As DNC opens in Chicago, state leaders tout Illinois as a ‘model of
Democratic success’
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[August 20, 2024]
By HANNAH MEISEL
Capitol News Illinois
hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com
CHICAGO – In announcing Chicago would host of the 2024 Democratic
National Convention more than a year ago, national party leaders
referred to Illinois as a key part of the “blue wall” of Midwestern
states crucial to President Joe Biden’s 2020 election.
Instead of choosing a venue in a swing state, as they had done for the
last two decades, Democrats selected a city and state long dominated by
Democratic politics and policies. And while Illinois and Chicago in
particular have become conservative media shorthand for out-of-control
progressive government, Illinois Democrats on Monday morning sought to
cast their brand of politics as an exemplar for the nation.
Gov. JB Pritzker, who was instrumental in landing the DNC in Chicago,
kicked off the Illinois delegation’s Monday breakfast at a downtown
hotel by thanking elected Democrats in the room “for the work that
you've done to make this the greatest Democratic Party that Illinois has
ever had and in the entire country.”
Before making a quick exit to speak to delegates at two other states’
Democratic Party breakfasts, Pritzker rattled off a litany of
legislation passed during his 5 ˝-year tenure as governor so far. The
governor acknowledged the Democratic supermajorities in the General
Assembly that helped pass items ranging from a minimum wage hike to $15
an hour starting next year to a $10 million state investment to pay off
a projected $1 billion in medical debt for low-income Illinoisans.
Republicans, he reminded the group, “voted against all of that.”
“It's almost as if Republicans don't want working families to succeed,”
Pritzker said, pivoting to the attack dog role he’s been rehearsing for
months and criticizing the GOP for being “obsessed with other
things...like explaining away Donald Trump's 34 felony fraud
convictions.”
But instead of focusing on Trump and other Republicans on Monday,
Democrats tried to keep the spotlight on their positive vision for what
their party can accomplish.
"This convention is our opportunity to share our successes, to set the
agenda, and to show the entire country why Illinois is leading the way,”
DNC Host Committee Executive Director Christy George, who most recently
worked in Pritzker’s office on budget and economic issues, told the
breakfast crowd.
State Rep. Lisa Hernandez, D-Cicero, who serves as chair of the Illinois
Democratic Party, echoed those sentiments as she called Illinois “a
model of Democratic success” and “the beacon of progress in the
Midwest.”
Illinois is increasingly a blue island in the mostly red center of the
country, and Democratic politicians have leaned into that identity in
recent years.
On the heels of Trump nominating his first U.S. Supreme Court justice
weeks into his first term in early 2017, Democrats in the General
Assembly began pushing for abortion protections in the event that a
conservative majority on the court might someday overturn Roe v. Wade.
By the time that happened five years later, Illinois Democrats had
approved a series of laws shoring up reproductive rights just as
surrounding states began banning or severely restricting abortion
access.
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Gov. JB Pritzker opens the Illinois delegation's Monday breakfast at
the Democratic National Convention. (Capitol News Illinois photo by
Andrew Adams)
Later this week, Pritzker will highlight Illinois’ position as a
sanctuary for abortion seekers and providers in an event hosted by Think
Big America, the progressive advocacy organization he founded last fall.
The group, staffed by the governor’s political team, has so far been
involved with abortion rights ballot measures in Ohio, Nevada, Arizona
and Montana.
Illinois also stands out as the only noncoastal state to have banned
assault-style weapons. Democrats quickly pushed the “Protect Illinois
Communities Act” through the legislature early last year after a mass
shooting at an Independence Day parade in Highland Park left seven dead
and dozens more injured in July 2022.
Illinois Democrats highlighted the law during an event Monday in
conjunction with the anti-gun violence organization named for former
U.S. Rep. Gabby Giffords, who has spent more than a decade advocating
for gun control measures after surviving an assassination attempt early
in her third term in Congress in 2011.
Recalling the chaos of the Highland Park parade, State Rep. Bob Morgan,
D-Deerfield, who went on to become the lead sponsor of Illinois’ assault
weapons ban, said it was an “opportunity to turn our pain into purpose.”
While Illinois is among a mix of Midwestern states that have not adopted
“right to work” laws that bar employers from requiring workers to be
union members to keep their jobs.
But Illinois Democrats went a step further, putting a constitutional
amendment on the ballot that bans the state from adopting right-to-work
laws in the future. Illinois voters approved the “Workers Rights
Amendment” in 2022.
And in a move that continues to generate attacks from conservatives,
Illinois became the first state to completely eliminate its cash bail
system last year. Abolishing cash bail was just one part of a
wide-ranging 2021 criminal justice reform law pushed by the Illinois
Legislative Black Caucus in the wake of the police killing of George
Floyd in 2020 and a summer of protests that followed.
The law went unmentioned during the Illinois delegation’s official
breakfast Monday morning, but House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch,
D-Hillside, highlighted the legacy of Black political power in Illinois,
stretching back to the founding of the NAACP in Springfield following
the 1908 race riots in the city.
Welch traced the trajectories of major Black activists and elected
officials with ties to Illinois through time, including the Rev. Jesse
Jackson, who he said inspired generations of young Black Americans to
get involved in politics with his oft-recited speech adapted from an
earlier poem that featured the phrase “I am somebody.”
“I believed I was somebody, and I stand before you today as the first
Black speaker of the Illinois House,” he said.
Capitol News Illinois is
a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state government. It is
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It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert
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