Politics & Government

Lake Forest-Lake Bluff Election Guide: What's On Ballot, What To Know

Local candidates from Lake Forest and Lake Bluff are among those vying for office on Election Day 2024.

Here's what is on the ballot in Lake Forest, Lake Bluff and Lake County.
Here's what is on the ballot in Lake Forest, Lake Bluff and Lake County. (Patch)

LAKE FOREST, IL — Election Day is nearly here as voting for the 2024 general election in Lake Forest, Lake Bluff and the rest of Lake County comes to an end Tuesday.

Eligible voters who have yet to register may do so in person while casting a ballot Tuesday, although early voting site with grace period registration also offer the opportunity to register and vote in one fell swoop.

Lake Forest City Hall, 220 E. Deerpath Road, offers early voting and grace period registration from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. until Friday and then from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday.

Find out what's happening in Lake Forest-Lake Blufffor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Other nearby early voting locations include North Chicago City Hall, 1850 Lewis Ave., Deerspring Pool, 200 Deerfield Road and the Highwood Library and Community Center at 102 Highwood Ave.

(A list of all early voting and grace period registration sites in Lake County, as well as their hours of operations, is available online.)

Find out what's happening in Lake Forest-Lake Blufffor free with the latest updates from Patch.

While the closest and most nationally consequential race on the ballot is expected to be the presidential contest between former President Donald Trump and current Vice President Kamala Harris, there are several other notable races on the ballot in Lake Forest and Lake Bluff, with local residents challenging incumbents on the Lake County Board and State's Attorney's Office.

In the Illinois General Assembly's 58th District, which includes Lake Forest and Lake Bluff, State Rep. Bob Morgan, the Deerfield Democrat who sponsored the statewide ban on assault weapons, faces a challenge from Highland Park Republican Carl Lambrecht, a local precinct committeeman who made a series of dubious claims at a recent forum.

Read more: 58th District State Rep. Bob Morgan Defends Legislative Record, Carl Lambrecht Makes Dubious Claims

Voters across the county are deciding whether to authorize Lake County Forest Preserve officials to borrow $155 million to buy more land, restore and improve it and enhance flood controls. In approved, the bond issue would end up costing the owner of a $300,000 home about $33 in the first year of the increase.

Lake County State's Attorney Eric Rinehart, a Highland Park Democrat, is running against Republican Lake Bluff Village Trustee Mary Cole, a former assistant state's attorney in his office who says she quit because of how politicized it became after Rinehart's election four years ago.

Read more: Lake County State's Attorney Forum: Rinehart Repeats Trump Jab, Cole Calls Out Hawaii Cost

Lake County Coroner Jennifer Banek, a nurse anesthesiologist and Army reservist, is seeking a second term in office. The Green Oaks Democrat has cited the opioid epidemic as the most important issue facing the office. She faces a challenge from Highland Park Republican Mark Symonds, the second-generation co-owner of a local funeral home.

In the race for Lake County Board, incumbent Highland Park Democrat Paras Parekh, a marketing executive for a pharmaceutical company, is being challenged in his bid for a second term in the 12th District by Lake Forest Republican Andy Dalkin, a former Cook County prosecutor who now represents police unions.

In the 13th District, incumbent Lake County Board President Sandy Hart, a Lake Bluff Democrat, faces a challenge from Lake Bluff Republican Ben Grum, a commander with the Lake Forest Police Department.

Read more: Lake Forest Cop Takes On Lake County Board Chair In District 13 Candidate Forum

There are three statewide advisory questions — non-binding referendums sometimes used by Illinois politicians to block citizen-led initiatives from appearing on the ballot or to otherwise buttress their policies — on the ballot.

This year, the questions ask whether insurance plans should cover assisted reproductive treatments if they cover pregnancy, if a 3 percent tax on incomes over $1 million should fund property tax relief and if candidates should face penalties for interfering with election workers.

Illinois lawmakers put them on the ballot in May through Senate Bill 2412, which also changed the rules for slating candidates that a judge later found to be unconstitutional.

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