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Claim: Homeland Security official pledges to prosecute Rep. Croke

Saturday, Oct 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’m not sure why the Assistant Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security believes posting publicly displayed license plate numbers of cars is illegal, but we may find out…


Rep. Croke (D-Chicago) is running for Illinois comptroller. I’ve asked for a statement.

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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Oct 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Stop that train

Some stand aside to try their best

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition

Friday, Oct 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Oct 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ABC Chicago

The U.S. Department of Justice is appealing a ruling made in a lawsuit against Illinois, Cook County and Chicago over sanctuary city policies, the I-Team has learned.

The DOJ’s lawsuit filed back in February had accused the local, county and state governments of blocking federal immigration law, specifically rules in place preventing local and state law enforcement from participating in immigration enforcement, as well as the sharing the status of criminals in custody/when they would be released.

U.S. District Judge Lindsay Jenkins dismissed the lawsuit back in July, ruling, “(T)he United States lacks standing to sue… with respect to the Sanctuary Policies.” […]

The DOJ was given a month to amend its complaint, but according to court records, it did not do so, and Judge Jenkins’ ruling was converted into one with prejudice.

Nearly two months after that decision became final, Assistant Attorney General Brett Shumate notified the court on Friday that the case would be appealed to the Seventh Circuit, according to a court filing.

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* It’s that time of year again! The Senate and House staff held their annual Capitol Trick-or-Treat event yesterday. Thanks to the Office of the Senate President for sending this over…

This year the Capitol Trick-or-Treat event had 21 total locations. This year’s decoration judge was none other than Joe Crain. Joe would like to invite everyone to stop by Abe’s Haunted Hollow this Saturday, Oct. 25 from 4:30-7 p.m. at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum.

Guests can play games and win prizes, take eerie photos with our special selfie station, walk through a giant pumpkin, dance to the music of DJ Dino-mite, and even join a séance with Mrs. Lincoln!

The first 500 children receive a gift bag that includes a lighted Halloween wand!

Abe’s Haunted Hollow is free to attend. Advance registration is not required.

Come in your favorite costume for all the fun in the museum and grab a spot afterward for downtown Springfield’s Halloween parade, which passes by the ALPLM.

* Some snaps…



* Joe Crain, Director of Public Programs and Community Engagement at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, judged this year’s decoration contest. Cue the drum roll.…

1st place: The House Democratic Policy & Budget staff with their theme of May 32nd. Special shout out to Sofia for being a top tier tour guide.

2nd place: The Senate Republican Communication Department with their theme of the Haunted Mansion.

3rd Place: The Senate Democratic Legislative assistants of C and F section with their theme of State Fair after Dark.

4th Place: The Senate Democratic Communication Staff with their theme of Wicked.

Congrats to the winners and big thanks to everyone who helped pull it together. Staff really goes all out for this one every year with the decorations, the costumes, the candy, all of it. Always a fun day around the building and much appreciated by everyone who gets to enjoy it.

*** Statewide ***

* Sun-Times | Sens. Durbin, Duckworth blast Trump for playing ‘political games’ in denying Illinois disaster assistance: Gov. JB Pritzker requested authorization of the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s Individual Assistance for impacted counties, as well as disaster loan programs to help Illinoisans following two severe weather events: a multi-day storm between Aug. 16 and Aug. 19 that passed through Boone, Cook, Kane, McHenry and Will counties, and another storm between July 25 and July 28 in Calhoun, Cook and Jersey counties. Durbin and Duckworth blasted Trump’s denial, calling it “yet another troubling example of the Trump administration putting politics ahead of people.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Block Club | Transit Leaders Plead For Lawmakers To Fill $200 Million Shortfall As CTA, Metra Cuts Loom: Nora Cay Ryan, board member for the RTA, said agency officials should be sounding the alarm every chance they get on the agency’s fiscal cliff and putting themselves into rooms with lawmakers. The comments came after Rob Nash, RTA director for government affairs, said the agency has been left out of negotiations with lawmakers for some time. “In these meetings, I don’t feel the sense of urgency,” Ryan said during the Thursday meeting. “If you’re not at the table, you’re on the menu. We are on the menu. So what do we need to be doing right now to get ourselves in that room?”

* The Telegraph | Democrat announces he will challenge for Illinois State Senate: Former Edwardsville Township Supervisor Kevin Hall announced Wednesday he would run in the Democratic primary for the 56th District Illinois Senate Seat held by Republican Erica Harriss. Harriss, first elected in 2022, announce she would seek reelection in June. Both are Glen Carbon residents.

* WAND | 5 things to do this weekend across central Illinois Oct. 24-26: Celebrate Halloween in spooky style at the Illinois Governor’s Mansion on Saturday! Kids can meet the Governor and First Lady—both in costume—while collecting candy and exploring all the fun on the mansion grounds. Enjoy hands-on crafts with the Illinois State Museum, check out a real Springfield Fire Department engine, and trunk-or-treat with Central Baptist Church. Don’t forget to snap a photo with the mansion’s annual pumpkin display, glowing with fall spirit and family-friendly fun!

