Democratic candidates focus on national politics in campaign for U.S. Senate
(The Center Square) – Illinois’ Democratic Party candidates for U.S. Senate have focused their campaigns on opposition to Republicans and President Donald Trump.
The field formed quickly after Illinois U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin announced in April he would not seek reelection.
U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly spoke with reporters at the Illinois State Fair and expressed her support for Texas Democrats who fled to Illinois so they could avoid voting on Texas Republicans’ congressional redistricting plans.
“I’m a fair person, but we have to fight fire with fire. That’s what they’re doing. This is no time to bring the butter knife to the fight,” Kelly said.
Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton told the Illinois Democratic County Chairs’ Association that what is happening in politics across the country is “a five-alarm fire” and the status quo will not cut it.
“The day after the last election, I stood with Gov. Pritzker and vowed to protect every Illinoisan from the darkness ahead. And what we’ve said all along remains true today: we have your backs,” Stratton said.
The lieutenant governor called Illinois a blueprint for the rest of the nation.
U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi said he has gone after special interests. He called Durbin “a lion” and a role model.
“I wouldn’t even begin to pretend like I could somehow replace him, but I aspire to build on his legacy of great progress,” Krishnamoorthi said.
Krishnamoorthi said he has sponsored legislation to reform the country’s broken system of legal immigration.
“For undocumented folks, giving them a path to legalization, ultimately citizenship, for TPS (Temporary Protected Status) and Dreamers doing the same, for high-skill talent, reforming the system so we don’t have one million people in queue to matriculate from an H-1B visa to a green card. It doesn’t make sense,” Krishnamoorthi said.
The filing period for the March 17, 2026, primary begins Oct. 27.
Latest News Stories
Pritzker: State will not build stadium for Bears
California doctor indicted in Louisiana for sending abortion pills
Bill Clinton skips out on closed-door deposition
Illinois uses state-run ACA exchange to extend deadline
Trump says inflation data shows Fed can cut interest rates
Allstate homeowners rate hike sparks debate over Illinois insurance oversight
Trump tells Iranian protesters help is on the way, encourages uprising
Sen. Kelly sues Hegseth over effort to reduce retirement pay
Illinois interstate shootings decline
WATCH: State sues Trump admin over enforcement tactics; No tax on tips proposal filed
Will the Clintons testify on Epstein relationship this week?
Dems move to almost entirely block fed immigration enforcement in IL