2006 Illinois gubernatorial election

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The 2006 Illinois gubernatorial election took place on November 7, 2006. Incumbent Democratic Governor Rod Blagojevich won re-election to a second four-year term scheduled to have ended on January 10, 2011. However, Blagojevich did not complete his term, as he was impeached and removed from office in 2009. This was the first election since 1964 that a Democrat was re-elected governor.

Many observers expected the race to be close, especially considering the polling,[1] which had shown Governor Blagojevich to have a high disapproval rating. However, the Republicans had fared poorly due to scandals involving prior Governor George Ryan, and the increasingly unpopular presidency of George W. Bush. Exit polls showed Topinka won white voters (46%–41%-13%), while Blagojevich performed well among African Americans (80%–16%-2%) and Latinos (83%–12%-4%). Democrats won Will County for the first time since 1964, and Lake County for the first time since 1960.

This was the second and last time in Illinois that a woman was a major party's nominee for governor, the other being 1994. This was also the last time a male lieutenant governor was on the winning ticket.

Background

The primaries and general elections coincided with those for Congress and those for other state offices. The election was part of the 2006 Illinois elections.

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For the primaries, turnout for the gubernatorial primaries was 23.13%, with 1,680,207 votes cast and turnout for the lieutenant gubernatorial primaries was 20.60% with 1,496,453 votes cast.[2][3] For the general election, turnout was 47.29%, with 3,487,989 votes cast.[2][3]

Democratic primary

Governor

Candidates

Results

File:Illinois Governor D Primary 2006.svg
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Democratic gubernatorial primary results[4]
Party Candidate Votes %
Script error: No such module "Political party". Rod Blagojevich (incumbent) Script error: No such module "string". 70.84
Script error: No such module "Political party". Edwin Eisendrath Script error: No such module "string". 29.16
Total votes Script error: No such module "string". 100.00

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Lieutenant governor

Candidates

Results

Democratic lieutenant gubernatorial primary results[3]
Party Candidate Votes %
Script error: No such module "Political party". Pat Quinn (incumbent) Script error: No such module "string". 100.00
Script error: No such module "Political party". Pamela R. Schadow Script error: No such module "string". 0.00
Total votes Script error: No such module "string". 100.00

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Republican primary

Governor

Candidates

Declined

Campaign

On November 7, 2005, Topinka announced that she would not seek re-election as state treasurer — instead, she entered the gubernatorial primary, hoping to challenge Democratic Governor Rod Blagojevich. The Republican primary was deeply divisive; her tenure as Party Chairman destroyed her support from the conservative wing of her party, and it was feared that her pro-choice and positive gay rights positions would be detrimental to her standing with the same conservatives. In December she announced that she would join forces with DuPage County State's Attorney Joe Birkett as a candidate for Lieutenant Governor of Illinois.

In February 2006, the candidates for the Republican nomination for Illinois Governor began running their first TV ads for the March statewide primary election. Rival candidate Ron Gidwitz's advertisements, attacking Topinka, were rebuked in the same week by the Illinois Republican Party: "In an unprecedented action, the Illinois Republican Party has officially rebuked the Gidwitz campaign for this ad because the Party found that the ad violates the Party's "Code of Conduct", which was enacted to police proper conduct among Republican candidates."

Later in February, candidate Jim Oberweis, another rival for the Republican Gubernatorial nomination, started a series of attack ads for television markets, against Topinka, that were even more widely criticized, mostly for using "fake" headlines on the images of actual Illinois newspapers.[1][2] These ads, like Gidwitz's ads, also came under review by the Illinois Republican Party.[3] Because of the controversy generated, several television stations withdrew Oberweis's ads.[4]

Results

File:2006 Illinois gubernatorial Republican primary results map by county.svg
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Republican gubernatorial primary results[4]
Party Candidate Votes %
Script error: No such module "Political party". Judy Baar Topinka Script error: No such module "string". 38.15
Script error: No such module "Political party". Jim Oberweis Script error: No such module "string". 31.74
Script error: No such module "Political party". Bill Brady Script error: No such module "string". 18.40
Script error: No such module "Political party". Ron Gidwitz Script error: No such module "string". 10.88
Script error: No such module "Political party". Andy Martin Script error: No such module "string". 0.83
Total votes Script error: No such module "string". 100.00