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Masked immigration agents erode trust and intimidate, former No. 2 DEA boss, others say: Riley, who retired from the agency in 2017, said he didn’t authorize DEA agents to cover their faces even when some of their Mexican law enforcement counterparts did. When immigration agents obscure their faces, they risk undermining the legitimacy of every other police officer, according to Riley and the 35,000-member International Association of Chiefs of Police.

* Block Club | Feds Detain At Least 2 People During Random Stops In Wicker Park, West Town: An agent appeared to use a face-scanning app on his cellphone to identify the man sitting in the red truck before frisking and handcuffing him. Sebek approached the man and asked for contact information before agents sped away, saying they were off to a “secret” staging area to process detained people.

* Sun-Times | Taking the horror out of a Rogers Park viaduct’s murals: Enter Jim Ginderske of Rogers Park, who decided the viaduct with the creepy and haunted feel should not send pedestrians on a walking detour around Jarvis Square to avoid it. “That thing was a real horror show,” Ginderske says. “I got tired of looking at it.” So in 2024 Ginderske got to work, scraping about five pounds of peeling paint off the posts, the walls and the ceiling. He painted the posts’ arches lilac to complement the yellow warning color at street level.

* Block Club | Historic Portage Theater Has A New Owner Who Plans To Revive It As A Community Space: Bauman’s company, Zenith Music Group, bought the theater from its former owner for $25,000. Bauman said he will also address the more than $500,000 of back taxes owed on the property. Bauman, who organized events at the Portage Theater from 2014 to 2018, said his goal is to transform the theater into “the community center that it was built to be.”

* Sun-Times | Bears matriarch Virginia McCaskey advances in Hall of Fame’s contributor class: Virginia McCaskey, the Bears’ matriarch until her death in February, was one of 21 contributors to advance in the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s selection process. The Hall’s contributor blue-ribbon committee was tasked to select 20 people but the rules allowed for more in the case of a tie. Later this month, the committee will whittle the list to nine before narrowing it down to one finalist for the 2026 class.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Backlash in Harvey follows sweeping furloughs in response to fiscal crisis: Harvey furloughed about 40% of city workers this week, following Mayor Christopher Clark’s announcement Oct. 16 the city would partially shut down services as a consequence of its financial situation becoming untenable. According to Clark, Harvey is $164 million in debt. Harvey’s total workforce is 167, and 69 employees were furloughed, leaving 98 to maintain the essential operations of government. That includes nearly half of the Fire Department, with 20 out of 41 total employees furloughed, and more than a third of the Police Department, with 24 out of 68 employees furloughed, according to city documents.

* Daily Southtown | Elk Grove Village hires well-connected municipal lawyer as new counsel: Michael Del Galdo, a heavyweight municipal attorney who briefly represented controversial former Dolton Mayor Tiffany Henyard and recently got a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement fence to come down in Broadview, is now adding Elk Grove Village to his list of clients. Del Galdo, senior partner and managing member of the Berwyn-based Del Galdo Law Group, officially starts Monday as the new village attorney in Elk Grove and will be introduced at the village board meeting Tuesday night.

* Daily Herald | DuPage judge refuses to force county to pay two election vendors: DuPage County Judge Bryan Chapman this week denied the county clerk’s request for a temporary restraining order to force the payment of the two bills, totaling more than $230,000. In his ruling Wednesday, Chapman said granting the TRO would require him to rule on the underlying case that DuPage County Clerk Jean Kaczmarek brought against the county. In that case, Kaczmarek argues the county cannot prevent her from procuring services or equipment needed to run her office.

*** Downstate ***

* Crain’s | Google power deal could clear way for $1 billion carbon capture plant in Illinois: Google has two data centers on the Midcontinent Independent System Operator grid, or MISO, which serves downstate Illinois. Google is the second major tech company to announce a power purchase agreement with a supplier connected to MISO. Meta, the parent company of Facebook, announced a 20-year deal to buy power from Constellation Energy’s nuclear power plant in Clinton.

* WMBD | ‘Tactically unsound judgements’: Inside the Courtroom: Sean Grayson trial – Day 5: Looking at the totality of the circumstances, Sean Grayson made several tactically “unsound” decisions leading up to the deadly shooting of Sonya Massey. And he didn’t see or didn’t act on several signs that the Springfield woman was having mental or cognitive issues. That’s the opinion of a University of South Carolina law professor who is an expert in police tactics and also the use of force. He was the opening witness on day five of Grayson’s murder trial.

