Topic: Illinois Democratic Politics
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Illinois Democratic Politics

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Illinois Democratic Primaries Highlight Pritzker Power, Stratton 'Abolish ICE' Pledge and AIPAC, Tech Money Battles
New York Times live coverage of Illinois’ March 17, 2026 primaries details how Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton won the Democratic U.S. Senate primary over Reps. Raja Krishnamoorthi and Robin Kelly in a race saturated with outside spending and racial‑politics maneuvering, then used her victory speech to repeat a central campaign promise to fight to abolish ICE as she heads into a general election against former state GOP chair Don Tracy. Gov. JB Pritzker, unopposed for a third‑term Democratic gubernatorial nomination and headed for a 2026 rematch with Darren Bailey, effectively turned the night into a showcase of his political muscle and 2028 presidential ambitions by making himself the face and financier of Stratton’s campaign, including at least $5 million in direct support. The article’s House roundup reports that Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss won an open suburban Chicago primary, former Rep. Melissa Bean beat more liberal challenger Junaid Ahmed in the 8th District, and Cook County Commissioner Donna Miller defeated Jesse Jackson Jr. and Robert Peters in the 2nd District, with analysts reading these open‑seat contests as part of a broader push for a new generation of Democratic leaders. It underscores that AIPAC‑aligned groups helped deliver wins for Bean and Miller and also spent heavily, but unsuccessfully, for Laura Fine, while AI and crypto interests poured more than $15 million into backing candidates like Jackson and Krishnamoorthi but saw mostly mixed or losing results—raising questions about how much clout these emerging donor blocs really have inside Democratic primaries. On social media, the combination of an 'abolish ICE' platform in a statewide race, pro‑Israel money shaping deep‑blue districts, and the tech‑sector’s uneven return on investment is fueling arguments about whether a handful of wealthy actors and ideological PACs are steering the party’s future direction away from its activist left.
Illinois Democratic Politics AIPAC and Democratic Primaries Immigration & Demographic Change