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Crucial Illinois House races down to the wire

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ISSUES/STRATEGY: The Democratic political apparatus has run ads accusing Plummer of wanting to end Medicare — the health insurance program for the elderly — while casting him as an "unexplained millionaire" whose only full-time job has been with his father's company. Plummer disputes that. Meanwhile, Republicans repeatedly link Enyart to disgraced former Gov. Rod Blagojevich, who picked the former Air Force officer to run the Illinois National Guard in 2007. They refer to Enyart, a former National Guard major general, as "Blagojevich's general." Bradshaw calls for a "Green New Deal," putting the federal government in control of creating jobs involving national infrastructure upgrades, notably addressing renewable energy and light-rail transportation.

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2ND DISTRICT: MISSING CONGRESSMAN

CANDIDATES: Incumbent U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. is being challenged by professor Brian Woodworth, a Bourbonnais Republican; postal worker Marcus Lewis of Matteson, an independent; and Rev. Anthony Williams, a write-in candidate who hosts his own gospel radio show.

TERRITORY: Chicago's South Side, south suburbs and new areas reaching beyond Kankakee, hugging the Indiana line.

SIGNIFICANCE: Jackson, an eight-term incumbent, is expected to win re-election against his little known challengers, though he hasn't actively campaigned since quietly taking medical leave in June and remains under a House Ethics Committee investigation. Last spring, the son of Rev. Jesse Jackson won handily in the most difficult election of his career, a primary challenge by former U.S. Rep. Debbie Halvorson. But months later he took a secretive medical leave and was treated at Minnesota's Mayo Clinic for bipolar disorder. He's since checked back in with no sign of when he'll return to work.

ISSUES/STRATEGY: Jackson counts on a safe district that's still largely urban, black and Democratic. His only communication with voters has been a recent robocall where he asked for patience. Woodworth, who teaches criminal justice at Olivet Nazarene University, claims the district has no voice and Lewis calls Jackson "a ghost." Still, Jackson and his family engender loyalty and respect in the district, and mayors who support Jackson praise his dedication to local projects and ability to bring in federal money.

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Associated Press writers David Mercer in Champaign and Jim Suhr in St. Louis contributed to this report.

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