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1982 Illinois gubernatorial election

The 1982 Illinois gubernatorial election was held in Illinois on November 2, 1982. Incumbent Republican governor James R. Thompson won a third term in office, defeating the Democratic nominee, former United States Senator Adlai Stevenson III, by a slim margin of about 5,000 votes.

1982 Illinois gubernatorial election

← 1978 November 2, 1982 1986 →
Turnout61.58% 7.35 pp
 
Nominee James R. Thompson Adlai Stevenson III
Party Republican Democratic
Running mate George Ryan Grace Mary Stern
Popular vote 1,816,101 1,811,027
Percentage 49.4% 49.3%

County results

Thompson:      40-50%      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%

Stevenson:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%

Governor before election

James R. Thompson
Republican

Elected Governor

James R. Thompson
Republican

Election information Edit

The election coincided with those for congress and those for other state offices. The election was part of the 1982 Illinois elections.

Turnout Edit

Turnout in the primaries saw 22.42% in the gubernatorial primaries, with a total of 1,337,581 votes cast, and 20.25% in the lieutenant gubernatorial primary, with 1,208,178 votes cast.[1][2]

Turnout during the general election was 61.58%, with 3,673,707 votes cast.[1][3]

Democratic primary Edit

Governor Edit

Adlai Stevenson III, former United States Senator, won the primary for the gubernatorial nomination unopposed.

Democratic gubernatorial primary[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Adlai E. Stevenson 731,041 99.99
Write-in Others 94 0.01
Total votes 731,135 100

Lieutenant governor Edit

Grace Mary Stern won the Democratic primary for lieutenant governor unopposed.

Democratic lieutenant gubernatorial primary[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Grace Mary Stern 588,942 99.98
Write-in Others 103 0.02
Total votes 589,045 100

Republican primary Edit

Governor Edit

Incumbent James R. Thompson defeated challengers John E. Roche and V. A. Kelley.

Republican gubernatorial primary[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican James R. Thompson (incumbent) 507,893 83.75
Republican John E. Roche 54,858 9.05
Republican V. A. Kelley 43,627 7.19
Write-in Others 68 0.01
Total votes 606,446 100

Lieutenant governor Edit

George Ryan defeated Susan Catania and Donald L. Totten in the lieutenant gubernatorial primary.

Republican lieutenant gubernatorial primary[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican George Ryan 278,544 44.99
Republican Susan Catania 188,220 30.40
Republican Donald L. Totten 152,356 24.61
Write-in Others 13 0.00
Total votes 619,133 100

General election results Edit

Stevenson complained that Thompson was trying to portray him as an ineffectual elitist by famously stating, "He is saying 'Me tough guy,' as if to imply that I’m some kind of wimp."[4] Before the election, Thompson had been favored by polls and predictions to win by roughly twenty percentage points.[5]

The nominees of the third-party Libertarian and Taxpayers tickets were both right-of-center, and were therefore regarded as more likely to siphon off more potential supporters from Thompson than from Stevenson.[6]

Statewide result Edit

Thompson won by a narrow 5,074 vote margin. Thompson carried 83 of Illinois' 102 counties, while Stevenson carried on 19. However, Stevenson won Cook County, home of Chicago.[1] Cook County accounted for a substantial share of the state's population. Thompson had actually carried the vote of suburban Cook County. However, Stevenson had managed to win the city of Chicago by a margin of nearly 4 to 1.[6][7] Thompson's narrow victory was likely attributable, in part, to his strong performance in the collar counties (the five counties that border Cook County; DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry, and Will).

The 1982 Democratic ticket performed better than the Democratic ticket had in the previous 1978 gubernatorial election.[7] In the cumulative vote of Cook County and the five collar counties (DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry, and Will), the 1982 Democratic Ticket performed 10% better than the 1978 ticket had.[7] At the time, the downstate Illinois vote was seen as very important to determining victory in Illinois statewide elections. The 1982 Democratic ticket performed better than the 1978 had in downstate Illinois. However, despite the Republican ticket performing weaker in downstate Illinois than it had in the 1978 election, the Republican ticket still managed to win downstate Illinois by a 136,917 vote margin, which was a key factor in securing their victory.[7]

1982 gubernatorial election, Illinois[1][3]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican James R. Thompson (incumbent)/ George H. Ryan 1,816,101 49.44
Democratic Adlai Stevenson III/ Grace Mary Stern 1,811,027 49.30
Libertarian Bea Armstrong/ David L. Kelley 24,417 0.66
Taxpayers John E. Roche/ Melvin "Mel" Jones 22,001 0.60
N/A write-ins 161 0.00 n-a
Majority 5,074 0.14
Turnout 3,673,707 61.58
Republican hold Swing

Rate of voter participation Edit

3,673,707 (61.58%) of the state's 5,965,514 registered voters voted in the gubernatorial election. This percentage of registered voters participating in the 1982 gubernatorial election marked a 7.35% increase from that of the preceding 1978 gubernatorial election.[3][1][8]

183,311 of the 3,856,875 individuals that cast ballots in the state's 1982 general election did not vote in the gubernatorial race.[6][3] This number of "blank votes" in the gubernatorial election was equal to 4.75% of the voters who participated in the state general election,[3] and 3.07% of the state's registered voters.[1] 2,108,639 (35.35%) of the state's registered voters did not cast valid ballots in the state's general election.[1] The combined total of the registered voters who cast no valid ballot and the registered voters who cast ballots with "blank votes" in the gubernatorial election meant that 2,291,950 (38.42%) of the registered voters did not vote in the gubernatorial election.[3][1]

Geographic breakdowns of the results Edit

Chicago vs. Cook County vs. collar counties vs. downstate Illinois Edit

The following table breaks down the results into three categories, providing a comparative breakdown between the results in Chicago, the results in suburban Cook County, the results in the five collar counties (DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry, and Will), and the results the results of the remainder of Illinois ("downstate Illinois").

