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Pritzker asked to respond to several recent news stories

Thursday, Sep 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune

As Chicago prepares for federal agents and soldiers to arrive in the city, a group of military veterans, attorneys and advocates urged service members to resist potentially unlawful orders from the Trump administration if deployed.

Veterans and lawyers from About Face: Veterans Against the War, the National Lawyers Guild and Movement Law Lab outlined options for National Guard members to follow their conscience in the face of what advocates and Democratic politicians say are illegal federal military operations. […]

While Gov. JB Pritzker has previously called a potential National Guard deployment to Chicago “unlawful,” advocates asked him to increase his support for service members who resist Trump’s orders. Specifically, they said Pritzker should order Illinois National Guard members to resist federal orders if deployed in Chicago — in his capacity as their commander-in-chief — as well as lend state legal resources to aid service members who resist.

Um, he can’t legally “order” soldiers to disobey a federal order.

* Pritzker was asked about that story today

Q: Governor, if the Guard does get called up, there are some advocates who have called for you to in your capacity as Commander in Chief of the Illinois National Guard to order Guard members here in the state not to obey that call. Is that something you’ve considered or evaluated? What other resources can the state make available?

Pritzker: We’re going to immediately go to court. If National Guard or other military troops are sent to deploy to the city of Chicago, immediately go to court. So that’s going to be our first line of defense is getting a court to issue a TRO or other injunction against that activity.

There is no way for me to override - state law does not override federal law. So we have to abide by the law.

We do that in the state of Illinois, we abide by the law. We abide by state law and federal law, unlike the President of the United States, who often acts in unconstitutional fashions. So we’re going to do everything we can, again, to alleviate the challenge on the people of Chicago, if in fact, the President is trying to bring troops into Chicago, military troops, but, but you know, he has the ability to call in other outside agents and does not have a legal right to call in military troops. But we’re going to have to act quickly and have a court act quickly in order to deter that.

* Crain’s

“CHICAGO WILL BE LIBERATED.”

That’s the promise being made in a fundraising email now being circulated to supporters of President Donald Trump. […]

“The Radical Left Governors and Mayors of crime ridden cities don’t want to stop the radical crime. I wish they’d just give me a call. I’d gain respect for them,” the email states, a nod to Trump’s call for Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker to seek federal help — a call Pritzker has refused to make.

“Now hear me: WE’RE GOING TO DO IT ANYWAY,” the email continues.

* Pritzker was asked about that as well

I don’t know why anybody would fund an unconstitutional action or have a positive reaction to the idea of the president thwarting the law of the United States. So, you know, I hope that it’s unsuccessful. I know that there are, you know, some supporters of his who act in a cult-like fashion in supporting everything that he does. But let’s remember, everybody that the future of our democracy, the future of America, is on the line, and supporting the activity of thwarting the US Constitution is antithetical to all of that.

* Sun-Times

Pilsen’s Mexican Independence Day parade will be held with additional precautions this weekend amid the threat of immigration raids and the arrival of National Guard troops looming over the city, its organizer said.

Volunteers stationed along the route will carry radios, cellphones and whistles to quickly report any issues, said Rigoberto Gonzalez Jr., executive director of the Pilsen Chamber of Commerce.

“We want people to feel safe,” he said.

Gonzalez said he never doubted the parade, scheduled to step of in Pilsen noon Saturday, would be canceled in light of the new threats of immigration raids and President Donald Trump’s potential deployment of National Guard.

Gov. JB Pritzker said Tuesday he believes immigration raids are being timed to coincide to Mexican Independence Day celebrations.

* From the presser

Q: Governor, what is your advice to those who might want to celebrate this weekend’s Mexican Independence Day… Are you telling them to stay home?

Pritzker: I’m telling people to know your rights, be extra careful, and know that there is the possibility that ice will be on the ground and causing some mayhem. Don’t play into their hands. And if you have the opportunity, please protest. Pull out your phone, video everything that they’re doing - whether it’s an iPhone, an Android, whatever you’ve got, and make sure that the media sees it.

  13 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Sep 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

Northwestern University President Michael Schill will resign after a three-year tenure, including five months of an unprecedented $790 million federal funding freeze, the school announced Thursday.

