Illinois
Illinois AG Raoul filed 63 lawsuits against Trump with a 93% win rate. The state defends assault weapons ban and immigrant protections.
Latest: July 3, 2026 Latest Brief14 Illinois Laws ActiveJuly 3, 2026Democrats control the governor’s office and hold supermajorities in both chambers of the Legislature. Governor JB Pritzker is running for a third term. The state has gone Democratic by double digits in every presidential election since 1992.
Illinois is using that power. AG Kwame Raoul has filed more lawsuits against the Trump administration than any other state attorney general. The Legislature let a $315 million voucher program die and passed the first statewide cash bail elimination in the country.
Kwame Raoul is suing Trump once a week
AG Raoul has filed 63 lawsuits against the Trump administration as of early 2026. Courts have ruled in his favor 93% of the time. Only two cases have been dismissed outright.
$6.6 billion in federal funding protected for Illinois through AG litigation
The wins are specific. Raoul blocked the federal government from suspending SNAP benefits for 1.9 million Illinois recipients. He led the lawsuit against Trump’s military deployment to Chicago, and the Supreme Court sided with Illinois in December 2025. He joined four states suing over a $10 billion child care funding freeze and separately sued over $600 million in cut public health grants.
Eighteen preliminary injunctions or temporary restraining orders remain in place. Each one represents a federal action that a court found likely illegal.
”We are winning. Not every aspect and not every lawsuit, but overwhelmingly we are successful. And what winning looks like is having the spigot of funding reopened where there have been efforts to freeze funding or condition funding.”
AG Kwame RaoulRaoul’s office has framed every lawsuit around a single argument. The federal government cannot condition funding on political loyalty or bypass Congress to cut programs.
Chicago absorbed 50,000 migrants and $638 million in costs
Texas Governor Greg Abbott began busing migrants to Chicago in August 2022. At the peak, 12 to 15 buses arrived daily. Migrants slept on the floors of police stations and O’Hare Airport.
The city ended its 60-day shelter guarantee. No buses have arrived from Texas since December 2024. But the federal government opened a new front: DHS announced “Operation Midway Blitz” to round up people without legal status in the Chicago area.
Pritzker refused to authorize National Guard troops for the operation. He called it unconstitutional and said Trump was trying to normalize military presence in civilian areas before the 2026 midterms. The Supreme Court agreed with Illinois, ruling in December 2025 that the federal government had no authority to deploy troops to execute laws in the state.
| Cost source | Amount |
|---|---|
| Chicago vendor contracts | $638.7 million |
| Additional 2025 city budget | $150 million |
| Statewide projected total | $2.5 billion |
Trump’s DOJ is trying to kill Illinois’s assault weapons ban
The Protect Illinois Communities Act bans the sale, transfer, and future acquisition of assault weapons, high-capacity magazines, and certain accessories. It passed in 2023. It remains in effect.
A federal district court ruled the ban unconstitutional in November 2024 and entered a permanent injunction. The state appealed to the Seventh Circuit, which stayed the district court ruling. Oral arguments were scheduled for September 2025.
Trump’s Department of Justice filed an amicus brief in June 2025 supporting the NRA-backed challenge to Illinois’s ban. The federal government is actively working to overturn a state law that its own courts have not yet resolved.
The Supreme Court declined in June 2025 to hear challenges to assault weapons bans from other states, leaving those bans intact. That is not a ruling on the merits. It means the Seventh Circuit decision will likely determine whether Illinois’s ban survives.
If the Seventh Circuit upholds the ban
- Illinois keeps its assault weapons restrictions
- Other Midwest states gain legal precedent for similar laws
- Supreme Court may still take up the issue later
If the court strikes it down
- Assault weapons sales resume immediately in Illinois
- Other state bans face stronger legal challenges
- Trump DOJ uses the precedent against remaining state bans
Illinois killed its voucher program after $315 million walked out the door
The “Invest in Kids” tax credit scholarship program ran from 2018 to 2024. It diverted $315 million from the state’s General Revenue Fund to private school tuition. The Legislature refused to renew it. The program sunset.
$315 million diverted from public revenue to private school tuition over six years
The FY2026 budget added $307 million to K-12 through the evidence-based funding formula. That is the first time since 2020 the increase fell below $350 million. The state board of education had requested $497 million.
Over 1.3 million students still attend schools in underfunded districts. Those districts are disproportionately low-income and serve Black and Latino students.
Voucher supporters have not quit. Advisory referenda on vouchers appeared on the March 2026 primary ballot in several counties. The Illinois Education Association called the referendum language misleading and urged voters to reject them.
Cash bail is gone and crime went down
Illinois became the first state to fully eliminate cash bail when the Pretrial Fairness Act took effect on September 18, 2023. Judges now decide detention based on risk of reoffending or flight, not whether someone can write a check.
The predictions were loud. Opponents said ending cash bail would unleash a crime wave. Illinois State Police data says the opposite happened. A Loyola University study found that only 3% of defendants released pretrial committed a new violent crime.
The Trump administration has threatened to cut funding or force changes to the law. Top Democrats in Springfield said in January 2026 they would consider narrow adjustments if a judicial report recommends them, but no wholesale rollback.
