By Illinois Review
Republican gubernatorial candidate Ted Dabrowski is under fire after turning a solemn memorial for conservative leader Charlie Kirk into a campaign rally – complete with profanity shouted in front of children and families.
The incident, combined with new revelations about his advisors’ involvement in a political smear campaign against fellow Republican Darren Bailey, has sparked outrage among grassroots conservatives who say Dabrowski’s campaign has lost all sense of moral direction.
The memorial, held in Yorkville – a longtime conservative community – was meant to honor Kirk’s legacy of faith, family, and conservative leadership. Attendees included community leaders, families, and supporters who had gathered to celebrate the life of a man who inspired thousands of young Americans through Turning Point USA and his unapologetic Christian witness.
But instead of a message of unity, attendees were stunned when Dabrowski – invited to offer brief remarks – turned his appearance into a political speech for his gubernatorial campaign.
According to multiple witnesses and cell phone video, Dabrowski repeatedly shouted “G**dammit! G**dammit!” from the stage. The outburst shocked families in attendance, many with small children.
Just moments earlier, Dabrowski had declared, “People ask me a lot, am I a man of faith? Absolutely. Pope John Paul? Yes, I’m a man of faith.” He went on to joke about his “main sin,” saying:
“I’ll give you my main sin. I moved one block away from a church, and yet I’m always one minute late. It’s so close I figure I’ve got plenty of time.”
The comment, meant as self-deprecating humor, was followed moments later by his profanity-laced tirade – leaving many questioning both his sincerity and his temperament. Notably, Dabrowski’s campaign edited the profanity out of the video posted to his social media.
Maria Davis, who attended the event, shared her frustration publicly on Facebook:
“I attended a memorial for Charlie Kirk about a month ago. Darren and Aaron also attended and were invited to speak along with Ted. Again, it was a memorial for Charlie Kirk. Ted proceeded to turn it into a campaign stop for his gubernatorial campaign along with spewing foul language as he spoke to a group that had lots of young families. Very inappropriate and unprofessional.”

The Yorkville incident isn’t Dabrowski’s only controversy. His campaign has already been rocked by reports that two of his closest advisors – former state representative Jeanne Ives and Florida-based Chicago political operative Dan Proft – were directly involved in leaking a confidential campaign document from 2022 in an effort to smear Darren Bailey.
The document, which was never intended for public release, surfaced on a network of websites controlled by Proft’s longtime business associate, Brian Timpone, before being weaponized by Proft and Ives to attack Bailey publicly.
The coordinated smear has infuriated Republican donors and grassroots leaders who see it as a betrayal of conservative unity.
Now, after the Yorkville outburst, many see a pattern – of arrogance, poor judgment, and a lack of moral restraint. For a candidate who constantly invokes his Catholic faith and traditional values, Dabrowski’s behavior has many conservatives questioning whether his campaign represents those principles in practice.
The controversy also comes amid criticism of Dabrowski’s campaign scheduling. Just hours after Bailey’s team announced that he and his wife, Cindy, had lost their son, daughter-in-law, and two grandchildren in a tragic helicopter crash in Montana, Dabrowski’s campaign announced a six-day swing through southern Illinois – Bailey’s political home base.
Under intense public backlash following Illinois Review’s reporting, Dabrowski eventually postponed part of the trip, claiming it was “out of respect for the Bailey family.” But by then, the political damage was done.

Between the leaked document scandal, his profanity-laced tirade at a memorial, and his tone-deaf campaign decisions, Ted Dabrowski’s bid for governor has been defined less by faith and leadership – and more by chaos, disrespect, and questionable judgment.
In the end, it wasn’t just the profanity that offended so many – it was the hypocrisy. A man who claims to stand for faith, family, and conservative values turned a moment of remembrance into a stage for self-promotion and disrespect. Ted Dabrowski may talk about faith, but in Yorkville, his words – and his actions – told a very different story.






