Crowded field of contenders fight to replace Jesse Jackson Jr.

CHICAGO – The crowded field of hopefuls racing to replace embattled former Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. will soon dwindle to one person; one candidate, who, in a steep local economic mess, will have to tackle issues and aspirations left unrealized by the exiting Congressman.

Jackson Jr. served in Illinois’ 2nd Congressional District for more than 17 years before resigning last November, just one week after he reclaimed his seat in a landslide victory, grabbing 63 percent of votes cast during the 2012 election.

The Feb. 26 Democratic primary winner is almost certain to win the April 9 special general election in the heavily-Democratic district. And since a chance like this only comes around every so often, politicos agree that it’s expected that many will bid for the seat.

Potential Democratic candidates vying for the seat must gather at least 1,256 signatures on nominating petitions to be eligible to run for the special primary election, while a Republican candidate would need 288 signatures. Independent candidates would need as many as 25,095 signatures while any new party candidates would need at least 15,682.

In mid-December, a group of Democratic committeemen were expected to throw their support behind a candidate following a slating event for 2nd Congressional District seat seekers, however they unanimously voted not to slate a candidate.

With the January 7 deadline to file nomination papers looming (Jan. 8 for write-in candidates), 2nd Congressional District aspirants have less than a week to gather the necessary signatures to petition to run, or run as a write-in candidate if they desire. Since the filing deadline hasn’t yet passed, it’s unclear exactly how many Democrats will run in the primary, however, since Jackson’s resignation, the district has seen more than a dozen contenders either announce their candidacy, be rumored to run or take their hat out of the ring all together.

State Sen. Donne Trotter was considered the frontrunner for the 2nd Congressional District. However, last week Trotter dropped out of the race following his early-December arrest at a Chicago airport after attempting to board a plane with an unloaded gun and bullets. Trotter said he forgot he had the gun in his bag after returning home from his job as a security guard the night before.

Earlier in the race for the 2nd Congressional District, many others were rumored to be running, including Jackson Jr.’s wife, Ald. Sandi Jackson, his brother Jonathan Jackson, Attorney Sam Adam Jr., Ald. Will Burns, Sen. Kwame Raoul, former Cook County Board President Todd Stroger. Although he was considering a run, Chicago “rooftop pastor” Corey Brooks decided not to compete for the seat.

Renita D. Young is a Chicago-based multimedia journalist. Follow her on Twitter @RenitaDYoung.

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