One gap remains. Electronic monitoring data is hard to analyze because probation and pretrial services fall under the judicial branch, which is exempt from state transparency laws. Better data would strengthen the law’s defenders.
Protect yourself right now
-
Check your voter registration. Verify at elections.il.gov. The November 2026 general election includes the governor’s race and an open U.S. Senate seat. Verify your status at the Illinois State Board of Elections.
-
Know what your AG is fighting for. Raoul’s 63 lawsuits protect specific programs. If you receive SNAP benefits, child care subsidies, or public health services, check whether your funding has been restored. The AG’s office publishes case updates.
-
Watch your school board. Voucher referenda are showing up on county ballots. Your local school board and county party committees decide whether these appear. Show up at meetings before the language is finalized.
-
Understand your pretrial rights. If you or someone you know is arrested in Illinois, cash bail no longer applies. Detention is based on risk assessment, not ability to pay. The public defender’s office can explain the process.
-
Call the governor’s office. 217-782-0244. Ask about the $190 million gap between what schools need and what the budget provides. Ask whether the state will fight the DOJ’s intervention in the assault weapons case.
Show Up Locally
South Suburban Relentless
Rally · Indivisible
14700 LaGrange Rd, Orland Park, IL, 60462
Are we asking a lot having you all come out on July 4th? We don't think so. We all realize what is at stake. This peaceful protest will be different...in a good way. South Suburban Relentless will be.
Volunteer at the Greater Chicago Food Depository
Community Event · Indivisible Greater West Loop
4100 W Ann Lurie Pl, Chicago, IL, 60632
Take some time to provide support to the 1 in 5 of our Chicago neighbors being impacted by food insecurity. Join Indivisible Greater West Loop as we serve our community at the Greater Chicago Food.
Candidate Meet n Greet with Jennifer Todd & Macon County Democrats!
Community Event · Organize Illinois 2026
234 W Cerro Gordo St, Decatur, IL, 62522
Jennifer Todd (IL-15 Candidate) & Macon County Democrats are hosting a candidate meet n greet over coffee and donuts to discuss what matters most to you this campaign! Join us at the Painters Hall in.
We The People: Popsicle & Ice Cream Social (NEW DATE!)
Community Event · Indivisible Greater West Loop
South Throop Street & West Monroe Street, Chicago, IL, 60607
NEW DATE! Thank you for your patience as we secured a new date after our weather postponement! Join us for a family-friendly summer gathering celebrating community, creativity, and connection! We’ll.
Good Trouble Lives On (GTLO) Community Forum: Election Survival
Community Event · Capital City Illinois Indivisible
S Martin Luther King Jr Dr, Springfield, IL, 62703
Coined by civil rights icon Congressman John Lewis, Good Trouble is the act of coming together to take peaceful, nonviolent action to challenge injustice. The power of collective nonviolent action.
Sip, Chat , and Act with Marsie Geldert-Murphey!
Community Event · Organize Illinois 2026
This event’s address is private. Sign up for more details, Collinsville, IL, 62234
Sip, Chat, & Act is a monthly gathering with Marsie Geldert-Murphey, candidate for Illinois State Senate District 56, where community members come together over coffee, build unity, and turn.
Taco Tuesdays at Zapata's in Fairview Hts.
Community Event · Indivisible Monroe County Illinois
4660 N Illinois St, Fairview Heights, IL, 62208
Taco Tuesdays started because there wasn't time to get to know each other during regular meetings of the Southwest Illinois Democratic Women. Now it's a monthly conversation about the future of.
Decatur Branch NAACP: Uplift The Community Event
Decatur Branch NAACP
This event’s address is private. Sign up for more details, Decatur, IL, 62522
Join as us as we uplift Decatur with resources and information!
What Changed Recently
Illinois Launches a Department of Early Childhood July 1. 14 Laws Now Active.
Illinois activates 14 new laws on July 1, 2026, including a new Department of Early Childhood starting full operations and a permanent cocktails-to-go program.
Corbett Stays on Illinois Ballot. Bailey Camp Drops Signature Challenge.
Independent Illinois governor candidate Collin Corbett will remain on the November ballot after the Bailey campaign withdrew a challenge to 20,000 of his
Illinois Law Blocks Out-of-State Access to Abortion Patients' Records
Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker signed a law June 24 shielding abortion patients' digital medical records from out-of-state subpoenas as ban states pursue cross-border cases.
Illinois Sen. Linda Holmes Ends Her 20-Year Career, Citing Multiple Sclerosis.
Illinois Senate Democrat Linda Holmes filed to remove her name from the November 2026 ballot on June 22, citing the toll of nearly four decades of multiple sclerosis.
States Are Passing Gun Safety Laws That Congress Will Not Touch
Connecticut, Rhode Island, Virginia, and other states passed assault weapons bans and gun reforms in 2025-2026 while Congress did nothing.
Your State Attorney General Might Be the Most Important Person Fighting Trump Right Now
Democratic AGs have filed 100+ lawsuits against the Trump administration and won 82% of resolved cases. Here are the results by state.
Voter Registration and Resources
Don't see a letter on your issue? Text RESIST to 50409 to write your own to any official.