Raoul says ‘I do not want to go to Washington,’ rules out bid for U.S.
Senate
[April 02, 2025]
By Peter Hancock
While many Illinois Democrats wait anxiously to hear whether U.S. Sen.
Dick Durbin will run for reelection in 2026 or step down after five
terms in the Senate, at least one incumbent officeholder appears to be
ruling himself out as a potential successor.
Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul said Tuesday he is not interested
in running for that job, or any other elected position in the
foreseeable future.
“I do not want to go to Washington. I want to stay here,” Raoul told a
luncheon audience at the City Club of Chicago. “And this is no knock on
Sen. Durbin or Sen. (Tammy) Duckworth. I truly believe what I do on a
day-to-day basis (as attorney general) has more impact than what I could
do as U.S. senator.”
Durbin, who turned 80 in November, currently serves as the Democratic
whip in the Senate, the second-highest ranking position in the caucus,
behind Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, of New York. But he is widely
expected to announce in the coming weeks whether he will run for another
term, and there has been rampant speculation in political circles about
who might succeed him.
Raoul, 60, has become the target of much of that speculation in recent
months by joining numerous multistate lawsuits that seek to block many
of President Donald Trump’s executive orders and other policy
initiatives.

Those include Trump’s efforts to halt the recognition of birthright
citizenship that is recognized under the 14th amendment; to freeze the
distribution of federal funds previously appropriated by Congress; to
dismantle the U.S. Department of Education, and to terminate the
employment of tens of thousands of federal employees.
But Raoul, who served 15 years in the Illinois Senate before being
elected attorney general in 2018, said emphatically Tuesday he does not
want to be considered for Durbin’s seat, insisting he can do more to
counteract the Trump administration from the attorney general’s office
than from anywhere else.
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Attorney General Kwame Raoul, left, answers questions from City Club
of Chicago CEO Dan Gibbon during a luncheon appearance Tuesday,
April 1, 2025. (Credit: City Club of Chicago)

“I know that the attorney general’s office, and it’s in every state,
produces more than a single U.S. senator can for its constituency,” he
said. “So why would I leave doing something more important to doing
something — I’m not saying unimportant — but less impactful?”
Durbin himself has come under criticism from fellow Democrats, including
Gov. JB Pritzker, for voting last month in favor of a Republican-backed
spending plan that averted a partial government shutdown but also
provides for implementing massive spending cuts over the next 10 years.
Pritzker called that vote “a huge mistake,” but Durbin defended it by
telling reporters at a March 18 event in Taylorville, “I have never
voted for a shutdown and I didn’t last week.”
In his comments Tuesday, Raoul said the budget vote caused a rift within
Democratic circles nationally, but he said he would not second-guess
Durbin or any of the other Democrats who voted to let the spending
package go through.
“I don’t know how I would have voted on the continuing resolution,” he
said. “But I’m not going to drag anybody over the coals without a very
healthy, well-informed debate about everything that they were facing in
that moment.”
Capitol News Illinois is
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coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily
by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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