1986 Illinois gubernatorial election

From WikiProjectMed
Jump to navigation Jump to search

1986 Illinois gubernatorial election

← 1982 November 4, 1986 1990 →
Turnout52.37% Decrease 9.21 pp
 
Nominee Jim Thompson Adlai Stevenson III No nominee
Party Republican Illinois Solidarity Democratic
Running mate George Ryan Mike Howlett Mark Fairchild
Popular vote 1,655,849 1,256,626 208,830
Percentage 52.67% 39.97% 6.64%

Thompson:      40-50%      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%
Stevenson:      40-50%      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%
Tie:      30-40%      40-50%

Governor before election

James R. Thompson
Republican

Elected Governor

James R. Thompson
Republican

The 1986 Illinois gubernatorial election was held on November 4, 1986. Republican candidate James R. Thompson won a fourth term in office, defeating the Illinois Solidarity Party nominee, former United States Senator Adlai Stevenson III, by around 400,000 votes.

Stevenson, a Democrat, originally ran for and received that party's gubernatorial nomination. However, his preferred candidate lost the lieutenant gubernatorial nomination to Mark J. Fairchild in the primary (primaries for both major parties were held March 18, 1986[1]). When it came out after the primary that Fairchild was a member of the LaRouche movement, Stevenson dropped off of the Democratic gubernatorial ticket to avoid running with Fairchild. At that time in Illinois, the governor and lieutenant governor were nominated in separate primaries, but ran as a single ticket in the general election. Stevenson formed the third party Solidarity Party and ran as its candidate with Mike Howlett as his running mate.

Virtually the entire Democratic establishment supported Stevenson's bid. The "official" Democratic ticket, ultimately running Fairchild on the ballot alone as a lieutenant gubernatorial nominee without a gubernatorial nominee atop the ticket, only just managed to surpass the 5% mark needed for the party to retain their major party status in Illinois after the election.

Background

The primaries and general elections coincided with those for federal offices (Senate and House), as well as those for other state offices. The election was part of the 1986 Illinois elections.[1][2]

The primaries saw turnout of 21.10% in the gubernatorial primaries, with 1,289,162 votes cast, and turnout of 18.01% in the lieutenant gubernatorial primaries, with 1,100,110 votes cast.[1]

Turnout during the general election was 52.37%, with 3,143,978 votes cast.[2]

Democratic primary

Adlai Stevenson III won a comfortable victory in the primary over perennial candidate Larry Burgess. Originally, Attorney General Neil Hartigan had declared himself a candidate for governor. However, soon after Stevenson announced his intention to run as well, Hartigan opted to run for reelection as Illinois Attorney General instead.[3][4]

As a result of Stevenson's primary victory, the 1986 election was a rematch of the 1982 election, which had been narrowly won by Thompson over Adlai Stevenson III by about 5,000 votes out of over 3.5 million votes cast. However, Stevenson's efforts were largely derailed in the primary when the candidates he supported for Lieutenant Governor (George Sangmeister) and Secretary of State (Aurelia Pucinski) were both upset by Mark J. Fairchild and Janice Hart.

While not heavily publicized during the primaries, Fairchild and Hart were followers of the controversial Lyndon LaRouche. When this became public knowledge after the primaries, Stevenson was forced to abandon his Democratic Party nomination and run as a third-party candidate. As of 2024, this remains the last time a third party candidate finished in the top two in the Illinois governor's race.[5]

Stevenson made it clear right after learning his running mate was to be a LaRouche supporter that he would "never run on a ticket with candidates who espouse the hate-filled folly of Lyndon LaRouche".[6]

Governor

Candidates

Withdrew

Democratic gubernatorial primary[1]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Adlai E. Stevenson 735,249 92.93
Democratic Larry Burgess 55,930 7.07
Write-in Others 1 0.00
Total votes 791,180 100

Republican primary

Governor

Incumbent James R. Thompson defeated his sole challenger, Peter Bowen.

Republican gubernatorial primary[1]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican James R. Thompson (incumbent) 452,685 90.90
Republican Peter Bowen 45,236 9.08
Write-in Others 61 0.01
Total votes 497,982 100

Lieutenant governor

Incumbent George Ryan won the Republican primary for lieutenant governor, running unopposed.

