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Campaign funding spills into Illinois congressional races

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(MCT) — CHICAGO — National political parties and independent super political action committees have poured in more than $42 million this fall to try to sway voters in the Illinois’ top six competitive congressional races, underscoring the key national role Illinois is playing in the battle for control of the House.

The staggering total amounts to almost $10 per resident in each of the half-dozen districts. It’s also nearly four times what Democrats, Republicans and various interest groups spent here two years ago.

The influx of money reflects the Republican desire to hold onto seats the party won in Illinois in 2010 and Democratic attempts to use the state as part of plan to pick up 25 seats across the nation to take back the House. And it illustrates the big dollar political wars being waged after a Supreme Court decision opened the door to unlimited and sometimes uncharted donations to groups to influence elections.

The spending is legal — as long as it’s not coordinated with a candidate’s campaign.

At the top of the money list are the National Republican Congressional Committee and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. Together, the two sides already have devoted more than $18.7 million, while super PACs and business and labor interests have added almost $24 million into the House contests, according to a Chicago Tribune review of federal campaign finance records. Those figures do not includes millions of dollars more in donations that were sent directly to the candidates’ campaigns.

The bulk of the money is spent on TV ads, a particularly expensive proposition in the costly Chicago media market for three suburban campaigns where most viewers won’t even have a chance to vote for any of the contenders.

If voters think the campaigns have taken on a more negative tone this year, the FEC reports bear that out. Of more than 700 expenditures by outside groups statewide, only 167 were made in support of a candidate, while the remainder were to oppose a contender.

Among the top 10 groups in spending, eight are affiliated with Republicans, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and Crossroads Grassroots Policy Strategies, the later co-founded by Karl Rove, President George W. Bush’s political strategist. The GOP groups account for nearly $20.5 million.

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