“It’s
an ideological battle by the right wing, hiding behind a claim that they
would protect our children — but whose real intention is to marginalize
people and ideas they don’t like,” Pritzker told a joint session of the
Illinois General Assembly gathered in the state Capitol for the first
live address since before the pandemic. “This has been done in the past,
and it doesn’t stop with just snuffing out ideas.”
Pritzker
described “a virulent strain of nationalism plaguing our nation,” and
he criticized “demagogues” attacking school board members and library
trustees.
He also invoked historical parallels to the current climate.
“This is the Land of Lincoln. We have a responsibility to that legacy,” he said.
Then
Pritzker quoted Wiesel, the Holocaust survivor and Nobel Laureate: “We
must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the
victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.”
The governor made his comments after laying out a budget agenda focused on education funding.
“It’s all meaningless,” he said, “if we become a nation that bans books
from school libraries about racism suffered by Roberto Clemente and Hank
Aaron, and tells kids they can’t talk about being gay. It signals to
Black and brown people and Asian Americans and Jews and Muslims that our
authentic stories can’t be told.”
That passage of his speech drew a
standing ovation from Democrats seated on his right in the chamber and
silence from Republicans at his left.
Pritzker then invoked his two college-age children.
“I don’t want them to be lied to,” he said. “I want them to learn our true history, warts and all.”
Running feud
The speech follows Pritzker writing
the College Board, which oversees Advanced Placement exams, to urge the
group not to appease DeSantis by changing the African American studies
course.
Earlier this week, DeSantis doubled down on the issue, threatening to withdraw state support for AP programs.
DeSantis’ threats and Pritzker’s
comments in his Springfield address add fire to a feud between the two
governors ahead of the 2024 presidential election. Both have been
mentioned as potential candidates for their respective parties.
DeSantis is all but expected to jump
into the GOP primary and face former President Donald Trump. Pritzker
has repeatedly said he will be supporting President Joe Biden for
president.
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