2022 5:05:46 PM PST by LibertyWoman (America, the Handwriting is on the Wall. )
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To: jfd1776

I’m in Illinois.
I’m a MAGA Republican.
I voted on Election Day.
Straight Republican.
I’m ready to move to Wisconsin. They have their liberal stronghold in Madison, but I feel that at least we’ll have a voice there.
I’m tired of the GOP, the Gang Of P*SSIES Party who get in front of a camera and complain about the democrats, but get face time on tv and collect a paycheck from the state, and DON’T SEEM TO CARE.
I have my CCL, and won’t leave home without it.
The only thing keeping me here is family.


24 posted on 11/11/2022 5:08:14 PM PST by telescope115 (Proud member of the ANTIFAuci movement. )
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To: LibertyWoman

The governor’s race though...extremely disheartening.

I’ll take what I can get.
The house seats are huge. More so because,
we know they cheat.

:) All the best!


25 posted on 11/11/2022 5:18:00 PM PST by redrhino47
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To: A strike

Good heavens. You are absolutely right. The clause was meant to refer to “legal immigrants (green card holders) or illegal aliens”.

I was using voice to text to dictate it, and then I corrected the typos. I didn’t see that one. I can get it corrected in the original… I don’t know how to fix it in free republic. Darn it.

Thanks very much for catching it! I’m so embarrassed.


26 posted on 11/11/2022 5:20:33 PM PST by jfd1776 (John F. Di Leo, Illinois Review Columnist)
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To: redrhino47

Amen FRiend ;)


27 posted on 11/11/2022 5:25:12 PM PST by LibertyWoman (America, the Handwriting is on the Wall. )
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To: jfd1776

No worries. Way too many on our side act as if these distinctions don”t matter.
It doesn’t matter as they are not any different, and the goal of population replacement proceeds apace regardless.


28 posted on 11/11/2022 6:08:47 PM PST by A strike (LGBFJRoberts)
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To: jfd1776

You could always just repost the entire text in a comment as a clarification / correction...

In my experience most legal immigrants who go through the proper processes including showing they will not be dependent on the state (old style where you had to have money, a profession, or a sponsor to back you / provide for you) become contributing, working citizens who pay taxes. As a group, politically they seem no worse than the group of women of childbearing age in the USA.

Now, of CURRENT legal immigrants who receive much less scrutiny, that may be different. Those I interact with seem pretty decent to me, but that is a much more limited sampling, these days...


29 posted on 11/11/2022 6:37:13 PM PST by Paul R. (You know your pullets are dumb if they don't recognize a half Whopper as food!)
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To: jfd1776

I agree with almost all your points, but, I’ll add another observation: I was watching an IL TV station’s “Local News” in a rather red region of downstate IL the night B4 the election. They aired as part of the “news” just under 5 minutes total of Democrat candidates making their pitches. This included Biden at a rally (not in IL but I don’t recall where, PA maybe?) Add in a couple minutes of “reports” on the legal attacks on DJT.

By contrast, the Republican side got maybe 15 seconds of President Trump at a rally. That was it.

This does not even include the constant reports of all the great things the Dems are doing for us (/s) as they (not reported) suck the sustenance out of us, ruin the society, and drive out most of the people with $$.*

Pardon my French, but, how the “H” do Republicans / conservatives compete with this? And how do we make a run at getting it corrected?

*Several of my successful friends from the Chicago suburban area are leaving for states like TN and AR as soon as they can conclude family matters (usually care of a parent) and / or sell their businesses. (These friends are all moderately to very conservative.)

BTW, if you have a ping list, please add me to it.

Thanks.


30 posted on 11/11/2022 7:03:00 PM PST by Paul R. (You know your pullets are dumb if they don't recognize a half Whopper as food!)
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To: LibertyWoman

In Southern IL, the property owners may resort to removing trespassers themselves. Without a trace, as they say...


31 posted on 11/11/2022 7:10:35 PM PST by Paul R. (You know your pullets are dumb if they don't recognize a half Whopper as food!)
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To: telescope115
"I’m ready to move to Wisconsin."

We could sure use more patriots up here. Help to gird our legislators loins. Wisconsin state legislature is all red, and we even managed to increase majorities in both chambers and flipped a congressional seat this year. Ron Johnson re-elected too so we're holding our own. We don't have veto-proof majorities in the legislature but hopefully they can thwart Tony Evers and his communist plans.

I relocated up here from the Chicago area in 2003. Even back then it felt like I had escaped a lunatic asylum.

32 posted on 11/12/2022 7:08:32 AM PST by SkiKnee
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To: Paul R.

Probably will be their only option.


33 posted on 11/12/2022 9:52:58 AM PST by LibertyWoman (America, the Handwriting is on the Wall. )
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