Pritzker positions himself at forefront of Trump opposition by invoking
Nazis’ rise to power
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[February 26, 2025]
By Hannah Meisel
SPRINGFIELD – A month into President Donald Trump’s second term in the
White House, Gov. JB Pritzker last week warned that the breakneck pace
at which the Trump administration has been remaking federal policy could
be a harbinger of something darker.
“It took the Nazis one month, three weeks, two days, eight hours and 40
minutes to dismantle a constitutional republic,” the governor said near
the end of his annual combined State of the State and Budget Address on
Wednesday.
Pritzker’s speech to a packed Illinois House chamber marked the start of
the usual monthslong process of crafting a new state budget for the
coming fiscal year. More than any budget or policy proposal, though, the
governor used his annual public address to take aim at Trump in a way
other high-profile Democrats have largely shied away from: discussing
the rise of Adolf Hitler.
“The seed that grew into a dictatorship in Europe a lifetime ago didn’t
arrive overnight,” he said. “It started with everyday Germans mad about
inflation and looking for someone to blame.”
Pritzker, Illinois’ third Jewish governor whose ancestors fled religious
persecution in Ukraine in the late 1800s, said he didn’t “invoke the
specter of Nazis lightly” but cited his experience working with
survivors to help found the Illinois Holocaust Museum in suburban Skokie
as basis for his warning message.

“I’m watching with a foreboding dread what is happening in our country
right now,” he said. “The authoritarian playbook is laid bare here: They
point to a group of people who don’t look like you and tell you to blame
them for your problems. I just have one question: What comes next?”
As the governor presented his seventh budget proposal last week, he
nodded to the very real possibility that it could all be blown up by the
Trump administration and a Republican-controlled Congress.
“For all the Illinoisans watching at home, let me be clear: this is
going to affect your daily lives,” Pritzker said. “Our state budget
can’t make up for the damage that is done to people across our state if
they succeed.”
Instead of his usual post-Budget Address whistle-stop tour of Illinois
promoting his agenda, the governor spent Tuesday in the U.S. Capitol
with Illinois’ congressional delegation “to press the Trump admin on the
more than $1.8 billion they are withholding from Illinoisans,” according
to a social media post from a spokesman.
It’s unclear whether Pritzker’s fiery rhetoric will help him pass the
budget blueprint and legislative agenda he laid out last week in
Springfield. But it did garner him national attention, including on The
Rachel Maddow Show and earning millions of ‘likes’ on TikTok.
The governor insisted he wasn’t “speaking up in service to my ambitions
– but in deference to my obligations.”
But the spotlight moment comes as years of speculation over the
governor’s political future as a presidential candidate may come to a
head later this year as Pritzker decides whether to run for a third term
as governor in 2026.
‘On the federal chopping block’
The second-term governor went on to urge political leaders to “be strong
enough to learn from” history in order to prevent repeating it.
But Pritzker also cited more recent history, drawing parallels between
Trump’s move to slash federal spending and a budget fight that crippled
much of Illinois government under his predecessor, Republican Gov. Bruce
Rauner.

This year marks a decade since Rauner’s political fight with Democratic
majorities in the General Assembly launched the state into a two-year
budget impasse that decimated social services in Illinois. It also
ballooned Illinois’ unpaid bill backlog to $17 billion and earned the
state multiple credit downgrades.
“Here in Illinois,10 years ago we saw the consequences of a rampant
ideological gutting of government,” Pritzker said. “It genuinely harmed
people. Our citizens hated it. Trust me: I won an entire election based
in part on just how much they hated it.”
Pritzker, who is now the nation’s second-wealthiest elected official
after Trump, said in his speech Wednesday that tech billionaire Elon
Musk – the richest person on earth – plans to “steal Illinois’ tax
dollars and deny our citizens the protection and services they need.”
“They say they’re doing it to eliminate inefficiencies,” Pritzker said
of Musk’s so-called “Department of Government Efficiency.” But only an
idiot would think we should eliminate emergency response in a natural
disaster, education and healthcare for disabled children, gang crime
investigations, clean air and water programs, monitoring of nursing home
abuse, nuclear reactor regulation, and cancer research.”
Despite campaign promises to not touch entitlement programs, Trump has
endorsed congressional Republicans’ plans to shrink federal spending to
pay for an extension the president’s 2017 tax cuts over the next decade
at a cost of $4.5 trillion. Advocates worry the GOP framework would
leave Congress little choice but to gut Medicaid, a joint program
between states and the federal government that supports 3.3 million
Illinoisans who are either low-income, have disabilities or meet other
qualifications for benefits.
Illinois is one of 40 states plus the District of Columbia that have
adopted Medicaid expansion programs authorized under the Affordable Care
Act that extend Medicaid coverage to low-income childless adults who
don’t otherwise qualify for the program.

