John Maitland (Illinois politician) explained

John Maitland
Birth Place:Normal, Illinois
State Senate:Illinois
District:44th
Predecessor:Harber Hall
Successor:Bill Brady
Party:Republican
Spouse:Joann
Residence:Normal, Illinois
Alma Mater:Illinois State University
Profession:Farmer
businessman
Branch: Marine Corps

John W. Maitland, Jr. (born July 29, 1936) is an American farmer and politician who served as a Republican member of the Illinois Senate from 1979 until 2002.

Early life

John W. Maitland, Jr. was born July 29, 1936, in Normal, Illinois. He graduated from Illinois State University and served in the United States Marine Corps.[1] Maitland served on the McLean County Regional Planning Commission for a time.[2]

Illinois Senate

Incumbent Republican Harber Hall declined to run for reelection to the Illinois Senate in the 1978 election. Maitland, then-President of the McLean County Farm Bureau, defeated Mayor of Normal and Democratic candidate Carol Reitan for the open seat.[3] Maitland was elected to the Illinois Senate on an "anti-big government" platform seeking to, among other things, reduce the high cost of the workmen's compensation and unemployment programs for Illinois businesses.[2] In 1993, after the election of fellow Republican Pate Philip became the President of the Illinois Senate, Maitland joined twelve senators in reestablishing the Downstate Republican Caucus.[4]

In September 2001, Maitland announced his intention to retire from the Illinois Senate.[5] Bud Stone, an incumbent redistricted into the same district as Maitland also chose not to run.[6] On April 8, 2002, Maitland announced his intention to resign from the Illinois Senate effective April 30, 2002. The Legislative Committee of the Republican Party of the 44th Legislative District appointed Bill Brady, the winner of the 2002 Republican primary for the newly drawn 44th district Senate seat, to the vacancy. Brady was sworn into office by Judge Rita Garman and took office on May 1, 2002.[7] [8]

Post-political life

In 2017, Maitland and his wife Joann supported Illinois's effort to pass the Equal Rights Amendment.[9] As of September 5, 2021, Maitland operates a museum of antique tractors on his family's farm.[10]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Illinois Blue Book 1979–1980. 154. July 12, 2022.
  2. Gherardini. Caroline. New Members of the General Assembly. Illinois Issues. Sangamon State University. 5. 2. 28. May 29, 2020.
  3. Web site: Straka. Carol. Carol A. Reitan Collection. 2010. 2–4. McLean County Museum of History. July 12, 2022. July 13, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220713003344/https://www.mcleancountyhistory.org/perch/resources/Finding/reitan-carol-a-collection.pdf.
  4. Halperin. Jennifer. Pate Philip: Illinois' new Senate President in the Limelight. Illinois Issues. 29. 3. Sangamon State University. 0738-9663. July 12, 2022.
  5. News: Erickson. Kurt. Maitland won't run in 2002 – Contenders line up support. September 25, 2001. The Pantagraph. NewsBank.
  6. News: Pearson. Rick. Democrat remap clears panel over GOP protests. September 26, 2001. Chicago Tribune. Chicago, Illinois. July 13, 2017.
  7. News: Richardson. Scott. Brady fends off Kinzinger challenge – 'Grass-roots' effort pays off. March 20, 2002. The Pantagraph. NewsBank.
  8. Harry. Jim (Secretary of the Senate). Communication from the Illinois Secretary of State. 92. 92. 117–120. May 6, 2002. Journal of the Illinois Senate. July 12, 2022. Illinois Senate.
  9. News: Packowitz. Howard. Local advocates kick-off ERA drive with help from prominent Republican couple. July 28, 2017. WJBC 102.1 FM. July 12, 2022.
  10. News: Coulter. Phyllis. Tractor collection brings together former Illinois senator's family. September 5, 2021. The Pantagraph. July 12, 2022. subscription.