* WCIA | The Trial of Sean Grayson: Live Updates: Wykoff also brought up how Sangamon County policy requires an officer to warn someone before they act, which Grayson did. “That is not a situation in where the warning was appropriate,” [Seth Stoughton, a professor of law and an affiliate professor of criminology and criminal justice at the University of South Carolina,] countered. “You would not know if the training he received comported with generally accepted with best practices and principles?” Wykoff asked. “No, I would not,” Stoughton said.

* WGLT | McLean County tops 50% recycling rate goal for the first time: That target was set in the county’s 2017 Twenty-Year Solid Waste Management Plan and puts the county ahead of the national recycling average of 32%. Michael Brown from the Ecology Action Center [EAC] said this has been a long-term effort. “Our community has had a Solid Waste Plan, I believe, since the 90s, even late 80s. It was actually our precursor Operation Recycle that really pushed for a communitywide solid waste plan, even prior to the statewide mandate,” Brown said.

* WSIL | Salukis Build Here’ Kicks Off Downtown Carbondale: Hangar 9 was standing room only Thursday night as alumni, business owners, and city leaders gathered to celebrate the launch of Salukis Build Here, a new initiative aimed at bringing Southern Illinois University graduates back to Carbondale to live, work, and invest. The event, held in the heart of downtown Carbondale, marked the start of a collaboration between SIU, the City of Carbondale, the SIU Foundation, the Alumni Association, Carbondale Main Street, and the Carbondale Chamber of Commerce. Together, they’re working to highlight alumni-owned businesses and help more graduates plant roots in the region.

*** National ***


* Crain’s | Rivian will pay $250M to settle IPO class-action lawsuit: Rivian is paying $250 million to settle a shareholder class-action lawsuit stemming from its initial public offering in 2021. The electric vehicle maker, which assembles trucks and SUVs in Normal, did not admit wrongdoing. The company said insurance will pay $67 million and $183 million will come from cash reserves. Rivian had $7.5 billion in cash and short-term investments as of June 30.

* 404 Media | A $60 Mod to Meta’s Ray-Bans Disables Its Privacy-Protecting Recording Light: Meta’s Ray-Ban glasses usually include an LED that lights up when the user is recording other people. One hobbyist is charging a small fee to disable that light, and has a growing list of customers around the country.

* US Department of Justice | Justice Department to Monitor Polling Sites in California, New Jersey: Today, the Department of Justice announced that it will monitor polling sites in six jurisdictions ahead of the upcoming November 4, 2025, general election to ensure transparency, ballot security, and compliance with federal law. The Department, through the Civil Rights Division, enforces federal voting rights laws that protect the rights of all eligible citizens to access the ballot. The Department regularly deploys its staff to monitor for compliance with federal civil rights laws in elections in communities across the country.

* The Atlantic | No One Knows How Big Pumpkins Can Get: A decade ago, the world’s heaviest pumpkin weighed 2,000 pounds. Now the 3,000-pound mark is within sight. There are two Michael Jordans, both widely regarded as the Greatest of All Time. One is an NBA legend. The other is a pumpkin. In 2023, the 2,749-pound Goliath set the world record for heaviest pumpkin. Michael Jordan weighed as much as a small car and was even more massive—so broad that it would just barely fit in a parking space. Like all giant pumpkins, its flesh was warped by all that mass—sort of like Jabba the Hutt with a spray tan.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - More session news

Friday, Oct 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Catching up with the congressionals

Friday, Oct 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Russell Lissau at the Daily Herald

A suburban congressional candidate is awaiting trial in a federal fraud case alleging she misused COVID-19 relief funds.

Tedora M. Brown, a Palos Park resident who’s seeking the Republican nomination for Illinois’ 11th Congressional District seat [against US Rep. Bill Foster], maintained her innocence during a lengthy telephone interview Thursday.

“They came after me because I’m a Republican and I’m an American Black woman,” Brown said. “If I was guilty, why would I run for Congress? Why would I put myself in the limelight? It just doesn’t make any sense.”

Brown and husband Christopher Scott fraudulently obtained at least $742,000 in small business loans and grants from the federal government for businesses that didn’t exist or weren’t operating, prosecutors alleged after their indictments in 2023.

Brown is charged with 13 counts of wire fraud. Her trial is set for June 22, 2026.

Scott, then of Hazel Crest, was charged with nine counts of wire fraud. He pleaded guilty in April to one count of wire fraud and was sentenced in August to nearly six years in prison. Currently incarcerated in West Virginia, Scott also was ordered to pay $567,333 in restitution.

* Former US Rep. Melissa Bean…

Today, Congressman and former House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (MD-05) and Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz (FL-25) endorsed Melissa Bean in the race for Illinois’ 8th Congressional District seat.

Statement from Congressman Steny Hoyer:
“As Democrats fight to protect progress and fundamental American values, we need strong, experienced leadership in the House. That’s why I am proud to offer my full support to my friend and former colleague Melissa Bean in the race to represent IL-08 in Washington. Throughout her time in Congress, Melissa’s work ethic and her ability to win tough fights made her an effective and formidable leader, and I am confident that she will help us defend our progress for American families.”

