SPRINGFIELD 鈥 First-time candidate Nikki Budzinski, a Democrat, defeated Republican Regan Deering on Tuesday, flipping Illinois鈥 13th Congressional District blue after years of it being a GOP stronghold.
The formerly represented by five-term Republican Rep. Rodney Davis, was redrawn by Democrats in the 2020 redistricting process to exclude Davis' home and connect portions of the Metro East with parts of Springfield, Decatur and Champaign-Urbana.
鈥淭hank you, and then let鈥檚 get to work,鈥 Nikki Budzinski said on Election Night to a cheering crowd at the Hoogland Center for the Arts in Springfield. She secured victory by over 20,000 votes.
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Budzinski worked as an aide to Governor JB Pritzker and President Joe Biden, but this was her first time running for political office.
The Peoria native and graduate of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign called the win a personal one. She said her first move after taking office will be to help working people.
鈥淢y top priority in Congress will be tackling rising costs, and helping those same families keep more of what they earn,鈥 Budzinski said. 鈥淎nd that to me means middle class tax relief. That means lowering the cost of prescription drugs.鈥
Chris Frydenger, a utility worker from Monticello (and a member of United Steelworkers Local 7-838), where he tried and failed to pronounce the congresswoman-elect鈥檚 name.
He said he voted for Budzinski because of her support for labor and reproductive rights.
鈥淵ou know, even though I鈥檓 not a woman myself, I do want women to have the same rights as men do,鈥 Frydenger said. 鈥淎nd that includes choosing what they do with their body. And I know that she鈥檚 behind that. And also, I am in the labor movement. I know that she鈥檚 a champion of workers.鈥
Frydenger said he never really struggled with pronouncing her name, but that it was a unique experience having a beer with your future congresswoman.
鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 be prouder to be a part of it. Just being a part of a positive ad, and (it) made people laugh. And it brought people to her,鈥 he said.
Budzinski will be among the first women to represent Central and Southern Illinois 鈥 joining Republican Mary Miller, who was re-elected to a second term representing the 15th Congressional District.
Deering concedes after Champaign County votes counted
Republican candidate Regan Deering conceded around midnight on Tuesday. Her friends and family gathered at The Decatur Club in the city鈥檚 downtown.
鈥淲e really didn鈥檛 expect to get this far. We stood when many other people were backing away. We showed that you can be a conservative woman and [be] taken very seriously. We showed that here in central Illinois, we can put up a good fight,鈥 Deering said.
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Deering viewed herself as a political newcomer with the potential to shake up Washington. Deering is an activist and educator, and the granddaughter of Dwayne Andreas, former chairman of Archer Daniels Midland.
She became involved in politics during the early part of COVID-19 鈥 pushing back, with other conservative parents, against the state 鈥渕ask mandate.鈥
Her campaign for congress, though, focused on kitchen table issues.
鈥淰oters regardless of party are feeling the extra pressures of record-high inflation and (the) kind of crime that鈥檚 on the rise,鈥 Deering said recently.
Deering was endorsed by the NRA, Former Acting U.S. Attorney General (under the Trump administration) Matthew Whitaker, and the late Congressman Tim Johnson, among others.
Deering grew up in Decatur, and many locals at her Election Night watch party said they couldn鈥檛 vote for her because of redistricting.
Her cousin, Paul Whitley, lives in Mount Zion, to the south of Decatur. He said the village feels like a part of the Decatur community.
鈥淥nce they reset the boundaries, a lot of her constituents [at] least locally, all of a sudden鈥ouldn鈥檛 vote for her. I mean, I wanted to put her in as a write-in candidate,鈥 Whitley said.
Harrison Malkin is a reporter for Illinois Public Media. Follow him @HarrisonMalkin
Emily Hays is a reporter for Illinois Public Media. Follow her on Twitter @amihatt.