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Republican money managers emerge in bid to shape Illinois politics

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(MCT) — Spawned by frustration with the status quo and fueled by anti-union sentiment, a new money-manager style of Republican activism is taking hold in Illinois with the potential to reshape the political landscape heading into the 2014 statewide elections.

Venture capitalists and hedge fund directors have been writing six-figure donations with increasing frequency since the 2010 state elections and are spending big on the presidential and congressional races, taking advantage of the new era of super political action committees that can raise and spend unlimited amounts of money on campaigns.

The Nov. 6 contests for the White House and Congress are only part of the picture for the new cadre of wealthy financiers who are looking to magnify their impact by focusing on state and local politics. They are not putting much money into state Republicans' slim chances of reversing Democratic control of the Legislature this year, but insiders expect their influence to grow dramatically with statewide offices, including U.S. senator and governor on the ballot two years from now.

The leaders of the new movement include Bruce Rauner, a wealthy venture capitalist and private equity specialist who is a potential candidate for governor. Framing his argument in apocalyptic terms, Rauner lambastes public employee unions and says only a political revolution can pull Illinois out of an economic "death spiral."

Also stepping into a new activist role are mega-donors Kenneth Griffin, who founded the hedge fund firm Citadel LLC, and Anne Dias Griffin, who founded her hedge fund firm, Aragon Global Management. The husband and wife have donated more than $6.1 million to candidates and causes at the state and federal level since 1998.

Dias Griffin is the force behind a new social media operation, Reboot Illinois, that calls itself nonpartisan but has echoed GOP critiques on topics from public worker pensions to improving the business climate and school funding.

The influx of dollars from investment managers represents a generational shift in the funding of Republican candidates and interests in Illinois. The industrialists who traditionally donated to the state GOP are graying, and their publicly traded companies have been bought and sold in a world market where CEOs are transitional and less inclined to publicly play politics.

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