Joe Biden Campaigns for Democratic Candidates Across Illinois

The former vice president headlined a pair of "Get Out the Vote" rallies across the state

Former Vice President Joe Biden made two stops in Illinois Wednesday— one in suburban St. Charles, the other downstate, as he pushes for democratic candidates running for congress. NBC 5’s Mary Ann Ahern reports.

Former Vice President Joe Biden made a pair of stops on a visit to Illinois Wednesday to campaign for several Democratic candidates across the state.

Biden's first stop of the day came in suburban St. Charles, as he attended a rally with Lauren Underwood, the Democratic challenger looking to unseat incumbent GOP Rep. Randy Hultgren in Illinois' 14th Congressional District.

Biden and Underwood appeared at a "Get Out the Vote" rally at the Kane County Fairgrounds. 

The biggest statewide race is for governor of Illinois. There are four candidates on the ballot: incumbent Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner, Democrat J.B. Pritzker, Libertarian Kash Jackson and Conservative Sam McCann. The two major-party candidates are largely self-funding billionaires who have each dumped millions of dollars of their own money into their campaign coffers. Rauner is running for a second term using many of the same rallying cries that sent him to Springfield in 2014 - calling for lower property taxes and term limits, among other issues. But he faces an uphill battle after angering right-wing voters by signing bills on immigration and abortion. Consistently ranked among the most unpopular and most vulnerable Republican governors in the country, thanks in part to the state's historic budget impasse that lasted more than two years, Rauner won the GOP primary over challenger Jeanne Ives by just 3 points and will have to fight to keep his base from shifting to support Conservative candidate McCann in the general. Several polls have shown Pritzker leads Rauner by double digits in a race that has drawn national attention largely for its potentially record-breaking price tag. Rauner, who previously worked in private equity, has donated more than $95 million to his efforts, while Pritzker - heir to the Hyatt hotel fortune with a net worth of $3.2 billion - has funneled $161.5 million of his own money into his campaign. Having never held elective office, Pritzker doesn't have a legislative record but has said he supports raising the minimum wage as well as shifting Illinois to a progressive income tax, though he has not released further details or proposed rates. While Pritzker may have a sizable lead in the polls, that doesn't mean it's wrapped up just yet. Rauner has repeatedly attacked Pritzker - a longtime political donor - on his ties to the so-called "machine," particularly incarcerated former Gov. Rod Blagojevich and House Speaker Michael Madigan. And with just weeks to go before Election Day, 10 current and former Pritzker campaign staffers filed a lawsuit alleging repeated racial discrimination and harassment by the organization - claims Pritzker vehemently denied - in this cycle's own version of an "October surprise." Read more on the candidates here, as well as their answers to 11 policy questions here.
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Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan's 2017 announcement that she would not seek a fifth term in office sent shockwaves through the state’s political circles, and left her high-profile job wide open come November. Emerging from their respective primaries were Democrat Kwame Raoul, Republican Erika Harold, and Libertarian Bubba Harsy. A former prosecutor, Raoul is currently an Illinois state senator who has represented portions of Chicago's South Side since 2004. He has long eyed the attorney general job and beat out seven other candidates, including former Gov. Pat Quinn, to earn the Democratic nomination. Raoul has painted himself as a foil to President Donald Trump's administration and earned the endorsement of former President Barack Obama - whose seat Raoul was appointed to after Obama was elected to the U.S. Senate. He faces GOP nominee Erika Harold, a Harvard-educated former Miss America who unsuccessfully ran for Congress downstate in 2014. Harold announced her candidacy before Madigan revealed she wouldn't run again, currently works as an attorney in Urbana and has emphasized in particular her experience advocating against violence and bullying. The battle between the two has been contentious, with attack ads from both camps up early and often. Raoul has portrayed Harold as a right-wing conservative, highlighting her views, both past and present, opposing the Affordable Care Act, Roe v. Wade and same-sex marriage, among others. For her part, Harold has attacked Raoul for voting to raise the state income tax and by depicting him as entrenched in the so-called "machine," tying him to House Speaker Michael Madigan. Both candidates have vehemently denied the other's allegations. While several polls have placed Raoul ahead of Harold by an average of roughly 10 points, those same polls have shown relatively high numbers of undecided voters in a contest that looks to be closer than the race for governor.
