WATCH: Trump order withholds funds over no-cash bail policies like Illinois’
(The Center Square) – Taxpayer resources should not be used to support jurisdictions with cashless bail policies, according to a new executive order signed by President Donald Trump. The order comes as the president hedges on whether to send the National Guard to Chicago.
Within 30 days, a list of states and local jurisdictions that have ended cash bail will be delivered to the president. The order says the federal government may suspend or terminate federal funds, grants and contracts to areas with no cash bail. Illinois was the first state to end money bond statewide in September 2023.
“They have great cashless bail, you know you don’t even go to court sometimes,” Trump joked with staff in the oval office. “Illinois, I love that state. It’s a great state, but it’s run so badly by [Gov. J.B.] Pritzker.”
Monday afternoon, the Illinois Network for Pretrial Justice held a news conference supporting Illinois’ end to money bond. ACLU of Illinois’ Ed Yohnka said Trump’s moves are an overreach.
“You just simply don’t have the power to limit … and choke off funding to states on the basis of a policy that is really unrelated to the funding that is being given,” Yohnka said.
The group couldn’t put a price tag of how much federal tax funds could be withheld from Illinois because of the state’s no-cash bail law.
Yohnka anticipates the state of Illinois would file a lawsuit against any withholding of federal funds, to which the ACLU would file an amicus brief.
During the same event in the Oval Office Monday, Trump hedged on the idea of sending National Guard troops to Chicago to address public safety.
“These people are sick, but I’m really saying, and I say this to all of you, in a certain way we should wait to be asked, because they have cities that are so under, you know, out of control,” Trump said.
During an afternoon news conference with Democratic members of Congress and other elected officials, Pritzker said there has been no communication between state and local officials about the use of the National Guard and there is no crime emergency in Illinois or in Chicago.
“This is not because we’ve asked for it, it is not because there is some justice that he is going to seek, it is because he wants to create chaos, that is all this is about,” Pritzker said.
Attorney General Kwame Raoul said he couldn’t rule out a lawsuit against the Trump administration.
Community Events
Latest News Stories
Study: K-12 public spending nears $1 trillion in U.S.
WATCH: Power grid regulator says PNW in ‘crosshairs’ for potential winter blackouts
Pritzker suggests he’s open to tweaking SAFE-T Act after train passenger fire
Arizona attorney general to appeal ‘fake electors’ ruling
Illinois quick hits: Small business grants announced; new Naperville DMV
Clintons ordered to testify on connections to Jeffrey Epstein in December
CBO says foreign companies could pick up some tariff costs
Guidelines issued on how taxpayers can claim deductions on tips, overtime in 2025
GOP attorneys general back rail merger, splitting Republicans on deal
WATCH: Trump admin moving ahead with dismantling the U.S. Dept. of Education
Two Cook County judges’ rulings allowed CTA arson attacker to be free
Debate persists over nation’s highest gas prices in California