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NEWS: JUDGE ALLOWS ANTITRUST LAWSUIT

NOVEMBER 3, 2022 SIXTH WEEK VOL. 135, ISSUE 4

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Here’s What You Need to Know About the 2022 Midterm Races in Illinois By PETER MAHERAS | Senior News Reporter On November 8, voters in Illinois will decide who will represent them in government over the next few years. Voters will also decide on a ballot measure that could determine the future of labor organizing in the state. Here is a summary of the major candidates running to represent Hyde Park and of the Workers’ Rights Amendment. Governor The governor’s race pits incumbent Democrat J. B. Pritzker against Illinois Senator Darren Bailey. Recent polling suggests Pritzker enjoys a significant lead over Bailey. Despite the seemingly uncompetitive nature of the race, both sides have spent significant amounts of money. Pritzker is a billionaire businessman and a member of the family that owns the Chicago-based Hyatt Hotels Corporation. In 1998, Pritzker ran for the House of Representatives in Illinois’s Ninth Congressional District but finished third. He later served as the national co-chair of Hillary Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign. According to the Chicago Tribune, Pritzker has spent $152 million on his own campaign since winning the governor’s office in 2018. Forbes estimates Pritzker’s net worth at $3.6 billion. Bailey is the owner of Bailey Family Farm in Xenia, Illinois. In 2018, Bailey won a seat in the Illinois House of Representatives for the 109th District before moving to the Illinois Senate in 2020. He easily won a six-person Republican primary with 57 percent of the vote. Bailey has raised almost $14 million during his candidacy, including $10 million from billionaire Richard Uihlein. Pritzker’s campaign has largely focused on raising awareness of his first-term record. During a recent debate, Pritzker listed providing $1.8 billion in tax relief, raising the minimum wage, legalizing cannabis, and

NEWS: Organizers Demand Affordable Housing,Transparency at Woodlawn Meeting PAGE 3

passing a major state infrastructure bill as some of his accomplishments. Pritzker has recently increased his focus on attacking Bailey’s position on abortion. In a 2017 video posted on Bailey’s Facebook page, Bailey compared abortion to the Holocaust. “The attempted extermination of the Jews of World War II doesn’t even compare to a shadow of the life that has been lost with abortion since its legalization,” Bailey said. Bailey has spent the closing months of the campaign attacking Pritzker over crime, taxes, and education. Bailey supports repealing the recently passed SAFE-T Act, which abolished cash bail for several criminal offenses, including second-degree murder and aggravated battery. Senate At the federal level, incumbent Democratic senator Tammy Duckworth faces a challenge from Republican Kathy Salvi. Election experts, including the non-partisan Cook Political Report and UVA Center for Politics, expect Duckworth to be reelected comfortably. The most recent publicly available poll, conducted by Emerson College, showed Duckworth with a 19 percent margin of victory. Duckworth is a U.S. Army veteran and Purple Heart recipient who served as a Black Hawk helicopter pilot during the Iraq War, in which she lost both legs when her helicopter was attacked by a rocket-propelled grenade in 2004. After leaving the Army, she became the director of the Illinois Department of Veterans Affairs and then the assistant secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs during the Obama administration. Duckworth was then elected to the House of Representatives in 2012, serving for two terms before unseating Republican senator

GREY CITY: Lake Michigan: A Story of Ecocide PAGE 6

Mark Kirk in 2016. Salvi is an attorney who served as a law clerk in Illinois’s Second Appellate District and as an assistant public defender in Lake County. She then entered private law practice as a personal injury lawyer. In 2006, Salvi ran for the Republican nomination for Illinois’s Eighth Congressional District but lost in the primary. Salvi defeated a seven-candidate field in the Republican primary to win the nomination with 30 percent of the vote. In her reelection campaign, Duckworth has touted the passage of recent bills includ-

ing the Inflation Reduction Act and the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. Duckworth has criticized Salvi’s position on abortion. Salvi supported the Supreme Court’s decision overturning the constitutional right to an abortion and said in a recent debate that the issue of abortion access should be made at the state level. In the same debate, Salvi attempted to characterize Duckworth as a “rubber stamp” for President Biden’s “socialist, leftist agenda.” Salvi has also focused on tying Duckworth to inflation and crime, which reCONTINUED ON PG. 2

Gage Gramlick, Editor-in-Chief Yiwen Lu, Managing Editor Matthew Chang, Chief Production Officer Astrid Weinberg & Dylan Zhang, Chief Business Officers The Editorial Board is ran by the editor-in-chief of The Maroon and composed of members from various editorial sections of the paper. NEWS DESIGN

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ARTS: A Review of Three Crows ensemble theater company’s Macbeth

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SPORTS: A conversation with UChicago’s recently formed boxing RSO PAGE 9

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