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Rep. Jackson’s wife says he will remain on Nov. 6 ballot

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“The pressure is coming from where he always gets pressure from,” the adviser said of Jackson’s frequent critics. “But the solid religious leaders are saying, ‘Take your time.’ They understand what his seniority (in the House) means. They know the difference it makes for him to be on the (House) appropriations committee.”

Even Sandi Jackson noted that if Democrats can regain control of the House from Republicans next month, her husband “would be in line to be a major appropriator.” Jackson is Illinois’ lone representative on the powerful appropriations panel.

Woodworth, Jackson’s Republican opponent, said Alderman Jackson’s focus on her husband’s ability to “bring home the bacon” on the Appropriations Committee shows how misguided Jackson and other Democrats have been about spending in Washington. “It fits right into that Chicago political mindset of looking for favoritism rather than treating everyone the same,” Woodworth said.

Also Wednesday, Sandi Jackson spoke for the first time about the sale of the family’s Victorian-style town house, which was briefly listed at $2.5 million last month before the public listing was pulled.

“We’ve got folks who were coming up to the house without representation,” she said. “They were scaring my children because they were coming without, I think, any desire to buy, but really just to come look-see.”

But the Jacksons will continue trying to sell the home privately, she said, because her husband’s congressional “Cadillac” healthcare plan isn’t as comprehensive as some might think when it comes to paying for the kind of mental health treatment the lawmaker is receiving.

“I think most Americans will say when it comes to mental health, those medical plans do not cover it,” Alderman Jackson said.

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