logo
US Rep. Jan Schakowsky, congresswoman since 1999, announces she will not seek another term next year

US Rep. Jan Schakowsky, congresswoman since 1999, announces she will not seek another term next year

Chicago Tribune05-05-2025

U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky, who represented a Far North Side and north and northwest suburban district in Congress for more than two and a half decades, announced on Monday she will not seek a 15th term next year.
'This is the official, that I'm not going to run again for Congress, and there are pluses to that,' Schakowsky said at an Ultimate Women's Power Luncheon event she hosted at the Sheraton Grand Chicago Hotel. 'You know, I can still be a badass.'
The move marks the end of an era for a reliably Democratic district that Schakowsky, 80 of Evanston, has represented since 1999 after soundly defeating two opponents, including JB Pritzker, in an open seat primary. Before her, Sidney Yates held the seat for 24 terms, almost 50 years.
Her retirement will undoubtedly set off a series of political maneuvers, with a progressive political online content creator and newcomer to Illinois having weeks ago announced a bid for the seat and others with more local ties to the district's political scene now sure to quickly follow.
Schakowsky's announcement comes less than two weeks after U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, also 80, declared he would not seek another term.
Schakowsky was a state representative when she first ran for Congress on her record as a lawmaker and activist, with a 'message of equal rights for women, minorities and gays, protection for union workers, and affordable national health care,' the Tribune wrote.
She was seen as more progressive than her two Democratic primary opponents, state Sen. Howard Carroll and Pritzker, who finished third. The primary was one of the most expensive in the nation at the time, as Pritzker, heir to the Hyatt Hotel fortune, spent nearly $1 million of his own money. In his two bids for governor, Pritzker has spent $350 million.
Declaring victory in 1998, Schakowsky said voters' desire to have a woman representative may have put her over the edge, as she was elected at a time when all of the state's then 20 members in the House were men.
'Now the men's club delegation to the U.S. House of Representatives will have a woman's voice,' she said.
At the time of her first win, the 9th Congressional District ran along Lake Michigan from Diversey Avenue to Evanston's north border before moving west to take in some of the city's Northwest Side, as well as north suburban Skokie, Golf, Morton Grove, Lincolnwood and much of Niles. Today, the district is still heavily Democratic but stretches from the Far North Side of Chicago to include all or part of Buffalo Grove, Tower Lake and Hawthorn Woods as well as other parts of Cook and McHenry Counties.
Even as redistricting changed its borders, Schakowsky has not had a serious primary challenger since she was first elected to Congress and has easily defeated Republican opponents in the general election.
Over the years, she rose to become a member of the House Democratic leadership team under former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and was an ardent voice of women's rights and increasing the number of women elected to Congress. She twice backed Marie Newman in challenging incumbent conservative Democrat U.S. Rep. Dan Lipinski, with Newman defeating Lipinski in 2020. Schakowsky has also been a vocal opponent of President Donald Trump, skipping his joint address to Congress this year as she did in 2018.
Throughout her time in Washington, she was an advocate for stricter gun laws, health care reform and the consumer issues that helped buoy her to the national stage. She was an early critic of the Iraq war and a supporter of abortion rights.
Schakowsky, who is Jewish and has been a staunch supporter of Israel, more recently was criticized by some to the left who thought she should more forcefully advocate for Palestinians in the ongoing war in Gaza.
The daughter of Jewish immigrants, Schakowsky grew up in Chicago and was active in public interest groups before running for the state legislature. Her husband, Robert Creamer, was the founder of one of those groups, Illinois Public Action. Creamer, a political consultant, was sentenced to five months in prison in 2006 for using bad checks to prop up his struggling consumer group and for a tax charge.
Even before Schakowsky's announcement Monday, one person had already declared candidacy for the seat: 26-year-old Kat Abughazaleh, a progressive critic of the far-right who moved to Illinois last year and out-raised Schakowsky in the first quarter of 2025.
Abughazaleh will almost certainly be joined by a field of Democratic hopefuls that could include Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss, state Sen. Laura Fine, state Rep. Hoan Huynh and a handful of others.
Last week, addressing the potential of a primary field shaping up to replace Durbin, Pritzker recalled his run against Schakowsky and encouraged new leadership in the Senate race.
'Remember, I ran for Congress when I was 31 years old, and there were an awful lot of people who said to me that it's not your turn. I ran anyway. I think that in fact we need more young people, we need the new generation,' he said.
Schakowsky herself once represented a generational change, as she took over her seat from someone who held it for nearly 50 years As she announced she would become the first declared candidate for Yates' post in April 1997, Schakowsky traced her career to one of her first and most famous political fights: getting a freshness dates on groceries.
'A date on cottage cheese did not change the world, but it's changed my life forever,' she said. 'It convinced me that a few committed individuals could make their world better.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Poll shows low-profile New York City comptroller race narrowing in the home stretch
Poll shows low-profile New York City comptroller race narrowing in the home stretch

Politico

time40 minutes ago

  • Politico

Poll shows low-profile New York City comptroller race narrowing in the home stretch

