Rep. Katz Muhl, challenger Behr disagree on anti-slating law
Katz Muhl, also of Northbrook, defended her vote, alleging candidates have used the slating process to skip primaries and avoid vetting by the public.
Behr and Katz Muhl discussed the legislation during a joint, online interview with the Daily Herald. A video of the interview can be found at dailyherald.com.
The law only affects General Assembly races.
Behr and more than a dozen other Republican candidates who had been slated after the state’s March primary election sued the Illinois State Board of Elections and state Attorney General Kwame Raoul and asked a Sangamon County judge to issue an emergency temporary restraining order to stop implementation of the law this cycle. That order was granted and then upheld by the Illinois Supreme Court.
The Illinois State Board of Elections independently ruled it wouldn’t remove slated candidates from this fall’s ballots, too.
Behr, a transportation and economic development consultant making his first run at public office, criticized the law while answering a question about ethics in state government.
He said the law would’ve prevented voters from having second candidates to choose from in 20 state contests.
“That I don’t consider good ethics,” he said.
“If it was across the board and applied to every office … that would be a different story,” Behr said. “It wasn’t.”
Katz Muhl said the state’s previous rules for slating candidates after primaries were intended to allow political parties to replace candidates who’ve won primaries but can’t continue to general elections because of illness or other factors. The rules also had allowed parties to replace candidates disqualified from primary races because of petition flaws, she said.
“But over the last several years, we’ve seen actors from both the Democratic and Republican parties misuse that law to deliberately skip participating in primary elections,” said Katz Muhl, a lawyer and former school board member who was appointed to the state House earlier this year.
Behr said he was asked to run by GOP leaders when no primary candidate surfaced — but too late to get on that ballot. Behr denied his appointment was the result of political shenanigans.
“There were no backroom deals, no smoke-filled rooms,” he said.
The 57th District covers all or parts of Glenview, Northbrook, Northfield, Wilmette, Winnetka, Buffalo Grove, Des Plaines, Glencoe, Mount Prospect, Prospect Heights and Wheeling. The last day to vote is Nov. 5.
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