But like other states, Illinois has a trigger law in place that would
effectively cancel its Medicaid expansion program if federal
reimbursement falls below 90%, making it likely more than 700,000
Illinoisans would lose health coverage if congressional Republicans
target ACA expansion first.
Pritzker warned Medicaid cuts would mean rural hospitals in Illinois
would be shuttered.
Meanwhile the governor said popular programs like Meals on Wheels “are
on the federal chopping block” as the Trump administration briefly
blocked routine federal payments for many services last month.
Even so, Pritzker last week presented no contingency plans for federal
funds potentially disappearing. Instead, he proposed a $55.2 billion
budget that would see discretionary spending – including state programs
targeted at everything from economic development to violence prevention
– grow at about 1% from the current fiscal year, which ends June 30.
Fixed costs, including pension payments, K-12 education spending and
state employee health care costs – drive the rest of the $2 billion in
spending growth from this year’s enacted budget.
Reaction to invoking Nazi history
While some members of the General Assembly’s influential Latino and
Black caucuses were less than thrilled with Pritzker’s budget proposal,
some in his own party praised the framework – including moderate members
who held up last year’s late night budget vote in protest.
But reactions were mixed when it came to the governor invoking the rise
of the Nazis in 1930s Germany. Many Democrats clapped when Pritzker
urged learning from history to avoid repeating it.
Rep. Bob Morgan, D-Deerfield, who co-chairs the General Assembly’s
Jewish Caucus, and whose great-grandparents perished in the Holocaust,
was among them.
“I think we are seeing some ignoring of those rising elements of
extremism and hate,” he said. “The confidence that white supremacists
feel to march in state capitals around the country is relatively recent,
and it’s absolutely happening, and I think we have to call it out … That
was the lesson I’ve always taken from the Holocaust – it’s that people
didn’t speak up.”

To critics’ ears, however, Pritzker’s speech signaled he has his eye on
the White House in 2028.
The governor was vetted as a possible running mate for former Vice
President Kamala Harris’ presidential run last summer. He’s also
expanded his political influence in recent years, spending big for
Democrats in other states and even launching a nationwide “dark money”
501(c) organization focused on progressive policies, starting with
abortion protections.
Rep. Ryan Spain, R-Peoria, warned that the governor’s rhetoric may put
Illinois squarely in the Trump administration’s crosshairs.
“He is not going to be running against Donald Trump in 2028 and he needs
to understand that as soon as possible, because there’s a lot at risk
for the state of Illinois by continuing to play the part of antagonizer
to the president of the United States,” he said.
Even Democrats who had previously been more outspoken in their
opposition to Trump have been more muted since the president’s
inauguration last month.
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Gov. JB Pritzker enters the House chamber on Wednesday, Feb. 19,
2025, for his annual budget address. (Capitol News Illinois photo by
Andrew Adams)

California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who just last summer made references to
the spread of fascism in 1930s Europe in his 2024 State of the State
speech, needs federal disaster funding to help the state recover from
January’s devastating wildfires. Earlier this month Newsom met with
Trump about disaster relief, thanking the president and his
administration for their assistance.
Trump has directly threatened funding to blue states in the last month,
including directly to Maine Gov. Janet Mills last week over her state’s
laws aimed at protecting transgender people from discrimination.
Federal funding to Illinois has also been threatened in Trump’s second
term. Though courts blocked the president’s 2017 attempt to withhold
funding from “sanctuary cities,” an executive order the president issued
on his first day back in office calls for the same halt to funding on
any local government that has enacted policies restricting local law
enforcement agencies from cooperating with federal immigration
enforcement actions.
And earlier this month, Trump’s Department of Justice sued Chicago, Cook
County and Illinois over their “sanctuary” laws.
Illinois’ senior U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, with whom Pritzker has publicly
disagreed with over politics in the past, last month was roundly
criticized for saying he didn’t know who would be leading Democrats’
charge against Trump.
“I can’t answer that. Give us a little time,” he told Semafor. “This is
brand new.”
Pritzker on Wednesday used his bully pulpit to challenge his fellow
Democrats, who are facing intraparty criticism for failing to do much to
stop or slow the Trump administration’s consolidation of power.
“There are people – some in my own party – who think that if you just
give Donald Trump everything he wants, he’ll make an exception and spare
you some of the harm,” Pritzker said, launching into an abbreviated
version of a story he’s told publicly several times about the early
weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020.

