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            Chirinjeev Kathuria plans to run for Illinois governor 
            Chicago, August 03, 2005 
            Illinois-based   entrepreneur and space travel buff Chirinjeev Kathuria is planning to run for   lieutenant governor after a failed bid last year for the US Senate. 
               
              While   he has not formally announced his candidacy, Kathuria said he had sent letters   and brochures asking for support to 
            the 101 state Republican   party county chairmen, 101 deputy county chairs, Republican Illinois assembly   representatives and senators and to all precinct committeemen. 
             
            "It's too   early to say anything about endorsements. We are making a formal announcement   about the candidacy on Aug 18, but I put the website up ahead of time," Kathuria   told IANS. 
             
            Recently, Kathuria bought up a Canadian company that is   building a rocket for commercial space flights, a dream he tried to make come   true when four years ago he bought into MirCorp, a Russian company that flew the   first Space Tourist Dennis Tito into orbit. 
             
            The Indian American argues   that for the Republican Party to take back the governor's mansion in Chicago, it   has to get the support of minorities -- and what better minority than himself to   bring in those votes. 
             
            "In Illinois there are 700,000 registered Hispanic   voters, 960,000 registered African American voters and over 400,000 Asian   Americans, of whom probably 25 percent are registered voters. It also has   900,000 independent voters, who by the way endorsed me when I ran for the US   Senate last year," Kathuria said. 
             
            The bearded, turbaned Sikh has sold his   seemingly different look as well as his stellar academic and business   credentials into an advantage - a graduate in medicine from Brown University, an   MBA from Stanford, a business gadfly who has put his finger into unusual and   well oiled schemes that have evidently paid off to make him one of the   wealthiest candidates to run for state office. 
             
            But, as Kathuria continues   to argue, the Republicans would do well to broaden their base. And if he was to   get the nomination at the March 21, 2006, primaries, money would begin to come   into his campaign not just from citizens of the state but from Indian Americans   around the country, thus costing the party less to have him on the   ticket. 
             
            Plus there is the fact that so far he is the only minority   candidate running for that office. 
             
            "For a Republican governor to win, he   needs to attract the minority - and by having me on the ticket, the chances are   better," he said. 
             
            Republicans have controlled the governorship for   decades except for the last one where they lost it to a   Democrat. 
             
            Kathuria is trying to do things differently in his run for lt.   governor than his bid for the Senate. 
             
            "When I announced for the US Senate   I did not have a website up and sent a letter only just prior to the election.   So this time, I had the website up and running eight months before the   election," he noted. 
             
            Apart from Kathuria, the other announced candidates   for lt. governor are state representative Raymond Poe and Kane county recorder,   ex-Gail Borden Library trustee Sandy Wegman.....IANS
              
             
              
              
              
               
              
              
              
              
              
              
              
              
              
              
              
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