News

On Republican Day at the State Fair, Pritzker signs workers’ protection bills at Springfield union office

On Republican Day at the State Fair, Pritzker signs workers’ protection bills at Springfield union office

Governor JB Pritzker signs several union-backed bills at the Springfield AFL-CIO headquarters. Photo: Contributed/Screenshot of video from BlueRoomStream.com


Springfield, IL (CAPITOL CITY NOW) – Governor JB Pritzker has signed a series of bills into law he says will protect Illinois workers from attacks by the Trump administration.

They preserve pay standards and other worker protections Pritzker claims Trump wants to do away with.

“With my signature, we are restoring hard-fought worker protections that Trump and Congress are trying to destroy,” said Pritzker, “protections that were established under the federal Occupational Safety and Health Act, the Fair Labor Standards Act, and the Coal Mine Safety Act.  This new state law means Trump can’t take these rights away from Illinois workers.”

Pritzker was backed by union leaders and laborers during the signing at the AFL-CIO headquarters downtown, as Republicans weren’t far away having their day at the Illinois State Fair.

He claims the previous Bruce Rauner administration along with Republicans in the legislature also waged a war on the state’s workers that Trump allegedly is continuing.

Lieutenant Governor Juliana Stratton — also one of several candidates running for U.S. Senate — didn’t mince words when also claiming Trump is trying to do harm to Illinois.

“The President of the United States — a man notorious for abusing and manipulating workers — is actively using his office to attack the rights of all workers and labor unions,” said Stratton.  “Whether he knows it or not, in doing so, he’s highlighting why Illinois’ work is so crucial.”

Pritzker was asked a question by a reporter that suggested signing such protections into law would actually harm the state’s economy, and hold the state’s small businesses back.

“Paying our workers properly does not hold Illinois back.  It advances the cause of Illinois,” said Pritzker.  “I have worked very hard to stand up for our small businesses.  In fact, we’ve reduced…the franchise tax in the State of Illinois.  We’ve made it easier for them to do business in the State of Illinois.  We continue to look at how we can advance small businesses.”

The bills signed were SB1976 and HB1189.  Another bill, HB2488, was signed into law June 30.

Recent Headlines

16 hours ago in Entertainment

What to Stream: Ed Sheeran, ‘Only Murders in the Building,’ Charlie Sheen doc and Borderlands 4

"Only Murders in the Building" returning for its fifth season and Ed Sheeran coming back with the new pop album "Play" are some of the new television, films, music and games headed to a device near you.

16 hours ago in Entertainment, Music

Ella Langley, Megan Moroney, Lainey Wilson lead Country Music Association Awards noms with 6 each

Joining Lainey Wilson in competing for the night's highest honor — CMA entertainer of the year — will be Luke Combs, Cody Johnson, Chris Stapleton and Morgan Wallen, last year's winner in the category.

23 hours ago in Entertainment

‘SNL’ wins big for season 50 at the Creative Arts Emmys. Obama, Kimmel and Lamar also take trophies

Barack Obama won his third career Emmy and Kendrick Lamar won his second, while the 50th season of "Saturday Night Live" was the biggest winner with 11 on the second night of the Creative Arts Emmy Awards.

23 hours ago in Sports, Trending

Ravens’ stunning collapse: Baltimore blows 15-point lead in final 4 minutes in 41-40 loss to Bills

With Matt Prater hitting a 32-yard field goal as time expired, Baltimore squandered a 15-point lead in the final four minutes in a stunning season-opening 41-40 loss to the Buffalo Bills on Sunday night.

4 days ago in Entertainment, Music

This year’s song of the summer is a ballad, not a banger. Here’s what that says about us

For the past 14 weeks and counting, the top Billboard spot has been held by a love ballad: Alex Warren's "Ordinary." As Berklee College of Music professor and forensic musicologist Joe Bennett notes, the February release is "a fair bit slower than the mean average for the Hot 100, or for a historical song of the summer."