Senate Minority Leader-elect John Curran will take
over a caucus that’s more than doubled in size by the majority-party
Democrats.
His goal: “Bring balance to state government.”
“Because
we're going to produce better results with that balance for working
families throughout all Illinois communities,” Curran said in an
interview with Capitol News Illinois on Wednesday, one day after being
chosen as the GOP’s next minority leader.
The
Republican from southwest suburban Downers Grove has served in the
General Assembly since 2017. In January, he’ll take over for Minority
Leader Dan McConchie, a Hawthorn Woods Republican who was chosen for the
post in November 2020, but whose caucus chose a new route by electing
Curran this week.
“There's no pivot,” Curran
said. “We all sit at one table, this is a few people changing seats,
just a couple of different roles as we go forward. But, you know,
really, this is about us being a unified caucus.”
Curran brings a track record of working with
Democrats to his leadership role as the caucus looks to navigate a
likely 40-19 Democratic majority.
“Our
obstacles are the lack, at times, of the majority party to respect and
include the minority party in a meaningful manner in public policy
discussions,” Curran said. “I, as an individual legislator, have found
ways to have some meaningful participation in that process and getting
members of the other side of the aisle to respect my policy objectives
and getting them included in the ultimate product. We need to do that as
a caucus.”He was the lone Republican standing with Democrats in Springfield when
the governor signed a health care reform backed by the Illinois
Legislative Black Caucus in 2021. He was also a lead voice in an effort
to drastically curtail allowable emissions of ethylene oxide in
Illinois, a cancer-causing gas used in medical supply sterilization
that’s been tied to an elevated cancer risk in the Willowbrook area.
“Members of both sides of the aisle worked
collaboratively to solve that public health crisis,” he said. “If you're
not safe in your community, either from a health perspective, or a
public safety, personal safety perspective, you know, we're failing
you.”
When Democrats worked to pass a
transformative energy policy, the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, that
subsidizes renewable and nuclear generators while aiming to take fossil
fuel producers offline in the next two decades, Curran was one of two Republicans casting a “yes” vote.
“Reliable,
sustainable energy is one of the imperatives that we have,” he said.
“We had to have those nuclear plants on. And that's where I came down to
that issue. We need nuclear energy in the state of Illinois. It is
clean. It is reliable. And quite frankly, that is one of the large
advantages we have.”
Other advantages, he said,
are transportation infrastructure, clean drinking water, low-cost
reliable energy and a highly educated workforce.
“We
have some great benefits that attract employers to Illinois,” he said.
“We have a lot of promise, but we also have some regulatory matters we
have to address to continue to grow and attract more investment and more
jobs to Illinois.”
A former assistant Cook County state’s attorney and DuPage County Board vice chairman, he was the lead Senate GOP voice on ethics reforms passed in 2021.
While House Republicans quickly called news conferences to call that
bill watered down and ineffective, Curran at the time appeared with
Democrats and spoke to reporters individually about how he worked with
the majority party to strengthen the bill.
He has also been an opponent of the criminal
justice reform known as the SAFE-T Act, arguing that while he’s not
opposed to ending cash bail, he believes the system that will replace it
has several shortcomings.
“This was an extreme
piece of legislation,” he said. “It was weighted greatly towards the
extremes of their base and it jeopardizes public safety. Republican
involvement in that process will help balance that out. There's no
reason we can't be fair and just and at the same time protect public
safety.”
Aside from a message of balance, he
said he’d be active in Republican fundraising, aiming to diversify
donations from just one or two megadonors. In recent election cycles,
the two major funders of the state GOP were shipping magnate Richard
Uihlein and hedge fund billionaire Ken Griffin, who recently moved his
business to Florida.
While Uihlein’s money has
frequently been used to elevate the party’s more conservative voices,
such as state Sen. Darren Bailey, who lost the election for governor by a
wide margin to incumbent Democrat JB Pritzker, Curran said it helped
the Senate GOP.
“Mr. Uihlein, we were very
fortunate, invested heavily in the Illinois Senate Republican
candidates, and these were not extreme candidates. These were candidates
modeled to represent the districts they were running in,” he said.
“Certainly, we welcome Mr. Uihlein’s investment in our cause, but we
certainly, as we look forward, need to diversify our fundraising.”
Curran’s
interview came one day after former President Donald Trump announced
another bid for the White House in 2024. The former president, who is a
subject of multiple criminal investigations, lost Illinois in both of
his elections by 900,000 to more than 1 million votes.
But Curran said he didn’t think Trump’s announcement would make his job harder.
“Any
national figure should not frame who the Illinois Republican Party is
to our citizens that we seek to represent,” he said. “So, we need to be
strong enough and we are strong enough to present ourselves in a manner
that that leads to meaningful participation in the state.”
That includes reframing the abortion issue, Curran said.
“We
have to do a better job on the abortion messaging,” he said. “You know,
the reality is, what else can we do here in Illinois? The laws of
Illinois are more weighted towards guarantees of the rights to have an
abortion than any other state in the nation. There's no further to go.”