Democratic governors hammered Trump before the election. Now they're 
		hoping to work with him
		
		 
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		 [December 20, 2024]  
		By ANTHONY IZAGUIRRE 
		
		ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — They warned about him. Now they'll have to work with 
		him. 
		 
		A handful of prominent Democratic governors are quickly adjusting their 
		approach to President-elect Donald Trump before he takes office, hoping 
		to avoid antagonizing him to ensure they'll have a working relationship 
		with his new administration. 
		 
		They're in a precarious position: adopting caution while also weighing 
		their party's desires to stake out early, and often combative, positions 
		against Trump's agenda. 
		 
		“It’s a combination of fighting like hell if your values are attacked or 
		if your innocent communities or innocent people are attacked. And then 
		on the other hand, you’re trying like heck also to find common ground on 
		things that we could agree on,” New Jersey Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy 
		said in an interview with The Associated Press. 
		 
		Democratic New York Gov. Kathy Hochul is walking a similar tightrope, 
		vowing to push back against Trump on potential policies against 
		reproductive rights, while also appearing hopeful that she and the 
		Republican can work together. 
		 
		Hochul, who slammed Trump during a speech at the Democratic National 
		Convention and was a prominent campaign surrogate for Democrats this 
		year, has said she and Trump spoke at length after his election victory 
		and were able to find common ground. 
		
		
		  
		
		“There are areas where we can work together, like infrastructure where 
		we rely on federal money, and he seems to share my priorities, but also 
		I'm going to stand up for protecting rights, reproductive rights and 
		other rights,” she said at a news conference. 
		
		Asked this week whether as governor she would consider pardoning Trump 
		in his New York hush money criminal conviction, Hochul notably didn't 
		shut down the question. “There is a pardoning process in the state of 
		New York. It is lengthy. It requires a couple of elements. One is 
		remorse," she said, letting out a quick laugh. 
		 
		A New York jury convicted Trump earlier this year on all 34 charges in a 
		scheme to illegally influence the 2016 election through a hush money 
		payment to a porn actor who said the two had sex. 
		 
		Other Democrats have taken decidedly more combative stances. 
		 
		California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a fierce Trump critic, summoned lawmakers 
		back to work this month to allocate more money to the state attorney 
		general's office so it can launch anticipated legal battles against the 
		Trump administration. Newsom's goal, as he put it, is to “Trump-proof” 
		California's progressive state laws. 
		 
		Shortly after Trump defeated Vice President Kamala Harris, Illinois Gov. 
		J.B. Pritzker and Colorado Gov. Jared Polisformed a group called 
		Governors Safeguarding Democracy to “fortify democratic institutions in 
		the states and ensure the rule of law serves all people,” according to 
		the group's website. 
		
		
		  
		
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            Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer speaks, accompanied by Maryland Gov. 
			Wes Moore, from left, Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers, Pennsylvania Gov. 
			Josh Shapiro and New York Gov. Kathy Hochul at a campaign event for 
			Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris in 
			Riverside Park, in Grand Rapids, Mich., Friday, Oct. 18, 2024. (AP 
			Photo/Paul Sancya, File) 
            
			
			
			  
            Still, Polis has put on a balancing act in his relationship with 
			Trump. He's expressed excitement for Trump’s pick of Robert F. 
			Kennedy Jr. to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, 
			saying he was hopeful Kennedy would take on “big pharma and 
			corporate ag.” 
			 
			In Massachusetts, Democratic Gov. Maura Healey has taken a somewhat 
			less confrontational attitude toward Trump than she did four years 
			ago when she was the state’s attorney general. Back then, Healey 
			initiated or joined dozens of lawsuits targeting Trump on everything 
			from immigration policy to health care and environmental issues. 
			 
			Now as governor of a state that Harris easily won but where Trump 
			got more than 35% of the vote, Healey has sounded more muted in her 
			criticism. 
			 
			“I think I’ve spoken quite a bit about Donald Trump and my feelings 
			about him,” Healey told reporters after Trump’s win. “We have to see 
			whether he makes good on what he promised and ran on in terms of 
			Project 2025 or other things," she said, referring a hard-right 
			policy plan. 
			 
			Healey has indicated that state police won’t help enforce violations 
			of federal immigration law — a key Trump priority — but has been 
			less clear about whether she would bar the state National Guard from 
			helping detain those in the country illegally. 
			 
			As co-chair of Harris’ presidential campaign, Michigan Gov. Gretchen 
			Whitmer frequently warned about the dangers of a second Trump 
			presidency, describing him as “deranged” and declaring that his 
			reelection would signify that “we failed as a country.” 
			 
			But after Trump’s victory, the second-term governor has largely 
			stayed out of the spotlight and said little about how she will 
			address some of his policy proposals, such as mass deportations. 
            
			  
			“I know that some of my colleagues have staked out some pretty 
			aggressive strategies,” Whitmer told reporters days after the 
			election. “As I’m thinking about what a Trump administration will 
			mean for our work, I’m trying to focus on where we can find some 
			shared priorities.” 
			 
			Those close to Whitmer describe her approach as a wait-and-see 
			strategy, with hopes of working with the president-elect on areas of 
			shared interest, such as economic development. 
			“We have worked with the Trump administration before and we will 
			figure out how to work with a Trump administration going into this 
			last two years of my term,” said Whitmer. 
			 
			______ 
			 
			Associated Press writers Mike Catalini in Trenton, New Jersey; Jesse 
			Bedayn in Denver; Steve LeBlanc in Boston and Joey Cappelletti in 
			Lansing, Michigan contributed to this report. 
			
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