Statement from Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz:
“I’m honored to support Melissa Bean, a dear friend and true fighter. An incredible mom with a razor sharp business intellect, the 8th district in Illinois will get the best representative out there. From our early days in Congress to our work together on historic legislation like the Affordable Care Act, I’ve seen her compassion, integrity, and legislative effectiveness up close. Melissa leads with principle and purpose — and that’s exactly the kind of leadership Congress desperately needs today. I would be thrilled and proud to serve alongside her once again.”

Yesterday, Kevin Morrison announced an endorsement from former U.S. Rep. Joe Walsh, who held the seat from 2011 to 2013 after knocking off former Rep. Melissa Bean.

* AP

Hoan Huynh was going door-to-door informing businesses of ramped up immigration enforcement on Chicago’s North Side when the Democratic state lawmaker got an activist notification of federal agents nearby.

He followed agents’ vehicles and then honked to warn others when he was pulled over. Masked federal officers pointed a gun at him and a staffer, attempted to break his car window and took photos of their faces, before issuing a warning, he recounted. […]

Huynh, who was elected to the Illinois House in 2022, is also running for Congress to replace retiring U.S. Rep. Jan Schawkosky, among four open House seats in safely Democratic territory. Other candidates in the crowded primary have also publicized their opposition outside a federal immigration processing center, including Kat Abughazaleh who was thrown on the ground by federal agents as she protested. […]

“My family came as refugees from the Vietnam War where people were being picked up by the secret police all the time. We believed in the American ideal of due process,” he said. “It is very concerning that in this country right now and very disturbing right now that we are living under this authoritarian regime.”

* 7th Congressional District candidate and state Rep. La Shawn Ford in the Tribune

Unfortunately, hospitals in Illinois are seriously abusing the 340B program. Some of our largest and wealthiest hospital systems are reaping millions of dollars from marking up discounted drugs meant for our underserved patients and funneling those profits into high-end suburban facilities, where they charge wealthy, fully insured patients full price and pocket the profit. This intentional exploitation of the program leaves the very communities the program was designed to help even further behind.

And yet, today, despite this far-from-stellar track record, hospital lobbyists have the audacity to be pressuring lawmakers in Springfield to expand 340B and are even asking them to remove transparency safeguards on the program. They paint this effort as a fight for patients. But to truly fight for patients, we must take an honest look at how the system is being abused today. Illinois hospitals are siphoning dollars away from poor communities to build cancer clinics and infusion centers in some of the wealthiest ZIP codes in the state. […]

We should not and cannot allow corporations to continue gaming the system. Before the General Assembly even thinks about expanding 340B, lawmakers — both in Congress and Springfield — must make sure 340B dollars are being spent on the underserved.

They must demand transparency on where hospital 340B revenues are going, require hospitals to reinvest profits in the communities that qualify them for the program, and end the abusive practice of linking South and West Side hospitals to suburban luxury clinics.

* CBS Chicago

More than a dozen members of Congress will be in Chicago on Friday morning to push back against the immigration crackdown happening across the state.

Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle and Mayor Brandon Johnson are among the lawmakers who are expected to attend. The list also includes U.S. Representative Pramila Jayapal, who is a ranking member of the immigration integrity, security and enforcement subcommittee, and representatives Jesus ‘Chuy’ Garcia, Delia Ramirez, Robin Kelly, and Danny Davis.

They’re calling the shadow hearing “Kidnapped and Disappeared: Trump’s Assault on Chicago.” Organizers said the goal is to dive into what they describe as President Trump’s “unlawful and aggressive actions in Chicago.”

Witnesses will speak to what they call the personal trauma, constitutional violations, and labor implications of the immigration crackdown, which started about a month and a half ago.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - This just in… (Updated x2)

Friday, Oct 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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United States Attorney General pledges to pursue Pritzker, Lightfoot

Friday, Oct 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Fox 32

Former Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said she and other attorneys are creating a nonprofit called “The ICE Accountability Project.”

The group plans to “unmask” agents by documenting physical traits, clothing and vehicles, though not names or identities. […]

“We want to create a centralized archive of all the purported criminal actions of ICE and CBP agents,” Lightfoot said. “We want to create a portal where what’s happening real time can be centralized and put out for the public to view.”

* WTTW

Gov. JB Pritzker announced Thursday he would form a commission to document what he called “countless acts of harassment and intimidation and brutality and abuse of power” during a series of increasingly aggressive immigration enforcement raids across Chicago and the suburbs

* Fox News…


More here.

* White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy and Homeland Security Advisor…



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Despite fiscal challenges, Moody’s upgrades Illinois credit rating

Friday, Oct 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Two weeks ago

The Governor’s Office of Management and Budget projected last week the current fiscal year’s budget will run a $267 million deficit. The budget office recommended taking “immediate” action to plug the hole.

