It Ain't Just A River In Egypt

Republicans met in Decatur this weekend for their state party convention, giving members an opportunity to hash out strategies for the rest of this election year. Gov. Blagojevich's poor reputation is an obvious boon for the GOP, but observers suggest that Barack Obama's position atop the national ticket will drive Democratic turnout in 2008, delivering a huge advantage to statewide Democratic candidates, as was the case in Illinois' 14th District this March.

Yet State Sen. Bill Brady of Bloomington was in full denial mode about Obama's expected coattails:

Brady said Obama's liberal political stance could also be a weak point.

"There's a great number of people in this state who do not agree with what Barack Obama believes in," Brady said.

It's not clear what planet Brady has been living on for the last four years, but he obviously missed Obama's U.S. Senate campaign in 2004, when 70 percent of Illinoisans backed him. He also apparently ignored Obama's romp through Illinois' Democratic primary back in February, during which he garnered over 64 percent of the vote, including huge swaths of Independent and Republican voters. If the Illinois GOP thinks running hard against Obama is going to deliver the goods this November, they are in worse shape then we thought.

Comments

Pretty funny hearing electoral predictions from a guy who was first won his senate seat through appointment. And at a candidates forum in 2006, he needed a high school kid to explain what "gentrification" meant.

What a tool.

The next time he runs for office, someone should ask Brady how much money his homebuilding company raked in from the $25 billion federal bailout.

Republicans love to mouth free-market pieties until they want help.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options

Progress Illinois' intention is to foster community and to maintain a comfortable and constructive blogging environment. While we encourage and appreciates different points of view, we do not consider it our duty to give a voice to anybody with an opinion.

Discussion on this site is moderated. All comments submitted will be automatically held for review by the editors before posting. Your comment will not appear on the site until it has been approved.

We will not publish comments that we consider:

  • off-topic
  • long-winded or containing excessive text from another source
  • inflammatory
  • commercial promotion

Please leave a name or nickname when commenting, as it makes it easier for others to respond directly.