Collar Counties | |
Subdivision Name2: | DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry and Will. |
Established Title: | Settled |
Established Date: | 1770s |
Named For: | Their mutual proximity to and surrounding of Cook County. |
Population As Of: | 2012 Estimate |
Population Total: | 3,143,257 |
Utc Offset: | −06:00 |
Utc Offset Dst: | −05:00 |
Area Code: | 224, 331, 630, 779, 815, 847 |
Collar counties is a colloquialism for DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry, and Will counties, the five counties of Illinois that border Cook County, which is home to Chicago. The collar counties are part of the Chicago metropolitan area and comprise many of the area's suburbs. While Lake County, Indiana, also borders Cook County, it is not typically included in the phrase "Collar Counties" due to different socioeconomic characteristics and positionality.
After Cook County, the collar counties are also the next five most populous counties in Illinois. According to the Encyclopedia of Chicago, there is no specifically known origin of the phrase, but it has been commonly used among policy makers, urban planners, and in the media.
In 1950, the Census Bureau defined the Chicago metropolitan statistical area as comprising Cook County, four of the five collar counties (excluding McHenry), and Lake County in Indiana. In 2010, reflecting urban growth, the Bureau redefined the area as comprising several additional counties in Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin.[1]
As of 2019, there are 3,150,376 people residing in the collar counties, nearly 25% of the population of Illinois. Cook County and the collar counties combined are home to approximately 65% of Illinois's population.
While it is not its exclusive use, the term is often employed in political discussions.[2] [3] Like many other suburban areas in the United States, the collar counties have somewhat different political leanings from the core city. Chicago has long been a Democratic stronghold, while the collar counties historically tilted Republican. In recent elections, however, the collar counties have voted for Democrats, but with lower margins than Cook County.[4]
Because Cook County tends to vote for Democrats by large margins, and downstate Illinois tends to vote for Republicans by large margins, the collar counties are routinely cited as being the key to any statewide election.[5] [6] [7] However, that conventional wisdom was challenged in the 2010 gubernatorial election, as Democrat Pat Quinn won election while winning only Cook County and three counties in Southern Illinois.[8] All five collar counties went Republican, so the key to that gubernatorial election was winning Cook County by a wide enough margin to overwhelm the rest of the state.
Barack Obama used the term in his speech before the Democratic National Convention in 2004.[9]