In Will County, Pritzker calls proposed cuts to Social Security ‘irresponsible, cruel, and chaotic’

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Romeoville — Gov. JB Pritzker and Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton continued their “Standing Up for Illinois” statewide tour on Thursday with a stop in Romeoville alongside U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood and advocates from Will County senior and disability organizations.

Speaking at the Ovation senior community center operated by Senior Services of Will County, Pritzker and Stratton leveled sharp criticism of President Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency for proposed cuts to Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.

“It’s irresponsible, it’s cruel, and it’s chaotic,” Pritzker said. “Social Security is built on our shared responsibility to protect one another, to care for the generations that came before us, as well as the generations that will come after us. ”

Musk has called Social Security, a program created in 1935 in reaction to the Great Depression, “the greatest Ponzi scheme of all time.”

The Trump administration announced plans on March 13 to eliminate the ability for the Social Security Administration to handle claims by phone, requiring recipients to do business online or make in-person appointments at field offices when they need assistance with claims.

Simultaneously, DOGE has also announced plans to shutter offices and layoff SSA employees as what Musk calls a cost-cutting measure.

Critics of the plan have pointed out that requiring in-person meetings to handle claims and verify recipient’s identities will overload an already strapped system and place an extra burden on elderly and disabled individuals, who make up the majority of Social Security recipients.

Governor JB Pritzker, Lieutenant Governor Julianna Stratton, Representative Lauren Underwood, Will County Seniors CEO Brianne Hetman, Illinois Department on Aging Director Mary Killough, AgeGuide CEO Marla Kronczak, and Disability Resource Center Independent Living Advocate Riley Spreadbury gather for a photo at the Ovation Center on the Standing Up For Illinois tour. 
Thursday, March 20, 2025.

Governor JB Pritzker, Lieutenant Governor Julianna Stratton, Representative Lauren Underwood, Will County Seniors CEO Brianne Hetman, Illinois Department on Aging Director Mary Killough, AgeGuide CEO Marla Kronczak, and Disability Resource Center Independent Living Advocate Riley Spreadbury gather for a photo at the Ovation Center on the Standing Up For Illinois tour. Thursday, March 20, 2025. (Jessie Molloy)

“What Elon and President Trump are trying to disguise as operational changes will directly effect the way seniors, people with disabilities and others in our communities access their most basic needs,” Stratton said.

Trump and Musk are breaking a “sacred promise” with the American people that “your hard work will be rewarded with dignity and respect when you retire and if you become disabled,” Pritzker said.

“They’re gutting the Social Security Administration, firing staff and closing offices across the nation. I’d call it idiotic if I didn’t suspect that this was actually part of a plan to throw people off of Social Security,” he said.

People could expect longer wait times for assistance with their benefits, improper denial of claims and delayed or missed benefit checks, he said.

The governor said over 2 million Illinois residents rely on Social Security and 3 million use Medicaid.

“If they cut what I think they will cut, which is the Medicaid expansion that was implemented under the Affordable Care Act, that’s about $7.5 billion dollars annually,” Pritzker said, when asked how the state plans to combat potential cuts.

Our number one priority now is to fight to keep these programs from going away, because they are easier to defend than to get back.”

—  Gov. JB Pritzker

The state could work to boost funding for free clinics, but some critical access hospitals in the inner city and rural areas would be forced to close, he said.

“We would provide as much money as we can, but what we have is not enough,” Pritzker said. “I am deeply concerned. This is devastating. If we don’t speak up now, people will die.”

Pritzker noted that this problem would only be exacerbated if plans to eliminate the Department of Education and its funding to the states were implemented, something Trump was anticipated to do Thursday after the governor finished speaking.

On top of the $7.5 billion the state receives in Medicaid funding, an additional $3.5 billion comes in each year to fund school programs, including initiatives to support low-income students and special education.

“Education should be one of our top priorities,” Pritzker said. “But we can’t replace that funding, especially on top of the $7 to $8 billion dollars we’d need to make up in Medicaid. We’ll be in dire straits.”

Pritzker called on the public to speak out against the cuts and actions being taken by the Trump administration by protesting and by calling and writing to members of Congress.

“We can’t control what the federal government does,” he said of the state government. “We can only react. Our number one priority now is to fight to keep these programs from going away, because they are easier to defend than to get back.”

Underwood, D-Naperville, said that if the Democrats in the House of Representatives stand united against Republican initiatives, it would not take many GOP defectors to halt the bills’ progress, due to the small margin the majority has in the chamber.

“We only need three,” she said, before pointing out there are three Republican representatives from Illinois, at least three Republican representatives from districts that voted for Kamala Harris in November, and three upcoming Republican vacancies in the House.

Representative Lauren Underwood speaks at the Standing Up For Illinois tour at the Ovation Center in Romeoville on Thursday, March 20, 2025.

Representative Lauren Underwood speaks at the Standing Up For Illinois tour at the Ovation Center in Romeoville on Thursday, March 20, 2025. (Jessie Molloy)

“I’m not telling you which three to pick, which three Republicans to reach out to, but the key is to channel our advocacy right now in a way that will protect our values and protect these vital services and programs that our families are counting on,” she said.

“Standing up for Social Security is not just right its in our own best interest and this fight is for all of our futures,” Stratton said.

Thursday’s appearance in Romeoville was the second stop of Pritzker’s Standing Up For Illinois tour, aimed at highlighting the impact the Trump administration’s proposed budget cuts could have on Illinois residents.

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March 20, 2025 at 08:07PM

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