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Juliana Stratton's primary win proves that grassroots progressive energy beats big money every time — she triumphed over a candidate who spent $29 million in ads with just $1.1 million of her own campaign cash. Backed by powerhouse endorsements from Sen. Tammy Duckworth and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, Stratton's bold platform of Medicare for All, a $25 minimum wage and abolishing ICE is exactly what Illinois Democrats demanded. She's the fighter Washington desperately needs right now.
Stratton's win isn't a grassroots triumph — it's a billionaire governor buying a Senate seat, with Pritzker pumping at least $5 million into a super PAC that spent $14 million boosting her while she raised just $4 million on her own. The Congressional Black Caucus chair called Pritzker's meddling "beyond frustrating," and rightfully so. Extreme positions like abolishing ICE will make Stratton a liability, and Don Tracy is already calling her the most far-left Senate candidate Illinois has ever seen.
The results from Illinois showed a mixed bag of results, and, most concerningly, a web of dark money and lobbying groups meddling in U.S. politics. Despite Stratton's victory, the left was largely wiped out by complex lobbying interests that are challenging to untangle within each race. The true scale of lobbying and dark money in American politics is staggering.