This race was less about ideology than about which Democratic machine factions control money, endorsements, and succession for the next decade. On March 17, 2026, Illinois Lieutenant Governor Juliana Stratton won the Democratic primary for the U.S. Senate seat that Dick Durbin has held for nearly 30 years. As CBS News reported, Stratton was projected to win in a heated and crowded field. The result is a redraw of the Chicago and Illinois power map: Governor JB Pritzker’s faction prevailed over rivals who had more cash or different coalition backing.
Pritzker’s machine beat the money
Stratton lagged in direct fundraising. U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi had amassed roughly $30.5 million in his campaign account and had been running statewide TV ads since July. Stratton won anyway. The difference was Pritzker. The governor contributed at least $5 million to a super PAC called Illinois Future, which spent roughly $12.2 million supporting her. He campaigned with her across the state. According to the Chicago Tribune and The Hill, the primary was explicitly framed as a test of Pritzker’s political influence as he eyes a potential 2028 presidential run. Stratton’s win is the proof of concept: the governor’s faction can deliver a Senate nominee even when the other candidate outraises her by tens of millions. That is a lesson in who controls the runway for the next decade—not the candidate with the biggest war chest, but the one with the right institutional backer.
Faction fights over endorsements exposed the map
The primary exposed sharp factional lines. The Congressional Black Caucus leader, Rep. Yvette Clarke, backed U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly and criticised Pritzker’s involvement as an “effort to tip the scales,” saying his “behavior in this race won’t soon be forgotten.” Politico and others reported disputed endorsement claims: Stratton’s campaign used a ballot card from the Rainbow PUSH Coalition that suggested Rev. Jesse Jackson’s support, but Rep. Jonathan Jackson said his father “never got in on Black-on-Black fights” and would not have endorsed. A super PAC backing Stratton ran ads implying Barack Obama had endorsed her; former Obama adviser David Axelrod clarified that Obama “hasn’t endorsed ANY of the candidates.” The fights were not only about policy; they were about which names and networks get to anoint the next senator. Stratton had Pritzker, Tammy Duckworth, and the machinery that came with them. The result is a clear signal about which Democratic factions control succession in Illinois.
Ten candidates, one open seat, and a new pecking order
Ten Democrats ran for the seat. With about 82% of the vote in, Stratton had 39.6%, Krishnamoorthi 33.4%, and Kelly 18.5%. The rest was split among seven others. It was Illinois’ first open Senate race in 16 years. Durbin announced his retirement in April 2025; Stratton declared the day after. The race was never a pure ideas contest. It was about money, endorsements, and coalition: who had the governor, who had the CBC-aligned lane, who had the crypto and tech donors (Krishnamoorthi’s base), and who could turn out the voters. As CBS News and the Chicago Tribune have documented, the outcome reshapes the state’s delegation and its seniority in Washington. Stratton will face Republican Don Tracy, the former Illinois GOP chair, in November; she is the heavy favourite in a Democratic state. The real redraw already happened in the primary: Pritzker’s faction now owns the succession to Durbin’s seat.
What This Actually Means
Juliana Stratton’s primary win is the real Chicago power map redraw. The race was less about ideology than about which Democratic machine factions control money, endorsements, and succession for the next decade. Pritzker’s backing beat Krishnamoorthi’s money and Kelly’s coalition. The endorsement fights—Jackson, Obama, CBC—showed that the contest was over who gets to anoint the next senator. Stratton’s victory proves that in Illinois, the governor’s faction can deliver even when outraised. The power map has shifted accordingly.
Who is Juliana Stratton?
Juliana Stratton is an American lawyer and politician who has served as the 48th lieutenant governor of Illinois since 2019. A progressive Democrat, she was elected in 2018 and 2022 on a ticket with Governor JB Pritzker. She was the first high-profile candidate to declare for the Senate race, the day after Durbin announced his retirement in April 2025. She previously served in the Illinois House of Representatives. She has advocated for a $25 minimum wage, abolishing ICE, and addressing Trump-era immigration enforcement. If she wins the November 2026 general election, she would be the first woman to hold the Senate seat since 1997 and the sixth Black woman senator in U.S. history.
What is at stake for the next decade?
Dick Durbin held the seat for nearly 30 years and served as Senate Democratic whip. His retirement, along with other long-serving Illinois Democrats, is diminishing the state’s seniority and clout in Washington. The primary decided who will lead that delegation for the next generation. Stratton’s win means Pritzker’s wing of the party controls that succession. The same machinery that delivered her the nomination will expect a voice in how she governs and which priorities get pushed. The redraw is not only who holds the seat but who controls the money, endorsements, and coalition that will shape Illinois politics for the next decade.
Sources
CBS News, Chicago Tribune, The Hill, CNN, Politico, AP News, The New York Times