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Field grows in contest to replace Jesse Jackson Jr.

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(MCT) — As Illinois lawmakers acted Thursday to set a new date for a special general election to determine who will succeed former U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., two state senators, a former state representative and a Chicago alderman prepared to enter the campaign.

State Sens. Donne Trotter of Chicago and Toi Hutchinson of Olympia Fields and Ald. Anthony Beale, 9th, said they were joining the increasingly crowded field to fill the Jackson vacancy in the South Side and south suburban 2nd Congressional District. Aides to Robin Kelly, a top Cook County administrator and former state representative from Matteson, said she would announce her candidacy Sunday.

At the same time, a source close to Ald. Will Burns, 4th, said the protege of President Barack Obama is leaning against making a bid for Congress and a decision could come by the end of the week.

Already in the contest are former U.S. Rep. Debbie Halvorson of Crete, who lost a primary challenge to Jackson in March, and state Sen.-elect Napoleon Harris, a former Northwestern and NFL player who won his first office this month.

Also announced as a candidate is disgraced former U.S. Rep. Mel Reynolds, who gave up the 2nd District seat in 1995 after his conviction on sex-related charges, including having sex with an underage campaign worker.

On Thursday, the Illinois Senate gave final approval to a House-passed measure backed by Gov. Pat Quinn and election authorities in the 2nd District to set Feb. 26 for the special primary election and April 9 for the special general election. Those dates coincide with already-scheduled municipal elections in the district outside Chicago and could save taxpayers millions of dollars by not having a separate general election date in March.

Among the latest entrants in the contest, Trotter, who was elected to the state House in 1988 and to the state Senate in 1992, has served as the budget point man for Senate Democrats in Springfield. Trotter, who plans to formally kick off his candidacy early next week, also has the backing of a significant ally, Frank Zuccarelli, the Democratic chairman and supervisor of vote-rich Thornton Township.

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