
US Sen. Dick Durbin's retirement opens the floodgates for a number of potential successors
With his announcement Wednesday that he would not seek reelection next year, U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin set into motion an upheaval of Democratic politics involving current officeholders looking at the potential risks and rewards of seeking a coveted U.S. Senate seat and its potential for long-term job security.
Even before Durbin's long-awaited decision, a behind-the-scenes Democratic primary was underway by at least four current elected officials. But now that Durbin has made it official, additional contenders are likely to surface after they scrutinize their chances.
U.S. Reps. Raja Krishnamoorthi of Schaumburg, Robin Kelly of Matteson, Lauren Underwood of Naperville and Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton have been adding political staff, making contacts and creating schedules to take them around the state to gain much-needed name recognition as they awaited Durbin's decision.
On Thursday, one day after Durbin's announcement, Krishnamoorthi is scheduled to launch from Chicago a tour to central Illinois to warn of the impact of President Donald Trump's tariffs on small businesses and families. And Kelly is set to hold an afternoon 'town hall' on the campus of Eastern Illinois University in Charleston, in the heavily GOP congressional district of far-right U.S. Rep. Mary Miller.
Three-term Democratic state Treasurer Michael Frerichs said he is weighing a bid for Durbin's seat and other Democrats have floated the names of first-term Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias, state Sen. Robert Peters of Chicago and former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who has been looking for a reentry into Democratic politics and policy.
Emanuel, a former congressman, White House chief of staff and ambassador to Japan, prefers an executive rather than legislative post and is unlikely to seek Durbin's seat, those close to him say.
For statewide officeholders, a run for the Senate creates a disadvantage since money in their state campaign funds cannot be converted for use in a federal campaign, which has stricter fundraising restrictions. That means starting a fundraising operation anew.
Frerichs, who formerly lived in Champaign but now lives in Chicago, hailed Durbin as 'an important mentor and friend' and said he was 'considering how I can continue to best serve the people of Illinois.' That, he said, included 'having conversations with my family.'
Stratton, the lieutenant governor, has been spending down her state campaign fund by doling out more than $98,000 in digital advertising that could be viewed as a way to increase her name recognition for a Senate run.
In a social media post, Stratton hailed Durbin's career while vowing to 'work hard to carry on his legacy of delivering real solutions for the middle class.'
Giannoulias made an unsuccessful run for the Senate against Mark Kirk in 2010, the last Republican to hold the office. Kirk was defeated after one term by Democrat Tammy Duckworth, who was reelected in 2022. Giannoulias proved to be a strong fundraiser in his Senate bid but he is also considering making a bid for Chicago mayor in 2027.
Among the potential U.S. House Democrats considering a Senate contest, Krishnamoorthi, who has served five terms, had a federal campaign war chest of $19.4 million as of April 1.
'A champion for everyday families and an unyielding advocate for the underdog, Sen. Durbin represents the true meaning of public service,' Krishnamoorthi said on social media. 'Over the next two years, I know he will continue to fiercely advocate for our state, and I will be honored to fight alongside him as we continue to deliver for Illinois.'
Kelly, who has served in the House since 2013, had more than $2 million in her campaign bank account as of April 1.
'Sen. Durbin has always served with integrity and common sense, and I am one of millions of Illinoisans who are grateful for his leadership during challenging times,' she said on social media.
The four-term Underwood has $1.1 million in cash on hand at the start of April, records show. She called Durbin a 'generous and thoughtful leader.'
'As a steady force for good, Sen. Durbin always dedicates himself not just to our state, but the country,' she said. 'I'm so grateful for his decades of service which has made life better for millions of people.'
If the prospective congressional candidates and statewide elected officers ran for Durbin's seat, that, in turn, would create a chorus of candidates from the General Assembly and elsewhere seeking to run for open U.S. House seats.
While the eventual Democratic nominee is expected to have the advantage in a state where party members have held all statewide elected offices since 2019, Republican U.S. Rep. Darin LaHood of Peoria acknowledged Wednesday he was considering a Senate bid.