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Lieutenant governor

Candidates

Results

File:2006 Illinois lieutenant gubernatorial Republican primary results map by county.svg
County results Script error: No such module "collapsible list". Script error: No such module "collapsible list".
Republican lieutenant gubernatorial primary results[3]
Party Candidate Votes %
Script error: No such module "Political party". Joe Birkett Script error: No such module "string". 50.63
Script error: No such module "Political party". Steve Rauschenberger Script error: No such module "string". 29.95
Script error: No such module "Political party". Sandy Wegman Script error: No such module "string". 13.32
Script error: No such module "Political party". Lawrence L. Bruckner Script error: No such module "string". 6.19
Script error: No such module "Political party". Jeremy Bryan Cole Script error: No such module "string". 0.00
Total votes Script error: No such module "string". 100.00

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General election

Candidates

On ballot

Write-ins

The following candidates were write-in candidates.[7]

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[8] Template:USRaceRating November 6, 2006
Sabato's Crystal Ball[9] Template:USRaceRating November 6, 2006
Rothenberg Political Report[10] Template:USRaceRating November 2, 2006
Real Clear Politics[11] Template:USRaceRating November 6, 2006

Polling

File:2006IllinoisGubernatorialElectionPolling061014.gif
Polling on 14 October 2006
Source Date Rod
Blagojevich (D)
Judy Baar
Topinka (R)
Rich
Whitney (G)
Other
Survey USA[12] November 2, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 45% 37% 14% 4%
Survey USA[13] October 23, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 44% 34% 14% 8%
Rasmussen[14] October 19, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 44% 36% 9% 11%
Zogby/WSJ[15] October 16, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 47.1% 33.2% 11.3% 8.4%
Glengariff Group[16] October 15, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 39% 30% 9% 22%
Tribune/WGN-TV[17] October 11, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 43% 29% 9% 19%
Survey USA[18] September 20, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 45% 39% 7% 9%
Rasmussen[19] September 13, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 48% 36% 16%
Sun-Times/NBC5[20] September 12, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 56% 26% 3% 15%
Tribune/WGN-TV[21] September 11, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 45% 33% 6% 16%
Zogby/WSJ[22] September 11, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 46.5% 33.6% 19.9%
Research 2000[23] August 31, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 47% 39% 2% 12%
Zogby/WSJ[22] August 28, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 44.8% 37.6% 17.6%
Rasmussen[24] August 10, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 45% 37% 18%
Survey USA[25] July 25, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 45% 34% 21%
Zogby/WSJ[22] July 24, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 44.4% 36.4% 19.2%
Rasmussen[26] July 13, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 45% 34% 21%
Zogby/WSJ[22] June 21, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 41.1% 37.5% 21.4%
Glengariff Group[27] June 1–3, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 41% 34% 25%
Survey USA[28] May 23, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 43% 37% 20%
Rasmussen[29] April 24, 2006 38% style="background-color:Template:Republican Party (US)/meta/shading"| 44% 18%
Rasmussen[30] March 31, 2006 41% style="background-color:Template:Republican Party (US)/meta/shading"| 43% 16%
Rasmussen[31] February 25, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 42% 36% 22%
Rasmussen[32] February 7, 2006 37% style="background-color:Template:Republican Party (US)/meta/shading"| 48% 15%
Research 2000[33] January 22, 2006 style="color:black;background-color:Template:Democratic Party (US)/meta/shading"| 45% 37% 18%

Results

Template:Election box winning candidate with party linkTemplate:Election box write-in with party link
2006 Illinois gubernatorial election[2][3][34]
Party Candidate Votes % <templatestyles src="Template:Tooltip/styles.css" />±%Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Script error: No such module "Political party". Judy Baar Topinka 1,369,315 39.26% Script error: No such module "String".
Script error: No such module "Political party". Rich Whitney 361,336 10.36% Script error: No such module "String".
Total votes 3,487,989 100.00% n/a
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Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

Aftermath

Script error: No such module "Unsubst". The Green Party became an established political party statewide, according to Illinois state election law, when Rich Whitney received more than 5% of the total vote for governor. The new status provided the party with several new advantages, such as lower signature requirements for ballot access, primary elections, free access to additional voter data, the ability to elect precinct committeemen, run a partial slate of candidates at any jurisdictional level, and slate candidates without petitioning. The only other statewide established political parties were the Democratic and Republican Parties. It is rare for a new political party to become established statewide in Illinois, the last to do so being the Solidarity Party in 1986 and the Progressive Party before that.

See also

References

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External links

Official campaign websites (Archived)

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Template:US Third Party Election Template:Rod Blagojevich Template:Illinois elections