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Illinois’ Democratic leaders vow vigorous defense of personal rights and public policies under a second-term Trump

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Illinois’ Democratic leaders vow vigorous defense of personal rights and public policies under a second-term Trump
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Illinois’ Democratic leaders promised a vigorous defense — and potential court action — against any moves by President-elect Donald Trump to try to erode personal liberties or withhold federal funds for the state during his coming four-year tenure.

But as Trump campaigned on plans for mass deportation of immigrants, a rolling back of transgender rights and climate change controls, a likely GOP Congress considering a federal abortion ban and elimination of the Affordable Care Act, Illinois Democrats acknowledged they could not predict what the unpredictable former president will do once he’s in office.

“Chaos, retribution and disarray radiated from the White House the last time Donald Trump occupied it,” said Gov. JB Pritzker, a vehement critic of Trump both while he was in office and out of it the past four years. “Perhaps this time may be different.”

But Pritzker vowed in the wake of Tuesday’s election results that he’d fight any federal efforts that conflict with Illinois’ policies or rights of its residents.

“To anyone who intends to come take away the freedom, and opportunity, and dignity of Illinoisans, I would remind you that a happy warrior is still a warrior,” the second term governor said. “You come for my people, you come through me.”

Illinois found itself a virtual political Midwest island in supporting Vice President Kamala Harris and running mate Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota, whose electoral votes also went for the Democratic ticket. Illinois’ politicians braced for what impact a second Trump administration would bring, especially given his vows of retribution against political enemies amid his history of inflammatory rhetoric attacking Chicago.

“It’s immigrant rights. It’s reproductive rights. It’s basically everything I know and I love and I stand for. That’s what I’m afraid of,” said state Sen. Celina Villanueva, a Democrat from Chicago.

Villanueva said Trump’s win must lead to more organization among pro-immigrant groups and better education that “people still have rights in this country.” Beyond that, she said, “everything is up in the air.”

‘There’s going to be less restraint’

Attorney General Kwame Raoul said Democratic attorneys general across the nation had been coordinating over the last few months, preparing for the potential of a second Trump presidency and discussing when they might ask the courts to step in.

Raoul cited Trump’s history on immigration issues, the general uncertainty over the fate of the Affordable Care Act, and the potential weakening of worker classification protections benefiting employers and resulting in the loss of overtime or benefits as issues he’s keeping an eye on. Trump’s first term was also riddled with controversy in which he became the first president to be impeached twice, including on accusations he incited an insurrection on Jan. 6, 2021, when his supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol as part of a deadly riot.

Elizabeth Calderon of Chicago’s Pilsen neighborhood listens in as people attend a “Know Your Rights” gathering organized by immigrant advocates in Pilsen on Nov. 7, 2024. The rally was held to demonstrate solidarity, reassure immigrant communities, and prepare to protect families and communities after former President Donald Trump was elected for a second term on Nov. 5, 2024. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)

“There’s going to be less restraint and less respect for the boundaries that the American people and the rule of law have recognized for decades,” Raoul said, an acknowledgment of Trump’s pledge to surround himself with loyalists and a recent decision by a conservative U.S. Supreme Court that broadened presidential immunity for “official acts.”

Brandon Lee, a spokesman for the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, said the group wants to work with Raoul’s office to make sure that state laws such as the Trust Act, which generally prohibits local police from participating in federal immigration enforcement, is on solid ground even if Trump tries to supersede it.

“We know that they’re going to try to find unique ways to try and attack or destabilize our communities,” Lee said.

Brian Johnson, the chief executive officer of Equality Illinois, said he’s worried the Trump administration might try to pull federal funding from hospitals that practice gender-affirming care or from schools following Illinois’ law that requires teaching about the contributions of LGBTQ+ people.

And Sarah Garza Resnick, president of the abortion rights-supporting Personal PAC, questioned whether the new administration would seek to ban mifepristone, which when used with another drug, terminates early pregnancies.

But Pritzker sought to assuage concerns the new administration in Washington, D.C., would attack personal rights in Illinois, saying protections were placed in state law with a presidency like Trump’s in mind.

“Illinois will continue to be a refuge for those whose rights are being denied elsewhere, women seeking reproductive health care, immigrants searching to work hard for a better life, LGBTQ Americans looking for welcome and protection, and people with disabilities whose civil and human rights are under attack,” he said.

Still, Pritzker acknowledged he had met with his senior staff the day after the election and spoke with other governors and was gathering “a list of things that we may need to address” in state law.

“There are many people whose lives and livelihoods are at risk and there are many people who cried at the result because they know what impact it may have on their families,” the governor said.

“But I feel like a lot of that work has been done over the last five-and-a-half years to protect the people of Illinois from something, you know, terrible happening at the federal level or some attack on Illinois residents,” he said.

Fiscal questions

Along with the social concerns are questions of federal fiscal policy toward Illinois, primarily over transportation funding in Chicago, the nation’s crossroads.

One project of concern is the fate of the CTA’s longtime plans to extend the Red Line by 5.6 miles south to 130th Street.

Passengers wait for a train on the platform at the CTA Jackson Red Line station on Aug. 28, 2024. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
Passengers wait for a train on the platform at the CTA Jackson Red Line station on Aug. 28, 2024. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

The CTA is counting on a variety of federal funding for the project, including a large, nearly $2 billion grant that would make up almost 40% of the project’s expected cost. The grant has been promised but CTA has not yet signed the formal agreement guaranteeing the money. The agency has, however, already made plans to raise $950 million from a local transit tax financing district, commit state money to the project and issue $1.99 billion in bonds.

Trump’s election and the potential of a Republican-led House and Senate puts pressure on the CTA to lock in the formal agreement before a change in administration throws the commitment into jeopardy.

“With any change in administration, if you’re in the middle of negotiating something that’s taken months, years to get to resolving, you should try to wrap it up because you don’t want further delay,” said Stephen Schlickman, former executive director of the Regional Transportation Authority.

CTA spokeswoman Tammy Chase said the agency expects to have the agreement formalized by the end of the year or early 2025, which is before Trump is set to be inaugurated.

Once the agreement is signed, Congress must still regularly approve the money. It would be unusual for federal lawmakers to fail to approve agreed-on dollars, but Schlickman said if that were to happen there would be little recourse for the CTA to get the expected funding.

The CTA has relied on similar federal funding for a massive overhaul of the Red Line’s north end. The agency formalized the federal agreement in that case in early January 2017, shortly before Trump took office the first time. Throughout Trump’s first administration and the Biden administration, the CTA received all of the expected money on time, Chase said.

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