Campaign Adlai Stevenson II was chosen by
Jacob Arvey, leader of the powerful
Cook County Democratic Party organization, to the
Democratic candidate in the Illinois gubernatorial race against the incumbent Republican governor,
Dwight H. Green. While Stevenson had a preference for a role that would see him involved in national politics, such as being a
United States senator, the path for him to run for senate would have been difficult, while Arvey was offering him a clear path to be elected governor. Stevenson launched his campaign with a speech to the
McLean County Democrats
Jackson Day dinner in his hometown of
Bloomington on February 23, 1948. He made clear that, rather than seeking out the office himself, he had been
drafted by the Democratic State Central Committee, who had asked him to be their gubernatorial candidate due to his "record in private life," and, "public service in the war and the peace," and their confidence he would win and, that as governor would be, "a credit," to the Democratic party. Stevenson, in launching his campaign, pledged to clean up
Illinois politics, which had been plagued by
corruption and scandal. Part of his appeal as a candidate in the year 1948 was that he lacked ties to the state's "politics as usual". Stevenson ultimately faced no opponents on the ballot in the primary.
Results ==Republican primary==