NEW YORK — A new poll shows the race for New York City comptroller tightening, with Justin Brannan narrowing the gap in a contest still led by Mark Levine. And with less than two weeks until the Democratic primary, nearly half of New Yorkers remain undecided in the race to be the city's top fiscal watchdog, according to the poll Brannan's team commissioned and shared in full with POLITICO. It was conducted by Public Policy Polling, and queried 573 likely primary voters between June 6 and 7, with a 4.1 percent margin of error. Levine, the Manhattan borough president, led Brannan — the City Council finance committee chair — 30 percent to 19 percent among likely Democratic voters, according to the poll. That same survey showed state Assemblymember Zohran Mamdani leapfrogging Andrew Cuomo in the Democratic mayoral primary. The 11-point gap was smaller than a May 27 survey from Honan Strategy Group that had Levine at 38 percent and Brannan at 13 percent, a shift that left the Brooklyn lawmaker's team feeling bullish. Both surveys found 44 percent of likely voters undecided. 'A race that was once considered locked up is now anything but,' Brannan campaign adviser Alyssa Cass wrote in a campaign memo shared with POLITICO. 'As nearly half the electorate remains undecided, Brannan is the candidate with the most room to grow and the clearest path to an upset.' Brannan's team believes the tides will continue to shift in his favor. They cited the smaller gap that came after 10 days of going on air with a television ad along with a niche stat from their poll: Of voters who had seen Brannan's ads, they preferred him 40 percent to 37 percent. Those viewers, however, made up a small slice of the electorate at 23 percent. And it was unclear how many of those people knew of Levine or his campaign. Levine's camp countered that the polls have consistently shown him ahead of Brannan by double digits. And they touted the endorsement Wednesday night of a major municipal labor group. 'Mark has all the momentum in this race. We just earned the endorsement of the United Federation of Teachers, representing hundreds of thousands of NYC public school educators — adding to the 180-plus elected officials, faith leaders, labor unions and community groups backing our campaign,' Campaign Manager Matt Rubin said in a statement. 'Right now, we're focused on connecting with New Yorkers where they are — on the streets, at subway stops and at their doors.' A person on Levine's team also took issue with the survey methodology, suggesting it over sampled Brannan's home borough of Brooklyn — especially with affluent voters — and under sampled Black voters Levine is doing better with. The Public Policy Polling showed few New Yorkers have barely tuned into the contest: More than half of those surveyed had no opinion about the favorability of the two candidates, and around half of the likely Democratic primary voters had not seen an ad for either. Brannan and Levine were the only two comptroller candidates to qualify for a pair of televised debates, which mainly showcased how little they differ on policy. During their first meeting, they engaged in several back-and-forths over President Donald Trump and New York City Mayor Eric Adams, but had a conspicuous aversion to talking about Andrew Cuomo, who at the time had been leading the mayoral Democratic primary in every poll.

Bay Area solar owners could see tax credits slashed under Trump's spending bill
Bay Area solar owners could see tax credits slashed under Trump's spending bill

CBS News

time43 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Bay Area solar owners could see tax credits slashed under Trump's spending bill

The budget bill being debated in Congress could have serious implications for a lot of industries, but some are saying it could be a disaster for the residential solar industry. Solar companies are already hurting from reductions in government subsidies, but a threat to eliminate the federal solar tax credit could be putting the industry on the verge of collapse. Solar power itself is a proven technology with a lot of benefits to offer as a clean, renewable source of energy. But right now, a lot of energy is going into just keeping the business alive. "I think the industry is going to go through some very hard times," said Severin Borenstein, faculty director at UC Berkeley's Haas Energy Institute. He said rooftop solar has gone through a lot of changes in the last few years, with the State reducing how much solar system owners are credited for the energy they produce. But lately things have been improving. "2024 was back to 2021 levels, so they had really recovered from a drop," said Borenstein. "But now, with what the Trump administration is doing, I think there's a lot of concern. There were already a lot of rooftop solar companies that had pretty tenuous financing and were having a hard time. And I think this is pushing some of them over the edge." He was talking about a Republican effort in the budget bill to eliminate the 30 percent federal tax credit given to people who install solar systems on their homes. That, along with the tariffs being imposed by President Trump, has solar industry insiders calling foul. "It's really sad to see solar energy being caught in partisan crosshairs," said Brad Heavner, executive director of the California Solar and Storage Association. "The sun is not Republican or Democrat. The need for more electricity is not Democrat or Republican. We need more energy in America and Congress has a role to play in making that happen." But right now, the role Congress is playing is to restrict rooftop solar, along with other renewable energies, in favor of older sources like fossil fuels and coal. The effect has already been devastating, with solar companies going bankrupt across the country. On Monday, solar giant Sunnova Energy filed for protection and last week, Solar Mosaic, a major lender in the business, also went belly up. But Gordon Johnson, founder of a research firm studying the industry, said the companies may have brought it on themselves simply by the way they did business. He said some misrepresented their costs to lenders in what he compared to a Ponzi Scheme. "The solar industry in the US is in a state of significant disarray. And it's not something that could not have been predicted," said Johnson. "They perpetually issue debt. These companies are always issuing debt. As soon as they can't issue debt, and they can't plug that hole of the actual cost of the system versus what they show Wall Street, they quickly go bankrupt." Higher interest rates and equipment cost inflation have also figured into the mix. One analysis found that, nationwide, more than $14 billion in clean energy and electric vehicles have been cancelled or delayed as a result. The prospects for the industry aren't good right now, but Joe Osha, an analyst for investment banker Guggenheim Securities, said rooftop solar should not be confused with the overall solar energy market. "In megawatt terms, I can tell you that the residential solar business, as visible as it is, is only a tiny fraction of the solar generation that gets added into this country each year," said Osha. "The vast majority of it are these large utility-scale solar farms. I don't see any scenario under which that utility-scale solar business collapses." That leaves residential solar twisting in the political wind. And experts are saying small companies that have been the backbone of California's solar revolution will have a hard time staying in business.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store