While Rep. Dan Lipinski is all but guaranteed to win re-election to Illinois' 3rd Congressional District, the race remains one to watch for a unique reason: his Holocaust denier and white supremacist opponent. Art Jones, a former leader of the American Nazi Party, ran unopposed in the March Republican primary, racking up more than 20,000 votes to win the GOP nomination. While Jones has unsuccessfully run for elected office several times since the 1970s, appearing on a general election ballot is a significant victory for a candidate who refers to the Holocaust as "the biggest, blackest lie in history" on his campaign website and has praised the leadership of Adolf Hitler. Jones ran for the same district five times before, including in 2016, when he failed to make the ballot after the Illinois Republican Party challenged his petition signatures. In 2017 however, the state GOP declined to challenge Jones' candidacy or run another candidate, clearing his path to the Republican nomination. Just before the March primary, the party denounced Jones, with the chairman saying in a statement that the country has "no place for Nazis like Arthur Jones." There are two write-in candidates, Justin Hanson and Kenneth Yerkes, though Lipinski will almost certainly return to Congress for an eighth term in the seat previously held by his father. Lipinski - a conservative, anti-abortion member of the party - won a narrow 2-point victory over a strong progressive challenger in the Democratic primary for the district, where Hillary Clinton took 55 percent of the vote in 2016. Though the district may be blue, it will be eye-opening to see just how many voters will cast their ballots for a man who has marched with a swastika armband.
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Illinois’ 4th Congressional District is another race where the result has been all but decided even before the ballots have been cast, but it's still an important one to note in understanding Chicago's political landscape. In November, Rep. Luis Gutierrez revealed he would not seek re-election at the end of his 13th term in office. That surprise announcement stunned the city and set off a flurry of speculation, with candidates scrambling to get enough signatures to appear on the ballot before the petition filing deadline less than one week later. One person who wasn't caught off guard by the announcement was Cook County Commissioner Jesus 'Chuy' Garcia, who appeared with Gutierrez at the news conference announcing the outgoing legislator's retirement. That day, Gutierrez endorsed Garcia, a longtime friend and ally, as his chosen successor - a move that appeared to some as a classic backroom deal emblematic of the "Chicago way." Garcia forced Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel into an historic runoff election in 2015, and although he was unsuccessful in that effort, he was widely seen as a mayoral contender once again in 2019 - leaving some to speculate Emanuel may have in some capacity brokered a deal to get Garcia onto a different ballot. But eight months later, when Emanuel himself announced that he too would not be running for re-election, both Gutierrez and Garcia weighed a mayoral campaign before deciding against it. All that aside, come January, the majority-Hispanic 4th District will have a new representative for the first time since 1993, and Gutierrez will no longer be the longest-serving member of Illinois' Congressional delegation - historic in and of itself. Garcia is all but certain to prevail over Republican Mark Wayne Lorch and will likely model his time in Congress after Gutierrez, who has been among the most outspoken immigration advocates and critics of President Donald Trump.
