State Sen. Dillard considers run for Ill. governor

A Republican state senator who appeared in campaign commercials for President Barack Obama said Thursday he is “very strongly” considering a run for Illinois governor.

A Republican state senator who appeared in campaign commercials for President Barack Obama said Thursday he is "very strongly" considering a run for Illinois governor. Sen. Kirk Dillard of Hinsdale plans to make an announcement next month. He’s laying the groundwork for a campaign by visiting with Republican leaders in Mattoon, Mount Vernon and Effingham during the next few days. The 53-year-old suburban Chicago lawmaker said he has the experience the state needs as it grapples with historic budget problems after two terms of Democratic rule that started with ousted former Gov. Rod Blagojevich. A senator for nearly 16 years, Dillard has worked for two Republican governors: He was chief of staff to former Gov. Jim Edgar and legislative director for former Gov. Jim Thompson. "I have a proven track record — and this state so desperately needs it — of working with all types and factions of people, Democrats and Republicans," Dillard told The Associated Press in a telephone interview. Dillard appeared in ads during last year’s presidential campaign praising Obama’s bipartisanship when they served together in the Illinois Senate. On pressing state matters, Dillard said it’s "unconscionable" for Gov. Pat Quinn to ask for a 50 percent increase in the state income tax rate without "any concerted effort" to cut the budget that he says grew under Blagojevich. Quinn has been meeting with the state’s top lawmakers to talk about cost-saving measures, but he insists the state still will need new money from a tax increase to avoid deep service cuts. The GOP field for governor already includes one of Dillard’s colleagues in the state senate, Sen. Bill Brady of Bloomington. DuPage County Board chairman Bob Schillerstrom also has announced an exploratory committee. ______ Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

About Post Author

Comments

From the Web

Skip to content