Chicago vs. Cook County vs. collar counties vs. downstate Illinois[3][7]
Region Thompson vote Stevenson vote Margin Notes
Chicago 259,963 (26%) 728,580 (74%) 446,617 Stevenson Thompson carried 2 wards while Stevenson carried 48
Suburban Cook County 436,095 (61%) 279,000 (39%) 157,095 Thompson Thompson carried 28 townships while Stevenson carried 2
Collar counties 341,971 (68%) 162,292 (32%) 179,679 (34.97%) Thompson Thompson carried 5 counties, while Sevenson carried 0
Downstate Illinois (96 counties) 778,072 (54.15%) 641,115 (44.62%) 136,917 (9.53%) Thompson Thompson carried 78 counties while Stevenson carried 18

Cook County and collar counties vs. downstate Illinois Edit

The following table breaks down the results into two categories, providing a comparative breakdown between the cumulative results of Cook County and the five collar counties (DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry, and Will) with the results of the remainder of Illinois ("downstate Illinois"). Thompson performed stronger in downstate Illinois than he did in the cumaltive vote of Cook County and the collar counties, while Stevenson inversely performed stronger in the cumulative vote of Cook County and the collar counties than he did in downstate Illinois.

As this table indicates, Cook County and the collar counties cumulatively were the location of 60.91% of the statewide vote, with downstate Illinois being the location of only 39.09% of the statewide vote.

Cook County and collar counties vs. downstate Illinois[3][7]
Region Thompson vote Stevenson vote Armstrong vote Roche vote Write-in vote Total vote % of overall state vote Margin Counties carried by candidate
Cook County and collar counties 1,038,029 (46.39%) 1,169,872 (52.28%) 15,758 (0.70%) 14,036 (0.63%) 128 (0.00%) 2,237,823 60.91% 109,843 (4.91%) Stevenson Thompson: 5
Stevenson: 1
Downstate Illinois (96 counties) 778,072 (54.19%) 641,115 (44.65%) 8,659 (0.60%) 7,965 (0.55%) 33 (0.00%) 1,435,884 39.09% 136,917 (9.54%) Thompson Thompson: 78
Stevenson: 18

General geographic breakdown of Cook County and collar counties Edit

The following table gives a comparative breakdown of the results in the Chicago metropolitan area counties, breaking these results into three categories: the result within the municipal limits of Chicago, the results in the remainder of Cook County ("suburban Cook County"), and the cumulative results of the five collar counties of DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry, and Will.

Geographic breakdown of results in Cook County and collar counties[7]
Region Thompson vote Stevenson vote Margin Notes
Chicago 259,963 (26%) 728,580 (74%) 446,617 Stevenson Thompson carried 2 wards while Stevenson carried 48
Suburban Cook County 436,095 (61%) 279,000 (39%) 157,095 Thompson Thompson carried 28 townships while Stevenson carried 2
Collar counties 341,971 (68%) 162,292 (32%) 179,679 (34.97%) Thompson Thompson carried 5 counties, while Sevenson carried 0
Total 1,038,029 (46.41%) 1,169,872 (52.30%) 109,843 (4.91%) Stevenson

Chicago vs. suburban Cook County and the collar counties Edit

The following table gives a comparative breakdown of the results Chicago metropolitan area counties, contrasting the result within the municipal limits of Chicago with the outlying vote in the outlying area of its metropolitan area counties (Cook County and the five collar counties of DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry, and Will).

Cook County and the five collar counties saw a cumulative total of 2,237,823 votes cast between them, equivalent to 60.89% of the statewide total.[3]

This table demonstrates that, while Stevenson had carried the cumulative vote of Cook County and the collar counties, he had only done so due to his landslide performance (74%) in Chicago. The table demonstrates that Thompson won a landslide in cumulative vote of suburban Cook County and the collar counties (64%), performing even strong there than his 55% performance in downstate Illinois.[7]

Chicago vs. suburban Cook County and the collar counties[7]
Region Thompson vote Stevenson vote Margin
Chicago 259,963 (26%) 728,580 (74%) 446,617 (45.18%) Stevenson
Suburban Cook County and collar counties 778,066 (64%) 441,292 (36%) 336,774 (27.62%) Thompson
Total 1,038,029 (46.41%) 1,169,872 (52.30%) 109,843 (4.91%) Stevenson

Geographic breakdown of collar counties Edit

The following table gives a comparative breakdown of the results in each of the five collar counties. The cumulative vote of the collar counties (513,825 votes) was equivalent to 13.99% of the statewide vote.

