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Sara Feigenholtz

IL-05: A Detailed Look at the Special Election

by: jeffmd

Thu Mar 05, 2009 at 11:24 PM EST

(More phenomenal work from jeffmd - promoted by James L.)

If I lived a few miles south, I'd live smack in the middle of Illinois' 5th Congressional District.

Given that 12 candidates were running in the election on Tuesday - and that Quigley won with no more than 25% of the vote, I wanted to take a detailed look at the results by precinct.

A few Saturdays ago, I was running errands in Ravenswood. As I rode the Brown Line south towards the Loop, I noticed a distinct pattern in yard (or perhaps more accurately, window) signs - each neighborhood had the majority of signs supporting one candidate. North-South, they roughly went O'Connor, then Fritchey, then Quigley, then Feigenholtz.

So using the results available from the Chicago BoE, I tried to see if these yard signs were actually reflective. I also look at if each candidate did better in the district (whether State House, County Commissioner, or City Ward) that they represented.

I only got around to analyzing results within the city of Chicago though. Illinois (go figure) establishes separate election authorities for the City of Chicago and Suburban Cook County, and the Cook Suburbs didn't give me the requisite shapefiles to play with.

So, here's the goody that I think we're all waiting for: the winner by precinct (within the City of Chicago).

More maps and results below the flip.

There's More... :: (12 Comments, 1139 words in story)

SSP Daily Digest: 2/27

by: Crisitunity

Fri Feb 27, 2009 at 1:54 PM EST

NH-Sen: Oh, darn. Ex-Sen. Bob Smith isn't planning to run in the GOP primary for Judd Gregg's open senate seat. He said he prefers to remain a Florida resident.

OH-Sen: Add a fourth candidate (and, with Tyrone Yates, a second African-American with a less-than-statewide profile) to the mix in the Ohio senate primary: Cuyahoga County Commissioner Peter Lawson Jones. Last week he told Ohio Daily Blog that he'd be forming an exploratory committee this week. (No telling if that actually happened.)

OH-02: You may remember David Krikorian, an independent who racked up double-digits in last year's Schmidt/Wulsin faceoff. He's announced that he's going to seek the Democratic nomination for a rerun, as a loud 'n' proud Blue Dog.

IL-05: It's the last weekend of campaigning before the Mar. 3 primary for the special election to fill Rahm Emanuel's seat. With 12 candidates and projected low turnout, basically anything can happen. While Emanuel hasn't endorsed, Politico does observe that there's a Sara Feigenholtz sign in his yard in Chicago.

DCCC: Chris Van Hollen announced his 2009-10 chair for candidate recruitment: Rep. Steve Israel (of NY-02). He also announced that Robby Mook, most recently Jeanne Shaheen's campaign manager, will take over as the DCCC's political director.

FEC: This ought to make James's job a lot easier: Russ Feingold has introduced legislation, widely expected to pass, requiring Senate candidates to electronically file their campaign finance reports with the FEC, the way House candidates already do. Currently, Senate filings are paper-only.

KY-St Sen.: Here's a bit of good news that's a few weeks old that eluded us until now: a Democratic candidate, Mike Reynolds, won the Feb. 11 special election to fill the state senate seat vacated by Republican Brett Guthrie (elected in KY-02 in November). The 32nd, based in Bowling Green, is in a deep red area at the federal level, but apparently still maintains a downballot Dem tradition. The GOP still controls the state senate, 21-16-1.

NYC: SSP doesn't usually delve into county-level governance, but this involves one of the legal community's most legendary members: Bob Morgenthau, the District Attorney of New York County (aka Manhattan), has decided not to go for a 10th term. Currently 89 years old, he's been in office for 35 years.

Retread Watch: Yeah, there's some precedent for this. But isn't it a little sad that twice-defeated House loser Jeb Bradley is considering a run for New Hampshire state Senate?

Discuss :: (18 Comments)

Sara Feigenholtz for IL-5

by: Menhen

Sun Nov 16, 2008 at 3:32 AM EST

Soon Rep. Rahm "Rahmbo" Emanuel will be leaving his congressional seat vacant in order to become Barack Obama's chief of staff.  Emanuel represents Illinois 5th District, which includes northern portions of Chicago as well as some suburbs west of the city. John Kerry won this district 67-23 in 2004, and Barack Obama certainly did much better than that.  Of course, Emanuel's resignation will set up a special election sometime in the near future.
There's More... :: (8 Comments, 286 words in story)

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