Letters from an American - April 28, 2025
Episode Date: April 29, 2025Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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April 28th, 2025. There's been a change of foot in the Democratic Party for a while now,
as its leaders shift from trying to find common ground with Republicans to standing firmly
against them and articulating their own vision for the United States. That shift burst dramatically into the open last night when
Democratic Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker gave a barn-burning speech to Democrats in New Hampshire.
After walking out to the American author's song, Go Big or Go Home, Pritzker urged Democrats to stop
listening to do-nothing political types who are calling for caution at a time
when Americans are demanding urgent action and to fight everywhere and all at once.
Pritzker highlighted three ordinary Americans who are opposing the Trump administration
and Elon Musk's Department of Government efficiency by building communities to protest, hanging
an upside down flag on the face of Yosemite National Park's famous cliff, El Capitan,
and welcoming Vice President J.D. Vance to Sugarbush Resort in Vermont with a snow report calling attention to the
administration's attacks on veterans, people with disabilities,
LGBTQ plus Americans, immigrant workers, and people of color.
He urged Democrats to lead with the same passion.
He listed the positions on which he wants Democrats to stand firm, beginning, it's
wrong to snatch a person off the street and ship them to a foreign gulag with no chance
to defend themselves in a court of law.
This is not about immigration, he said,
but about the Constitution.
Standing for the idea that the government
doesn't have the right to kidnap you
without due process is arguably
the most effective campaign slogan in history, he said.
Today, it's an immigrant with a tattoo.
Tomorrow, it's a citizen whose Facebook post annoys Trump."
Pritzker tore into the MAGA myth that Democrats want rapists and murderers on the streets,
saying that Democrats do not want undocumented immigrants who are convicted of violent crimes
to stay in the country. He called for real, sensible immigration reform. But, he said, immigration, with all its struggles
and its complexities, is part of the secret sauce
that makes America great, always.
Immigrants strengthen our communities,
enrich our neighborhoods, renew our passion
for America's greatness, enliven our music
and our culture, enhance understanding of the world.
The success of our economy depends upon immigrants.
In fact, 46% of Fortune 500 companies were founded by immigrants or the children of immigrants.
Trump's attacks on immigrants, he said, are likely to make the U.S. economy fail. Indeed, he suggested, making America fail
is the point of the Trump administration's actions.
We have a Secretary of Education
who hates teachers and schools, he said.
We have a Secretary of Transportation
who hates public transit.
We have an Attorney General who hates the Constitution.
We have a Secretary of State,
the son of naturalized citizens,
a family of refugees on a crusade to expel our country of both. We have a head of the
Department of Government Efficiency, an immigrant granted the privilege of living and working here,
a man who has made hundreds of billions of dollars after the government rescued his business for him,
who is looking to destroy
the American middle class to fund tax cuts for himself.
And we have a president who claims to love America, but who hates our military so much
that he calls them losers and suckers, and who can't be bothered to delay his golf game
to greet the bodies of four fallen U.S. soldiers.
And we have a grand old party party founded by one of our bravest
presidents, Abraham Lincoln, who today would be a Democrat,
I might add, so afraid of the felon and the fraud
that they put in the White House that they would sooner
watch him destroy our country than lift a hand to save it.
He called on Democrats to stop wondering if you can trust
the nuclear codes to people
who don't know how to organize a group chat.
It's time to stop ignoring the hypocrisy in wearing a big gold cross while announcing
the defunding of children's cancer research.
And time to stop thinking we can reason or negotiate with a madman.
Time to stop apologizing when we were not wrong. Time to stop surrendering
when we need to fight. Our small businesses don't deserve to be bankrupted by unsustainable
tariffs. Our retirees don't deserve to be left destitute by a Social Security Administration
decimated by Elon Musk. Our citizens don't deserve to lose health care
coverage because Republicans want to hand a tax cut to billionaires. Our
federal workers don't deserve to have, well, a 19 year old doge bro called Big
Balls destroy their careers. Autistic kids and adults who are loving
contributors to our society don't deserve to be stigmatized
by a weird nepo baby who once stashed a dead bear in the backseat of his car. Our service
members don't deserve to be told by a washed up Fox TV commentator who drank too much and
committed sexual assault before being appointed Secretary of Defense that they can't serve
this country simply because they're black or gay or a woman.
And if it sounds like I'm becoming contemptuous of Donald Trump and the people that he has
elevated, it's because I am.
You should be too.
They are an affront to every value this country was founded upon.
Pritzker called on Democrats to be bold and our ideas
fearless and we must deliver on that agenda for working families and for the
real people who truly make America great. I understand the tendency to give into
despair right now he said but despair is an indulgence that we cannot afford in
the times upon which history turns. Never before in my life have I called for mass protests,
for mobilization, for disruption.
But I am now.
These Republicans cannot know a moment of peace.
They have to understand that we will fight their cruelty
with every megaphone and microphone that we have.
We must castigate them on the soapbox
and then punish them at the ballot box.
They must feel in their bones that when we survive
this shameful episode of American history
with our democracy intact,
because we have no alternative but to do just that,
that we will relegate their portraits
to the museum halls reserved for tyrants and
traitors. Cowardice can be contagious, Pritzker said, but so too can courage, just as the hope
that we hold onto in the darkness shines with its own special light. Tonight, I'm telling you what
I'm willing to do is fight for our democracy, for our liberty,
for the opportunity for all our people to live lives that are meaningful and free.
And I see around me tonight a room full of people who are ready to do the same.
So I have one question for all of you, Pritzker said.
Are you ready for the fight?
Letters from an American was written and read
by Heather Cox Richardson.
It was produced at Soundscape Productions,
dead in Massachusetts,
recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.