Prizker CNI exclusive: ‘We’ve turned this battleship around’

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Happy Friday morning. Springfield got some much-need rain this week and is expected to hit 75 degrees today. Not bad for early March.

Gov. JB Pritzker was in the capital city this week. He honored 28 Illinois schools for academic performance at an event at the governor’s mansion and later signed a steel beam that will be installed at the new Springfield Multimodal Transportation Center.

The governor also sat for an interview with our Brenden Moore and Ben Szalinski earlier this week. And that’s our lead topic:

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: In a wide-ranging interview with Capitol News Illinois, Gov. JB. Pritzker touted progress in his first seven years but said there’s “more work to do” economically as he ramps up his bid for a third term. We’ll publish further updates throughout the day.

KEY QUOTE: “The point is: we’ve turned this battleship around in the right direction, and now we’re accelerating in that direction,” Pritzker said, talking of Illinois’ economic headwinds. “But remember: Some of these problems took literally 50 and 75 years for Illinois to get into the problem. And it’s going to take a few years to come out of them.”

STATE OF THE STATE: In his State of the State address last month, Pritzker described Illinois’ economy as “remarkably resilient” and “forging ahead toward accelerating growth and expansion.”

But a recent Moody’s Analytics report prepared for the nonpartisan Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability said Illinois’ economy is in “a precarious spot” and would “underperform” the Midwest and nation this year. The report also said wage and job growth would likely remain a few steps behind the region and nation.

REPUBLICAN ATTACKS: Those lagging economic indicators and the state’s relatively high tax burden (the nonpartisan Tax Foundation ranks it 38th in state tax competitiveness) have opened Pritzker up to attacks from Republicans.

Repeating some Pritzkerisms of years past, the governor cast his opponents as “doom grifters” and “carnival barkers” who say “everything is terrible and we’re falling off a cliff.” “And the truth is, they continue to say that despite the progress that we made,” Pritzker said. “It’s almost like they’re rooting against the state of Illinois.”

“THERE’S MORE WORK TO DO,” Pritzker said. “And I certainly did not suggest… that we’ve gotten to where we want to be, or that we’ve caught up even to the entire United States. But we are doing better than we were when I took office, and it is accelerating in the right direction.”

PRITZKER’S POINTS OF PROGRESS: Despite a hiccup with COVID-19 and notwithstanding present federal uncertainty, Pritzker touts progress: the books are balanced, the bill backlog is gone. The state has also built up the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity and the public-private Illinois Economic Development Corporation to attract businesses in emerging industries like electric vehicles and quantum computing. Illinois’ credit rating, once near junk, has been upgraded 10 times collectively by multiple rating agencies.

Pritzker added: “Illinois was growing at less than half of the growth rate of the nation” when he took office in 2019, with the state bogged down by years of unbalanced budgets, a budget impasse that left more than $17 billion in unpaid bills and weak state-level business attraction efforts.

“We had all these terrible fiscal situations; a long-term, low growth mode of the state and no economic development efforts,” Pritzker said. “So all of that needed to be worked on.”


Soldier Field, Chicago
Soldier Field in Chicago. (Photo by Willian Justen de Vasconcellos on unsplash)

ON THE BEARS: “I think the Bears had not set themselves up well for getting something done. And so, we’ve tried to help them along in this session, and I believe that we’re going to be successful. And the Bears seem to like what’s being put forward.”

Pritzker on the Chicago Bears


Border Patrol agent vest
A Border Patrol agent in Chicago. (Capitol News Illinois file photo by Andrew Adams)

ON WHETHER IMMIGRATION AGENTS WILL RETURN: “But I’ll just say one other thing having not heard whether they’re coming back or when: We are nevertheless prepared for it. And I think the people of the city and across the state of Illinois showed their willingness to stand up for each other.”

Pritzker on immigration

Brenden Moore
Capitol News Illinois reporter Brenden Moore stands along the third-floor rail outside the Illinois House in the Capitol. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Jerry Nowicki)

Moore: Pritzker embraces ‘abundance’ agenda with housing, nuke proposals

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: With major housing and nuclear proposals, Gov. JB Pritzker is embracing an “abundance” agenda, writes Brenden Moore. The governor’s observation that he’s repeated at least twice: “Everything’s too damned expensive.”

“ABUNDANCE AGENDA”: Moore explores a decades-old paradox: many places run by Democrats who champion the issue of affordability also happen to be among the least affordable place to live. This is often the result of what journalists Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson labeled in their 2025 nonfiction book “Abundance” as “chosen scarcities.”

WHAT’S PRITZKER DOING? After years of focusing on the demand side of the ledger with policies like increasing the minimum wage, Pritzker had added some supply side solutions to his arsenal. He wants more nuclear energy and more “middle housing.”

WHAT WE’RE WATCHING: Nuclear power has bipartisan support.

Statewide preemption of local zoning authority? That will be a tougher sell.

WHY IT MATTERS: With rumors continuing to swirl about the governor’s 2028 hopes, wins in those areas would build momentum.

HOW WE GOT HERE:
Pritzker to propose statewide zoning laws to spur homebuilding, limit local control
What does Gov. JB Pritzker’s nuclear energy executive order do?

Read Brenden Moore’s column

 

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March 6, 2026 at 10:30AM

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