County breakdown of Collar County results[3]
County Thompson vote Stevenson vote Armstrong vote Roche vote Write-in vote Total vote % of overall state vote Thompson's margin over Stevenson
DuPage 138,502 (71.44%) 51,543 (25.59%) 1,974 (1.02%) 1,824 (0.94%) 20 (0.01%) 193,863 5.28% 86,959 (44.86%)
Kane 48,513 (67.36%) 22,132 (30.73%) 744 (1.03%) 612 (0.85%) 17 (0.02%) 72,018 1.96% 26,381 (36.63%)
Lake 72,420 (62.93%) 40,757 (35.42%) 1,090 (0.95%) 803 (0.70%) 4 (0.00%) 115,074 3.13% 31,663 (27.52%)
McHenry 29,343 (72.74%) 10,181 (25.24%) 442 (1.10%) 374 (0.93%) 2 (0.00%) 40,342 1.10% 19,162 (47.50%)
Will 53,193 (57.49%) 37,679 (40.72%) 668 (0.72%) 983 (1.06%) 5 (0.00%) 92,528 2.52% 15,514 (15.77%)
Total 341,971 (66.55%) 162,292 (31.59%) 4,918 (0.96%) 4,596 (0.89%) 48 (0.00%) 513,825 13.99% 179,679 (34.97%)

Geographic breakdown of Cook County Edit

The following table gives a comparative breakdown of the results in Cook County, contrasting the votes cast in the municipal limits of Chicago with the votes cast in the remainder of Cook County ("suburban Cook County").

Cook County saw a total of 1,723,998 votes cast, equivalent to 46.93% of all votes cast in the election.[3]

This table demonstrates that, while Stevenson won a 58.48% of the vote in Cook County, with a margin of 18.07% over Thompson, this was solely attributable to Stevenson's 44.75% margin over Thompson in Chicago, as Thompson actually carried the remainder of Cook County by a 21.97% margin over Stevenson.

Breakdown of Cook County results[7]
Region Thompson vote Stevenson vote Margin
Chicago 259,963 (26%) 728,580 (74%) 446,617 (44.75%) Stevenson
Suburban Cook County 436,095 (61%) 279,000 (39%) 157,095 (21.97%) Thompson
Total 696,058 (40.37%)) 1,007,580 (58.44%) 311,522 (18.07%) Stevenson

Geographic breakdown of Stevenson's vote Edit

40.23% of Stevenson's votes came from Chicago. 15.41% of Stevenson's votes came from suburban Cook County. 8.96% of Stevenson's votes came from the collar counties. 35.40% of Stevenson's votes came from downstate Illinois.[3]

Geographic breakdown of Thompson's vote Edit

14.31% of Thompson's votes came from Chicago. 24.01% of Thompson's votes came from suburban Cook County. 18.83% of Thompson's votes came from the collar counties. 42.84% of Thompson's votes came from downstate Illinois.[3]

Post-election day developments Edit

Certification of results Edit

The final canvass conducted by election officials was conducted on November 22, 1982.[6] The Illinois State Board of Elections certified the result on January 23, 1982.[9]

Partial recounts Edit

For the first time since its passage in 1977, Illinois' law outlining election recounts was invoked.[6] The law enabled candidates to request partial recounts of the votes in up to 25% of the state's more than 7,000 election precincts, with candidates being able to hand-pick the precincts to be recounted.[6] Stevenson opted for a recount of precincts in 70 of the state's 102 counties. The counties chosen where ones where Thompson had received a strong share of the vote.[6] Thompson also opted to invoke his right to a partial recount, and chose to have a recount of precincts in 32 of Chicago's 50 wards. The wards in question were ones where Stevenson had received a strong share of the vote.[6]

Unsuccessful petition by Stevenson for a full state recount Edit

On December 7, 1982 Stevenson and Stern filed a petition with the Illinois Supreme Court requesting a recount.[9] Stevenson and Stern's petition argued that the election had been impacted by "widespread irregularities and error".[10] Thompson and Ryan filed their objections to this on December 10, 1982.[9] Under the state's 1977 election recount law, if a complete statewide recount had been ordered, the recount would have been supervised by a three-member panel of Illinois Circuit Court judges. Under the law, the Illinois Supreme Court would have selected the three judges to serve on the panel.[6]

At the time of the case, four of the Illinois Supreme Court's seven justices were Democrats.[10] Oral arguments were heard by the court on December 21, 1982.[9] Stevenson put forth an argument that, based on the evidence gathered in the partial recount of 500,000 votes in 70 of the state's 102 counties, that he believed a full statewide recount would find him to have won the election by an approximately 11,000-vote margin.[10] Stevenson claimed that the partial recount in the precincts he had selected had found enough invalid ballots to decrease Thompson's margin-of-victory from 5,074 to merely 325 votes.[6] However, Thompson's legal counsel characterized a recount as unwarranted, and also challenged the figures Stevenson alleged that the recount of his selected counties had indicated. Thompson argued that many of the ballots which Stevenson had characterized as illegitimate had been so-characterized due to "defacing" that was actually the result of markings from electronic tabulating machines.[6] Thompson's legal counsel argued that Stevenson did not provide the level of evidence required by the state's 1977 election recount law (a law which had, up until then, never been tested).[10]

