Illinois Governor JB Pritzker has a great decision, and it comes amid continuous speculation about whether he will consider running for the presidency in 2028.
NBC political correspondence, Mary Ann Ahren, said, although it will be a surprise that the current decision at the governor's table is whether a third term will be running in his position in 2026, and although it will be a surprise if he did not ask for another term, he said that NBC Chicago Political Completer Mary Ann Ahern is still not specified on this topic.
“I did not decide if I was nominating to re -election,” he said.
The question arose as Pritzker revealed that he is planning to overcome this week's meeting before the completion of the Democrats in Cook County with preparedness for the 2026 campaign. This decision sparked speculation about his political future, but he said that he does not feel that the meeting is indicated by a plan that he is not seeking to re -election.
“When I did it in the past, that was when I was thinking about running the first time (in the 2018 session),” he said.
When Aiern Pritzker asked about this step, leaving the idea of ​​not running for a third term, he did not reject it.
“Well, this is because this is a possibility,” he said.
Pritzker witnessed its national shares in multiple ways, as Illinois occupied the lead center during the 2024 National Democratic Conference and the ruler plays the starring role. He was also listed in the list of competitors to be former Vice President Kamala Harris in these elections, and raised his personal file by starting a tour of the donation collection during the race.
He was also a frequent and frank critic of President Donald Trump's policies, as he put the state as a cohesion against some administration's plans and not afraid of his dispute with the White House.
Pritzker also attracted the Republican Party's attention with Representative James Commer, head of the House of Representatives Control Committee, called on the ruler to testify before Congress on the state's immigration policies.
The ruler has not yet decided whether he would attend the May 15 session, which comes at a time when Democrats are trying to pass the state budget before the end of the legislative session at the end of the month.