And the problem gets much worse in the future, with a $2.2 billion projected deficit for next fiscal year, which begins July 1. […]

According to Governor’s Office of Management and Budget, the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” will cost the state $587.2 million this fiscal year in corporate income tax receipts and another $249 million in individual income tax receipts (although the commission reports that individual tax receipts are still rising as expected). […]

The governor’s budget office said it wants the Illinois General Assembly to “immediately” change state law to decouple from the new “bonus depreciation” law ($121 million in corporate income taxes and $23 million in individual taxes) and unspecified others. It also wants the General Assembly to update state law to “reflect the federal change from global intangible low-taxed income to net controlled foreign corporation tested income” ($90 million corporate).

* And yet, the state got its 10th credit ratings upgrade in a row yesterday. Crain’s

Moody’s gave Illinois another credit upgrade, citing improvement in the state’s financial metrics while still expressing concerns over its massive pension liabilities.

The firm raised the state’s rating to A2, five steps above junk, from A3, with a stable outlook. It’s the 10th credit upgrade since Gov. JB Pritzker took office six years ago. Improved credit ratings lowers the state’s borrowing costs. However, Illinois still has the lowest rating of any state.

“Illinois continues to add to its reserves and fund balance, growth in which is a crucial element in mitigating risks associated with the state’s high leverage, as well as shifts in federal policy,” Moody’s said.

* Bond Buyer

The rating agency said the state’s operating flexibility is constrained by its high fixed cost burden, as well as constitutional provisions that protect post-employment benefits and prohibit certain changes in tax structure. Its fund balance and budget reserves continue to reach historic highs, but they both remain lean as a share of revenue compared to those of other states.

With the issuer rating upgrade, Illinois general obligation bonds rise to A2 from A3, as do its Build Illinois sales tax bonds. Moody’s also upgraded to Baa1 from Baa2 the rating on Metropolitan Pier & Exposition Authority bonds that are partially paid with state appropriations.

Moody’s said an upgrade could come if the state can make more timely releases of its audited financial statements that show fund balances above 15% of revenue, lower its liability and fixed-cost burdens, accelerate economic expansion, or increase pension contributions to reduce its large liabilities.

* Insurance Journal

As part of efforts to mitigate risks to federal funding, Pritzker in recent weeks told state agencies to cut costs to put up to 4% of their budgets into reserves. In past years, Illinois held very little cash in reserves. For example, the state had only $3.6 million in its rainy day fund in 2019. Since then, officials built up the rainy day fund to a record $2.4 billion this year, though it still holds among the smallest levels of any state, according to a report released by the governor’s office of management and budget earlier this month.

* Moody’s…

FACTORS THAT COULD LEAD TO A DOWNGRADE OF THE RATINGS

    ⁃ Development of a material budget gap due to, for example, an economic recession, federal funding cuts, or support of fiscal challenges of downstream governmental units
    ⁃ Decline in GAAP-basis fund balance to below 10% of revenue
    ⁃ Growth in leverage (debt or other unfunded liabilities) or the state’s fixed cost burden
    ⁃ A departure from fiscal management practices that support growth in reserves and stronger pension contributions

* Pritzker press release

The rating of a state’s bonds is a measure of their credit quality. A higher bond rating generally means the state can borrow at a lower interest rate, saving taxpayers millions of dollars. Before Governor Pritzker took office, the State of Illinois experienced 24 downgrades over 15 years. Between just 2015 and 2017, Illinois suffered eight credit rating downgrades and sat at the top of many analysts’ lists of the worst managed states in the nation under the previous administration. At its worst, Illinois’ bill backlog hit nearly $17 billion.

Across major credit rating agencies Moody’s Investors Service, S&P Global Ratings, and Fitch Ratings, the State has received ten upgrades since June of 2021. Prior to those upgrades, the State had not received an upgrade since June of 2000, over two decades. Agencies have cited the State’s actions in paying down bill backlogs, repaying debts, increased fiscal transparency, building financial reserves, and balancing the State budget as factors in the upgraded ratings.

* In related news, here’s Capitol News Illinois

The new leader of the Illinois Federation of Teachers says state lawmakers should consider raising taxes on wealthy individuals and corporations that have received federal tax breaks under the Trump administration to increase state spending on education and other public services.

As noted above (and in a Capitol News Illinois story earlier this month) that’s already happening and will continue in the spring. The object will be to use that money to plug federally created holes. No mention of that in the story, however.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Oct 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Border Patrol Cmdr. Gregory Bovino accused of violating judge’s order by throwing tear gas at crowd in Little Village Thursday. Tribune

    - Bovino was captured on video appearing to lob a canister while standing in a parking lot next to federal agents.
    - A still image from the recording was included in a two-page court document filed in federal court by journalism advocacy organizations.
    - They also accused federal agents of using pepper spray and throwing at least one protester to the ground at a similar incident in Little Village on Wednesday.

