Schellinger concedes Democratic race for governor

by Troy Kehoe (tkehoe@wsbt.com)

Tools

Jim Schellinger speaks to his supporters in Indianapolis

Jim Schellinger speaks to his supporters in Indianapolis on Tuesday, May 6, 2008. (CBS photo)

By WSBT News1

FORT WAYNE — The votes are all counted, and it now appears there is clear winner in the Democratic primary for governor. Jill Long Thompson says she's the victor, and late Wednesday afternoon, Jim Schellinger conceded.

By late Wednesday, Schellinger had not spoken with the media about his decision. His campaign manager would only tell the Associated Press that Schellinger chose to concede after watching the gap widen between the two candidates to more than 7,000 votes.

But earlier in the day, the tone was much different, as neither candidate would back down.

As the polls closed Tuesday night, it looked like the party might start early at Jill Long Thompson's campaign rally in Fort Wayne. Early returns showed the former Congresswoman who now lives in Argos up by more than 10 points.

But as the clock continued to tick, the nail biting began.

"[It's] very nerve racking! I'm very nervous about this," said Vida Creed, of Plymouth, who attended the rally to support Long Thompson.

By 9 p.m., the race had pulled into a dead heat, with both candidates receiving 50 percent of the vote, with up to 85 percent of precincts across the state reporting.

An hour later, South Bend native Schellinger had grabbed a big lead of nearly 10,000 votes. The numbers stayed in his favor until nearly all the precincts were counted shortly before 1:30 a.m.

At that point, Long Thompson had garnered 50.2 percent of the vote. Schellinger had 49.8 percent of the vote.

Only about 6,000 of the 1.2 million votes cast separated the two.

Late Wednesday morning, she declared victory.

"I'm clearly the winner," she told reporters in Ft. Wayne. "And I am looking forward to the race against Mitch Daniels here in the fall. And let me just say all the major news organizations have declared me the winner."

But Schellinger wasn't convinced.

In a statement released Wednesday morning, his campaign manager Tim Jeffers called the race " still too close to call."

There are many precincts still uncounted," he said, "and provisional ballots to count and sort through. A re-canvass process
[will] likely show shifts in county vote totals."

However, by late Wednesday afternoon, the campaign had stopped short of calling for a re-count. According to spokeswoman Jennifer Wagner, Schellinger was on a 'fact-finding' mission. In the end, what he found, was enough reason to concede the race.

Long Thompson is now celebrating her win, including strong showings in a number of counties in our area. She recorded victories of at least 10 points in Elkhart, Fulton, Kosciusko, and Pulaski counties. She also won by 4 points in Starke County. But her most convincing win was a 20 point victory in her home county of Marshall.

Schellinger's only big win in the South Bend area was his home county of St. Joseph, which he won by a 9 point margin.

"We knew what I needed to get in each county and I was very optimistic that it was going to go in my favor," said Long Thompson. "That's now to say I wasn't tense, but I felt very confident that it would probably go in my favor."

Long Thompson will now take on Mitch Daniels in the fall. He told reporters in Indianapolis Wednesday that he "doesn't care" who won the nomination, because he's focused on his own campaign.

Watch WSBT News at 11 to hear from Gov. Daniels. Reporter Troy Kehoe will also take a closer look at the match-up between Long Thompson and Daniels, and who might have an early advantage.

For more election headlines and voter resources, go to WSBT.com's Campaign ‘08 section.

Thursday, May 8 at 9:59 AM Anonymous wrote ...

IS THE RACE OVER NOW? IM JUS ASKIN.

Thursday, May 8 at 5:45 AM My Man! wrote ...

Right on Sandy! Take it from a Marshall Co. resident. She is TROUBLE! I don't want IN to be Snyderville or Long-Thompsonville! What is with the hyphenated last name anyway? Insecurity?

Wednesday, May 7 at 9:07 PM Sandy Guthrie wrote ...

#1, she ain't that smart. #2, She ain't that classy #3, That job has already been promised to someone who managed to get her the 7000 votes it took to defeat the better man. WSBT won't print the word but instead of Ditch Mitch you'll all be crying Ditch the....! She's a one termer to be sure. And you know what's scary about one termers? They got nothing to lose so they'll grab all they can for themselves while they have it to grab. They'll line their pockets and then they're gone! Right Mitch?

Wednesday, May 7 at 7:47 PM ev wrote ...

Go Jill! Ditch Mitch!

Wednesday, May 7 at 7:29 PM Sean wrote ...

I think Long-Thompson should look at Schellinger to be her Lt Gov. I think they would slam Daniels!

Add a comment

Name:

Comment: 500 Characters Left

Comments are moderated and will not appear on this story until after they have been reviewed and deemed appropriate for posting.

WSBT and its affiliated companies are not responsible for the content of comments posted or for anything arising out of use of the above comments or other interaction among the users. We reserve the right to screen, refuse to post, remove or edit user-generated content at any time and for any or no reason in our absolute and sole discretion without prior notice, although we have no duty to do so or to monitor any Public Forum.

More On Demand

Stock Quotes

This content requires the latest Adobe Flash Player and a browser with JavaScript enabled. Click here for a free download of the latest Adobe Flash Player.

Tonight On WSBTFull Schedule

7.00
Wheel of Fortune
7.30
Jeopardy!
8.00
Ghost Whisperer
9.00
Moonlight
10.00
Numb3rs
11.00
WSBT News
11.35
Late Show with David Letterman

Question of The Day

Should schools offer incentives for attendance?

E-mail your comments to us. We'll pick some to read during WSBT News.

  • Yes
  • No