Republican lieutenant gubernatorial primary[1]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican George Ryan (incumbent) 441,672 100
Write-in Others 7 0.00
Total votes 441,679 100

Third-party nominations

Adlai Stevenson III's newly-formed Illinois Solidarity Party nominated him for governor. Mike Howlett, an associate judge on the Cook County Circuit Court and son of former Illinois Secretary of State Michael Howlett, was nominated for lieutenant governor. Stevenson opted to avoid having his ticket spoiling the performance of non-LaRouche affiliated Democratic nominees for statewide office by having political unknowns nominated on his Solidarity slate for all offices except lieutenant governor and secretary of state.[8]

The Libertarian Party nominated Gary L. Shilts for governor and Gerry Walsh for lieutenant governor.[9]

The Socialist Workers Party nominated Diane Roling for governor and Jim Little for lieutenant governor.[9]

Chicago Mayor Harold Washington, a strong supporter of Stevenson's candidacy, worked to combat an attempt by a Black activist to collect signatures for a third-party slate of Black candidates for statewide office, which was seen as likely to threaten Stevenson in a general election by dividing the Black vote.[8]

General election

Thompson's reelection campaign received the backing of incumbent Republican president Ronald Reagan.[8]

1986 Illinois gubernatorial election[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican James R. Thompson (incumbent)/ George Ryan (incumbent) 1,655,849 52.67 +3.23
Illinois Solidarity Adlai Stevenson III/ Mike Howlett 1,256,626 39.97 N/A
Democratic No candidate/ Mark Fairchild 208,830 6.64 −42.66
Libertarian Gary L. Shilts/ Gerry Walsh 15,646 0.50 −0.16
Socialist Workers Diane Roling/ Jim Little 6,843 0.22 +0.22
Write-in Charles E. Koen 141 0.01 N/A
Write-in Wilbur L. Keeling 30 0.00 N/A
Write-in David L. Bernabie 13 0.00 N/A
Majority 399,223 12.70
Turnout 3,143,978 52.37
Republican hold Swing

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f "OFFICIAL VOTE Cast at the PRIMARY ELECTION GENERAL PRIMARY, MARCH 18, 1986" (PDF). www.elections.il.gov. Illinois Secretary of State. Retrieved April 10, 2020.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ a b c "OFFICIAL VOTE Cast at the GENERAL ELECTION NOVEMBER 4, 1986" (PDF). www.elections.il.gov. Illinois State Board of Elections. Archived (PDF) from the original on June 2, 2022. Retrieved April 10, 2020.
  3. ^ a b Dold, R. Bruce (December 8, 1985). "RYAN FIGHTS HISTORY IN CAMPAIGN". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved April 10, 2020.
  4. ^ Dold, R. Bruce (October 30, 1986). "CAREY FIGHTS HARTIGAN'S LEAD IN ATTORNEY GENERAL CONTEST". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved April 10, 2020.
  5. ^ Malcolm, Andrew H. (March 20, 1986), "2 CONSERVATIVE EXTREMISTS UPSET DEMOCRATS IN THE ILLINOIS PRIMARY", New York Times, pp. A18, retrieved November 9, 2016, However, politicians here suggested other reasons: an unusually low turnout of about 25 percent of the 6.1 million registered voters and the relatively unfamiliar names of Mr. Stevenson's candidates, George Sangmeister for Lieutenant Governor and Aurelia Pucinski for Secretary of State. The LaRouche victors were Mark J. Fairchild for Lieutenant Governor and Janice Hart for Secretary of State.
  6. ^ Kraft, Scott; Greem, Larry (March 20, 1986), "Two LaRouche Illinois Victories Stun Democrats", L.A. Times, retrieved November 9, 2016, At a packed news conference Wednesday night, Stevenson declared: "I will never run on a ticket with candidates who espouse the hate-filled folly of Lyndon LaRouche."
  7. ^ "Election Names". www.lib.niu.edu. Retrieved August 1, 2024.
  8. ^ a b c Gailey, Phil (August 12, 1986). "IN ILLINOIS, STEVENSON MAKES IT A RACE". The New York Times. Retrieved May 9, 2022.
  9. ^ a b Egler, Daniel (July 31, 1986). "STEVENSON IN FILING LINE BEHIND MINOR PARTIES". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved April 10, 2020.