Northwestern was never formally notified of the pause of research funds in April, which came amid several federal investigations into allegations of antisemitism.

The school, along with Schill, had already been subject to significant Republican scrutiny. The president was grilled for hours before a congressional committee in 2024 on the environment on campus for Jewish students. […]

In a message to the Northwestern community Thursday morning, Schill acknowledged the “difficult problems” at the federal level. He said he would remain in the role until the naming of an interim president.

* The US Department of Justice Civil Rights Division is asking to take part in oral arguments against Illinois’ assault weapons ban


* WGLT

State Farm has informed employees of a new voluntary exit program.

In an email obtained by WGLT, the Bloomington-based insurer says “if and when” changes are needed, the company will start with voluntary staff reductions whenever possible, but did not rule out the possibility of layoffs.

A State Farm spokesperson said the move is intended to give employees more choice when business areas need to make staffing adjustments. […]

The company is not saying when staff changes may be coming and how many jobs could be eliminated.

* New York Times

The list price for new tractors rose at least 60 percent over the last eight years, according to the University of Illinois Extension, with some models more than doubling in price, costing at least $250,000 more than they used to.

That’s bad news for companies like John Deere, the leading supplier of agricultural machinery in the United States. The company reported a record profit two years ago, but President Trump’s tariffs and trade policies are making the market more challenging and unpredictable for the business and its customers.

One of the country’s largest manufacturers is worse off now than it was six months ago. Last month, John Deere said net income in its most recent quarter was down 29 percent from a year earlier. Higher tariffs, primarily on steel but also on aluminum, have cost the company $300 million so far, with nearly another $300 million expected by the end of the year. This summer the company laid off 238 employees across factories in Illinois and Iowa.

* Mexican Independence Day parade organizers have said they’ll be taking additional precautions this weekend amid the threat of immigration raids. Governor JB Pritzker


*** Statehouse News ***

* Daily Herald | Rojo drops out of House 52nd Dem race, endorses Chan Ding: Jesse Rojo, U.S. Army veteran and policy advocate, announced Wednesday he’s exiting the Democratic primary race for state Rep. Martin McLaughlin’s 52nd District seat, endorsing recently reelected Barrington Area Unit District 220 school board member Erin Chan Ding. Rojo’s withdrawal leaves Chan Ding and Maria Peterson, vice chair of the Lake County Zoning Board of Appeals, as the two remaining Democratic candidates. “The decision to end my campaign was not an easy one,” said Rojo, who recently ran an unsuccessful campaign for the Barrington village board. “I came to realize that now is simply not the right time for me to run. My focus must remain on my professional obligations and, most importantly, on my family.”

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Immigration crackdown deals a blow to Chicago’s Latino business corridors: Since President Donald Trump started his second term in January, his immigration enforcement orders have been a different story. They have contributed to a grim first: The store’s sales are down 20% this year, says Mike Moreno Jr., 34, who runs the business with his parents. “It was said, and we said, the liquor industry was recession-proof,” Moreno says. But this is a perfect storm, he adds, citing concerns over high-profile immigration enforcement, inflation, tariffs and worries that a recession looms.

* Tribune | Facing fiscal cliff, CTA will hold September town halls on budget: During the town halls, the CTA said, agency leaders will discuss the funding situation and CTA riders will have the opportunity to weigh in. The CTA said it would release its budget plans next month. The Chicago region’s transit agencies face a budget deficit in the hundreds of millions of dollars next year as federal pandemic aid runs out. The CTA was previously expected to run out of money some months before Metra and suburban bus agency Pace.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Youth prison worker accused of sexually-oriented official misconduct: A worker at the state youth detention center in St. Charles has been accused of official misconduct over allegations she had sexually-oriented interactions with a teenage detainee. Bryana E. Phelan, 31, of the 1500 block of West 80th Street in Chicago, faces 15 felony counts, according to a news release from the Kane County state’s attorney’s office. […] The complaint accuses Phelan of having multiple phone conversations with a 17-year-old boy and driving him around the facility in a state vehicle for personal reasons.

