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Asbestos law firms among Callis’ biggest donors in IL13 race

MADISON - ST. CLAIR RECORD

Sunday, December 22, 2024

Asbestos law firms among Callis’ biggest donors in IL13 race

So far in the 2014 election cycle, U.S. Rep. Rodney Davis (R-Taylorville) has out-raised his Democratic opponent, Ann Callis, by more than $1 million, in spite of the sizeable donations the former Madison County judge has received from asbestos law firms.

Callis stepped down from a 19-year career on the bench last year to make a bid for the 13th Congressional District. In the March primary, she easily defeated challengers George Gollin and David Green, allowing her to go on to face Davis in the November general election.

As of March 31, reports filed with the Federal Elections Commission show Davis raking in $2,059,954 in campaign contributions as opposed to Callis’ total of $1,016,384.

While the bulk of Davis’ contributions have come from PACs - $1,213,155 - Callis has received the majority of her contributions, 78 percent, from individual contributions.

Excluding a $15,500 donation from Emily’s List, a PAC that supports pro-choice candidates, some of Callis’s top funders were law firms specializing in asbestos litigation.

Donations from the Simmons Law Firm of Alton and its attorneys totaled $23,700. Contributions from Gori, Julian & Associates of Edwardsville came in at $10,400, according to opensecrets.org.

Other plaintiff firms contributing to Callis’s campaign include:


  • Goldenberg Heller Antognoli & Rowland of Edwardsville - $5,700;

  • Clifford Law Offices of Chicago - $5,200;

  • Cook Ysursa Bartholomew Brauer of Belleville - $5,200;

  • Cooney & Conway of Chicago - $5,200;

  • Davis, Bethune & Jones of Kansas City - $5,200; and

  • Hiles Borgeson LLP of Glendale, Calif. - $5,200.


The law firm Callis Papa Hale & Szewczyk of Granite City, the firm of Callis’s father, Lance Callis, donated $5,700, according to opensecrets.org.

Accounting for nearly 400 individual donations, the vast majority of Callis’s single contributions came from ActBlue – A fundraising PAC that supports Democratic candidates, FEC reports show.

Conversely, Davis’s campaign is sustained by donations from businesses with the congressman receiving $10,000 donations from Home Depot, McKesson Corp. and New York Life Insurance.

Davis’s top contributor, National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, donated $13,000 to his campaign, according to opensecrets.org.

Legal Newsline: Reach David Yates at elections@legalnewsline.com

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