U.S. Rep. Rodney Davis (R-Taylorville) on Tuesday announced he'll run for a sixth term in Congress, ending months of chatter about his possible entrance in the Republican primary to unseat Gov. JB Pritzker in 2022.
鈥淒emocrats in Washington have put our nation in crisis with their big government, socialist schemes and dreams,鈥 Davis said in a statement officially announcing his re-election campaign on Tuesday. 鈥淩epublicans are primed to retake the House next year, and I鈥檓 ready to work with a new Republican majority to finally fire Nancy Pelosi and hold the Biden Administration accountable for their massive failures. I look forward to campaigning hard and earning every vote in this district over the next year.鈥
Davis began weighing a run against the first-term Democrat earlier this year, but that was long before Democrats, who control the General Assembly, unveiled newly drawn congressional districts last month. The majority party carved Davis out of much of his , but left him with a safer than the one he鈥檚 held onto for the last nearly nine years.
Since then, Davis has held off on announcing which office he鈥檇 seek, but it was widely acknowledged he鈥檇 likely stay in Congress. He told reporters in August that was his ambition, though he said his political future was in Democrats鈥 hands.
鈥淗oping to remain in Congress,鈥 Davis said at a GOP event prior to the party鈥檚 day at the State Fair in Springfield this summer. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 not my choice. It鈥檚 the choice of the corrupt Democrats in Springfield.鈥
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Democratic mapmakers instead chose to take most of the current 13th District 鈥 which stretches from Champaign at its easternmost point and Bloomington-Normal in the north southwest to the Mississippi River and parts of the Metro East 鈥 and condense it into a new 13th District favorable for former Pritzker adviser Nikki Budzinski in her bid for Congress.
After announcing her run in late August, Budzinski鈥檚 initial campaign messaging targeted Davis as an opponent. But Democrats placed Davis鈥 hometown of Taylorville in the newly drawn 15th District, which runs all the way from near the Quad Cities in its northwest corner, southeast to Terre Haute, Indiana, looping back southwest catching territory south of Champaign, Decatur and Springfield to the outskirts of the Metro East.
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Congressional candidates don鈥檛 have to live in the same district they鈥檙e running for. But even factoring in having to learn hundreds of square miles鈥 worth of new constituencies, running in the 15th District is a safer bet for Davis, who has had to fend off Democratic challengers in all five of his campaigns.
Davis nearly lost his first race in 2012, and CNN infamously called the 2018 contest for his opponent, Betsy Dirksen Londrigan, in the midst of Democrats鈥 so-called 鈥淏lue Wave鈥 election night. But Davis held on, and roundly beat Londrigan during a rematch last year.
Partisan gerrymandering in both blue and red states has made competitive districts like Davis鈥 current 13th District a rarity, but without having to worry about a serious electoral threat in the new 15th district, Davis could focus on a long-term goal 鈥 if the GOP takes back control of the House.
鈥淗oping to [stay in Congress] and be, eventually, the chair of our Transportation and Infrastructure Committee to work in a bipartisan way to bring resources back to Illinois,鈥 Davis told reporters in August.
Presented with the chance to vote for a massive infrastructure package earlier this month, however, Davis and all but 13 Republicans voted against President Joe Biden鈥檚 $1.2 trillion-dollar infrastructure package. Davis panned Democrats for tying the infrastructure package to the passage of an even larger social spending plan dubbed 鈥淏uild Back Better,鈥 though its parameters are still being negotiated. Even so, Davis dubbed it 鈥渞eckless.鈥
Davis announced his re-election bid with the support of 31 of the 35 GOP county party chairs in the new 15th district Also included in his announcement are endorsements from 14 Republican state legislators in that district, plus U.S. Reps. Darin LaHood (R-Peoria) and Mike Bost (R-Murphysboro) and retired Rep. John Shimkus (R-Collinsville).
That strong show of support from the jump could be designed to ward off a potential challenger from his own party: Shimkus' far-right successor, freshman U.S. Rep. Mary Miller (R-Oakland). Miller is the only Republican in Illinois鈥 congressional delegation who hasn鈥檛 announced her plans for 2022, and could challenge Bost in the much-expanded 12th District or mount a contest against Davis in the 15th district.
Miller gained national attention early this year when part of her speech during a pro-Trump rally outside the U.S. Capitol went viral. Miller invoked Nazi leader Adolf Hitler in her Jan. 5 speech 鈥 just two days after being sworn in to Congress and one day before the Jan. 6 insurrection on the Capitol.
鈥淚f we win a few elections, we鈥檙e still going to be losing unless we win the hearts and minds of our children,鈥 at the Moms for America rally. 鈥淭his is the battle. Hitler was right on one thing. He said, 鈥榃hoever has the youth has the future.鈥欌
Illinois鈥 current 18-member congressional delegation will be cut to 17 under the new map, dictated by the 2020 U.S. Census, which found Illinois lost net population for the first time ever. Illinois has lost one or two congressional seats each decade since modern reapportionment began after the 1940 Census.
Democrats鈥 new congressional map aimed to give the party 14 relatively safe seats, leaving just three districts for Illinois鈥 five congressional Republicans to fight over. The morning after Democrats passed the map through the General Assembly last month, one of those GOP members, U.S. Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Channahon) announced he wouldn鈥檛 seek a seventh term in Congress. Kinzinger has criticized the right wing of his party and was also one of the 13 Republican House members to vote for the infrastructure package in early November.
This post was updated after Davis officially announced his run on Tuesday morning.
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