Obama wins Ill.; Dems pick up 3 US House seats

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CHICAGO (AP) — Democrats landed most of the big prizes on the Illinois ballot Tuesday, picking up three congressional seats Republicans won two years ago, while President Barack Obama scored an easy home-state victory.

U.S. Rep. Joe Walsh lost to Iraq war veteran Tammy Duckworth; U.S. Rep. Bobby Schilling fell to Cheri Bustos; and longtime U.S. Rep. Judy Biggert lost her seat to challenger Bill Foster.

Former National Guard chief Bill Enyart kept a vacated seat in southern Illinois in Democratic hands. The other two closely watched congressional races were too close to call.

The party was looking to Illinois, along with California and New York, as their best chances to make significant gains in Congress. Republicans were fighting to hold on to several seats, a job made tougher when district boundaries were redrawn in a process controlled by Democrats.

With the new political map, all 177 seats in the Illinois General Assembly were on the ballot. That produced some fierce battles, but there was little chance Republicans would pick up enough seats to seize control of the state Senate or House.

The Associated Press called Obama's victory based on exit polling shortly after polls closed Tuesday. The polling showed Obama carried every age group and won both men and women. But his support among white voters slipped slightly from 2008, and among white men, most favored Republican Mitt Romney.

The economy was the issue most on voters' minds in a state where the unemployment rate is nearly 9 percent, slightly above the national average.

Randy Yorke, who cast his ballot for Obama, said the president deserves another term.

"I'm much better off now than I was four years ago," said Yorke, 64, a lawyer from the Chicago suburb of Naperville. "The country's better off."

Jim Chmura, 67, of Oak Park, said he struggled with his decision right up until he punched his ticket for Romney, concluding he "could probably break through the gridlock" in Washington more easily to help improve the economy.

"It was not yes this one or yes that one," said Chmura, a semi-retired printing company manager who voted for Obama in 2008. "But I finally decided my biggest concern was the economy."

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