On January 7, 1983, the court issued a 4–3 decision, with a majority opinion authored by Chief Justice Howard C. Ryan, rejecting Stevenson's petition for a recount.[9][6] The majority opinion of the court found insufficient evidence of either mistakes, fraud, or irregularities to warrant a recount.[10] Furthermore, in their decision, the court found the state's 1977 law outlining rules for statewide election recounts to be unconstitutional, finding that, in passing the law, the Illinois Legislature unconstitutionally established what was effectively a new court due to the provision having a three-member panel of Illinois Circuit Court judges oversee statewide recounts.[10][6] The opinion cited the 1975 state decision Rice v. Cunningham in finding that, "the General Assembly did not have the authority to provide that a case be heard by a three judge panel," and that, "the 1970 Constitution confers no authority in the legislature to create new courts".[11] The court's axing of the 1977 election law had been unprompted by either party in the case.[10] The majority opinion was supported by Republican justices Howard C. Ryan, Thomas Moran, Robert C. Underwood, and Democratic justice Seymour Simon. Dissenting were Democratic justices William G. Clark, Joseph Goldenhersh, and Daniel P. Ward.[11]

The court's opinion was issued merely three days before the scheduled inauguration of the gubernatorial and lieutenant gubernatorial terms.[6] Hours after the court's decision, Stevenson conceded defeat,[6] and declared that he would not challenge the court's decision.[12]

Fraud convictions Edit

In January 1983, when the Illinois Supreme Court rejected the petition by Stevenson for a full statewide recount, the majority decision had opined that there was insufficient evidence of either mistakes, fraud, or irregularities that to justify a recount.[10] However, in December 1984, a special grand jury issued 62 indictments (ultimately result in 58 convictions), many involving precinct captains and election officials, for election fraud related to the 1982 Illinois elections.[13][14] The grand jury had judged that, in their opinion, 100,000 fraudulent votes had been cast in Chicago.[13] In its 26-page report, the grand jury alleged that, in one Chicago ward, votes were bought for $2 a vote, and in one precinct captain incentivized voters by distributing drinks. It was alleged that 10% of the votes that had been examined were fraudulently cast.[14] Authorities discovered large fraud involving vote buying and voter impersonation. In one instance, they discovered that a ballot which had been cast for the Democratic Party slate was tabulated 198 times.[13] The case was prosecuted by US Attorney Dan K. Webb.[15][16]

The gubernatorial election result has been questioned. Some Democrats have alleged that fraud might have committed by Republicans in areas outside Chicago to secure Thompson his victory.[15][17] In 2016, Rudy Giuliani suggested that the gubernatorial results had been fraudulent on the part of Chicago Democrats.[18]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "OFFICIAL VOTE Cast at the GENERAL ELECTION NOVEMBER 6, 1984" (PDF). www.elections.il.gov. Illinois State Board of Elections. Retrieved 24 April 2020.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ a b c d e "OFFICIAL VOTE Cast at the GENERAL PRIMARY ELECTION MARCH 16, 1982" (PDF). www.elections.il.gov. Illinois State Board of Elections. Retrieved 27 April 2020.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "OFFICIAL VOTE Cast at the GENERAL ELECTION NOVEMBER 2, 1982" (PDF). www.elections.il.gov. Illinois State Board of Elections. Retrieved 27 April 2020.[permanent dead link]
  4. ^ "'Wimp' Factor Surfaces Again," The Associated Press (AP), Friday, September 27, 1985. Retrieved September 9, 2021
  5. ^ "Stevenson Looking Forward to a Recount in Illinois". The New York Times. 21 November 1982. Retrieved 27 March 2020.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o McCaughna, Dan (November 5, 1986). "THOMPSON-STEVENSON PHOTO FINISH OF 1982 TOOK MONTHS TO DEVELOP". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Green, Paul M. (January 1983). "How Thompson Did It". www.lib.niu.edu. Retrieved 5 May 2022.
  8. ^ "OFFICIAL VOTE Cast at the GENERAL ELECTION NOVEMBER 7, 1978" (PDF). Illinois State Board of Elections. Retrieved 25 June 2020.[permanent dead link]
  9. ^ a b c d e "In Re Contest of Election for Offices of Governor". Justia Law. Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h "DEMOCRATS GIVE UP ILLINOIS CAMPAIGN". The New York Times. 8 January 1983. Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  11. ^ a b "Judicial Rulings Feb 1983". Illinois Issues. 12. February 1983. Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  12. ^ Magnunson, Karen M. (January 8, 1983). "High court rejects Illinois recount". UPI. Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  13. ^ a b c "Despite Trump claim, officials say technology means vote fraud thing of past". Chicago Tribune. 19 October 2016.
  14. ^ a b "Say precinct captains linked to vote fraud". UPI. December 17, 1984. Retrieved 28 April 2022.
  15. ^ a b "Election fraud Chicago style: Illinois' decades-old notoriety for election corruption is legendary". Salon. 14 February 2016. Retrieved 27 March 2020.
  16. ^ "Report of the Special January 1982 Grand Jury" (PDF). United States District Court, Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. December 14, 1984.
  17. ^ "Illinois Supreme Court Sets Date For Arguments On Gubernatorial; Recount". The New York Times. 14 December 1982. Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  18. ^ "Official: Chicago legacy of voter fraud has been cleaned up". HeraldNet.com. 19 October 2016. Retrieved 27 March 2020.

