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Ill. GOP facing long odds Nov. 6

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Republican Bill Albracht and incumbent Mike Jacobs, D-East Moline, Ill., candidates in Illinois' 36th Senate District, answer questions during a candidates forum at Black Hawk College in Moline. (AP photo)

SPRINGFIELD – The state’s unemployment rate is above 9 percent, Democrats in the Illinois Capitol have been in charge as budget and pension deficits soared, and Republicans are energized by Mitt Romney making it a close race against President Barack Obama.

Still, the odds are stacked against the Illinois GOP when it comes to challenging Democrats for control of the General Assembly.

Republicans need to pick up a dozen seats – six in the state Senate and six in the House – to win a majority in either chamber for the first time in a decade.

But they’re trying to do that in new legislative districts drawn by Democrats to help Democrats.

Republicans also have relatively few opportunities to make up ground. All 177 House and Senate seats are in play on the Nov. 6 ballot, but nearly half are uncontested.

Of those, according to election records, Democrats are assured 45 seats, Republicans 39.

The GOP is targeting about two dozen races. In the Senate, they’re even pounding a handful of entrenched Democratic incumbents over their votes for increased taxes, budget borrowing and pay raises.

“We have some excellent candidates throughout the state,” said Rep. Sidney Mathias, R-Buffalo Grove, whose race against Rep. Carol Sente, a Vernon Hills Democrat, is the only one in which the new map pitted two incumbents against each other. “People who think we cannot take over the majority should look back two years ago.”

That’s when House Speaker Michael Madigan’s 70-48 Democratic majority shrunk by six. The Republicans chipped away in the Senate, too. Democrats now hold a 35-24 edge there.

Those 2008 gains came during devastating balloting for Democrats across the country in a midterm election. But, while Republicans nationally went “gangbusters,” the party in Illinois achieved relatively little, said Charles Wheeler III, director of the Public Affairs Reporting Program at the University of Illinois at Springfield.

“They picked up a few seats but not anything like the numbers nationally would have suggested,” Wheeler said.

Romney might be nipping at Obama’s heels elsewhere, but the president still is expected to enjoy a comfortable margin in Illinois.

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