After his second-term inauguration amid a frenzied “lame duck” legislative session last week, Gov. JB Pritzker took the global stage this week at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland.
The governor and high-ranking members
of his staff joined a bipartisan delegation of U.S. politicians and
world business leaders with the goal of “promoting Illinois as a major
player on the world stage,” Pritzker said in a call Thursday morning
with media outlets back home.
In particular, Pritzker touted
Illinois’ Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, or CEJA—which aims to make
Illinois’ energy grid reliant on 100 percent renewable sources by
2050—and the $45 billion capital infrastructure plan known as Rebuild
Illinois.
“We’ve made it very
clear when looking for nation-leading legislation, and leadership on
fighting climate change and clean energy developments, that you don’t
need to stop at the coastal states,” Pritzker added.
CEJA also set a goal of
having one million electric vehicles on Illinois roads by 2030. The
state is climbing steadily toward that goal, with the number of electric
vehicles registered in the state increasing from 8,255 to 57,311 over
the past five years.
A recent report from the union-tied Illinois Economic Policy Institute
noted that an increase to 1 million EVs by 2030 could potentially cause
a decrease in state and federal transportation revenues exceeding $1
billion over the next decade.
Since transportation infrastructure
revenues are heavily reliant on motor fuel taxes, the revenue loss could
reach $4.3 billion when factoring in increased fuel efficiency, the
report noted.
When asked if he had a plan for making
up the lost revenue, Pritzker said he didn’t find anything in the
report “unusual” and the state continues to encourage EV adoption
through tax credits.
“It’s not like Illinois is doing
something that is deleterious to the future of infrastructure funding
that isn't already happening all across the nation,” he said, without
identifying other potential revenue sources.
Pritzker said he has also been
meeting with business and world leaders to discuss bringing more
business to Illinois. In particular, he cited the field of hydrogen
energy as a potential area of growth in Illinois.
On Tuesday, Pritzker visited the
Wieland manufacturing facility in Vöhringen, Germany, an industry leader
in manufacturing and converting copper and copper alloys.
Wieland currently has eight locations in Illinois, including in East Alton which the governor recently visited.
“I wanted to make sure they know that
I’m at their service if there are things that I can do to enhance their
operations,” Pritzker said. “They have many other divisions…and so
bringing more of the rest of their company to Illinois is an opportunity
I’d like to take advantage of.”
In a news release, Wieland CEO Erwin
Mayer said the company is “contributing to the revitalization of
manufacturing in the U.S.A. and serving the critical industries in the
fields of semiconductors and electric vehicles.”
“We look forward to continuing the
collaboration with Gov. Pritzker and his administration on further
developing these critical supply chains,” he said in the release.
On Wednesday night, Pritzker said, he
had dinner with the U.S. ambassador to Switzerland and the Swiss
ambassador to the U.S., discussing potential business relationships.
The governor has also been touting
two laws he signed last week: a ban on the state’s assault weapons and a
measure protecting abortion providers and out-of-state patients, as
well as gender-affirming care.
“In my state, people want to ban
assault weapons. We just did that. Protect a woman’s right to choose. We
just did that,” Pritzker said during a widely reported panel discussion Tuesday. “Those are not happening at the federal level and should, but we’re doing it at the state level.”
Pritzker mentioned those measures in
the media call Thursday while referring to himself as the “state’s best
chief marketing officer.”
“I’m making sure that people know
about our leadership on safeguarding reproductive rights, on our focus
on fiscal responsibility, our booming manufacturing sector and the fact
that we are full of brilliant talent from our world-class universities
and our nation-leading, third largest in the nation community college
system.”
The governor also downplayed a Thursday morning POLITICO
report that he was overheard talking at “high volume in the central
lounge of the Congress Center” about his potential for a White House
bid. He said the discussion that was overheard was with a reporter, to
whom he was giving the same answer he frequently gives to local media
outlets.
“I have every intention to serve out
the four years that I just won as governor,” he said. “We have a lot of
challenges in Illinois that we’re going to continue to work on
overcoming and lots of success already.”
Pritzker was accompanied by first
lady MK Pritzker, chief of staff Anne Caprara, and deputy governors Andy
Manar and Christian Mitchell. He didn’t provide a cost breakdown, but
said “much of it is covered by me personally.”
“And, of course, there's a security need, so that's covered by the state of Illinois,” he said.
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