1982, illinois, gubernatorial, election, related, races, 1982, united, states, gubernatorial, elections, held, illinois, november, 1982, incumbent, republican, governor, james, thompson, third, term, office, defeating, democratic, nominee, former, united, stat. For related races see 1982 United States gubernatorial elections The 1982 Illinois gubernatorial election was held in Illinois on November 2 1982 Incumbent Republican governor James R Thompson won a third term in office defeating the Democratic nominee former United States Senator Adlai Stevenson III by a slim margin of about 5 000 votes 1982 Illinois gubernatorial election 1978 November 2 1982 1986 Turnout61 58 7 35 pp Nominee James R Thompson Adlai Stevenson IIIParty Republican DemocraticRunning mate George Ryan Grace Mary SternPopular vote 1 816 101 1 811 027Percentage 49 4 49 3 County results Thompson 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 Stevenson 40 50 50 60 60 70 Governor before electionJames R ThompsonRepublican Elected Governor James R ThompsonRepublican Contents 1 Election information 1 1 Turnout 2 Democratic primary 2 1 Governor 2 2 Lieutenant governor 3 Republican primary 3 1 Governor 3 2 Lieutenant governor 4 General election results 4 1 Statewide result 4 2 Rate of voter participation 4 3 Geographic breakdowns of the results 4 3 1 Chicago vs Cook County vs collar counties vs downstate Illinois 4 3 2 Cook County and collar counties vs downstate Illinois 4 3 3 General geographic breakdown of Cook County and collar counties 4 3 4 Chicago vs suburban Cook County and the collar counties 4 3 5 Geographic breakdown of collar counties 4 3 6 Geographic breakdown of Cook County 4 3 7 Geographic breakdown of Stevenson s vote 4 3 8 Geographic breakdown of Thompson s vote 5 Post election day developments 5 1 Certification of results 5 2 Partial recounts 5 3 Unsuccessful petition by Stevenson for a full state recount 5 4 Fraud convictions 6 ReferencesElection information EditThe election coincided with those for congress and those for other state offices The election was part of the 1982 Illinois elections Turnout Edit Turnout in the primaries saw 22 42 in the gubernatorial primaries with a total of 1 337 581 votes cast and 20 25 in the lieutenant gubernatorial primary with 1 208 178 votes cast 1 2 Turnout during the general election was 61 58 with 3 673 707 votes cast 1 3 Democratic primary EditGovernor Edit Adlai Stevenson III former United States Senator won the primary for the gubernatorial nomination unopposed Democratic gubernatorial primary 2 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Adlai E Stevenson 731 041 99 99Write in Others 94 0 01Total votes 731 135 100Lieutenant governor Edit Grace Mary Stern won the Democratic primary for lieutenant governor unopposed Democratic lieutenant gubernatorial primary 2 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Grace Mary Stern 588 942 99 98Write in Others 103 0 02Total votes 589 045 100Republican primary EditGovernor Edit Incumbent James R Thompson defeated challengers John E Roche and V A Kelley Republican gubernatorial primary 2 Party Candidate Votes Republican James R Thompson incumbent 507 893 83 75Republican John E Roche 54 858 9 05Republican V A Kelley 43 627 7 19Write in Others 68 0 01Total votes 606 446 100Lieutenant governor Edit George Ryan defeated Susan Catania and Donald L Totten in the lieutenant gubernatorial primary Republican lieutenant gubernatorial primary 2 Party Candidate Votes Republican George Ryan 278 544 44 99Republican Susan Catania 188 220 30 40Republican Donald L Totten 152 356 24 61Write in Others 13 0 00Total votes 619 133 100General election results EditStevenson complained that Thompson was trying to portray him as an ineffectual elitist by famously stating He is saying Me tough guy as if to imply that I m some kind of wimp 4 Before the election Thompson had been favored by polls and predictions to win by roughly twenty percentage points 5 The nominees of the third party Libertarian and Taxpayers tickets were both right of center and were therefore regarded as more likely to siphon off more potential supporters from Thompson than from Stevenson 6 Statewide result Edit Thompson won by a narrow 5 074 vote margin Thompson carried 83 of Illinois 102 counties while Stevenson carried on 19 However Stevenson won Cook County home of Chicago 1 Cook County accounted for a substantial share of the state s population Thompson had actually carried the vote of suburban Cook County However Stevenson had managed to win the city of Chicago by a margin of nearly 4 to 1 6 7 Thompson s narrow victory was likely attributable in part to his strong performance in the collar counties the five counties that border Cook County DuPage Kane Lake McHenry and Will The 1982 Democratic ticket performed better than the Democratic ticket had in the previous 1978 gubernatorial election 7 In the cumulative vote of Cook County and the five collar counties DuPage Kane Lake McHenry and Will the 1982 Democratic Ticket performed 10 better than the 1978 ticket had 7 At the time the downstate Illinois vote was seen as very important to determining victory in Illinois statewide elections The 1982 Democratic ticket performed better than the 1978 had in downstate Illinois However despite the Republican ticket performing weaker in downstate Illinois than it had in the 1978 election the Republican ticket still managed to win downstate Illinois by a 136 917 vote margin which was a key factor in securing