Politics & Government

Duckworth Seeks Second Term As U.S. Senator, Facing Salvi and Redpath

Tammy Duckworth says she has worked for "common-sense" lawmaking, while attorney Kathy Salvi claims the Senator is "part of the problem."

U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth is seeking a second term in office in Tuesday's general election and is being opposed by Republican and Mundelein attorney Kathy Salvi.
U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth is seeking a second term in office in Tuesday's general election and is being opposed by Republican and Mundelein attorney Kathy Salvi. (Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

ILLINOIS — Six years have passed since U.S. Senator Tammy Duckworth made history, becoming only the second woman in Illinois’ history to capture the office.

Now, another woman — Republican Mundelein attorney Kathy Salvi — is attempting to stand in the way of Duckworth from serving another term in the Senate in Tuesday’s general election.

While both are hoping to win over voters on Tuesday, their approach to doing so couldn’t come from more different philosophies, including on the biggest issues facing voters in the ever-critical mid-term elections.

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Duckworth, who was on President Joe Biden’s shortlist as a candidate for vice president in the 2020 election, has taken clear stances on gun violence, women’s productive health rights, and immigration. Salvi, however, has linked Duckworth’s philosophy with a Biden presidency she believes has failed both Illinois and the rest of the country since Biden took up residency in the White House more than 18 months ago.

West Dundee Libertarian Bill Redpath is also on the ballot on Tuesday, but it has Duckworth and Salvi who have garnered the majority of the attention for the Senate seat.

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Neither Duckworth nor Salvi responded to multiple requests from Patch to fill out a pre-election questionnaire addressing their stance on several key issues facing Illinois voters.

Mundelein attorney Kathy Salvi is seeking a seat in the U.S. Senate in Tuesday's general election. (Photo courtesy of Kathy Salvi)

In a recent televised debate with Salvi, Duckworth said she was sent to Washington by voters to “find common-sense solutions” and said sensible gun control legislation that would curb gun violence in areas like Chicago, where murder and other violent crime have been prevalent for decades.

She said that an assault weapons ban needs to be passed, along with a ban on high-capacity magazines.

“That would get those guns off the street,” Duckworth said in the WTTW debate with Salvi, whom Duckworth said has received an “A” rating from the National Rifle Association and who, according to the senator, said would never vote for an assault weapons ban.

Salvi said that the country has a mental health crisis that needs addressing, and also said unsafe streets have created more of an issue than the guns themselves. She cited mental health issues for the Highland Park July 4 mass shooting that killed seven people and injured nearly 50 more people.

Salvi said as a U.S. Senator, she will focus on mental health treatment and how that can improve communities. Salvi accused Duckworth of having "soft on crime" policies that send a mixed signal. Asked by debate hosts if she would support a ban on assault weapons, however, Salvi never answered.

Duckworth said she’s proud of the bi-partisan work she has done to create common-sense solutions, including in a piece of legislation that she says provides support and funding for police officers and first responders who develop post-traumatic stress disorder as a result of their service, Duckworth said.

Salvi, who ran for Congress in 2006, called Duckworth’s support of Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot “reckless” after Salvi said that Lightfoot stripped $52 million in funding for the Chicago Police Department.

Duckworth also said the country is in need of comprehensive immigration reform, but said that begins with acknowledging that there is a crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border. She said that any reform needs to be practical, humane, and fair at a time when more than 3,500 asylum seekers have arrived in Illinois and Chicago as a sanctuary city.

Salvi, meanwhile, says the U.S. has a humanitarian crisis at its borders and said that people who enter the country illegally are dying by the day. She claims Duckworth has voted against every measure of protection at the southern border and voted against the addition of more border patrol officers.

“You are part of the problem,” Salvi said during the WTTW debate, saying that the Biden administration’s stance on border patrol has added to the fentanyl problem in the country.

On women’s productive health rights, Salvi characterized the Supreme Court’s decision on Roe. v. Wade as “good”, saying abortion laws need to be decided at the state level rather than at the federal level. Salvi said she supports exceptions such as to save the life of the mother or cases of rape or incest when it comes to abortion, as well as the regulation of “big-business abortion.”

She said she considers herself “pro-life, pro-woman and pro-child” and called Duckworth a “radical extremist on the issue of abortion.”

Duckworth said she would like to see the court’s decision on federal abortion rights reversed with the restrictions that are provided in the Roe v. Wade legislation and Illinois law, which points to the 24-week point of viability.

“With my daughters, I’m not going to allow them to grow up in a world where they have less rights than I do,” Duckworth said.

The two candidates also disagreed on how to fix inflation and solve the nation’s economic woes. Salvi again pointed to Duckworth’s history of supporting Biden administration policies and said making the country stronger economically is the predominant reason why she is seeking office.

She said that every worker in Illinois is affected because of the “reckless” budget bill that Duckworth and other Democrats voted for in 2021. She said Duckworth has been a “100 percent rubber stamp” for Biden-pushed agenda.

“I am running because we can’t un-elect Joe Biden,” Salvi said. “But what we can do is un-elect Tammy Duckworth this November.”

Duckworth, meanwhile, points to profits made by large oil and pharmaceutical companies as the reason for the nation’s struggling economy. Duckworth also says that the cost of college education needs to be addressed as the issue of college loan forgiveness remains unsolved.

Duckworth said she supports Biden’s plan to forgive up to $10,000 in student loans, but that it needs to be a one-time thing. Duckworth said that college should be affordable for anyone who wants a college education, and that it should happen so that students can emerge debt-free.

Salvi said, however, that student loan forgiveness would instead drive up the cost of tuition and says it is “palpably unfair” to put that burden on the American taxpayer.

Asked if each candidate would concede the election if they were to lose, both Duckworth and Salvi said they would indeed concede, which was one of the few issues both candidates agreed on throughout the election cycle.

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