With Illinois win, Romney solidifies hold atop GOP field

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WASHINGTON (JTA) — Mitt Romney handily won the Illinois primary, consolidating his status as the front-runner in the race for the GOP presidential nod.

Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, won 47 percent of the vote with 98 percent of votes counted in the Tuesday primary.

Rick Santorum, the former Pennsylvania senator, trailed with 35 percent of the vote. Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) received 9 percent of the vote and Newt Gingrich, the former U.S. House of Representatives, had 8 percent.

Santorum had emerged from a broad pack of conservatives to challenge Romney from the right, and he and the others show no sign of leaving the contest.

Romney’s win, however, seemed to make the moderate’s hold on the nomination inevitable.

Brad Schneider defeated Ilya Sheyman in the Democratic primary in the 10th District in a race that pitted two pro-Israel Jews against one another. The district, which comprises parts of Chicago and its northern suburbs, has a substantial Jewish population. 

Sheyman, who immigrated to the United States from the former Soviet Union as a child, had the backing of grass-roots activists on the left of the party, while Schneider, who long has been involved in Jewish communal affairs, had the backing of the Democratic establishment.

Schneider advances to face incumbent Rep. Bob Dold (R-Ill.) in November.

Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. (D-Ill.), one of the most pro-Israel congressmen in the Congressional Black Caucus, easily beat back a challenge from a former congresswoman, Debbie Halvorson, in the 2nd District comprising Chicago’s southern suburbs.

In the 3rd District, comprising southwestern Chicago and its suburbs, Arthur Jones, a Holocaust denier, came in a distant third in the GOP primary, garnering 11 percent. The district is considered Democratic-safe, and Jones had been repudiated by the state Republican Party.

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