Elections
BURNELL HEINECKE: President of the Legislative Correspondents' Association, he spent 10 years as Springfield bureau chief for a Chicago newspaper before resigning to organize the Heinecke News Service. Heinecke was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University, 1956-57.

Stratton's solution for high cost of campaigning: Move primary to the fall

CANDIDATES for state office in Illinois are being caught in a squeeze: the cost of campaigning is going up and financial disclosure requirements make it more difficult to raise funds.

Former Gov. William G. Stratton, who served as a Republican congressman and state treasurer before being elected in 1952 to the first of two terms as governor, thinks the time is ripe to do something about reducing campaign costs.

Stratton, who was defeated by Democrat Otto Kerner in 1960 when he tried for a third consecutive term as governor, said he is aghast at the $1.5 million or $2 million estimates placed on the 1972 and 1976 gubernatorial campaigns. "When I ran, $50,000 to $100,000 would finance a campaign, but television has changed all that," Stratton said recently. "If you want to cut this outrageous spending, the first thing to do is cut the campaign from about 14 months to three," Stratton said.

April to June to March
Illinois had April primaries until 1968, when they were shifted to June. That year, Kerner resigned as governor in May and Samuel H. Shapiro moved up from lieutenant governor to governor, and also became the Democratic nominee for the fall general election. The low turnout in the June primary led to cries to return the primary to winter, and March was chosen. This past year, Gov. Walker vetoed legislation moving the primary to May. After the veto, legislators reevaluated the impact of a later date on the Democratic gubernatorial primary election, and there was no effort to override the Walker veto.

"Don't fool around with April, or May, but do the job where it ought to be done," Stratton insists. "Put it back in September, or somewhere like that. Then you'll get a good hot campaign on real issues through September, October and November. I just can't see why the public doesn't stand up and demand we cut this out."

Shortening the campaign
Decisions on candidacy usually have to be made in September in the year before the elections so petitions can be filed by December. As a rule, a basic campaign apparatus has to be organized a full year in advance and kept going lest there be the appearance of loss of momentum. Offices have to be rented, help hired, furnishings and equipment leased, and mailings and heavy telephone work begun at increasing cost these days. Shortening the campaign, in Stratton's opinion, is the best way to cut costs, and the one least likely to involve the government. "I am very hesitant about any government, federal or state, using any taxpayer funds for campaigns," Stratton said. "It may tend to give some stability, but I think it also gives unfair advantage to incumbents, and the people that eventually are going to control what government does. Whenever you see government financing, you see government controlling the purse strings."

What about convention delegates
The problem some have posed about picking party presidential convention delegates before mid-summer conventions is not insurmountable, in Stratton's opinion. "They are not public officials, or even party officials," Stratton said. "You are dealing with party organization rather than the public interest, and I wouldn't be adverse to some sort of party convention with delegates selected by county committees or something like that."

Stratton noted that with a short, two-year term of office coming up, state officials sworn in during January 1977 will be gearing up for their next election by December of the same year. A change in the primary election date could change this. "The legislature had better change it," Stratton asserted. "Its inexcusable the way it is now. In a big state like Illinois, it's a disaster." 

April 1976 / Illinois Issues / 9


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