* Related stories…

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*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Fate of Illinois’ first-in-the-nation credit card ‘swipe fee’ ban awaits judge’s ruling: A law that would make Illinois the first jurisdiction in the world to ban financial institutions from charging “interchange fees” on the tax and tip portions of debit and credit card transactions finally got its day in court this week nearly 18 months after its passage. U.S. District Judge Virginia Kendall’s ruling — expected in the coming weeks — will determine the legality of the “Interchange Fee Prohibition Act,” which was folded into Illinois’ Fiscal Year 2025 budget package in May 2024 by Democrats who control the General Assembly.

* Tribune | States worry about how to fill the gap in food aid ahead of a federal benefits halt: Officials in Louisiana, Vermont and Virginia pledged Thursday to keep food aid flowing to recipients in their states, even if the federal program is stalled next month because of the government shutdown. The fate of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, which helps about 1 in 8 Americans buy groceries, is becoming a deep concern as it gets closer to Nov. 1, when the benefits could dry up without either a resolution of the federal government shutdown or other action.

*** Statewide ***

* Capitol News Illinois | New teachers union leaders in Illinois call for tax shift to fund K-12, higher education: “We believe that we should be taxing billionaires so they can pay their fair share,” Stacy Davis Gates said in an interview with Capitol News Illinois. “We believe that wealthy corporations that are receiving a benefit from the Trump administration should see that benefit manifest and put in a little more in Illinois.” Davis Gates, who has served as president of the Chicago Teachers Union since 2022, was elected president of CTU’s parent organization, the Illinois Federation of Teachers, last weekend. She succeeds Dan Montgomery, who led the union for 15 years.

* Tribune | President Trump issues disaster declarations for several Republican-led states but denies Illinois and Maryland: President Donald Trump approved major disaster declarations for Alaska, Nebraska, North Dakota and the Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe late Wednesday, while denying requests from Vermont, Illinois and Maryland and leaving other states still waiting for answers. The decisions fell mostly along party lines, with Trump touting on social media Wednesday that he had “won BIG” in Alaska in the last three presidential elections and that it was his “honor” to deliver for the “incredible Patriots” of Missouri, a state he also won three times.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WSIL | Local Illinois elected officials react to deaths of Darren Bailey’s family members: Illinois lawmakers are reacting to the deaths of four close family members related to Republican Governor Candidate Darren Bailey. According to Darren Bailey’s campaign team, Bailey’s son Zachary, his wife Kelsey, and their two young children, died in a helicopter accident in Montana on Wednesday.

* House Speaker Chris Welch takes a jab at House Republican Leader Tony McCombie


* Fox News | JB Pritzker accuses ICE of ‘racial profiling,’ defends comparing agents to Nazis: “They’re literally going after Black and Brown people because of the color of their skin,” the governor told “Special Report.” Pritzker, who created the Illinois Accountability Commission to track ICE agents’ conduct, insisted there are instances of misconduct “all the time.” The vocal Trump critic has compared the president’s ICE crackdown to Nazi Germany and called ICE agents Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s “thugs.”

* Center Square | Battery storage financials remain in question as lawmakers consider energy omnibus: Earlier this month, state Sen. Willie Preston, D-Chicago, told The Center Square that he was a “hard no” on the energy omnibus if it included another line item on consumers’ utility bills, saying it “could just crush working-class people.” State Sen. Li Arellano, R-Dixon, noted that Preston offered a way to keep utility customers from having to pick up the tab for battery storage. “So in the case of Sen. Preston, I know he’s been talking about some language on the energy bill that would have developers pay for their own battery storage if they want to develop that out instead of putting it on consumers,” Arellano told The Center Square.

* Evanston Now | Tick tock on the fiscal cliff clock: With half of the two-week-long veto session already finished in the Illinois General Assembly, and no resolution yet to the multi-million-dollar mass transit fiscal cliff, board member Nora Cay Ryan told her colleagues on Thursday “this is a six-alarm fire. Do we need to hop on an Amtrak and go down there [to Springfield]” as a body, and lobby the legislators in person?

* WGN | Family of former Gov. George Ryan holding estate sale: One of marquee items is a framed photos of Michael Jordan’s final shot with the Bulls. The last photo is signed by Jordan. The estate sale began Thursday from 9 to 4 p.m. at runs through Sunday with the same time.

*** Chicago ***

* CBS Chicago | City tourism organization worries about the impact of President Trump’s negative narrative on Chicago’s economy and jobs: “Chicago’s always had a challenge with our reputation nationally … but right now that’s amplified,” said Choose Chicago’s President and CEO Kristen Reynolds. […] Reynolds said this is what she hears from first-time visitors, “People have a mindset and then they come here and they go, ‘Wow, the city is beautiful. It’s amazing. It’s clean. I love it. I had no idea.’”

