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Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker blasts Abbott and Trump over GOP redistricting efforts

- - Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker blasts Abbott and Trump over GOP redistricting efforts

Alexandra Marquez August 10, 2025 at 9:00 AM

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker slammed President Donald Trump as a "cheater" and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott as a "joke" days after welcoming Texas Democrats who fled their state in protest of GOP-led redistricting efforts.

"Governor Abbott is the joke," Pritzker, a Democrat, told NBC News’ “Meet the Press” in an interview that aired Sunday in response to Abbott calling Illinois’ congressional map a “joke.”

"He's the one who is attempting mid-decade here — at a time when, frankly, all of us are concerned about the future of democracy. He's literally helping whittle it away and licking the boots of his leader, Donald Trump," Pritzker added.

Pritzker also defended himself against allegations that Illinois' congressional map is gerrymandered. Trump won 44% of the statewide vote in 2024 but Republicans hold only three of the state's 17 House districts.

"We held public hearings, legislative hearings. People attended them. They spoke out. There was a map that was put out. There were actually changes made to the map. And a map was passed, and it was done at the end of the census, the decennial census. So that's how it's done in this country," Pritzker said.

He went on to say, "This is — it's cheating. Donald Trump is a cheater. He cheats on his wives, he cheats at golf, and now he's trying to cheat the American people out of their votes."

Democratic state legislators from Texas have been huddling in Illinois and other blue states after leaving the state to deny GOP leaders a quorum in the state House. Republicans have repeatedly attempted to move forward with their legislative plans, but have fallen short of the 100 people necessary for a quorum.

Abbott and his Republican allies late last month unveiled plans to draw new congressional district lines in the state that could guarantee their party up to five additional safe Republican seats in Congress. The process of redrawing district lines traditionally happens only once a decade, after the decennial census is conducted.

Abbott has clashed with Democrats in the Legislature in the past and GOP leaders in Texas have threatened the Democratic legislators with suspension of pay and civil arrests if they don’t return to the statehouse.

“Democrats act like they’re not going to come back as long as this is an issue. That means they’re not going to come back until like 2027 or 2028, because I’m going to call special session after special session after special session with the same agenda items on there,” Abbott told NBC News in an interview Thursday.

On Sunday, Abbott reiterated that point, telling "Fox News Sunday," "This could literally last years, because in Texas, I’m authorized to call a special session every 30 days. It lasts 30 days. And as soon as this one is over, I’m going to call another one, then another one, then another one, then another one."

Abbott also warned Democrats that they would be arrested if they came back to Texas.

"If they show back up in the state of Texas, they will be arrested and taken to the Capitol," he said. "If they want to evade that arrest, they’re going to just stay outside of the state of Texas for literally years."

Trump has defended Abbott and Texas Republicans' efforts to draw new maps that favor the GOP, telling CNBC's Squawk Box last week, "We have an opportunity in Texas to pick up five seats. We have a really good governor, and we have good people in Texas. And I won Texas."

“I got the highest vote in the history of Texas, as you probably know, and we are entitled to five more seats," he added.

On Sunday, former Attorney General Eric Holder, who has fought gerrymandered state congressional maps as the head of National Democratic Redistricting Committee, also spoke to "Meet the Press" about Texas' redistricting plan and California Gov. Gavin Newsom's proposal for his state to respond in kind.

"What I've said is that we have to protect our democracy now if we ultimately want to be able to save it," Holder said Sunday. "And so taking the reasonable steps that have been proposed in in California, I think it makes a great deal of sense in this moment, a temporary way in which to respond to that which is happening in Texas, with the thought that after this crisis has passed, we get back to the fight against gerrymandering by anybody."

Holder stressed his opinion that any forthcoming Democratic gerrymandering should be a response to Texas, not a permanent way to draw district lines.

"If Texas had not moved in the way that they appear to be doing, California would would not be doing what they're doing," Holder said. "What Democrats are doing is is responsive and is temporary."

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, also addressed her party's effort to redraw the state's congressional map in response to Texas' move in an interview on "Fox News Sunday."

"These times call for fighting fire with fire," Hochul said. "We didn’t ask for this fight. I’m busy governing the state of New York focusing on public safety and affordability. Why are we here today? Because Donald Trump looked at the polls for next year."

Hochul said state Democrats would put forth an amendment to New York's constitution in order to redraw the state congressional map before the next U.S. census is completed, which would need approval from voters.

"We can put it to the people," Hochul said. "But I think the people of this state, after what they’re seeing when there’s one party domination in Washington, and how our costs are going up, we’re losing jobs and people are suffering, they’re going to want us to use every tool in the arsenal to fight back, and that’s what I intend to do."

Vice President JD Vance, who visited Indiana last week to discuss redistricting, blamed Democrats for the GOP push to redraw state congressional maps in an interview that aired Sunday on Fox News. Vance said gerrymandering in blue states like New York, California and Illinois "actually suppresses the will of the people in states like Indiana."

Vance also argued that the large number of undocumented immigrants in California have given the state a disproportionately high number of congressional seats, noting that, although such immigrants are not allowed to vote, they are still counted in the census.

"California has way more House seats than it should because they have such a high population of illegal aliens," Vance said. "So, they get rewarded for welcoming illegal aliens into their state, giving them federal benefits, actually asking the taxpayers of states like Ohio to subsidize them. And then those same taxpayers in Ohio and Indiana and elsewhere, they have fewer congressional representatives because of what California has allowed to happen. That's ridiculously unfair," Vance said.

He added, "The only real way to fight back against it is for us to redistrict in some ways, as aggressively as these hard blue states have done."

Trump last week floated the idea of excluding undocumented immigrants from the next census, even though the Constitution says that all people in the U.S., regardless of citizenship, should be counted in it.

In his "Meet the Press" interview, Pritzker also responded to reports that the FBI granted a request from Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, who is running for re-election in 2026, to help track down the Democratic state legislators who fled Texas.

"There's no federal law that would allow the FBI to arrest anybody that's here visiting our state," Pritzker said. "So it's a lot of grandstanding. That's what this is all about."

Pritzger was also asked about the war in Gaza and a Senate resolution this week to block arms sales to Israel amid the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.

"I think that the resolution that was put up in the United States Senate was an effort to send a message. And it’s the right kind of a message, which is that Israel needs to make sure that the food assistance that ought to go to innocent Palestinians should arrive there," he said. "And they should do everything in their power to prevent the starvation that I think we’ve all seen."

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Source: “AOL Politics”

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