Donald Trump and Joe Biden win Illinois primaries

Donald Trump and Joe Biden won the Illinois presidential primaries Tuesday.

AP Photos

Eliciting an electoral ho-hum from voters, Democratic President Joe Biden and Republican former President Donald Trump notched lopsided wins Tuesday amid one of the worst voter turnouts for a Chicago presidential primary since at least World War II.

Shortly after the polls closed, the Associated Press declared both candidates winners.

Tuesday’s vote offered only bragging rights to the candidates after decisive primaries last week in Georgia, Mississippi and Washington state made both Biden and Trump the presumptive presidential nominees for their respective parties.

Chicagoans seemed to recognize that their votes didn’t matter or were expressing their dissatisfaction with the choices when it came to the day’s marquee political contest. They stayed away from polling places in droves, with voter turnout hovering at slightly below 17% as of 5 pm.

That percentage would be the lowest in any presidential primary in the city in at least 80 years, city election board data showed. Chicago turnout was 38% four years ago and 54% in the 2016 primary.

In Tuesday’s Illinois primary, Associated Press called the results of the vote moments after polls closed at 7 p.m.

With 15% of votes counted, Biden carried 92% of the vote, according to AP estimates, easily eclipsing the combined low-single-digit totals amassed by other Democrats on the primary ballot, U.S. Rep. Dean Phillips, Marianne Williamson and Frank Lozada.

On the GOP side, Trump stood at 78% with 9% of votes counted, according to AP estimates, less than his romp in 2020’s largely noncompetitive primary when he received 96% of the vote. In 2016, Trump won an 11-way primary in Illinois with 38% of the vote.

2024 Primary Election Results
The Sun-Times and WBEZ’s coverage of Illinois’ 2024 primary.
View results of contested Cook County and Illinois General Assembly races from the Chicago area, and all congressional races statewide on the 2024 Illinois primary ballot.
Chicago voter turnout was at or near historic lows, likely a signal of either displeasure with the candidates or recognition that the party nominees were pre-determined.
The ballot referendum was the talk of the town — at least among the small number of people who actually turned out to vote.

Tuesday’s outcomes set the stage for the summer political conventions in Chicago and Milwaukee and a fall general election rematch, where Illinois appears tilted heavily in Biden’s favor based on historic benchmarks. No Democratic presidential candidate has lost the state in a general election since 1988, when former Republican president George H.W. Bush defeated former Democratic Gov. Michael Dukakis.

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Neither candidate campaigned in Illinois ahead of the state primary. And Trump was the only one to extend any political capital here with an endorsement of Republican U.S. Rep. Mike Bost in the heated, down-ballot congressional primary in far southern Illinois against failed 2022 Republican gubernatorial candidate Darren Bailey.

In that primary, with 1% of votes counted, Bost led Bailey by 79-to-21%, according to AP estimates.

Trump also survived a challenge to his place on Illinois’ primary ballot. A group of five voters and a national voting rights group convinced a Cook County judge to order him off the ballot on grounds his activities during the fatal January 6th attack on the U.S. Capitol ran afoul of the 14th Amendment.

But the local judicial ruling was upended by the U.S. Supreme Court days later. A unanimous court held that individual states did not have authority to render a federal candidate ineligible under the 14th Amendment.

The national narrative involving Trump and Biden has centered on two widely unpopular candidates, each facing potentially consequential pockets of strife within their own parties.

Tuesday’s Illinois vote hinted that some voters here wanted alternatives, and some voters appeared simply to have tuned out.

Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, who dropped out of the presidential campaign earlier this month, was on Illinois’ GOP presidential ballot, as was former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who folded up his tent in January.

In early voting, she drew 17% of the vote among Illinois Republicans, while Christie stood at 2%.

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