Rauner moves some numbers in gov bid
POLITICS | Rich Miller
Back in early February, not a single person picked Bruce Rauner’s name in a Paul Simon Public Policy Institute poll of likely Republican primary voters.
Other polls taken since then have shown the retired financier Rauner in the low single digits in his bid for governor.
But Rauner has been dumping money into downstate TV, the Fox News Channel in the Chicago area and Chicago and downstate radio. As a result, he appears to be moving some numbers.
A Capitol Fax/We Ask America poll taken June 20 of 1,310 likely Republican gubernatorial primary voters found Rauner at 12 percent. The poll was taken almost two weeks after Rauner began running ads.
Twelve percent was enough for third place. It’s tough at this point to gauge just where Rauner’s ceiling is. He could zoom way up like the unknown wealthy candidate Jack Ryan did in the 2004 Republican U.S. Senate primary, taking over first place in January and never relinquishing it. Or he could top out like Ron Gidwitz did in the 2006 Republican gubernatorial primary. Like Rauner, Gidwitz started running TV ads in July of 2005 and spent millions, but after an early rise, he stopped moving and ended up at just 11 percent.
Rauner’s ‘angry outsider’ and anti-public employeeunion messages may play well with the base, but he also has pro-choice leanings, won’t say where he stands on gay marriage and has close ties to Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel – none of which will be loved by conservative Republicans. If any of his competitors exploit those weaknesses, Rauner’s rise could be stopped in its tracks.
Also, just 700-800,000 people tend to vote in GOP primaries, so the party’s old guard tends to have a significant say in the outcome. And, right now, the old guard is mostly with state Sen. Kirk Dillard.
But the poll has Dillard just barely in last place of the four gubernatorial candidates tested.
However, pollster Gregg Durham cautioned against
reading too much into the results. “There isn’t a single result in here
that I would consider as a trend, indication of strength or hint of
weakness,” Durham said after he conducted the poll. “It’s just too
early.” And with the poll’s margin of error of +/- 2.8 percent, it’s
impossible to say for sure that Dillard is in fourth place.
The
poll has Treasurer Dan Rutherford in first, with 22 percent, state Sen.
Bill Brady places second with 18 percent, then Rauner at 12 followed by
Dillard with 11. Another 38 percent said they were undecided. Possible
gubernatorial candidate Dan Proft was not tested.
Rutherford
has carefully built a statewide campaign infrastructure for the past
two decades, culminating in 2010 with his state treasurer win. Brady is
on his third race for governor, and his name recognition is still pretty
strong after his 2010 loss to Gov. Pat Quinn in the general election.
Dillard has been a state party fixture for years and came up less than
200 votes shy of winning the 2010 Republican primary.
Except
for Rauner, it’s difficult to tell at this point how the candidates are
doing with their fundraising. Most candidates in both parties are
taking advantage of an obscure but important state law that allows them
to hold off reporting contributions until after they deposit the checks.
Until they start spending money in a big way and need that cash
immediately, we won’t be able to track most candidate fundraising
between quarterly finance reports. Rauner needs access to his cash
because he’s spending so much.
Dillard
is reportedly telling people that he’s on track to raise $200-300
thousand this quarter, while Rutherford apparently plans to report $1
million in the bank at the end of this quarter. But beyond that, we
really don’t know what’s going on.
Also,
Rauner has been careful not to go above the $250,000 self-funder
ceiling, which would break the contribution caps for all candidates
running for governor.
State
law is a bit vague on whether a busted cap in one primary would apply
to the other, but the executive director of the Illinois State Board of
Elections told me last month that his interpretation of the law is that
if a candidate in one party busts the cap, then all candidates in all
parties for that particular office are no longer constrained by the
state’s contribution caps.
The
poll, by the way, had Rutherford ahead in downstate counties and in
suburban Cook, while Brady led in the suburban collar counties and
Chicago.
Rich Miller also publishes Capitol Fax, a daily political newsletter, and CapitolFax.com.