* Aurora Beacon News | Aurora fiber network nearly $1 million in debt, Mayor John Laesch says: During a presentation at a City Council Committee of the Whole meeting Tuesday, Laesch said the organization is currently operating at a $27,000 monthly deficit and has the resources to make it roughly to the end of the month. He has replaced the organization’s executive director, Charles Baker, with a volunteer as a cost-saving measure, and has made other cuts, he said at the meeting. Baker told The Beacon-News that he believes his firing was unlawful and unjust. He and other former leadership at OnLight Aurora say this is an overreach by Laesch, and that he is doing this to go after those associated with the previous administration, which the current mayor has heavily criticized.

*** Downstate ***

* Illinois Times | Trump’s trans ban affects Chatham resident: Dahl, 22, a Chatham resident and the daughter of Dave and Corrina Dahl, enlisted in the Illinois Army National Guard in late 2020 to help pay for college. The Glenwood High School graduate and cinema major beginning her junior year at Southern Illinois University Carbondale went through basic training in June 2021 and is a specialist in the East St. Louis-based 1844th Transportation Company, for which she serves as a part-time truck driver. She began coming out as a transgender woman in 2022 and started her medical transition in January of this year. Dahl filed for voluntary separation from the military to meet a July 6 deadline set by the Trump administration. That way, she can receive an honorable discharge, call herself a veteran and maintain some benefits rather than be removed from the military. Her service with the National Guard was originally supposed to extend until December 2026.

* NPR Illinois | SIU Carbondale enrollment holds steady while Edwardsville campus sees an increase: SIU Carbondale reports overall enrollment on the 10th day of class for fall 2025 remained nearly flat at 11,785 – only five fewer students than last year – which saw a record percentage enrollment growth. This figure reflects increases among several demographics, including new students from the Southern Illinois region (6%), new students from states bordering Illinois (16%) and online students (23% growth overall, 161% in graduate programs).

* STL PR | Bucking national trend, SIUE reports increased fall semester enrollment: A total of 12,813 students are enrolled at SIUE, which accounts for a 7.7% increase since last fall, according to university figures released on Wednesday. “The numbers tell us that the value proposition of a high quality, affordable college degree still has meaning for students,” said SIUE Chancellor James Minor in a statement. “We now have the extraordinary opportunity to serve them.”

* WCIA | ADM worker files lawsuit, claims company responsible for 2023 explosion: Just weeks before the two-year anniversary of the event, Ogilvie and Shay filed suit against ADM, saying the company had ignored federal safety regulations concerning hazardous materials, leading to the blast. […] “ADM used hexane gas in a device called an extractor, located within the East Plant, to process flaked soybeans into a mixture of oil and hexane called miscella,” Williams wrote. “On the date of the explosion, ADM then conducted further processes to recapture most of the hexane from the miscella mixture in order to reuse said hexane gas in its cyclical soybean oil extraction process.”

* WCIA | Champaign church changing security policies: Some Catholic churches in Central Illinois are changing their security policies after a shooting at a school mass in Minneapolis last week killed two children and hurt 21 others. St. Matthew’s Roman Catholic Church in Champaign is locking its doors during weekend mass services, after already locking school mass doors for years. “I said you know what, you don’t know when it’s going to be your turn,” Pastor Father John Zilimu said.

* PJ Star | Constant crisis or signs of hope? Longtime Peoria nonprofit PCCEO at a crossroads: Denise Moore had been warned during her interview to be the next CEO of the Peoria Citizens Committee for Economic Opportunity that the state of the nonprofit was bad. The reality of the organization, as she said she would quickly come to learn, was “so much worse.” Moore resigned from her role as CEO of the PCCEO on Aug. 26, citing a family health crisis and disfunction at the longtime Peoria agency. She spoke with the Journal Star and offered perhaps the deepest account yet of the steep troubles plaguing an organization that has spent multiple years in a state of disarray.

* WCIA | Champaign’s Black Dog donates food to soup kitchen after fire: As the restaurant moved food they already prepared to their Urbana location, they decided to donate the rest to the Daily Bread Soup Kitchen, where it made a big difference. “All of our main entree today, is from Black Dog. And if that goes all the way and we think it will, it will feed somewhere up in excess of 400 people,” soup kitchen cook Tom Scott said.

