Guard not needed in Chicago, Pritzker tells AP during tour of city to
counter Trump’s crime claims
[August 28, 2025]
By SOPHIA TAREEN
CHICAGO (AP) — Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker is doubling down on his message
to President Donald Trump that the nation’s third-largest city doesn’t
need or want military intervention to fight crime, showing off parts of
the city where violent crime has decreased and saying sending in the
National Guard could only escalate problems.
“We want to make sure and show off that there’s no emergency happening
in Chicago,” the Democrat told The Associated Press on Wednesday while
walking in a South Side neighborhood where revitalization in recent
years has included an art studio, aquarium store and wine bar.
“We’ve been fighting crime. We’ve been trying to prevent crime and it’s
been working.”
Trump and Pritzker, eyed as a possible 2028 presidential contender, have
traded insults for days over a supposed plan that could deploy the
National Guard to Chicago and Baltimore, as the administration has done
in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.
Pritzker and city leaders vow to sue but, in the meantime, Pritzker has
convened showy news conferences, posted sarcastic social media and
choreographed a campaign-style neighborhood stop, keeping Chicago in the
spotlight.
The back-and-forth comes as polls suggest support for Trump’s aggressive
focus on crime in big cities run by Democrats and Pritzker, a wealthy
businessman seeking a third term, continues to build his national
profile.

Eyes now on Chicago
Chicago has long been one of Trump’s favorite targets, with him likening
it to a war zone, and this week, a “hellhole.” The city’s decades-old
sanctuary status has also irked the Trump administration and prompted
lawsuits. In January, Trump kicked off a nationwide crackdown on
immigration in Chicago, with arrests livestreamed by television
personality “Dr. Phil” McGraw.
“Panic stricken Governor Pritzker says that crime is under control, when
in fact it is just the opposite. He is an incompetent Governor who
should call me for HELP,” Trump posted Tuesday on his Truth Social media
platform.
The possibility of military patrols in Chicago was swiftly condemned by
Mayor Brandon Johnson, religious leaders and activist groups who argue
that crime is down. While no details have emerged of how the operation
might play out, Chicagoans remained on edge with questions about where
troops might be stationed and whether they’d be armed.
“What he’s trying to do is try to inflame something that will cause a
problem that he can then point at,” Pritzker told AP.
Chicago’s violent crime has dropped notably in recent years, but it
remains a persistent localized problem. Some neighborhoods with the
highest homicide rates, including on the city’s south and west sides,
have 68 times more homicides than those with the lowest rates, according
to the University of Chicago Crime Lab.
The city reported 573 homicides in 2024, the most of any U.S. city that
year, according to the Rochester Institute of Technology. At the same
time, violent crime dropped significantly in the first half of the year,
representing the steepest decline in over a decade, according to city
data. In the first six months of 2025, total violent crime dropped by
over 22% when compared with the same time period last year.

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Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker talks to people outside of Small Shop
Cycles & Service, Wednesday, Aug. 27, 2025, in the Bronzeville
neighborhood of Chicago. (AP Photo/Erin Hooley)

“He talks a good game,” Pritzker said of Trump. “He wants to reduce
crime, he says, but then he does things that are frankly defunding
police and defunding our efforts to fight crime.”
The vast majority of Americans, 81%, see crime as a “major problem”
in large cities, according to a new AP-NORC poll released Wednesday.
Trump has seized on those concerns as he has deployed the National
Guard to the District of Columbia and threatened to expand that
model elsewhere. The approach appears to be helping Trump, at least
for the moment, as the poll showed his overall approval rating
increased slightly, from 40% in July to 45% now.
About half of U.S. adults, 53%, say they approve of Trump’s handling
of crime, the poll finds. But there is less public support for
federal takeovers of local police departments, the poll also found.
That suggests opinions could shift, depending on how aggressively
Trump pursues his threats.
“Certainly there’s a lot more going on in the world than for him to
send troops into Chicago,” Pritzker said. “He ought to be focused on
some of the bigger problems.”
Pritzker's political theater
Since details of the possible plan emerged last week, Pritzker has
invited reporters aboard a Chicago River water taxi for a
picturesque ride, convened about 100 of the city’s most powerful
leaders for a solidarity news conference and made digs at Trump in a
narrated video of his morning walk along Lake Michigan.
By Wednesday, he opted for a less touristy locale away from
downtown, greeting a crowd at a soul food restaurant in the
historically Black Bronzeville neighborhood on the city's South
Side, where revitalization efforts have been ongoing. While Cleo’s
is usually closed on Wednesdays, the restaurant’s owner opened for
Pritzker and packed the small space with family and staff, all
supporters of the two-term governor.

Associated Press reporters were invited to observe as he greeted the
crowd and walked along a business corridor of Black-owned
businesses. A cameraman from Pritzker’s campaign team was also in
tow.
Pritzker, an heir to the Hyatt Hotel fortune, was first elected
governor in 2018, his first time in public office. He's sidestepped
questions about his plans for 2028, saying he's focused on the
state.
Pritzker dismissed the notion that he was the one keeping Chicago in
the spotlight.
“I’m not the one that’s targeting Chicago,” he said. “I’m not the
one that’s just speaking out to get attention for Chicago.”
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