Illinois Democrats see abortion rights as ‘fundamental’ issue in 2024
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[August 21, 2024]
By PETER HANCOCK
& JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
news@capitolnewsillinois.com
CHICAGO – Illinois delegates to the Democratic National Convention
focused their attention Tuesday on reproductive rights, which some
leaders say could eclipse the economy as a defining issue of the 2024
election campaign.
“We want to be able to take care of our families. We want to be able to
have a strong economy,” Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton told reporters after
the Illinois delegation’s breakfast meeting on Day 2 of the convention.
“But I do think the fact that they have decided, the GOP, to attack our
fundamental rights – the first time a fundamental right has ever been
stripped away from us – and taking us backward, I think has mobilized
voters all across the country. So yes, it is a fundamental issue of this
campaign.”
Abortion rights have been a significant issue in U.S. elections dating
back at least to 1973, when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Roe vs. Wade
that women have a constitutional right to an abortion during the first
trimester of pregnancy.
But it soared to the top of the agenda in 2022 when a new, more
conservative court reversed that decision and said there is no federal
constitutional right to abortion, effectively leaving the issue to be
decided on a state-by-state basis.
Stratton said she believes that decision made reproductive rights equal
to the economy as a national political issue.
“The focus on reproductive rights is the economy,” she said. “For women
to be able to work, for women to be able to take care of our children,
for us to be able to put food on the table, reproductive rights and the
ability to decide what's best for our bodies is an economic issue.”
In Illinois, access to abortion services remains virtually unrestricted.
The 2019 Reproductive Health Act declares in statute that access to
abortion is a “fundamental right.” And just months after the overturning
of Roe, Illinois lawmakers passed the Patient and Provider Protection
Act, which extends even more legal protections to ensure access to the
procedure.
But Megan Jeyifo, executive director of the Chicago Abortion Fund, a
nonprofit organization that helps women seeking abortions to defray the
cost of the procedure, noted that 41 other states now ban the procedure
at some point in a pregnancy. She said 14 states ban it “outright.”
She said that resulted last year alone in an estimated 37,000 women
coming to Illinois from other states to seek abortions.
“These bans are not just policies, they are acts of violence,” she said.
Since the overturning of Roe v. Wade, Gov. JB Pritzker, an ardent
supporter of abortion rights who was scheduled to speak at the
convention Tuesday, founded Think Big America, an organization that has
pushed to get abortion rights initiatives on the ballot in states around
the country.
According to a count by the Associated Press, at least 11 states will
have abortion rights measures on their ballots in November.
Pritzker’s organization has not, however, pushed to for a state
constitutional amendment in Illinois, where abortion rights are
currently protected only by statutes that can be repealed by a future
General Assembly if abortion opponents ever win a majority in the
legislature.
Stratton said she did not think a constitutional amendment in Illinois
is a political priority at the present time.
“What I think we need to do right now is to focus our attention where we
are putting it, and that is, first and foremost, making sure that Kamala
Harris and Tim Walz get elected on Nov. 5,” she said.
The delegation also heard Tuesday morning from another group that has
long been a key to its success: organized labor.
“Democrats don’t win without organized labor, and organized labor puts
everything at risk when Democrats don't win,” state Senate President Don
Harmon, of Oak Park, told the delegation. “So we are in this fight
together, and we got to stick together.”
In 2022, Democrats in the General Assembly approved putting a
constitutional amendment on the ballot giving workers “the fundamental
right to organize and to bargain collectively” on issues including
wages, hours, working conditions, economic welfare and workplace safety.
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Megan Jeyifo, executive director of the Chicago Abortion Fund,
speaks to members of the Illinois delegation on Day 2 of the
Democratic National Convention. (Capitol News Illinois photo by
Peter Hancock)
But their support for that amendment has become complicated in recent
months when some of the legislature’s own employees – specifically,
dozens of staff members who work in the office of Democratic House
Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch, of Hillside – tried to unionize.
Legislative employees are currently exempt from state laws governing
unions that represent other public sector employees.
Amid a stalemate, Welch’s employees filed suit against the speaker,
seeking to test the Workers’ Rights Amendment. Welch’s attorneys, citing
floor debate of the amendment, argued for a limited reading of it.
In a legal filing last week, the attorneys wrote those suing Welch “are
fundamentally wrong when they assert that the WRA (Workers’ Rights
Amendment) was intended to extend a ‘universal right’ and be a
‘gap-filling’ measure allowing all Illinois employees to be represented
by a labor organization and bargain collectively…”
Asked about the unionization effort on Monday, Welch said his “record is
clear” and noted he moved a bill through the House last year that would
have allowed staff to unionize.
“I am a big supporter of union rights, but we have a law in place
currently that I have fought to change,” he said. “I passed a bill out
of the house overwhelmingly. I stand by that bill. I'm hoping that the
Senate moves that bill to the governor's desk and the governor signs
it.”
Harmon on Tuesday called the bill that passed out of the House a
“nonstarter” and said he thinks any issues concerning staff in the
speaker’s office should be resolved in the House.
“I think everybody understands, including the staff, that there are
fatal flaws in the bill,” Harmon said. “And again, I hope that the House
leadership and staff will get together and work out their own problems.”
Home state Democrats on display
Monday night’s convention programming ran late, with President Joe Biden
providing the keynote address to thunderous applause and chants of “we
love Joe.”
But Illinois speakers were also featured throughout the evening,
including U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, U.S. Rep Lauren Underwood, and former
Chicago Bull and Olympic head basketball coach Steve Kerr. Hillary
Clinton, who was born in Chicago, also drew raucous applause in an
evening speech.
Durbin likened Trump to a “bad boss,” while Underwood, a registered
nurse, criticized Trump’s handling of the pandemic, saying, “He took the
COVID crisis and turned it into a catastrophe.”
Kerr, who famously buried the game-winning shot in Game 6 of the 1997
NBA Finals at the United Cener to net the Bulls their fifth
championship, said he felt a new energy in the building. He said he was
supporting the Harris-Walz ticket because leaders “must display
dignity,” must tell the truth and should be able to laugh at themselves.
The DNC crowd also celebrated the Rev. Jesse Jackson Jr., the Chicago
civil rights leader who ran for president as a Democrat in 1984 and
1988, becoming the first Black candidate to win a major-party state
primary or caucus. He didn’t speak but drew a standing ovation from the
hometown crowd.
Illinois speakers were set to be on display Tuesday night as well, with
Gov. JB Pritzker and former President Barack Obama scheduled to address
the United Center crowd.
Pritzker, at Illinois’ Monday breakfast, teased a potential run for a
third term in 2026 – noting he’d be the longest-serving Democratic
governor in Illinois history simply by serving out his current term.
“So I'm not suggesting that I want to try to beat Jim Thompson's 14-year
record,” he said. “My wife's not here, and I don't want anybody talking
to her about this, but she is my term limit. So if all of you want to
talk to her and convince her one way or another, by the way, you're
welcome to do that.”
Capitol News Illinois is
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