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In Illinois Governor’s Debate, Bailey Tries to Put Pritzker on Defensive.

It is no secret that Gov. J.B. Pritzker of Illinois has presidential ambitions. This year he has traveled to New Hampshire, used his billions to finance fellow Democratic candidates in critical states and made himself a national figure in the fight for abortion rights and gun control.

So when Mr. Pritzker’s Republican opponent, State Senator Darren Bailey, pulled from his suit jacket pocket a pledge to serve all four years of the term on the ballot in November, Mr. Pritzker responded with what was a not-quite-air-tight assertion.

“I intend to serve four years more if re-elected,” Mr. Pritzker said. “I intend to support the president, he’s running for re-election.”

President Biden has not formally made that declaration himself, but all indications are that he intends to run, just as Mr. Pritzker intends to serve out a second term. But neither man has made his pledge official.

Mr. Bailey’s pledge presentation was just one moment in an hourlong debate in which he sought to put Mr. Pritzker on the defensive, regularly interrupting the governor or muttering asides while Mr. Pritzker was speaking.

But Mr. Bailey, a far-right legislator, found himself having to explain his past statements comparing abortion to the Holocaust.

“The attempted extermination of the Jews in World War II, it doesn’t even compare to a shadow of the life that has been lost to abortion since its legalization,” Mr. Bailey said in a Facebook Live video clip the moderators played during the debate.

Mr. Bailey was then asked: “You said Jewish leaders told you, you were right. Can you name the Jewish leaders who agree with you?”

The state senator responded by saying “the liberal press” had taken his past remarks, which he said were from 2017, out of context.

“The atrocity of the Holocaust is beyond parallel,” he said.

Asked again to name the Jewish leaders who agreed with him, Mr. Bailey demurred.

“No, I’m not going to put anybody on record,” he said.


Source: Elections - nytimes.com


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