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The race to represent Illinois' 6th Congressional District has garnered plenty of national attention, as it has implications well beyond its suburban boundaries. In 2016, GOP Rep. Peter Roskam held onto his seat even though presidential nominee Hillary Clinton won the district by 7 points - making Roskam a high-profile target for Democrats looking to take back the House. Roskam's work on the GOP's tax reform bill and his votes to repeal Obamacare, plus criticism over his refusal to hold town hall meetings with constituents in person, have been among the issues that spurred seven candidates to jump into the Democratic primary race to unseat him. Emerging victorious was Sean Casten, a scientist and entrepreneur. Casten has highlighted his experience working in the environmental and energy sectors and has made access to healthcare one of his chief issues - running ads attacking Roskam over his votes to repeal the Affordable Care Act. Roskam has launched an offensive against Casten as well, painting him as "another shady Illinois politician," tying him to House Speaker Michael Madigan and criticizing his record as a registered lobbyist, among other lines of attack. The district, largely in DuPage County, has been red for decades, represented by Rep. Henry Hyde from 1975 to 2007 and by Roskam for six terms since. But recent polling released by Casten's campaign showed he has a slim lead over Roskam - between 3 and 5 points, while several analyses show the race leaning Democratic. Should Casten win the district, once a Republican stronghold, it could be a key indicator of the so-called "blue wave" for Democrats, who need to pick up 23 seats across the country to gain control of the House.
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While there's plenty of attention on Chicago's suburban areas, don't overlook the races downstate, like Illinois' 12th Congressional District. Encompassing areas like Belleville, Carbondale, East St. Louis and more, President Donald Trump may have won the district by 15 points in 2016 - but that doesn't mean it will be a slam dunk for incumbent GOP Rep. Mike Bost. First elected in 2014 after 20 years in the Illinois House, Bost is running for a third term. While Madison County and the Metro East were once considered Democratic strongholds, the area has trended Republican in recent years. St. Clair County State's Attorney Brendan Kelly is hoping to change that in a race that's drawing national attention - and some big names – to the district. Kelly earned the endorsement of former President Barack Obama – who won the district in 2008 and 2012 – and campaigned with civil rights icon Rep. John Lewis. For his part, Bost is bringing in Trump himself to rally Republican voters. Green Party candidate Randy Auxier is also on the ballot in a race that Cook Political Report has rated "leans Republican." But the race remains tight, with various polls showing Bost leading Kelly by a one-point margin. Something else to consider headed into Election Day: Kelly earned more than 40,000 votes in his primary, compared to Bost's nearly 32,000. The 12th District is the only contested Congressional race where the Democratic challenger in Illinois received more primary votes than the Republican incumbent. Is that a sign of what's to come? Keep an eye out.
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Another race to watch outside the Chicago area is Illinois' 13th Congressional District, where incumbent GOP Rep. Rodney Davis is looking to fend off a challenge from Democrat Betsy Dirksen Londrigan. Similar to the 12th District, the Cook Political Report rated it as a "lean Republican" race in the district that includes parts of Bloomington, Champaign, Decatur, Taylorville and more. President Donald Trump won the district by 6 percent in 2016, but polling shows it's another dead heat with Davis up by a 1-point margin. Londrigan got former President Barack Obama's endorsement as well, while Davis - who has represented the district since 2013 - brought in Vice President Mike Pence to campaign for him. Like Democratic challengers across Illinois and the nation, Londrigan has made access to affordable healthcare and coverage for pre-existing conditions a central part of her platform. The high-stakes battle even allegedly resulted in a physical brawl, as Davis' field director was arrested in August over a reported altercation with another man at an event for Londrigan. Davis' campaign fired the staffer, while the real contest continues at the ballot box.