* Tribune | Amid ICE surge, Board of Education urges CPS to offer remote learning: Parents are afraid to send their children to school while U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers lurk nearby. Students are sharing live updates on ICE agent locations. And whistles blow, alerting neighbors to federal activity. Those daily occurrences prompted school board members at their monthly meeting Thursday to urge CPS to take more action, including implementing remote learning options for students unable to attend school due to immigration enforcement fears.

* ABC Chicago | CTA riders brace for weekend work halting of trains on elevated Loop tracks: The CTA says the Brown, Green, Orange and Pink lines will be out of services at all elevated Loop stations to replace critical track switching equipment at Tower 18. That’s at Wells and Lake and is considered one of the busiest sections of track in the entire CTA system. The CTA says line closures are expected to go into effect at 4 a.m. Saturday morning.

* Sun-Times | Chicago buildings falling through fire safety inspection cracks: Only 17% of buildings in a Chicago Fire Department bureau database for fire code violations have received required annual inspections in the last year, city’s inspector general says.

* Crain’s | Hazy details on potential slot machines in Chicago airports frustrate City Council: Bally’s was given first dibs to place slots at O’Hare International Airport and Midway Airport in 2022, when the gaming company was awarded Chicago’s sole casino license. The company is permitted 4,000 total slot positions, to be divided between its city casino and the airports. Council members have complained the Johnson administration is leaving money on the table by not forcing Bally’s to either take the opportunity or pass so the city could explore handing over airport slots to other companies.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | ICE will pursue charges at federal level over Bolingbrook incident, police say: The ICE agents reported “two unknown females” struck them in the head while they were attempting to arrest a 46-year-old man in the parking lot, police said. […] The agents declined medical attention, police said.

* Daily Herald | McHenry County Board proposes tax levy increase while also looking for spending cuts: The so-called “lookback” option comes as county leaders have worked to close a projected $3.7 million budget gap for next year. On Tuesday, county board member Eric Hendricks proposed sending the budget and levy back to the county’s finance committee. County board Chair Mike Buehler declined to take up Hendricks’ proposal, but Hendricks pressed the point. After some procedural back-and-forth, Hendricks’ effort failed.

* Daily Herald | DuPage judge refuses to force county to pay two election vendors: DuPage County Judge Bryan Chapman this week denied the county clerk’s request for a temporary restraining order to force the payment of the two bills, totaling more than $230,000. In his ruling Wednesday, Chapman said granting the TRO would require him to rule on the underlying case that DuPage County Clerk Jean Kaczmarek brought against the county. In that case, Kaczmarek argues the county cannot prevent her from procuring services or equipment needed to run her office.

* Shaw Local | Ex-cop, ex-elected official both plead not guilty to PPP fraud in DeKalb County: A former DeKalb County Board member and an ex-corrections deputy pleaded not guilty on Thursday to multiple charges related to defrauding the federal COVID-19 Paycheck Protection Program. Cortland married couple Savannah Ilenikhena, 33, and Bartholomew Ilenikhena, 37, each was charged on July 11 with loan fraud and theft between $10,000 and $100,00.

* Daily Herald | Elgin could allow DACA recipients to be hired as firefighters and paramedics: The city already employs people with DACA status, including three police officers. Elgin does not have a requirement that any city employees be U.S. citizens, only that the person be legally authorized to work in the United States under federal law. Illinois passed legislation in 2023 to allow DACA recipients to become police officers, but efforts to extend the policy to firefighters had stalled, said council member Anthony Ortiz, who brought the initiative forward with the help of fellow council member Dustin Good.

*** Downstate ***

* WAND | Google announces carbon capture project with Broadwing Energy at ADM: Google is entering a carbon capture partnership with Broadwing Energy at ADM’s facility in Decatur, according to an announcement by the tech giant on Thursday. According to Michael Terrell, Google Head of Advanced Energy, the project in Decatur supplements Google’s desire to find enhanced geothermal, advanced nuclear and long-duration energy storage. Terrell said natural gas with carbon capture and storage, known as CCS, is a critical source of clean firm power.

* WGLT | EV maker Rivian to cut 4.5% of its workforce: The electric automaker Rivian confirmed Thursday it’s cutting hundreds of positions – about 4.5% of its companywide workforce. That would be about 600 jobs. It’s unclear how many of those jobs are in Normal; a Rivian spokesperson said no manufacturing operations employees are impacted.

* WCIA | Domestic violence investigator coming to Macon County State’s Attorney’s Office: Macon County State’s Attorney Diane Couri added a new position to her office this year: an investigator solely dedicated to domestic violence cases. Couri said these cases impact people from all walks of life, and are particularly delicate. […] The Decatur Police Department has received 3,732 domestic violence calls from Jan. 1 of this year through Thursday.

