This is the first really significant political news of the season
Democrats take high-profile Republican district
Sun Mar 9, 2008 10:43am EDT
By Michael Conlon
CHICAGO (Reuters) - A Democrat captured on Saturday an Illinois U.S.
House of Representatives seat that had been a Republican stronghold, in
a symbolic blow to President George W. Bush's party ahead of November
elections.
Returns showed physicist and businessman Bill Foster beating dairy owner
Jim Oberweis by 52 percent to 48 percent of the vote in the district
that had been held by former House Speaker Dennis Hastert for more than
two decades.
Democrats already control both houses of the Congress with a 30-seat
edge in the House so Foster's win does not affect the balance of power,
simply adding a seat to that majority. All House seats and part of the
Senate, as well as the presidency, are at stake in the November general
elections.
Hastert retired in December, setting up Saturday's special election for
the balance of his term, which runs through this calendar year and into
January when the new U.S. Congress will be seated. Oberweis, 61, and
Foster, 52, will also face off in November for a full two-year term.
While the area has been a Republican stronghold for years, redistricting
brought geographic changes and population shifts including more
Hispanics and younger suburban families that changed its make-up. The
2008 edition of the Almanac of American Politics rated the district as
"a tough one for Democrats to win but not impossible."
Congressional campaign committees from both parties poured hundreds of
thousands of dollars into the contest.
The conservative Hastert was replaced as speaker in January 2007 by
Nancy Pelosi, a liberal Democrat from California, after the Democrats
took control of Congress in the November 2006 congressional elections.
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