Illinois' 14th Congressional District is another suburban battleground to watch. Containing parts of DuPage, Kane and Will counties, the district has long been seen as a Republican stronghold - but this time, a Democrat might have a chance. Newcomer Lauren Underwood is challenging incumbent GOP Rep. Randy Hultgren for the seat he's held since the Tea Party wave of 2010. Underwood is a nurse and health policy expert who worked on the implementation of the Affordable Care Act under former President Barack Obama, who has endorsed her in the race. She has a heart condition and has centered her attacks on Hultgren around health care, often saying that she decided to run against Hultgren after he voted for a bill that she says did not include protections for those with pre-existing conditions. Hultgren, who served in the Illinois House and Senate prior to running for Congress, contends that the bill he voted for - the American Health Care Act, which passed the House but narrowly failed in the Senate - did not remove the requirement that insurance companies cover pre-existing conditions. President Donald Trump won the district in 2016 by 3 points - his slimmest margin of victory in all of Illinois' Congressional districts that he won. Earlier this month, Cook Political Report moved its prediction for the race from "lean Republican" to "toss up" and Underwood has a slight cash advantage in the final stretch - outraising Hultgren for the past three quarters, according to FEC filings. If she were to win, Underwood would be the first woman, and the first African-American, to represent the 14th District.
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While there's plenty of talk about a possible "blue wave" hitting Congress, not nearly as much focus has been on the Illinois statehouse - though the results of a few key races could have huge implications. Without a friendly legislature, whoever wins the race for governor will have a tough time turning his agenda into a reality. As Gov. Bruce Rauner learned the hard way in the state's historic budget impasse, battling a statehouse controlled by the other party doesn’t often end well. Both Rauner and Democratic challenger J.B. Pritzker have dumped millions into races down the ballot in an effort to boost turnout but also in hopes of swinging the legislature in their favor. Should Pritzker maintain his double-digit polling lead to win the race, the focus then shifts to which of his policy proposals could be signed into law. Pritzker has an ambitious and largely progressive agenda, including a graduated state income tax, a public health insurance option, legalizing recreational marijuana use and more. If voters decide to give Rauner another term, his agenda – lowering the state income tax and term limits on elected officials, among others – would be a heavy lift, if not impossible, with a Democratic legislature. While the governor may be the one signing bills into law, which bills reach his desk is up to the statehouse – where the slimmest margin of votes in certain races can have a huge impact on all Illinois residents. Click here to read about the statehouse races you should be watching.
While it may not be for several months, the Chicago mayoral election is still one to watch on election night, even this early. The race stole a bit of thunder from the midterms when Mayor Rahm Emanuel announced in September that he would not seek a third term, setting off a flurry of speculation and prompting several new candidates to join the already crowded field. At least one of those candidates - Toni Preckwinkle - is on the ballot this time around, seeking her third term as Cook County Board President. But she hopes to soon abandon that post if her run for mayor is successful. Two more potential candidates for Chicago mayor are also up for re-election to different offices this cycle - Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza and state Rep. LaShawn Ford. Mendoza has been rumored to be considering a run, particularly after Jesus 'Chuy' Garcia and Rep. Luis Gutierrez turned it down, leaving an opening for a strong Latino candidate. Fueling speculation, Mendoza's latest television ads have prominently featured Chicago, despite the fact that she's running statewide. Ford, who has represented portions of Chicago's West Side and surrounding suburbs since 2007, has all but announced his campaign for mayor, saying on several occasions that a coalition of African-American leaders have encouraged him to run. No matter who wins the race for Chicago mayor, they'll have to work closely with whoever wins the race for governor - a relationship that can be acrimonious at times, as Emanuel and Gov. Bruce Rauner have demonstrated on several occasions. To that end, you should keep an eye on all the candidates for mayor to see who might attend which election night events. While most of the 17 declared candidates are Democrats, former Chicago Police Supt. Garry McCarthy made an appearance alongside Rauner at a September fundraiser for Illinois House GOP Leader Jim Durkin - so they could show up just about anywhere. But many of the Democrats will likely be drawn to their party's nominee J.B. Pritzker, who leads by double digits in several polls, and as a largely self-funding billionaire, might just be willing to spread some of his wealth to his preferred mayoral candidate come February. Read more about the declared candidates for mayor here.

