hodayathink
Member
Mark Kirk winning a seat isn't surprising. If the populations in or around Chicago vote even remotely Republican a Republican has a chance to win because the majority of Illinois votes Republican to begin with.
This isn't really an accurate reading of Illinois politics, though. Looking at the two most recent statewide elected Republicans (Rauner and Kirk), one was elected in the Republican wave of 2010, which in addition to that, as stated earlier in this thread, was a low point for the Illinois Democratic Party as the former governor had just gotten impeached and convicted on corruption charges. The other was the replacement for the ineffective successor of said impeached governor. Also, it's hard for even the Chicago Metro area to vote Republican enough for the rest of the state to matter, mostly because that area makes up like 60-75% of the state's population, and because you still have smaller cities like Peoria and East. St Louis and Bloomington-Normal and Champaign-Urbana that go Dem consistently.
tl;dr: It took the 2010 Republican wave AND a high-level impeachment for Republicans to barely eek out 2 wins.