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The2000 United States House of Representatives election for the 1st district in Illinois took place on November 7, 2000, to elect a representative fromIllinois's 1st congressional district for the107th United States Congress.IncumbentDemocratic RepresentativeBobby Rush faced a primary challenge fromIllinois Senator and futurePresidentBarack Obama. Rush defeated Obama 61 percent to 30 percent, with other candidates combining for the remaining nine percent. Rush later defeated hisRepublican opponent,Raymond Wardingley, 88 percent to 12 percent, ensuring his reelection. Subsequent to this election, Obama waselected to the Senate in 2004, and laterelected President in 2008.
Illinois's 1st congressional district is aminority-majority district. At the time of the election, 65 percent of its constituents wereAfrican American.[1] Inredistricting after the1990 United States census, the district was extended into the suburbs for the first time in 90 years, but a majority of the districts' residents (70%) lived in Chicago.[2] A stronglyDemocratic district, only twice since 1966 has aRepublican candidate forUnited States Congress received over 20% of the vote.[3]
Rush was involved in thecivil rights movement of the 1960s. He was a member of theStudent Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and a former member and founder of the Illinois chapter of theBlack Panther Party.[1] After coordinating a medical clinic that treatedsickle cell anemia, Rush served as analderman and was first elected to represent Illinois's 1st district in1992. Rush ran forMayor of Chicago againstRichard M. Daley in 1999 and lost, receiving only 28% of the vote, making him appear electorally vulnerable.[1]
Obama, at age 38, was a lecturer at theUniversity of Chicago and a two-termstate Senator. Though friends, includingTerry Link, his colleague in the Illinois Senate, warned Obama against challenging Rush, as there was no obvious reason to displace him to the voters,[1] Obama ran anyway because of his frustration with what he claimed was Republican obstructionism in the Illinois Legislature and the feeling Rush was representing the district less effectively than Obama could.[1] Also challenging Rush wereDonne Trotter, a state senator, and George Roby, a police officer.[4]Raymond Wardingley, aperennial candidate who worked as aclown, ran unopposed for the Republican nomination.[4][5]

Obama entered the race in late September 1999, six months before the primary, stating that Rush represented "a politics that is rooted in the past, a reactive politics that isn’t good at coming up with concrete solutions." He promised to build consensus and lead coalitions involving people outside of the black community to reduce crime, improve health care coverage, promote economic development and expand educational opportunities.[1]

Early polling showed Rush's name recognition started off at 90 percent, with Obama's at 11 percent.[1] Rush had 70 percent approval, while Obama had 8 percent approval. In the head-to-head matchup, forty-seven percent of the people polled favored Rush, 10 percent favored Obama, and 5 percent supported Trotter, who is also African American. Most of Obama's support came fromWhite Americans.[1]
In mid-October, Rush's son, Huey, was murdered, leading Obama to put his campaign on hold.[1]GovernorGeorge Ryan called the Illinois Legislature to a special session to re-enact a package ofgun control bills, a pet issue of Rush, which had been overturned by theIllinois Supreme Court. Obama supported the package, but the session dragged on towards Christmas. Obama annually spent the Christmas vacation inHawaii with his family visiting his grandmother, who raised him. Obama left Illinois, expecting the session would continue into January. However, a crucial vote took place earlier than expected, failing by five votes with Obama and others absent. Obama came under fire for missing the vote though he said he would have flown back sooner, but his 18-month-old daughter was sick.[1] Meanwhile, Rush received an outpouring of sympathy that aided his campaign.[6]
As Obama lived inHyde Park, a more affluent neighborhood with a higher percentage of White voters than the rest of the district, the narrative of the race became "the Black Panther against the professor."[1] Obama frequently came off as uptight.[7] Rush criticized Obama: "Barack Obama went to Harvard and became an educated fool. We’re not impressed with these folks with these Eastern elite degrees. Barack is a person who read about the civil-rights protests and thinks he knows all about it."[8] Trotter said, "Barack is viewed in part to be the white man in blackface in our community."[7][9] Though theChicago Tribune endorsed Obama,[4] many, including local officials,PresidentBill Clinton, andVice PresidentAl Gore, theDemocratic Party nominee for President, endorsed Rush.[1] Then-State RepresentativeTom Dart supported Obama and organized on his behalf in the 19th ward.[10]
Obama raised enough money to remain competitive with Rush.[1][9] However, he neither connected with the working-class African Americans of the district nor provided a convincing reason for them to vote against Rush.[1] Obama later wrote: "Less than halfway into the campaign, I knew in my bones that I was going to lose. Each morning from that point forward I awoke with a vague sense of dread, realizing that I would have to spend the day smiling and shaking hands and pretending that everything was going according to plan."[11]
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Bobby Rush (incumbent) | 59,599 | 61.03% | |
| Democratic | Barack Obama | 29,649 | 30.36% | |
| Democratic | Donne Trotter | 6,915 | 7.08% | |
| Democratic | George Roby | 1,501 | 1.54% | |
| Total votes | 97,664 | 100.00% | ||
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Raymond Wardingley | 2,721 | 100.00% | |
| Total votes | 2,721 | 100.00% | ||
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Bobby Rush (incumbent) | 172,271 | 87.81% | |
| Republican | Raymond Wardingley | 23,915 | 12.19% | |
| Total votes | 196,186 | 100.00% | ||
| Democratichold | ||||
Obama later said about his loss to Rush "I got my rear end handed to me"[1] and acknowledged his own hubris.[9] However, many analysts believe that Obama's loss helped him to learn from his mistakes, which enabled him to run more successful campaigns in2004 and2008.[1][7][9] Obama was seen as a stiff policy wonk, and he used the experience to hone his ability to connect with voters.[1] According toChicago City Council memberToni Preckwinkle, an early Obama supporter, Obama "took a hard look at himself after that campaign and became a much better campaigner, more at ease on the campaign trail."[9] He put more effort into his campaign, hiringDavid Axelrod as his chief political strategist.[1] Also, Obama increased his focus on the Illinois Senate, improving his legislative accomplishments.[7]
In 2004, Obama was the keynote speaker at theDemocratic National Convention.[14] After his speech, political pundits speculated about his future as a possible presidential candidate.[15] After being elected to theUnited States Senate that year, and amid much speculation in the media regarding his future plans, Obama announced that he would seek the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination in February 2007[16][17] and went on to defeat fellow senatorHillary Clinton in one of the closest presidential nomination races in American history.[18] He then defeatedJohn McCain, also a senator, in the general election to becomePresident of the United States.[19] He wasre-elected in 2012.
Bobby Rush served a total of thirty years in the House of Representatives, retiring in early 2023 after 15 terms.