"We need to recognize that words matter," Biden said. "She came in and helped Barack and me make the Affordable Care Act a reality." 

Underwood's race, in a traditionally Republican area, has been labeled a "toss-up" by political experts, and could be a race to keep an eye on as Tuesday's election draws near. 

The candidate worked with the Obama administration's Department of Health and Human Services, and she told the assembled crowd at the event that she was motivated to run by the debate over health care in the United States. 

"I'm not a politician. I'm a nurse," she said. 

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Incumbent Gov. Bruce Rauner is running for a second term using many of the same rallying cries that sent him to Springfield the first time around. Rauner announced his re-election bid in October 2017, once again railing against powerful Democrat and longtime nemesis Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan. The Winnetka native’s announcement included another call for lower property taxes and term limits – two of the issues he focused on in his 2014 campaign, which was his first run for public office after a career in private equity. From the past four years, he counts education funding and criminal justice reform, as well as pro-business measures and his veto of an income tax hike (that eventually took effect), among his successes. But this time around may prove more difficult. Read more on Rauner here.
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J.B. Pritzker is a member of the billionaire Pritzker family, best known for owning the Hyatt hotel chain. After months of speculation, Pritzker announced in April 2017 that he would enter the race to unseat Gov. Bruce Rauner. For years, Pritzker has been a powerful Democratic fundraiser, involved in several local and national races, and unsuccessfully ran for Congress himself in 1998. A venture capitalist, Forbes listed Pritzker as the 219th richest person in the country in 2017, with a net worth of $3.4 billion - making him another candidate capable of self-funding his campaign. Read more on Pritzker here.
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Grayson "Kash" Jackson is the Libertarian candidate for Illinois governor. Born Benjamin Winderweedle in Louisiana, the 39-year-old retired U.S. Navy officer legally changed his name in 2017 and currently resides in north suburban Antioch. Jackson's proposals include requiring any tax increases to be passed by two-thirds of voters in a referendum, as well as unspecified criminal justice reforms, which he said includes getting family courts to “stop treating divorcing couples as sources of revenue" - an issue with particular relevance to his life. Read more on Jackson here.
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Republican State Sen. Sam McCann entered the race for governor in April under the Conservative Party label after initially mulling a GOP primary run against Rauner, with whom he has long been at odds. Billing himself as the only conservative in the race, McCann says on his website that he will “push for protections that preserve our religious beliefs from being attacked by leftist values” and “work with President Trump to secure the sovereignty of our borders.” Read more on McCann here.

The Republican National Committee released a statement Wednesday after the vice president's remarks, saying taht "Illinois voters are continually benefitting from Republican policies that have put the Prairie State's unemployment rate in its best shape since 1999." 

The statement also said that "Illinois voters cannot afford to go back to Biden's broken playbook." 

Hultgren will have a visitor of his own Friday, as Speaker of the House Paul Ryan will stump for him at a rally. 

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Republican candidate Gov. Bruce Rauner's responses can be found here.
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Democratic candidate J.B. Pritzker's responses can be found here.
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Libertarian candidate Kash Jackson's responses can be found here.
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Conservative candidate Sam McCann's responses can be found here.

Underwood will get one more boost to her campaign in the closing days of the race, as former President Barack Obama will speak at a Get Out the Vote rally in Chicago. 

Later in the day, Biden headed to East. St. Louis to stump for statewide and downstate candidates. 

The former vice president attended another GOTV rally with Democratic candidate for Illinois' 12th District, Brendan Kelly, who's taking on Rep. Mike Bost in a former Democratic stronghold that went for President Donald Trump by 15 points in 2016.

