I hate Illinois Nazis.

I grew up in Illinois.

Small ideas won't help Illinois' future.

I still think of myself as from Illinois.

I was the Richard Gere non-lookalike in Illinois.

Let's put Illinois back on the road to prosperity.

Our party is a diverse one, as is my home state of Illinois.

I'm from Oklahoma, and Nick's from a small town in Illinois.

Families in Illinois don't want lies and political mudslinging.

I went to DePaul University Theatre School in Chicago, Illinois.

I grew up in Danville, Illinois, right in the middle of the state.

Leaving Oklahoma for Illinois is not the no-brainer some think it is.

To the people of Illinois let me say this. Business as usual IS OVER.

Illinois is becoming more diverse, more tolerant, and even more green.

We're from Rockford, Illinois, but we've always thought international.

There could not be a more stark contrast between Wisconsin and Illinois.

Illinois corn farmers are the Nation's number two exporter of feed grains.

Illinois' economy will benefit from the modernization of the power sector.

It's not unusual for someone running for Senate in Illinois to come see me.

I'm running for governor because I think we need to change things in Illinois.

Illinois has severe budget problem. You cannot cut your way out of the problem.

I will advocate moving the Illinois minimum wage back to the national minimum wage.

My profession is about as far away from growing up in southern Illinois as you can get.

In politics, you never know who's going to die, retire, or - in Illinois - get indicted.

The Russians hacked into the Illinois State Board of Elections. They got into the database.

I accept the Republican nomination for the U.S. Senate, to represent the State of Illinois.

Illinois has less than a 12 percent black population and I won with 55 percent of the vote.

I was born in 1970 in Illinois, but all the life I remember I've spent in Chapel Hill, N.C.

I hear you have abolitionists here. We have a few in Illinois, but we shot one the other day.

The fact is that politics in Illinois is a blood sport. It's really rough. It's really nasty.

In the Illinois State Capitol, in Springfield, farmer-legislators write the agriculture laws.

If I'd gotten the job I wanted at Montgomery Ward, I suppose I would never have left Illinois.

I got an assistantship in physics at the University of Illinois, and I tore up my steno books.

We all know Illinois has big challenges. And under Gov. Rauner, things have only gotten worse.

Here I am, a Palestinian Arab who only knows how to write in Hebrew, stuck in central Illinois.

I was raised Catholic in Rockford, Illinois. But I'm not a practicing Catholic anymore. Oh God, no.

Train service is particularly vital for the students and employees of Southern Illinois University.

The people of Illinois sent me to Springfield to end the era of unbalanced budgets and runaway debt.

Illinois then had no legislation providing compensation for accident or disease caused by occupation.

Rauner needs to tell Illinoisans what essential health benefits he intends to keep covering in Illinois.

Illinois needs a single-payer health care system, and as governor, I will take the steps to get us there.

Almost 70 percent of U.S. ag exports travel the upper Mississippi River and the Illinois waterway system.

If we can rebuild Iraq, we can rebuild Illinois and Indiana and if we can do Baghdad, we can do Baltimore.

The biggest challenge I have with Washingtonians is they think Illinois is exclusively a Democratic state.

I went to Illinois. Most people think I went to Princeton or something. But I was never a diligent student.

Incremental increases in the minimum wage won't address the underlying skills and investment gaps in Illinois.

There are plenty of examples of very wealthy people who have run for office and failed, certainly in Illinois.

I admire Governor Blagojevich's unbending commitment to giving every person in Illinois access to health care.

A study in Illinois in the mid-1990s found that 65 percent of businesses were hurt by the proximity of gambling

Unfortunately, Bruce Rauner is more committed to playing politics than fighting for Illinois women and families.

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