* WSIL | West Frankfort teachers avert strike with tentative agreement: “Our union team is excited to announce that we have reached a three-year agreement this evening after several hours of intense bargaining with the school board,” said AFT Local 817 President Tim Aldridge. “While this TA does not give either side everything they wanted, it addresses issues that were important to our members while providing costs savings to the district. It also acknowledges the dedication and contributions of our incredible teachers and helps to keep West Frankfort schools strong.

* WCIA | Danville School Board unanimously approves administrator’s dismissal: Narcissus Rankin previously held the position of Director of Business for the Danville School District. But, during the meeting, the Board of Education uniformly agreed to remove her from her position, dismiss her as a tenured teacher in the district and place her on unpaid administrative leave, pending her dismissal as a tenured teacher. […] Rankin listed several issues that were cited in the letter she received from the district, among those, included “mismanagement of the business office.” But Rankin said before she received the letter there were no documented conversations about “excessive breaks, personal business conducted during work hours or general mismanagement of the department.”

* IPM Newsroom | Danville’s ousted school finance director: “This decision is retaliatory”: “What is most troubling about this process is the complete absence of any direct communication regarding my performance. At no time was I approached with concerns, offered feedback, or given the opportunity to improve or respond,” Rankin said. Rankin was hired in 2015 as an assistant director of bussines and finance, right before Alicia Geddis was hired as superintendent. The school board dismissed Geddis earlier this year for working remotely long-term after receiving a racist threat.

* WCIA | From the Farm: Artificial Intelligence Farms: CropWizard: Artificial intelligence is showing up everywhere — even in the fields. And the University of Illinois is ahead of the pack when it comes to applying AI technology to the farm. […] Most — if not all — farmers know about the Agronomy Handbook that has been published annually for decades. But CropWizard is updated every nanosecond, and fits on your phone or electronic note pad.

* WSIU | Carol Moseley Braun talks about her historic career: The Paul Simon Public Policy Institute hosted a talk with former US Senator Carol Moseley Braun about her career and new book. Ann Marie Shepherd was first in line to welcome Carol Moseley Braun to the Varsity Theater on Wednesday. She was excited to hear about Moseley Braun’s visit, “So I campaigned for her, voted for her all of the above, and when I heard that she was coming to come in there, I couldn’t resist coming.”

*** National ***

* The Hill | Trump defends tariffs to cattle ranchers, calls for lower prices: “The Cattle Ranchers, who I love, don’t understand that the only reason they are doing so well, for the first time in decades, is because I put Tariffs on cattle coming into the United States, including a 50% Tariff on Brazil,” Trump posted on Truth Social. “If it weren’t for me, they would be doing just as they’ve done for the past 20 years — Terrible!”

* Reason | ICE Is Mounting a Mass Surveillance Campaign on American Citizens: While a federal judge scrutinizes the constitutionality of tactics used by federal immigration authorities during ongoing protests in Chicago, these same agencies are quietly amassing behind-the-scenes surveillance technology. Originally slated to target undocumented immigrants, the technology is now being used to investigate protesters of President Donald Trump’s mass deportation campaign.

* KRON | Trump calling off plans for federal deployment to SF, mayor says: “Late last night, I received a phone call from the President of the United States. I told him the same thing I told our residents: San Francisco is on the rise,” Lurie said in a statement Thursday. “Visitors are coming back, buildings are getting leased and purchased, and workers are coming back to the office. We have work to do, and we would welcome continued partnerships with the FBI, DEA, ATF, and U.S. Attorney to get drugs and drug dealers off our streets, but having the military and militarized immigration enforcement in our city will hinder our recovery.”

* NYT | Google’s Quantum Computer Makes a Big Technical Leap: On Wednesday, Dr. Devoret and his colleagues at a Google lab near Santa Barbara, Calif., said their quantum computer had successfully run a new algorithm capable of accelerating advances in drug discovery, the design of new building materials and other fields. Leveraging the counterintuitive powers of quantum mechanics, Google’s machine ran this algorithm 13,000 times as fast as a top supercomputer executing similar code in the realm of classical physics, according to a paper written by the Google researchers in the scientific journal Nature.

* AP | Trump allies, undeterred by setbacks in courts and Congress, push anew for citizenship proof to vote: By a deadline earlier this week, the independent U.S. Election Assistance Commission had received more than 380,000 public comments reacting to a petition to add the requirement. The proposal is being pushed by America First Legal, a conservative group co-founded by Stephen Miller, the Republican president’s deputy chief of staff.

* The Atlantic | Trump’s Partisan Redistribution of Wealth: As much of America stalls and sputters, President Donald Trump is forging ahead on a plan to remake the government’s budget without Congress’s assent. His administration has used the shutdown as a pretext to withhold billions of dollars from scores of projects: a subway line in Manhattan, a utility microgrid in Oahu. The White House has diverted anti-terrorism money to red states and canceled clean-energy projects in blue states. Trump’s goal is not only to make the government smaller again but also to alter the country’s economic geography, pushing Democratic regions to falter and Republican ones to flourish.

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Friday, Oct 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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