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Though Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel appeared poised to run for a third term, he made a bombshell announcement in September that he would not seek re-election to a third term. First elected in 2011, the 58-year-old former congressman and President Barack Obama's ex-White House chief of staff was forced to an historic runoff in his 2015 reelection campaign against Jesus "Chuy" Garcia. A central issue in that race was the shooting death of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald. McDonald was shot 16 times in Oct. 2014 by Chicago Police Officer Jason Van Dyke, who was convicted of second-degree murder in the case. The fallout of the shooting, which in part sparked a U.S. Department of Justice investigation into the Chicago Police Department, was poised to play a key role in this race as well. Although he's stayed quiet on his future plans, Emanuel - a prolific fundraiser - had been steadily adding to his war chest, with more than $7.5 million in his political committee as of the most recent reporting period ending on June 30. With Emanuel out of the race, several challengers who had already emerged will engage in a drastically different battle than previously thought.
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Cook County Circuit Court Clerk Dorothy Brown, 64, announced her candidacy for mayor in April, despite an ongoing federal probe into allegations of bribery and corruption within her office. Earlier this year, prosecutors alleged that Brown took a $15,000 bribe from a man seeking a job with her office, disguised as a loan for the business she and her husband own, as well as another $10,000 loan from a separate employee of the clerk's office. The first man was sentenced to three years probation for perjury in February, the latest development in the years-long federal corruption investigation into Brown's office. Brown - whose home was raided by investigators in 2015 - has not been charged with a crime and has repeatedly denied wrongdoing, claiming in announcing her candidacy that people "trust" her and vowing to work "to make every square mile of the city of Chicago world-class."
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Gery Chico is running for Chicago mayor once again. Chico is an attorney who was former Mayor Richard M. Daley's chief of staff as well as board president of Chicago Public Schools before unsuccessfully running for U.S. Senate in 2004. He later served as president of the Chicago Park District and chairman of the City Colleges of Chicago board, then ran for mayor in 2011. Chico came in second of six candidates, earning 24 percent of the vote, behind Emanuel's 55 percent. In a statement announcing his run this time around, Chicago said he will focus on "violence, education, jobs and economic development."
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Having already taken over for him as White House chief of staff under President Barack Obama, Bill Daley is looking to replace Emanuel once again - this time as Chicago mayor. The former U.S. Secretary of Commerce under President Bill Clinton is also following in the footsteps of his father Richard J. Daley, who served as mayor for 21 years, and his brother Richard M. Daley, who became the longest-serving Chicago mayor before declining to run for a seventh term in 2011. A familiar name in Chicago politics, Bill Daley briefly entered the race for Illinois governor in 2013 before taking himself out of the running, and most recently worked in finance - enabling him to quickly build a $1.2 million war chest, the largest of all the candidates who have entered the race so far.
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Attorney and community activist Amara Enyia is throwing her hat in the ring as well – for the second time. Enyia ran for mayor in 2015 before exiting the race to back then-Ald. Bob Fioretti’s unsuccessful bid. With a doctorate in education policy, she has worked as a public policy advisor in various capacities, recently for lieutenant governor candidate Ra Joy, who fell short in the Democratic primary alongside Chris Kennedy. Enyia, 35, lives in Garfield Park and is the director of the Austin Chamber of Commerce. She founded a social lab to educate on economic development, according to her website, and co-authored a book on municipal funding in Chicago.
Community activist Ja'Mal Green is a 22-year-old South Side native (making him the second youngest candidate) and prominent figure in Chicago's Black Lives Matter organization. Green served as a surrogate for Sen. Bernie Sanders' 2016 presidential campaign and parts of his platform include increasing investment in education, creating an elected school board and police reform - an issue he has been vocal about, taking part in a protest at the 2016 Taste of Chicago that ended in his arrest. Green pleaded guilty to resisting arrest but other charges in the case were dropped.
Jerry Joyce Jr. is the son of former 19th Ward Alderman and state Sen. Jeremiah Joyce, a political operative who worked closely with former Mayor Richard M. Daley. Joyce is an attorney and lobbyist from the city's Far South Side and previously served as a Cook County assistant state's attorney, according to multiple reports. The Chicago Sun-Times reported that Joyce's father is part owner of a company that ran concessions at O'Hare Airport for years until Emanuel took office, awarding the lucrative contract to another company - though the paper noted that Joyce had reportedly told associates that dispute did not influence his decision to enter the race.
