Ryan Faces Obama in Illinois' Race for U.S. Senate
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, March 17, 2004
CHICAGO A state senator will face an investment
banker-turned-teacher after each emerged as his party's nominee
for a U.S. Senate race that could shape the balance of power in
Congress.
"This is going to be a contest of ideas," state Sen. Barack
Obama said Tuesday after rolling up more than 50 percent of the
vote in the Democrat primary, crushing six rivals.
The 42-year-old former civil rights lawyer, who could become
only the third black U.S. senator in a century, faces Republican
Jack Ryan, a 44-year-old millionaire high school teacher who has
been dogged by questions about his divorce from actress Jeri Ryan,
a star on Fox's "Boston Public."
The race for the seat of retiring GOP Sen. Peter Fitzgerald is
rated as must-win by Democrats, who have made it one of four key
targets in their drive to capture control of the Senate, now
narrowly divided with 51 Republicans, 48 Democrats and one
"independent" who leans Democrat.
Obama, the son of a Kenyan father and American mother, was
trailing in the early primary polls but gained ground quickly in
recent weeks with Democrat liberals as well as black
voters.
"I think it's fair to say the conventional wisdom was we could
not win," Obama told cheering supporters after his victory. "We
did not have enough money. We did not have enough organization.
There was no way that a skinny guy from the South Side with a funny
name like Barack Obama could win a statewide race. Sixteen months
later we are here."
Illinois was once a classic swing state but has become much more
Democrat in recent years. Ryan said he recognized it could be a
tough race for a Republican, but he said he would go to places that
have been voting Democrat and try to win hearts and minds with
fresh ideas.
"I think we're going to ask them to vote Republican just
once," Ryan said.
Ryan's television ads took satirical aim at high taxes and
federal bureaucracy. Obama, by contrast, pointed to his record of
enacting state programs intended to help the needy, especially one that
assures health care for children from low-income families.
'Excessive Prying'
Ryan could be hampered by the controversy over his refusal
to unseal his divorce files. The Chicago Tribune in an editorial
last week urged him to make them public, and a rival candidate,
James Oberweis, said he should show them to a respected figure who
could then reassure voters about the contents.
Ryan says he is keeping the records sealed to
protect his 9-year-old son. But political experts say the records
could still become public before Election Day.
"If the whole Democratic establishment of the United States
can't crack open that divorce file in the next three months, they
should all quit being in politics," longtime Chicago political
strategist Don Rose said. He said the effect of disclosing the
papers would "depend on what they found."
Fitzgerald brushed aside questions on how the issue could play
out. "This excessive prying into somebody's personal or family
life can boomerang on someone," he said.
The primary had been marked by big spending - seven of the 15
candidates were millionaires - and dominated in its closing weeks
by talk of drug abuse and divorce scandals.
With 98 percent of precincts reporting, Ryan led the Republicans
with 36 percent, followed by Oberweis with 23 percent and state
Sen. Steve Rauschenberger with 20 percent. Obama had 53 percent of
the Democrat vote, followed by state Comptroller Dan Hynes with
24 percent.
Choice of Cokeheads
Early Democrat front-runner Blair Hull, who poured about $29
million of his own money into the campaign, saw his lead plummet
after he unsealed divorce records that said he struck his ex-wife
and threatened her. He later admitted taking cocaine decades ago,
as did Obama. Hull ended up with 11 percent of the vote.
In another race of note, former death-row prisoner Aaron Patterson
was easily defeated in a legislative race by an incumbent state
representative in Chicago. Patterson spent 17 years in prison
before he was pardoned in January 2003.
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