LaHood, the son of former longtime GOP congressman and Obama transportation secretary Ray LaHood, had nearly $5.9 million in his federal campaign fund as of April 1. One of only three House Republicans in Illinois' congressional delegation, LaHood has served since 2015 in Congress and has been a strong supporter of President Trump.
A statement from Jake Ford, LaHood's political director, said Durbin's retirement was 'long overdue' and that the senator served as 'the face of Washington dysfunction.'
'Illinoisans are ready to turn the page. Voters are tired of out-of-touch liberal policies that have failed working families, and prioritized illegal immigrants and far-left ideological agendas over hard working American taxpayers,' Ford said in touting LaHood's 'strong support from voters.' LaHood has benefited by congressional maps drawn by legislative Democrats that sought to pack Republicans into as few GOP-majority districts as possible while maximizing Democratic representation from Illinois in the House.
'As the 2026 election approaches, congressman LaHood remains focused on delivering conservative leadership for all Illinoisans that offers a clear alternative to the failed liberal policies driving families and businesses out of Illinois,' Ford said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hill
26 minutes ago
- The Hill
Trump orders probe of Biden mental state, executive actions in office
President Trump on Wednesday ordered an investigation into actions taken by then-President Biden, citing questions about Biden's cognitive state toward the end of his term. Trump directed the counsel to the president, in consultation with Attorney General Pam Bondi, to probe 'whether certain individuals conspired to deceive the public about Biden's mental state and unconstitutionally exercise the authorities and responsibilities of the President.' The investigation will focus specifically on actions Biden signed using the 'autopen,' which has become a fixation of those on the right as they levy accusations about Biden's ability to carry out his duties. Trump's order cites Biden's appointment of more than 200 judges to the federal bench, the issuance of thousands of acts of clemency and the issuance of more than 1,000 presidential documents during his term. Biden and his aides have repeatedly denied that the former president was unable to carry out his duties while in office. A Biden spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment about Trump's latest order. New books, including 'Original Sin: President Biden's Decline, Its Cover-Up, and His Disastrous Choice to Run Again,' have reignited debate about Biden's mental acuity while in office and whether he experienced cognitive decline. Since President Trump took office, the GOP has taken a number of steps focusing on Biden. The White House confirmed Tuesday that pardon attorney Ed Martin would be reviewing Biden's pardons for his family members, as well as some other clemencies granted during his final days in office. House Republicans have reached out to former Biden aides as part of a probe into the former president's mental acuity. And the Justice Department last month released the full tapes of Biden's interview with special counsel Robert Hur, one in which the attorney said Biden appeared to have memory lapses. While president, Biden released the full transcript of the conversation.
Yahoo
30 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Biden's frailty has Democrats scrambling to rebrand - or jump ship like Karine Jean-Pierre
Joe Biden's former allies are running for the hills. Questions about the former president's mental faculties took on a new urgency last month thanks to the artificial drip-drip of revelations leaked to outlets ahead of the release of Original Sin, Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson's book about the ill-fated Biden re-election bid. Now, the Trump administration and GOP Congress are pushing the narrative along with investigations into the use of an 'autopen' by the former president when signing official documents — a move Donald Trump has baselessly alleged could mean that some shadowy figure was really running the show for four years. The Democratic Party is in the wilderness, electorally speaking, and undergoing a real internal reckoning over the mismanaged 2024 re-election campaign of Joe Biden and the final stretch sprint that was Kamala Harris's own bid for the top job. No one is more lost in this reshuffle than the members of Bidenworld, who found themselves jobless and loathed by a certain segment of the party after last year. Facing the clear prospect of being blacklisted by future Democratic campaigns and causes, some are rebranding themselves. Others are cutting ties altogether. Wednesday arrived in Washington with the news that Karine Jean-Pierre, Biden's White House press secretary for four years, was in the latter group. Hawking a new book titled Independent (no relation!), Jean-Pierre announced through representatives that she is leaving the party. The book's description labels the Biden White House 'broken' and was met with skepticism from journalists, who questioned