Morgan County Primary Results: Winners, Vote Totals Tracked Live
Greg Hacker won the Republican Morgan County Commissioner primary with roughly two-thirds of the vote as April 1 tallies settled several contested local races.

Greg Hacker claimed the Republican nomination for Morgan County Commissioner on Tuesday, pulling roughly two-thirds of the vote and locking in a November general-election berth that will directly shape how the county governs public safety, infrastructure, and land use.
Hacker's margin was among the headline results Morgan County voters tracked through Wednesday as precincts reported tallies from the March 31 primary. The ballot also included contested races for county sheriff and county clerk, two offices with distinct daily reach for Jacksonville residents: the sheriff controls how law enforcement is staffed and funded, while the clerk administers elections, including the certification process now under way for Tuesday's ballots.
Party turnout patterns from March 31 are already drawing attention from local campaigns. In Morgan County, down-ballot primaries are often decided by a relatively small number of votes across less-populated precincts, making participation gaps between neighborhoods a significant planning factor for general-election outreach in both parties.
At the statewide level, Associated Press tallies for gubernatorial and U.S. House primaries ran alongside the Morgan County numbers, giving local voters a way to compare their precinct-level returns with broader Illinois trends as totals accumulated through the counting period.
With primary winners now established, the county election authority moves into the formal canvass and certification of results. Any race that falls within Illinois's automatic-recount threshold will extend that timeline before November matchups are finalized.
The commissioner and sheriff contests warrant particular attention through the certification window. Both offices carry direct influence over active local policy conversations in Morgan County, including a proposed data-center moratorium and capital spending on county roads and public facilities. How those seats are filled in November will determine whether those proposals advance.
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