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The only Republican in the race, William Kelly has run for office multiple times. He unsuccessfully ran for the GOP nomination for Illinois comptroller in 2010, then announced campaigns for Chicago mayor in 2014 and Illinois governor in 2018 - though he did not make it onto the ballot in either race. Kelly hosts "The Citizen Kelly Show" on WCGO-AM and founded production company RevDigital, according to his website.
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Attorney John Kozlar is another candidate taking on Emanuel, looking to settle a score. The 30-year-old South Side native is a part of Aon plc’s risk solutions team and first ran for office in 2011, according to his website. He unsuccessfully ran for 11th Ward alderman at age 21, then mounted another bid for the same position in 2015, forcing a run-off against Patrick Daley Thompson, who ultimately won. Kozlar said Emanuel put $50,000 into that race against what he called an effort to defeat “machine politicians and elitists.”
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Former Chicago Public Schools principal Troy LaRaviere was the first to announce his intent to take on Emanuel, unveiling his campaign in January. LaRaviere is the president of the Chicago Principals and Administrators Association, and has been an outspoken critic of Emanuel since his days as principal of Blaine Elementary School - a position he was removed from over allegations of insubordination. He supported Garcia for mayor in 2015, as well as Sanders for president in 2016, and with his background, education and creating an elected school board are key components of his progressive platform.
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Former Chicago Police Board president Lori Lightfoot is one of the candidates looking to take on their former boss. Emanuel appointed Lightfoot, 55, chair of the Police Accountability Task Force in the wake of the Laquan McDonald shooting, and she has used that experience - as well as her time leading the Police Board - to tout her credentials on law enforcement reforms. A former federal prosecutor, Lightfoot was most recently a partner at Mayer Brown LLP.
Ex-Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy, who was fired by Emanuel during the Laquan McDonald fallout, is another former member of the mayor's administration now running for the top job. After months of speculation, McCarthy officially announced his candidacy in March with a video saying "thousands" of Chicagoans had approached him asking him to run to "fix the city's problems." The 58-year-old Bronx native and self-described “conservative Democrat” worked as Chicago’s top cop for four years before being dismissed in 2015 in the aftermath of the McDonald shooting.
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At 20 years old, Matthew Roney is the youngest candidate in the field. A political science student at DePaul University, Roney’s website says he wanted to enter politics after working as a pharmaceutical technician and seeing customers unable to afford their medications. Roney says he is running for mayor under a new party he founded called “The Garden Party” to “help Chicagoans grow.”
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Tech entrepreneur Neal Sales-Griffin entered the race in April with a speech lasting nearly an hour and a half, saying he wanted to address issues like population decline in Chicago but without delving into specific policy proposals. Sales-Griffin, 30, runs a nonprofit coding school called CodeNow and is an adjunct professor at Northwestern University, saying he's running because Emanuel isn’t "doing a good enough job."
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Former Chicago Public Schools CEO Paul Vallas, 64, led the district from 1995 to 2001 and has served as superintendent for multiple other school districts in New Orleans; Bridgeport, Conn.; and Philadelphia. He also ran for Illinois governor in 2002, losing in the Democratic primary to now-disgraced former Gov. Rod Blagojevich. Vallas later ran for lieutenant governor with Pat Quinn and lost in 2014.
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An activist and perennial candidate, William 'Dock' Walls is running for mayor once again. He worked for former Chicago Mayor Harold Washington in the 1980s, according to his website, which says he also served as political director for Rev. Jesse Jackson's Rainbow PUSH coalition. Walls has previously run for mayor in 2007, 2011 and in 2015.
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Dr. Willie Wilson, who ran for mayor in 2015, is running again. Wilson, a millionaire businessman who owned and operated several McDonald's franchises, also ran for president in 2016. Shortly after announcing his candidacy, Wilson donated $100,000 to his own committee - lifting the self-funding limit to allow candidates to contribute any amount to their own committees throughout the election. Wilson, 69, said his contribution is a "clear indicator of his determination to rid Chicago of the worse [sic] mayor it has ever had." Recently, Wilson came under fire for giving away cash from his charitable foundation at church and community events to help Cook County residents with property taxes. Opponents said the stunt was designed to buy votes, though the Illinois State Board of Elections ruled that it did not violate any campaign finance laws.

Gubernatorial candidate J.B. Pritzker, along with running mate state Rep. Juliana Stratton, as well as Illinois Attorney General candidate Kwame Raoul, incumbent state Treasurer Mike Frerichs and Rep. Cheri Bustos, of the 17th District, all attended the rally, held just days after President Trump spoke to supporters of Rep. Bost. 

On Tuesday, Biden was in Wisconsin to encourage voters to turn out for Sen. Tammy Baldwin and Tony Evers, who's looking to unseat Gov. Scott Walker.

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