*** National ***

* Bloomberg | Trump Sued Over Washington National Guard Troop Deployment: The city contends that the mobilization of more than 2,200 troops since mid-August violates US laws meant to bar the US military from carrying out domestic law enforcement activities — a dynamic that DC officials described as an involuntary occupation. The lawsuit, filed in federal court on Thursday, also alleges Trump illegally called in National Guard units from other states.

* Frank Cerabino | DeSantis betrayed Florida’s chemtrail conspiracy theorists by feeding into it: Twisting the benign common appearance of water vapor trails from aircraft into a nefarious weather modification plot used to be the sole province of America’s fringiest crackpots. People such as Alex Jones at Infowars have been claiming for years that Americans are under air attack from secret forces who poison the skies. Now, those fringe views have taken center stage in Florida, thanks to Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Republican-led legislature.

* NBC | In rare interviews, federal judges criticize Supreme Court’s handling of Trump cases: Some judges believe the Supreme Court, and in particular Chief Justice John Roberts, could be doing more to defend the integrity of their work as President Donald Trump and his allies harshly criticize those who rule against him and as violent threats against judges are on the rise. […] Ten of the 12 judges who spoke to NBC News said the Supreme Court should better explain those rulings, noting that the terse decisions leave lower court judges with little guidance for how to proceed. But they also have a new and concerning effect, the judges said, validating the Trump administration’s criticisms. A short rebuttal from the Supreme Court, they argue, makes it seem like they did shoddy work and are biased against Trump.

* The Guardian | Texas bill allowing residents to sue out-of-state abortion pill providers reaches governor: If the measure becomes law, it is nearly certain to spark legal challenges from abortion rights supporters. Under the measure, Texas residents could sue those who manufacture, transport or provide abortion-inducing drugs to anyone in Texas for up to $100,000. Women who receive the pills for their own use would not be liable. Under the bill, providers could be ordered to pay $100,000. But only the pregnant woman, the man who impregnated her or other close relatives could collect the entire amount. Anyone else who sued could receive only $10,000, with the remaining $90,000 going to charity.

  10 Comments      


Madigan files appeal in bid to remain out of prison

Thursday, Sep 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sun-Times federal courts reporter…


* From Madigan’s appeal

Defendant-Appellant Michael Madigan, former Speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives, respectfully moves under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 9(b) and 18 U.S.C. § 3143(b) to stay his October 13, 2025 surrender date and for release pending appeal. It is undisputed that Madigan, who is 83 years old, will not flee and poses no danger and that his appeal is not for delay. The only question, then, is whether Madigan’s appeal will raise “substantial” questions likely to result in reversal or a new trial if decided in his favor. It will.

Few areas of law are as complex and rapidly evolving in defendants’ favor as federal bribery law, and the Supreme Court has repeatedly rejected prosecutors’ aggressive applications of bribery statutes. See Snyder v. United States, 603 U.S. 1 (2024); Percoco v. United States, 598 U.S. 319 (2023); McDonnell v. United States, 579 U.S. 550 (2016); Skilling v. United States, 561 U.S. 358 (2010). Madigan’s prosecution involves substantial questions regarding how far these statutes can be stretched—questions this Court has not considered in the wake of these Supreme Court decisions, making this a quintessential case for release pending appeal.

In a sprawling 23-count indictment, the government shoehorned nearly a decade of conduct into alleged corruption schemes. The jury returned a mixed verdict, declining to convict on more than half of the counts. Madigan’s convictions, involving two “schemes,” rest on significant instructional issues and failures of proof that present substantial questions.

First, the government alleged that Madigan conspired to secure work for political associates from a utility company, ComEd, supposedly in connection with official action on legislation of interest to ComEd. The government charged this scheme under 18 U.S.C. § 666, at a time when the statute had been construed to permit prosecution for gratuities, presumably because the government could not prove bribery’s quid pro quo requirement. While this case was pending, the Supreme Court in Snyder limited § 666 to quid pro quo bribery. Instead of dismissing its charges, the government pivoted at trial to a nebulous “stream-of-benefits” theory that disclaimed the need to tie the alleged quids and quos together. The district court facilitated that misguided pivot by declining to instruct the jury that it must find that, at the time of the alleged bribe, Madigan agreed to be influenced on a specific question or matter. Every circuit to consider the stream-of-benefits theory post-McDonnell has found this limitation necessary.

