Holocaust-denier loses congressional race but gets more than 53,000 votes

SHARE Holocaust-denier loses congressional race but gets more than 53,000 votes
artjones_e1541551606957.jpg

Holocaust denier Art Jones/Chicago Sun-Times file photo

Complete coverage of the local and national primary and general election, including results, analysis and voter resources to keep Chicago voters informed.

In a race that garnered national attention, more than 53,000 people on Chicago’s Southwest Side and in the southwest suburbs voted on Tuesday for Art Jones, a Holocaust-denier, in his losing bid in the 3rd congressional district race.

Incumbent Rep. Dan Lipinski, a Democrat, won handily — garnering more than 73 percent of the vote with 95 percent of the precincts reporting.

Reached at home Tuesday night, Jones, a Republican, said he was “gratified” so many people voted for him.

“They can’t say they didn’t know who they were voting for,” Jones said. “You guys in the media made sure of that.”

Jones said he believes the recent mass shooting at a Pittsburgh synagogue also hurt his vote totals.

“I think I probably would’ve done a lot better had it not been for this disaster in Pittsburgh with the murder of 11 Jews,” Jones added.

Jones’ nomination embarrassed the state Republican party. At least two other Republican challengers mounted write-in campaigns to try to siphon votes away from Jones.

“It just shows how significant it is that people vote the party and don’t pay attention to the views of the candidates a lot of the time,” Lipinski said of Jones’ vote totals.

A video posted to YouTube Tuesday appeared to show Jones being confronted as he cast his ballot.

Though he had previously denied the Holocaust ever happening, Jones was captured on video saying that the 6 million Jews who were killed by the Nazis were “a bunch of stinkin’, rotten communists.”

In the 4th congressional district race, Cook County Commissioner Jesus “Chuy” Garcia scored an easy victory Tuesday. He will fill the vacated seat of his political ally, Rep. Luis Gutierrez.

Jesus “Chuy” Garcia gets a wristband to show he voted at his polling place Tuesday at the Daniel J. Corkery Elementary School. | James Foster/For the Sun-Times

Jesus “Chuy” Garcia gets a wristband to show he voted at his polling place Tuesday at the Daniel J. Corkery Elementary School. | James Foster/For the Sun-Times

Garcia — a Democrat and former alderman, state senator and mayoral candidate — received more than 86 percent of the vote, with 93 percent of precincts reporting. His Republican opponent, Mark Wayne Lorch received about 14 percent of the vote.

Garcia’s win comes 11 months after Gutierrez announced his retirement. Gutierrez endorsed Garcia to succeed him and represent the 4th District, which covers heavily Hispanic portions of the Northwest and Southwest sides, as well as the western suburbs.

Reps. Bobby Rush, Robin Kelly, Danny Davis, Mike Quigley and Jan Schakowsky, all Democrats representing parts of the city and nearby suburbs, were also re-elected.

RELATED STORIES:

Holocaust denier Art Jones walks precincts distributing anti-Semitic literature

Art Jones didn’t talk about his views about the Holocaust when passing nominating petitions

How Holocaust denier Art Jones got on the ballot: Illinois GOP let guard down

The Latest
A window of the Andersonville feminist bookstore displaying a Palestine flag and a sign calling for a cease-fire in the Israel-Hamas war was shattered early Wednesday. Police are investigating.
Echoing previous public statements, Gov. J.B. Pritzker — noticeably absent from the Bears unveiling — again brushed aside the latest proposal, which includes more than $2 billion in private funds but still requires taxpayer subsidies, saying it “isn’t one that I think the taxpayers are interested in getting engaged in.”
Fans said they liked the new amenities and features in the $4.7 billion stadium proposal unveiled Wednesday, although some worried the south lakefront could become even more congested than it is now.
The traditional TV broadcasts will be heavy on the Bears, who own the first and ninth picks of the first round. They’ll be on the clock at 7 p.m.