their victory 7 1982 gubernatorial election Illinois 1 3 Party Candidate Votes Republican James R Thompson incumbent George H Ryan 1 816 101 49 44Democratic Adlai Stevenson III Grace Mary Stern 1 811 027 49 30Libertarian Bea Armstrong David L Kelley 24 417 0 66Taxpayers John E Roche Melvin Mel Jones 22 001 0 60N A write ins 161 0 00 n aMajority 5 074 0 14Turnout 3 673 707 61 58Republican hold SwingRate of voter participation Edit 3 673 707 61 58 of the state s 5 965 514 registered voters voted in the gubernatorial election This percentage of registered voters participating in the 1982 gubernatorial election marked a 7 35 increase from that of the preceding 1978 gubernatorial election 3 1 8 183 311 of the 3 856 875 individuals that cast ballots in the state s 1982 general election did not vote in the gubernatorial race 6 3 This number of blank votes in the gubernatorial election was equal to 4 75 of the voters who participated in the state general election 3 and 3 07 of the state s registered voters 1 2 108 639 35 35 of the state s registered voters did not cast valid ballots in the state s general election 1 The combined total of the registered voters who cast no valid ballot and the registered voters who cast ballots with blank votes in the gubernatorial election meant that 2 291 950 38 42 of the registered voters did not vote in the gubernatorial election 3 1 Geographic breakdowns of the results Edit Chicago vs Cook County vs collar counties vs downstate Illinois Edit The following table breaks down the results into three categories providing a comparative breakdown between the results in Chicago the results in suburban Cook County the results in the five collar counties DuPage Kane Lake McHenry and Will and the results the results of the remainder of Illinois downstate Illinois Chicago vs Cook County vs collar counties vs downstate Illinois 3 7 Region Thompson vote Stevenson vote Margin NotesChicago 259 963 26 728 580 74 446 617 Stevenson Thompson carried 2 wards while Stevenson carried 48Suburban Cook County 436 095 61 279 000 39 157 095 Thompson Thompson carried 28 townships while Stevenson carried 2Collar counties 341 971 68 162 292 32 179 679 34 97 Thompson Thompson carried 5 counties while Sevenson carried 0Downstate Illinois 96 counties 778 072 54 15 641 115 44 62 136 917 9 53 Thompson Thompson carried 78 counties while Stevenson carried 18Cook County and collar counties vs downstate Illinois Edit The following table breaks down the results into two categories providing a comparative breakdown between the cumulative results of Cook County and the five collar counties DuPage Kane Lake McHenry and Will with the results of the remainder of Illinois downstate Illinois Thompson performed stronger in downstate Illinois than he did in the cumaltive vote of Cook County and the collar counties while Stevenson inversely performed stronger in the cumulative vote of Cook County and the collar counties than he did in downstate Illinois As this table indicates Cook County and the collar counties cumulatively were the location of 60 91 of the statewide vote with downstate Illinois being the location of only 39 09 of the statewide vote Cook County and collar counties vs downstate Illinois 3 7 Region Thompson vote Stevenson vote Armstrong vote Roche vote Write in vote Total vote of overall state vote Margin Counties carried by candidateCook County and collar counties 1 038 029 46 39 1 169 872 52 28 15 758 0 70 14 036 0 63 128 0 00 2 237 823 60 91 109 843 4 91 Stevenson Thompson 5Stevenson 1Downstate Illinois 96 counties 778 072 54 19 641 115 44 65 8 659 0 60 7 965 0 55 33 0 00 1 435 884 39 09 136 917 9 54 Thompson Thompson 78Stevenson 18General geographic breakdown of Cook County and collar counties Edit The following table gives a comparative breakdown of the results in the Chicago metropolitan area counties breaking these results into three categories the result within the municipal limits of Chicago the results in the remainder of Cook County suburban Cook County and the cumulative results of the five collar counties of DuPage Kane Lake McHenry and Will Geographic breakdown of results in Cook County and collar counties 7 Region Thompson vote Stevenson vote Margin NotesChicago 259 963 26 728 580 74 446 617 Stevenson Thompson carried 2 wards while Stevenson carried 48Suburban Cook County 436 095 61 279 000 39 157 095 Thompson Thompson carried 28 townships while Stevenson carried 2Collar counties 341 971 68 162 292 32 179 679 34 97 Thompson Thompson carried 5 counties while Sevenson carried 0Total 1 038 029 46 41 1 169 872 52 30 109 843 4 91 StevensonChicago vs suburban Cook County and the collar counties Edit The following table gives a comparative breakdown of the results Chicago metropolitan area counties contrasting the result within the municipal limits of Chicago with the outlying vote in the outlying area of its metropolitan area counties Cook County and the five collar counties of DuPage Kane Lake McHenry and Will Cook County and the five collar counties saw a cumulative total of 2 237 823 votes cast between them equivalent to 60 89 of the statewide total 3 This table demonstrates that while Stevenson had carried the cumulative vote of Cook County and the collar counties he had only done so due to his landslide performance 74 in Chicago The table demonstrates that Thompson won a landslide in cumulative vote of suburban Cook County and the collar counties 64 performing even strong there than his 55 performance in