The district court additionally erred in refusing to instruct the jury that the “corruptly” mens rea for § 666 requires consciousness of wrongdoing even though this Court defined “corruptly” that way on remand in Snyder, 2024 WL 4834037, at *2 (7th Cir. Nov. 20, 2024), and the government accepted that definition below. The district court further erred by instructing that an official acts corruptly if he knows the bribe-giver intends a bribe, contradicting the statute’s requirement that the official himself must intend to be influenced— an error the Second Circuit has expressly recognized. In denying release, the district court declared that the Second Circuit was wrong.

Second, the government claimed that Madigan committed traditional wire fraud and/or honest-services wire fraud by agreeing to recommend a former alderperson for a state board position in exchange for business referrals. But the government failed to prove that Madigan agreed to an exchange or made the recommendation. Nor did it prove that any such recommendation would have included a false statement or would have involved “pressure” or “advice” (and not just “expressing support”) had it occurred. The court also injected instructional error into the fraud counts in response to a jury note.

Finally, for both alleged schemes, the government charged Travel Act violations predicated on state bribery statutes lacking a quid pro quo element. But, as the Ninth Circuit recently held, state bribery statutes lacking a quid pro quo element are invalid Travel Act predicates. The district court below declared that the Ninth Circuit too was wrong.

The district court’s order denying release is manifestly erroneous. Even when the court reached conclusions admittedly at odds with those of other circuits, it refused to acknowledge the substantiality of the questions. Under the court’s standard, no defendant could obtain release pending appeal unless the error arguably violated binding precedent. If that were the test, release would almost never be granted. But in complex fraud and corruption cases like this one, courts routinely grant release. 1 Upon de novo review, this Court should grant release pending appeal and stay Madigan’s surrender date until it decides this motion.

  15 Comments      


What Illinois Can Learn From Texas On Battery Energy Storage

Thursday, Sep 4, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

As Illinois confronts skyrocketing electric bills, legislators are on the hunt for solutions that provide relief as quickly as possible. Battery energy storage is our best and most cost-effective solution.

But last session— without evidence —opponents attempted to claim that battery energy storage wouldn’t work. Try telling that to Texas, where the rapid deployment of battery storage has already prevented blackouts and saved consumers billions.

Called “Ground Zero for the US Battery Boom” by Bloomberg, Texas added enough storage in 2023 to power 3 million homes and drop grid emergency risk during peak hours from 16% to less than 1%. The result? Storage saved consumers an estimated $750 billion in 2024.

Texas has proven that storage is the quickest, cheapest, most reliable way to get consumers relief from skyrocketing, demand-induced price spikes. Storage is a nimble way to address growing populations, power-hungry data centers, and meet other electrification-related power needs. These are benefits Texas saw from storage even as the state reduced its gas generation capacity by 166 MW last year.

Illinois lawmakers should follow Texas’s lead and pass SB40 this fall to deploy 6GW of energy storage by 2035. Click here for more information.

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Caption contest!

Thursday, Sep 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Sun-Times accidentally posted a link to my newspaper column this morning on its homepage under the name and photo of Sen. Lakesia Collins…

I laughed so hard. And Sen. Collins got a kick out of it, too. I told her I hope she wins a Pulitzker Prize.

…Adding… They just fixed it.

  13 Comments      


Competition Works: Lower Bills. Reliable Power. Say NO To Right Of First Refusal

Thursday, Sep 4, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois families are sweating through heat and higher electricity bills this summer. Across the Midwest, some relief from energy inflation is in the forecast. Thanks to competitive bidding, dramatically lower costs have resulted compared to no-bid Right of First Refusal (ROFR) proposals.

Here’s the proof:

    $87 Million Saved
    Fairport to Denny Transmission Line (MISO – Missouri)

      • Competitive bidding cut MISO’s initial estimate from $161 million to just $74 million – saving Missouri Customers millions!
    $6 Million Saved
    Reid EHV to IN/KY Border Transmission Project (MISO)

      • Open competition saved customers $6 million upfront
      • Delivered long-term cost savings
    $14 Million Saved
    Matheson–Redbud Transmission Line (SPP – Oklahoma)

      • Competition delivered $14 million in savings
      • Provided a superior engineering solution compared to other proposals

In many cases, incumbent utilities won these bids, proving that when they compete with other qualified builders, consumers win. It saves money and drives better results.

