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Illinoisans casting ballots in crucial House races

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(MCT) — After two years of hard campaigning, dozens of debates, hundreds of robocalls, thousands of negative ads and millions of dollars in special interest money, Election Day arrives today to give voters the final say over the direction of the country and their government.

With the polls open from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m., Illinois voters are casting ballots for president, Congress, the state legislature, and in hundreds of more localized contests.

Statewide voters will consider a proposed amendment to the Illinois Constitution asking whether it should be tougher for government to improve public employee pension benefits. Even if approved, the measure would have little impact on the nation's most underfunded public pension system. Dozens of localized referendum issues also are on the ballot.

Even before today, more than a half-million people cast ballots in Chicago and suburban Cook County through early voting and voting by mail. With mailed-in ballots still arriving, the total was slightly below the 557,161 pre-election day ballots cast four years ago.

On Monday, Chicago election officials issued a cautionary note: two of every 10 city voters have a new polling place this time as a result of the redrawing of political boundaries after the federal census.

Illinois has not been in play during the expensive presidential campaign, with Republican Mitt Romney effectively ceding it to home-state President Barack Obama. But the top of the ticket contest could have coattails in the state’s new 18 congressional districts.

Obama was scheduled to arrive in Chicago early this morning and hold an evening rally at McCormick Place. In between, Obama plans to continue his tradition of playing basketball on Election Day, a campaign aide said.

Next up on the ballot are congressional contests, which feature new districts Democrats drew to try to reverse Republican gains in elections two years ago. Illinois is a key part of the national strategy by Democrats to regain control of the U.S. House. Democrats nationally need a net pickup of 25 seats to win the chamber, though polling across the country has suggested it will be difficult for them to take control.

In Illinois, six congressional races are highly competitive — three in the suburbs and three Downstate. Together, the six contests have attracted more than $43 million in outside money, the result of a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that allowed for the creation of super political action committees that can spend unlimited amounts of money.

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