Pritzker emerging as one of Trump’s most vocal Democratic critics
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[February 13, 2025]
By Ben Szalinski
SPRINGFIELD — Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker made a “special announcement” on
Friday: Illinois is renaming Lake Michigan to “Lake Illinois” and
annexing Green Bay, Wisconsin, “to protect itself against” the Green Bay
Packers.
The video shared by his campaign “was intended to inject some humor at a
moment when I think people don’t find much that’s going on humorous,”
Pritzker told reporters Monday. It poked fun at President Donald Trump
for renaming the Gulf of Mexico to Gulf of America and pledging the U.S.
will acquire Greenland.
Pritzker never referenced Trump in that video, but it was the governor’s
latest method to drum up attention toward his criticism of the
president. Pritzker has emerged as one of the most vocal Democrats
speaking out against Trump since the Jan. 20 inauguration.
Pritzker told reporters in Springfield at the end of January he’s
pushing Illinois’ Democratic members of Congress to be “persistent”
about communicating the effects of Trump’s policies because he believes
national media organizations don’t prioritize governors and state
leaders the same as D.C. politicians.
National media attention hasn’t been a big issue for Pritzker, however.
Since Trump was sworn in, Pritzker has done two CNN interviews, an MSNBC
Sunday show and a profile in Puck — a national political newsletter.
He’s often asked in the interviews how Democrats can infiltrate a
Trump-driven news cycle.
“We need to make sure that we’re communicating properly,” Pritzker said
in a CNN interview on Jan. 26. “I think that’s one of the big challenges
that we had in the last election: our message wasn’t right.”
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Pritzker helped organize a call at the end of January between some
Democratic governors and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer of New
York to encourage Senate Democrats to more forcefully push back on
Trump, according to The New York Times.
Stephen Maynard Caliendo, a political science professor at North Central
College in Naperville, said while Pritzker has always been a vocal
leader, it seems to have “ramped up” in Trump’s second term.
“It appears to me that he sees an opportunity to capture the American
imagination a bit,” Caliendo said in an interview.
Another vocal Democratic voice, California Gov. Gavin Newsom, has been
responding to wildfires near Los Angeles, which has forced him to tamp
down on criticizing Trump to ensure federal disaster aid gets directed
to his state, Caliendo said.
Asked Monday how he has sets himself apart from other Democrats in
responding to Trump, Pritzker said he sees negative impacts already
coming from Trump’s policies.
“People have been promised something by this Trump administration that
he is not delivering,” Pritzker said this week. “They’ve been promised
lower prices. They’ve been promised lower grocery prices. They’ve been
promised lower gas prices. They’ve been promised more affordability and
that is precisely the opposite of what’s happening.”
Weighing in on the issues
Just about every major story coming out of the Trump White House has
been fair game for Pritzker. That includes the president’s reaction to a
crash between an American Airlines plane and Black Hawk helicopter in
Washington, D.C.
“While times of tragedy should be focused on mourning the victims and
getting answers to their loved ones, we face the unfortunate reality
that we must be honest with the nation about: Donald Trump is unfit to
lead during moments of crisis like this,” Pritzker said in a statement.
Trump blamed the crash on efforts to hire a more diverse workforce,
including people with disabilities, in the federal government.
Pritzker noted that he is governor of one of the busiest airspaces in
the country around O’Hare and Midway airports and listed eight questions
he wants the federal government to answer, including about staffing at
the Federal Aviation Administration, Elon Musk’s role in personnel
changes at federal agencies and if top Trump administration officials
plan to cooperate in the investigation.
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“There’s no way to read that other than it’s an attempt to sort of gain
national prominence,” Caliendo said, adding Trump gave Pritzker an
opening to position himself as a progressive alternative to Trump.
Other issues Pritzker has focused on directly affect Illinois. He’s
defended the state’s “sanctuary” laws for immigrants, slammed Trump for
proposing tariffs that would likely raise prices for Illinois consumers
and quickly organized a news conference to explain the effects of a
proposed federal spending freeze on Illinois.
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Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker speaks at the Democratic National
Convention in Chicago on Aug. 21, 2024. Pritzker was considered as
former Vice President Kamala Harris’ running mate but wasn’t
selected. The speech allowed Pritzker to introduce himself to a
national audience. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Andrew Adams)
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“I have to say that the last 48 hours have been among the most bizarre
and terrible since I took office back in the middle of Trump’s first
term,” Pritzker told CNN’s Anderson Cooper after the federal spending
freeze was announced then rescinded.
The governor has also often criticized the role of “President Musk” in
Trump’s administration. The billionaire was put in charge of an advisory
organization, the “Department of Government Efficiency,” which has
played key roles in shutting off federal funding sources and
controversially sought records with sensitive data about Americans.
Amid all the criticism, Pritzker has said there’s been no communication
between Illinois and Trump or the White House.
“I’m looking forward to that call; certainly have a lot of things I’d
like to say directly to him,” Pritzker said last week in Springfield.
Looking to 2028
Pritzker, who turned 60 in January, was vetted as a possible running
mate for former Vice President Kamala Harris during the 2024 campaign,
but he wasn’t a well-known or popular choice among Democratic voters. A
NPR/PBS News/Marist poll last July found just 7% of Democrats thought
Pritzker should be Harris’ running mate.
Pritzker has downplayed any interest in running for president when asked
by reporters but admitted last August he was “torn” about leaving
Illinois to become vice president should he have been selected by Harris
and won the election.
“You don’t get on that list unless they think you actually could be
president of the United States and do the job if you had to,” Pritzker
told reporters in August.
Governors have good paths to the presidency because of their executive
experience overseeing a state government, Caliendo said. If Pritzker is
interested in running for president in 2028, there will be more obvious
signs than him criticizing Trump, he added.
“If he starts heading out to a lot of visits to South Carolina and Iowa
and New Hampshire, that’s when you really start to get tipped off,”
Caliendo said. “Right now, this could be laying the groundwork for that,
but it isn’t that out of the ordinary that somebody who feels as
protected, I think, as he does to make himself one of the chief critics
of the president.”
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Forbes estimates Pritzker to be worth around $3.7 billion, making him
one of the wealthiest politicians in U.S. history. He self-funded his
way through both of his campaigns for governor with hundreds of millions
of dollars. But if he runs for national office, he will need more help,
Caliendo said.
“What we need to be looking for besides these very sort of public things
over the next two years is how that’s going,” Caliendo said. “In other
words, what kind of money is Pritzker raising? What kind of coalitions
is he putting together that can be fundraising? Because as wealthy as he
is, it’s hard to fund a presidential campaign out of his own pocket.”
While Pritzker hasn’t solicited any big donations to his state campaign
organization, in 2023 he launched an abortion rights advocacy group that
has funded ballot measure campaigns in Nevada, Ohio and Arizona. The
organization, Think Big America, is sometimes called a “dark money”
group because it isn’t required to report its donors – though Pritzker
himself is its main financial backer.
Pritzker hasn’t made any decisions about running for a third term as
governor in 2026, though he didn’t announce his 2022 reelection campaign
until July 2021.
Being an incumbent isn’t as important as it used to be for a
presidential candidate to be successful, Caliendo said.
“Trump has changed a lot about American politics and I think one of the
things he changed is that you don’t have to have any governmental
experience,” Caliendo said. “But JB Pritzker has lots of it so simply
being out of position or spending all his time running for president as
opposed to running a state while he’s running for president, I don’t
think that’s going to be as much of a disadvantage as it would have been
prior to 2015.”
Capitol News Illinois is
a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government
coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily
by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |