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Bruised Ill. GOP looks 
to 2014, shifts in strategy

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CHICAGO – Stinging from a walloping at the polls, Illinois Republicans are focusing on the 2014 governor’s race as their best chance to emerge from the political cellar, while acknowledging that a recovery means doing things much differently.

The governor’s race is shaping up as a must-win for the GOP, after Democrats on Tuesday won veto-proof super majorities in the state House and Senate and a majority of the state’s congressional delegation, in addition to controlling all but two statewide offices.

That reality has Republicans re-evaluating everything from their image and campaign strategies to the diversity of their candidates and their policy priorities, such as their line against immigration reforms.

“[Winning the governor’s race] is our quickest trip back to relevancy,” said Illinois Republican Party Chairman Pat Brady. “We’ve got to get over this caricature of us as being a bunch of angry people standing in the way of everything.”

What happened Tuesday – described by top Republicans as everything from getting “schooled” to having their “brains bashed in” – was painful evidence that the party’s current strategies need to change, GOP leaders said.

Illinois Republicans lost five of the six most hotly contested seats in Congress, including three won by freshmen in 2010, when the tea party movement helped the GOP win back the U.S. House. When the new session begins, Republicans will hold just six of Illinois’ 18 House seats, compared with 11 of 19 in 2010.

The dismal showing prompted inevitable questions about whether Brady and the party’s legislative leaders should be replaced. But Brady said he serves at the pleasure of the party’s central committee and has no plans to resign.

He said the party already has begun a “top to bottom review” of what happened and why.

Republicans started at a disadvantage because Democrats dominated the once-a-decade drawing of boundaries for new congressional and legislative maps. The process also reduced the number of congressional seats from 19 to 18 because Illinois didn’t grow as fast as other states.

The new maps, which carved out territory friendly to Democrats, will ultimately affect how Republicans campaign in Illinois for the next decade.

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