Governor stages a big comeback

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

Every night before an Election Day, I spend 4 or 5 hours on the phone with people I trust, asking what they think will happen.

There are always a couple of races that will have them stumped, but I’ve never seen everybody perplexed about so many outcomes until the night before last week’s election.

Take, for instance, the Democratic governor’s primary.

Gov. Pat Quinn had what can only be described as a nightmarish few weeks in January. His job disapproval rating shot skyward, his support tanked everywhere, and Dan Hynes pulled even in the polls.

But things started to change 8 days before the election when word leaked out that Ford Motor Co. had agreed to add 1,200 jobs to its Chicago assembly plant. Factories are closing all over the country, yet here was a major success. Quinn held the official ceremony on Tuesday, which was attended by Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley.

On Wednesday, Quinn announced a $366 million upgrade to Wacker Drive in Chicago and held a ceremony at Northern Illinois University to release millions of dollars to “repurpose” Cole Hall – the site of the tragic campus shooting which left five students dead.

Thursday came a radio debate on WVON – an African-American station – where Quinn cleaned Hynes’ clock, and the announcement of big federal money for high-speed rail, with a subsequent Mayor Daley press conference and a statewide fly-around with U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin on Friday. Quinn owned the entire week.

By Friday afternoon, Quinn had put Hynes on the defensive after the governor’s campaign leaked some explosive documents to a Chicago TV station about Burr Oak Cemetery. The cemetery was the object of much controversy in the Chicago area last summer when it was discovered that graves were being resold and bodies were being dug up and cast aside. Quinn’s new information made it look like Hynes should have known back in 2003 that there was a serious problem with grave reselling.

After being, um, buried by Quinn’s super-positive announcements all week, Hynes clearly lost the weekend. Both candidates did their best to stay positive the day before Election Day, so even if it was a draw, that’s still a loss for the challenger.

Previous Page|1||

Comments



Get Real Deals delivered right to your inbox!

Blogs

» Twin Cities Talk
Twin Cities Talk

Bringing people to the river

STERLING – More entities are throwing their support behind the Rock River Trail Initiative.
» The Sole Goal
The Sole Goal

Be bold. Brave the cold.

The Indian Summer couldn't last forever. But despite the dip in temperatures, there's no reason you can't train in the great outdoors. In fact, winter running can be the most rewarding.

Reader Poll

The Republican field of presidential candidates is down to four. Which one do you favor?

Newt Gingrich
Ron Paul
Mitt Romney
Rick Santorum