Competition Works.

Legislators should choose competition and protect Illinois families.

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Catching up with the congressionals (Updated)

Thursday, Sep 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Politico

More than a decade after narrowly losing her suburban Chicago seat in the Tea Party wave of 2010, former U.S. Rep. Melissa Bean is considering a return to Congress in the 8th District seat now held by Raja Krishnamoorthi, who’s running for Senate.

Bean, a Democrat, is expected to make a decision “in the next week or two,” according to a person familiar with her plans. Her entry into the race would reshape an already crowded Democratic primary.
Bean has been eyeing a return to politics since President Donald Trump’s administration has focused on unraveling the work she accomplished on the Affordable Care Act.

Bean first won Illinois’ 8th Congressional District in 2004, defeating Republican stalwart Phil Crane. Her victory was a signal of the Democratic Party’s growing viability in suburban districts that had been GOP strongholds for decades.

* NBC Chicago

NBC 5 Investigates has learned the Trump administration plans to reassign more than 600 military attorneys to temporarily serve as immigration judges. […]

“Trump is doing something very dangerous here. He is attempting to take over a part of the court system,” said Dan Tully, a U.S. Army Reserve judge advocate who spoke to NBC 5 Investigates Wednesday.

Tully is one of nine Democrats in a field of 10 candidates that includes one Republican vying to become Illinois’ next 8th District Congressman, replacing incumbent Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi who is running for U.S. Senate.

His argument against this move by the Trump administration is that assigns military legal officers who normally handle military misconduct cases to now act as immigration judges. He says that flies in the face of what they signed up to do and distracts from there already important role.

* More from the 8th Congressional District…

Sanjyot Dunung, Congressional candidate for Illinois 8th District, received the endorsement of Vote Common Good, a leading national organization mobilizing faith-driven voters toward candidates who prioritize the common good. This endorsement, in addition to the recent ASPIRE (Asian Congressional Caucus of all 20 members) endorsement, marks a significant moment for Dunung’s campaign as it continues to gain momentum among voters seeking commonsense solutions, responsible change, and shared common values.

Said Robb Ryerse, political director of Vote Common Good, “Sanjyot is precisely the kind of leader our movement seeks to uplift. Her commitment to people, her passion for community service, and her vision for an America where all voices are heard align perfectly with our mission. We believe she will champion policies that serve not only Illinois’ 8th District, but the common good of all Americans.”

Vote Common Good, known for its commitment to inspiring people of faith and conscience to push beyond partisan divides, selected Dunung after a thorough review of her campaign priorities, community engagement, and vision for 21st-century governance. The organization’s endorsement process is rooted in principles of justice, empathy, and service, aiming to spotlight candidates who are committed to “loving your neighbor through your vote.”

* Sen. Willie Preston’s congressional campaign…

Black grassroots anti-crime leaders and elected officials from Chicago’s South Side and their supporters are scheduled to gather at NOON THURSDAY at Ryan Harris Park - named for a victim of brutal street crime - for a rally to urge President Trump to choose investment over the imminent invasion of their city.

The speakers will include 2nd District Congressional Candidate and Illinois State Senator Willile Preston; Mark Hamberlin, Chicago Police District Council member; Tamar Manasseh, founder of Mothers and Men Against Senseless Killing; Christopher Watts, executive director of the Kindness Campaign, and Joshua Coakley, Target Area Development Corporation executive director.

These leaders - all of whom have directly been affected by gun violence in Chicago - will urge President Trump to coordinate with local and state officials to promote proven solutions such as investment in small businesses, trade schools and jobs training as an alternative to the promised occupation of Chicago by federalized National Guard troops.

Preston’s press conference will be streamed here.

* US Rep. Bill Foster has endorsed Biss for the 9th CD…

U.S. Congressman Bill Foster (IL-11) announced his endorsement of Daniel Biss for Congress in Illinois’ 9th Congressional District. Rep. Foster joins Rep. Sean Casten (IL-06) in supporting Biss, the only IL-09 candidate who has been endorsed by any member of the Illinois Congressional delegation to date.