downstate Illinois 7 Chicago vs suburban Cook County and the collar counties 7 Region Thompson vote Stevenson vote MarginChicago 259 963 26 728 580 74 446 617 45 18 StevensonSuburban Cook County and collar counties 778 066 64 441 292 36 336 774 27 62 ThompsonTotal 1 038 029 46 41 1 169 872 52 30 109 843 4 91 StevensonGeographic breakdown of collar counties Edit The following table gives a comparative breakdown of the results in each of the five collar counties The cumulative vote of the collar counties 513 825 votes was equivalent to 13 99 of the statewide vote County breakdown of Collar County results 3 County Thompson vote Stevenson vote Armstrong vote Roche vote Write in vote Total vote of overall state vote Thompson s margin over StevensonDuPage 138 502 71 44 51 543 25 59 1 974 1 02 1 824 0 94 20 0 01 193 863 5 28 86 959 44 86 Kane 48 513 67 36 22 132 30 73 744 1 03 612 0 85 17 0 02 72 018 1 96 26 381 36 63 Lake 72 420 62 93 40 757 35 42 1 090 0 95 803 0 70 4 0 00 115 074 3 13 31 663 27 52 McHenry 29 343 72 74 10 181 25 24 442 1 10 374 0 93 2 0 00 40 342 1 10 19 162 47 50 Will 53 193 57 49 37 679 40 72 668 0 72 983 1 06 5 0 00 92 528 2 52 15 514 15 77 Total 341 971 66 55 162 292 31 59 4 918 0 96 4 596 0 89 48 0 00 513 825 13 99 179 679 34 97 Geographic breakdown of Cook County Edit The following table gives a comparative breakdown of the results in Cook County contrasting the votes cast in the municipal limits of Chicago with the votes cast in the remainder of Cook County suburban Cook County Cook County saw a total of 1 723 998 votes cast equivalent to 46 93 of all votes cast in the election 3 This table demonstrates that while Stevenson won a 58 48 of the vote in Cook County with a margin of 18 07 over Thompson this was solely attributable to Stevenson s 44 75 margin over Thompson in Chicago as Thompson actually carried the remainder of Cook County by a 21 97 margin over Stevenson Breakdown of Cook County results 7 Region Thompson vote Stevenson vote MarginChicago 259 963 26 728 580 74 446 617 44 75 StevensonSuburban Cook County 436 095 61 279 000 39 157 095 21 97 ThompsonTotal 696 058 40 37 1 007 580 58 44 311 522 18 07 StevensonGeographic breakdown of Stevenson s vote Edit 40 23 of Stevenson s votes came from Chicago 15 41 of Stevenson s votes came from suburban Cook County 8 96 of Stevenson s votes came from the collar counties 35 40 of Stevenson s votes came from downstate Illinois 3 Geographic breakdown of Thompson s vote Edit 14 31 of Thompson s votes came from Chicago 24 01 of Thompson s votes came from suburban Cook County 18 83 of Thompson s votes came from the collar counties 42 84 of Thompson s votes came from downstate Illinois 3 Post election day developments EditCertification of results Edit The final canvass conducted by election officials was conducted on November 22 1982 6 The Illinois State Board of Elections certified the result on January 23 1982 9 Partial recounts Edit For the first time since its passage in 1977 Illinois law outlining election recounts was invoked 6 The law enabled candidates to request partial recounts of the votes in up to 25 of the state s more than 7 000 election precincts with candidates being able to hand pick the precincts to be recounted 6 Stevenson opted for a recount of precincts in 70 of the state s 102 counties The counties chosen where ones where Thompson had received a strong share of the vote 6 Thompson also opted to invoke his right to a partial recount and chose to have a recount of precincts in 32 of Chicago s 50 wards The wards in question were ones where Stevenson had received a strong share of the vote 6 Unsuccessful petition by Stevenson for a full state recount Edit On December 7 1982 Stevenson and Stern filed a petition with the Illinois Supreme Court requesting a recount 9 Stevenson and Stern s petition argued that the election had been impacted by widespread irregularities and error 10 Thompson and Ryan filed their objections to this on December 10 1982 9 Under the state s 1977 election recount law if a complete statewide recount had been ordered the recount would have been supervised by a three member panel of Illinois Circuit Court judges Under the law the Illinois Supreme Court would have selected the three judges to serve on the panel 6 At the time of the case four of the Illinois Supreme Court s seven justices were Democrats 10 Oral arguments were heard by the court on December 21 1982 9 Stevenson put forth an argument that based on the evidence gathered in the partial recount of 500 000 votes in 70 of the state s 102 counties that he believed a full statewide recount would find him to have won the election by an approximately 11 000 vote margin 10 Stevenson claimed that the partial recount in the precincts he had selected had found enough invalid ballots to decrease Thompson s margin of victory from 5 074 to merely 325 votes 6 However Thompson s legal counsel characterized a recount as unwarranted and also challenged the figures Stevenson alleged that the recount of his selected counties had indicated Thompson argued that many of the ballots which Stevenson had characterized as illegitimate had been so characterized due to defacing that was actually the result of markings from electronic tabulating machines 6 Thompson s legal counsel argued that Stevenson did not provide the level of evidence required by the state s 1977 election recount law a law which had up until then never been tested 10 On January 7 1983 the court issued a 4 3 decision with a