In the governor’s telling, he offered to praise Trump on Sunday news
shows in exchange for N95 masks and ventilators. But when the supplies
arrived, the crates were instead filled with surgical masks and broken
BiPAP machines, which are most commonly used to treat sleep apnea and
other breathing disorders.
“Going along to get along does not work,” he said. “Just ask the
Trump-fearing red state governors … Those Trump state – red state
governors are dealing with the same cuts that we are, and I won’t be
fooled twice.”
Aside from accusations that Pritzker used inflammatory comparisons to
grow his national platform, some Republicans said they were offended
Wednesday. Six GOP House members left their desks on the House floor,
walking toward the back exit when the governor began talking about the
1978 Nazi march on Skokie.
Though most of them were members of the ultraconservative “Illinois
Freedom Caucus,” Rep. Jeff Keicher, R-Sycamore, one of the more moderate
Republicans in the General Assembly, said his walkout was spurred by
“emotional frustration” borne of what he felt was a sort of cognitive
dissonance in Pritzker’s speech.
“We still have all this money to spread all over the place,” Keicher
said of Pritzker’s spending plan, even as social services in Illinois
face persistent funding challenges. Keicher cited ongoing state funding
challenges to services including domestic violence shelters, nursing
homes and “a seven-year backlog” for adults seeking ” for developmental
disabilities services.developmental disabilities services in Illinois –
though the state’s official estimate has fallen to roughly five years.
“And then I hear the governor lay into what he’s calling Illinois Nazis,
and the way that we slip into Nazism is by having high inflation,” he
continued. “As a man who has stood up repeatedly in his public role and
defended the plight of Israel and Jews in this country – to be called a
Nazi is beyond the pale.”

David Shyovitz, the director of Northwestern University’s Crown Family
Center for Jewish and Israel Studies and an associate professor of
history, said careful study of how Hitler consolidated power through
“constitutional means” – “basically uprooting and eventually eliminating
any legal impediments that stood in their way” – can be instructive.
But he said Nazi Germany is not the only example of strongmen leaders
seizing power, and pointed to Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán,
whom Trump has said he personally admires.
While Shyovitz said invoking Hitler has a “certain rhetorical thrust,”
he said there is a risk to “devaluing what made that historical period
so horrible” and warned that overuse, particularly in online discourse,
could zap it of its power.
“As a historian, I think it’s appropriate for us to try and learn from
the historical past and apply it in the present,” Shyovitz said. “As a
voter, I would be worried that using that example is going to end up
alienating the very people that you need to convince.”
‘It’s not a scare tactic’
Rep. Terra Costa Howard, D-Glen Ellyn, the chair of the New Democrats
caucus, a group of more than 20 more moderate Democrats in the Illinois
House, agreed. She said she understood why Pritzker would choose to
invoke Nazism because “it is the only reference in modern times that
people can connect to.”
But she said Democrats will see more success messaging against Trump if
they put the focus on the ways in which decisions from the White House
affect Americans.
“If we lose Medicaid dollars, everybody knows somebody in a nursing
home,” Costa Howard said. “That is going to have a direct impact to
people we know and love in our community. People are not making that
connection. We need to explain what that is. It’s not a scare tactic. It
is a reality. And that is what people need to hear.”
In an op-ed for MSNBC and a longer podcast interview with one of its
hosts published Monday, Pritzker agreed with Costa Howard’s assertion,
saying Democrats should focus on “affordability” instead of expending
the party’s rhetorical power on “threats to democracy.”

To that end, the governor also backed an array of legislative proposals
in his speech last week, including cracking down on pharmaceutical
benefit managers in an attempt to hold down prescription drug costs.
Pritzker’s campaign last week also put out a poll showing that of
Trump’s recent moves, Illinoisans are most concerned about rolling back
former President Joe Biden’s initiative to lower drug costs.
Another Pritzker-backed idea would build on last year’s Healthcare
Protection Act, requiring insurers to reimburse travel costs to get to
medical appointments at certain distances and barring insurance
companies from spending less than 87% of premiums on health care
services.
Another affordability-focused proposal would have Illinois follow 24
other states that already allow community colleges to offer
baccalaureate degrees. As proposed, the program would authorize
community colleges in Illinois to offer four-year degrees specifically
tailored to meet the employment needs of their communities, including in
fields like health care, early childhood education or advanced
manufacturing.
Rep. Fred Crespo, D-Hoffman Estates, said he’s “excited” about that
proposal after having twice passed legislation in the House to allow
Harper College in Palatine to offer nursing degrees, only to see the
bills die in the Senate.
“So getting the governor’s backing on this – I’m hoping really moves the
needle because I think really that that’s where the future of education
is,” he said, noting that enrollment in Illinois’ community colleges has
increased more than the national average in recent years.
Pritzker’s other proposals range from progressive priorities like
further expanding abortion care availability and protections to ideas
that could appeal to voters in both parties, including banning cell
phones during instructional time in Illinois schools. At least 11 other
state legislatures have passed legislation on school cell phone use in
the last two years.
Improving and then selling off unused state property, lowering the
petition signature threshold for a township consolidation ballot
question and regulating cryptocurrency ATMs are also on the governor’s
list.
Bridgette Fox and Jade Aubrey contributed.
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.
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