how 'outside the party lines' the president's former press secretary could organically be. The news also enraged Democrats with ties to the former administration, according to Politico, who called it a 'grift' and mostly held to fuming in group chats. Others in this category have dropped off the face of the (political) Earth: Jen O'Malley Dillon, Harris's former campaign chair, hasn't made a public comment since appearing on a Pod Save America interview in the immediate aftermath of the election. Same with ex-campaign manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez. Several other top and mid-level Harris and Biden campaign officials have either sunk into relative obscurity or, such as was the case with former Biden White House spokesman Andrew Bates, struck out on their own. That's to say nothing, of course, of Harris herself. The former vice president continues to be virtually invisible as she reportedly weighs a run for governor of her home state (where she hasn't lived for four years), against what would likely be a field crowded with other Democrats. Doing so would expose her to tough questions about her former running mate. She has yet to pull the trigger, with that likely being a major reason why. There's one clear reason for this: Joe Biden's continued inability to refute any of the concerns about his age and ability to make a case for himself. It seemed like the former president's fade into obscurity began the day he ceded the presidential position on the re-election ticket to Harris; his most prominent moment in the weeks following was his pardon of Hunter, his son, in December. In a half-hearted effort to head off the worst of the Original Sin blowback, the former president appeared — alongside the former first lady — on The View, a comparatively friendly interview, before the book's release. It did not go well. A whispery ex-president's sentences were finished for him, and there was little sign of the fiery scrapper from Scranton whose antics were once the subject of memes and TV references, not derision. Neither the GOP nor a scandal-hungry Capitol press corps is eager to let this story die. Joe Biden seems wholly unable to kill it. The only question now is how long the stink of the last year remains on those affected, and how widespread it really is. Could it blunt Harris's ambitions? Probably. Less clear: its effect on Cabinet officials, like Pete Buttigieg. Or Rahm Emanuel, Biden's former ambassador to Japan, who's now publicly indicating that he may run in 2028. In the end, the former president's re-election bid could end up irreversibly tarring a whole segment of Democratic operatives and even a few of the party's (formerly) rising stars.
Yahoo
30 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Bipartisan group of assembly members urge Newsom to delay RTO order
( — A group of 17 California assemblymembers, made up of two Republicans and 15 Democrats, called on Gov. Gavin Newsom to delay his return-to-office order. The lawmakers asked that state workers not be made to return to the office four days a week until the State Auditor completes a report on the order. Video: State workers protest in front of the California Department of Human Services (March 2025) Newsom's order is scheduled to take effect July 1. The auditor's report is scheduled to be released later this summer, the lawmakers said. The Joint Legislative Audit Committee requested the audit address a number of issues, including how much each state agency relies on telework, how much the state would save on office leases, telework's impact on the state's climate goals and the impact of telework on employee productivity and customer satisfaction. The group, led by Asm. Josh Hoover (R-Folsom) and Assistant Majority Leader Robert Garcia (D-Rancho Cucamunga), argue that telework has numerous benefits the state should try to keep. 'The State Auditor is currently studying the benefits of California's telework policies, and it is critical that the Governor's RTO mandate be put on hold until this important work is completed,' Assemblymember Hoover said. 'Embracing telework where feasible has the potential to save California taxpayers millions of dollars, reduce traffic congestion, and help make state employers more competitive with the private sector. I appreciate Assemblymember Garcia and my legislative colleagues for joining this effort to support state workers.' The letter also said that Downtown Sacramento's parking infrastructure was not suited for so many in-person workers. 'In a recent memo from the Department of General Services, the Legislature was informed that the availability of daily parking passes will be capped and reduced each day due to the demand created by RTO,' the letter said. 'Eliminating telework will create significant parking capacity issues and will harm productivity for existing in-person state workers as well.' In his executive order, Newsom said research showed that in-person work 'enhanced collaboration, cohesion, and communication, improved opportunities for mentorship, and improved supervision and accountability.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.