majority opinion authored by Chief Justice Howard C Ryan rejecting Stevenson s petition for a recount 9 6 The majority opinion of the court found insufficient evidence of either mistakes fraud or irregularities to warrant a recount 10 Furthermore in their decision the court found the state s 1977 law outlining rules for statewide election recounts to be unconstitutional finding that in passing the law the Illinois Legislature unconstitutionally established what was effectively a new court due to the provision having a three member panel of Illinois Circuit Court judges oversee statewide recounts 10 6 The opinion cited the 1975 state decision Rice v Cunningham in finding that the General Assembly did not have the authority to provide that a case be heard by a three judge panel and that the 1970 Constitution confers no authority in the legislature to create new courts 11 The court s axing of the 1977 election law had been unprompted by either party in the case 10 The majority opinion was supported by Republican justices Howard C Ryan Thomas Moran Robert C Underwood and Democratic justice Seymour Simon Dissenting were Democratic justices William G Clark Joseph Goldenhersh and Daniel P Ward 11 The court s opinion was issued merely three days before the scheduled inauguration of the gubernatorial and lieutenant gubernatorial terms 6 Hours after the court s decision Stevenson conceded defeat 6 and declared that he would not challenge the court s decision 12 Fraud convictions Edit Main article 1982 Illinois elections Convictions for fraud In January 1983 when the Illinois Supreme Court rejected the petition by Stevenson for a full statewide recount the majority decision had opined that there was insufficient evidence of either mistakes fraud or irregularities that to justify a recount 10 However in December 1984 a special grand jury issued 62 indictments ultimately result in 58 convictions many involving precinct captains and election officials for election fraud related to the 1982 Illinois elections 13 14 The grand jury had judged that in their opinion 100 000 fraudulent votes had been cast in Chicago 13 In its 26 page report the grand jury alleged that in one Chicago ward votes were bought for 2 a vote and in one precinct captain incentivized voters by distributing drinks It was alleged that 10 of the votes that had been examined were fraudulently cast 14 Authorities discovered large fraud involving vote buying and voter impersonation In one instance they discovered that a ballot which had been cast for the Democratic Party slate was tabulated 198 times 13 The case was prosecuted by US Attorney Dan K Webb 15 16 The gubernatorial election result has been questioned Some Democrats have alleged that fraud might have committed by Republicans in areas outside Chicago to secure Thompson his victory 15 17 In 2016 Rudy Giuliani suggested that the gubernatorial results had been fraudulent on the part of Chicago Democrats 18 References Edit a b c d e f g h OFFICIAL VOTE Cast at the GENERAL ELECTION NOVEMBER 6 1984 PDF www elections il gov Illinois State Board of Elections Retrieved 24 April 2020 permanent dead link a b c d e OFFICIAL VOTE Cast at the GENERAL PRIMARY ELECTION MARCH 16 1982 PDF www elections il gov Illinois State Board of Elections Retrieved 27 April 2020 permanent dead link a b c d e f g h i j k l m OFFICIAL VOTE Cast at the GENERAL ELECTION NOVEMBER 2 1982 PDF www elections il gov Illinois State Board of Elections Retrieved 27 April 2020 permanent dead link Wimp Factor Surfaces Again The Associated Press AP Friday September 27 1985 Retrieved September 9 2021 Stevenson Looking Forward to a Recount in Illinois The New York Times 21 November 1982 Retrieved 27 March 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o McCaughna Dan November 5 1986 THOMPSON STEVENSON PHOTO FINISH OF 1982 TOOK MONTHS TO DEVELOP Chicago Tribune Retrieved 25 February 2022 a b c d e f g h i j Green Paul M January 1983 How Thompson Did It www lib niu edu Retrieved 5 May 2022 OFFICIAL VOTE Cast at the GENERAL ELECTION NOVEMBER 7 1978 PDF Illinois State Board of Elections Retrieved 25 June 2020 permanent dead link a b c d e In Re Contest of Election for Offices of Governor Justia Law Retrieved 25 February 2022 a b c d e f g h DEMOCRATS GIVE UP ILLINOIS CAMPAIGN The New York Times 8 January 1983 Retrieved 25 February 2022 a b Judicial Rulings Feb 1983 Illinois Issues 12 February 1983 Retrieved 25 February 2022 Magnunson Karen M January 8 1983 High court rejects Illinois recount UPI Retrieved 25 February 2022 a b c Despite Trump claim officials say technology means vote fraud thing of past Chicago Tribune 19 October 2016 a b Say precinct captains linked to vote fraud UPI December 17 1984 Retrieved 28 April 2022 a b Election fraud Chicago style Illinois decades old notoriety for election corruption is legendary Salon 14 February 2016 Retrieved 27 March 2020 Report of the Special January 1982 Grand Jury PDF United States District Court Northern District of Illinois Eastern Division December 14 1984 Illinois Supreme Court Sets Date For Arguments On Gubernatorial Recount The New York Times 14 December 1982 Retrieved 25 February 2022 Official Chicago legacy of voter fraud has been cleaned up HeraldNet com 19 October 2016 Retrieved 27 March 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1982 Illinois gubernatorial election amp oldid 1169469293, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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