Illinois Democratic Rep. Danny Davis says he won't seek reelection after
15 terms in Congress
[August 01, 2025]
By SOPHIA TAREEN and CHRISTINE FERNANDO
CHICAGO (AP) — U.S. Rep. Danny Davis announced Thursday that he won't
seek reelection next year after 15 terms in office, making him the
latest longtime Illinois Democrat to announce their retirement from
Congress.
Davis, 83, sits on the powerful House Committee on Ways and Means. First
elected in 1996, he represents a solidly Democratic district that
includes downtown Chicago, large sections of the city's South and West
Sides, and inner ring suburbs.
"We're not going to go away," Davis said, flanked by his wife, local
pastors and congressmen at a parking lot in East Garfield Park on
Chicago's West Side. “But the time has come.”
Davis’s retirement adds to an already unsettled 2026 congressional
landscape in Illinois, where there are now four open seats.
His announcement comes months after longtime U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky
said she won't run again and U.S Sen. Dick Durbin, the Senate’s No. 2
Democrat, decided he won’t seek a sixth term in 2026. There are two
other open congressional seats, with U.S. Reps. Raja Krishnamoorthi and
Robin Kelly planning to run for Senate.
Davis emphasized the importance of passing the torch to young people
“who can grow into leadership” and said he will campaign for them in
2026. He warned about “tyrants like Donald Trump” and efforts to undo
his and other Democratic officials’ health care advocacy efforts.

“There are efforts right now underway to try to diminish Medicare,
Medicaid,” he said Thursday. “If those programs are seriously
diminished, thousands and thousands and thousands of people will not
have access to health care.”
Davis has easily won reelection for decades, enjoying his status as a
respected elder statesman. Known for his deep and distinct voice, he
remained visible in his district, which includes large low-income
pockets. However, his last two primaries were challenging, with
questions about his age and whether he remained the right fit for the
district. During the campaign, he fended off questions about his acumen
by playing up his experience and using humor.
“I’m not running to be the quarterback for the (Chicago) Bears. I’m not
running to carry the torch in the Olympics,” he told the Associated
Press last year. “I’m running to use my knowledges, my expertise, my
intellect.”
Davis — among the most liberal members of Congress and a member of the
Congressional Black Caucus — has made issues of racial equality central
to his political career.

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U.S. Rep. Danny Davis announces he'll retire after finishing his
15th term during a news conference outside his 7th Congressional
District office on the West Side of Chicago, Thursday, July 31,
2025. (Ashlee Rezin/Chicago Sun-Times via AP)

Davis was among the House Democrats who took part in a 2016 sit-in
to demand a vote on gun control measures. His advocacy took a
personal turn later that year when his 15-year-old grandson was
fatally shot in Chicago after a dispute over basketball shoes.
He also pushed for legislation that would ban racial profiling,
saying he was a victim of it himself when he was pulled over by two
white police officers in Chicago. He was co-chair of the
Congressional Black Men and Boys Caucus, which was formed in 2013
after the death of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, the Florida teenager
who was shot and killed during a confrontation with a neighborhood
watch volunteer.
Over the years, he has also pushed for legislation to help former
prison inmates find jobs and has helped inmates in his district by
sponsoring workshops. He has spent Christmas Day with inmates at
Cook County Jail.
Born in Arkansas to a sharecropper father, Davis worked as a school
teacher and Civil Rights activist. Before Congress, he served as a
Chicago city alderman and Cook County board member. In 1991, he ran
unsuccessfully for mayor of Chicago against Mayor Richard M. Daley.
“I rose from the cotton fields of Arkansas," Davis said. “I used to
pick cotton. The hands that picked cotton ended up picking
presidents. I’ve known five of them.”
He actively sought other offices while in Congress too.
He contemplated another Chicago mayoral run in 2010 after Daley
announced he was leaving office. In 2009, he threw his name in the
hat for Cook County Board president, filing as a candidate for
Congress and for board president. He eventually dropped the board
president bid.
Word of Davis' retirement set off a scramble among potential
replacements, including on Thursday when Davis endorsed longtime
state legislator, Rep. La Shawn Ford of Chicago.
Davis called Ford “young, energetic, super ready," calling it “my
honor, my pleasure, my delight" to endorse him.
Several others have floated the idea of running, including Chicago
City Chicago Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin, who unsuccessfully
challenged Davis last year, and businessman Jason Friedman.
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