Here's an excerpt:
A burgeoning breakup movement is gaining momentum across Illinois, California and other states where vast swaths of red, rural counties are dominated by a few blue cities. More residents are pushing to break off and form new states. Or as a group called New Illinois State—which has declared itself independent from actual Illinois and last weekend passed the first draft of a new constitution—puts it: “Leave Illinois Without Moving.”
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73% of voters in predominantly rural Iroquois County...on Election Day backed the idea of forming a new state with every Illinois county except Cook, home to Chicago and more than 40% of the state’s population. The nonbinding resolution also passed in six other counties, bringing the total to 33 of Illinois’s 102 counties.This reminds me of the disgruntlement that rural voters have expressed about not having their views heard in both state and federal government. Kathy Cramer wrote about this in the context of Wisconsin in 2016, and others have since written about it, if only to ridicule it. (See various columns by, among other, Paul Krugman in the NYTimes).
“There’s a lot of people in Chicago, and I think that they make a lot of decisions that affect people downstate,” said Gioja, who doesn’t expect a New Illinois soon. “It’s just sending a message that, ‘Hey, you know, there’s people that would like to be part of the conversation, and often aren’t.’ ”
As a related matter, here's a story from The Guardian this weekend analyzing why eight California counties shifted from Biden (2020) to Trump (2024), and here's an LA Times story about Inyo County, which shifted to Biden by just 14 votes in 2020. Needless to say, Inyo and many of these other counties aer the ones where lots of folks would like to secede from California--or have urban cities in the Golden State peel off and go their own way. There are lots of prior stories on the blog about secession, including those about the would-be State of Jefferson.
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