Pritzker makes abortion rights central issue
Send a link to a friend
[August 31, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker
said Tuesday that abortion rights will be a central issue in the 2022
election, not just in his bid for reelection but in races up and down
the ballot.
That includes races for Congress and the Illinois Supreme Court as well
as the governor’s race and state legislative contests.
Speaking at a news conference with officials from political advocacy
arms of Planned Parenthood organizations, Pritzker said the U.S. Supreme
Court’s decision in June overturning Roe v. Wade changed the focus of
the 2022 elections and gave voters – particularly women – a new
motivation to vote this fall.
“But make no mistake, the right wing may have taken away abortion rights
from half of all Americans, but they've unleashed a tsunami of
determined women voters and their allies who will lift up pro-choice
candidates and take down the ultra-conservative fundamentalists this
November,” he said.
Pritzker’s comments came as the general election cycle is just getting
into full swing and the two major party candidates try to define what
the central issues of the campaign should be.
So far, Pritzker’s Republican challenger, state Sen. Darren Bailey, of
Xenia, has tried to focus the race on issues of law and order, including
the high rate of violent crime in Chicago, as well issues like taxes,
the economy and Pritzker’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Bailey’s lieutenant governor running mate, Stephanie Trussell, was
scheduled to hold a news conference Tuesday in Chicago to focus on what
the campaign called “the Pritzker administration’s failure to address
rising crime and businesses shutting down and fleeing communities across
Illinois.”
And on Monday, Bailey released a statement calling on Pritzker to
apologize to Illinois students and parents for closing schools and
cancelling extracurricular activities during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The U.S Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health
Organization appears to have made abortion a top issue with Democrats in
the mid-term elections. A Pew Research poll released last week showed 71
percent of Democrats view abortion as an issue that is “very important”
to their vote. That was up 25 percentage points from March, before the
Dobbs decision.
[to top of second column]
|
Gov. JB Pritzker speaks at a
campaign-sponsored news conference Tuesday, saying abortion rights
will be a central issue in the 2022 elections. (Credit:
Blueroomstream.com)
In Kansas, voters in that conservative state on Aug. 2 overwhelmingly
rejected a proposed constitutional amendment that would have given the
state’s legislature broad new authority to regulate abortion.
Elsewhere, so-called “trigger laws” quickly took effect in at least 16
states, including those neighboring Illinois, that have either banned or
imposed severe restrictions on abortion access, making Illinois an
outlier in the Midwest while giving Democrats here a hot-button social
issue on which to run.
“At least 26 states in total are expected to move to ban abortion in the
coming months, putting 40 million women and people who can get pregnant
at risk,” said Alexis McGill Johnson, president of Planned Parenthood
Action Fund. “Hundreds of thousands of people can no longer access the
abortion care they need in their own states, and they are fleeing to
places like Illinois to get care.”
Immediately after the Dobbs decision, Pritzker announced that he would
call the General Assembly into special session to consider measures to
expand abortion access in Illinois. Among the measures discussed is
allowing nurse practitioners to perform the procedure in order to
increase the number of abortion providers and giving legal protection in
Illinois to providers in other states who may face disciplinary action
or prosecution for performing the procedure.
Those plans, however, have been put on hold, and Pritzker indicated
Tuesday that lawmakers might wait until the 2023 regular session before
taking action, when it takes only a simple majority, rather than a
three-fifths super majority, to pass legislation that takes immediate
effect.
“So, there's some things that can be done, could be done with a
supermajority, some things that take a simple majority,” he said. “So
again, the legislature is working through all those things.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government and distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
|