Rep. Foster’s support comes on the heels of last week’s endorsements from Chicago City Council members Andre Vasquez (40th Ward), Matt Martin (47th Ward), and Timmy Knudsen (43rd Ward), as well as the Bricklayers Administrative District Council 1.

“Our people and our planet are under direct threat right now from Donald Trump and his right-wing MAGA allies. We need scientific leaders like Daniel Biss in Congress who understand the issues facing our communities and have the right approach and technical background to fight back and win,” said Congressman Bill Foster. “As a mathematician, a state lawmaker, and a local mayor, Daniel has proven he will not only take on powerful interests, but also build the coalitions necessary to win change. He will be a valuable addition to Illinois’ Congressional delegation.”

* US Rep. Mike Bost

Click here for the full list.

…Adding… 8th CD candidate Kevin Morrison…

In a major development in the race for Illinois’ 8th Congressional District, Cook County Commissioner and Democratic candidate Kevin Morrison today announced that Congressman Mike Quigley, three additional members of Congress, Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart, former Houston Mayor Annise Parker and more than 50 local leaders and elected officials are endorsing him. Alongside the more than 100 leaders and elected officials who have already endorsed, today’s endorsements mark an unprecedented level of support and make clear that Kevin Morrison is the only candidate in the race who can build the broad coalition necessary to win in the Northwest and Western suburbs.

“As a lifelong resident of the Northwest suburbs, Kevin knows firsthand the challenges hard-working families in his community face every day,” said Congressman Mike Quigley. “Kevin is an exemplary public servant who has delivered results time and again, and I know that he will continue being a fierce champion for his District as a member of Congress. I’m proud to endorse Kevin, and I look forward to working with him to put more money in the pockets of working families.”

“When the right to choose was on the line, Kevin didn’t hesitate—he fought back,” said Vermont Congresswoman Becca Balint. “As a member of Congress, I know he will continue being the kind of fighter that we need right now. He is a strong warrior who also understands the importance of listening. I’m proud to endorse him for Congress. At a time when reproductive freedoms remain under continuous assault, we need to elect thoughtful, caring people like Kevin who won’t shy away from a fight.”

…Adding… Sen. Robert Peters…

Rep. Ro Khanna (CA-17), a leading progressive voice in Washington, D.C., endorsed State Sen. Robert Peters for Congress in Illinois’ 2nd District on Thursday.

“From taking on the healthcare industry’s predatory practices, to ending the inequitable cash bail system in Illinois, Robert Peters is the kind of progressive organizer we need more of in Congress,” said Khanna. “I’m excited to fight alongside him.” […]

Rep. Khanna co-chaired Sen. Bernie Sanders 2020 presidential campaign, for which Sen. Peters was an Illinois delegate.

US Rep. Khanna endorsed Kat Abughazaleh in the 9th CD in July.

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Thursday, Sep 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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The reality behind the rhetoric

Thursday, Sep 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This question about ICE was asked during Gov. JB Pritzker’s press conference yesterday

Q: What protections are you offering the community besides getting upset?

Pritzker: Well, as you know, we cannot stand in the way. It’s not like we’re going to have armed men standing in between. That’s not something that’s legal. That’s not something that the state of Illinois can engage in, or the city of Chicago can engage in.

OK, let’s stop there for a moment.

* People from the right, the left, and many, many, many in between, as well as the news media and quite a lot of immigrants have totally bought into the “sanctuary state” rhetoric.

The only “sanctuary” this state offers is that state and local police are barred from cooperating with immigration authorities on civil matters. State and local cops can’t help ICE arrest suspected undocumented immigrants unless there’s a judicial warrant. State prisons and county jails can’t release inmates to ICE without a judicial warrant and can’t accept accused undocumented prisoners without judicial action.

ICE mostly uses civil warrants, which are basically just paper or electronic forms that the agents themselves often fill out right before they arrest someone. Under federal law, that’s legal. There is nothing the state can do to help the arrestees if ICE is following federal law. And even if they’re not following the law, I don’t know what the state could legally do except go to court.

I asked Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul back in July if he planned to release any guidance to state and local police about how to deal with federal immigration enforcement officers. AG Raoul said he only issues such guidance when there’s a state law involved, and since no state laws exist about this, he said, no guidance would be forthcoming. And, as far as I can tell, he’s right.

* Because of federal supremacy, ICE’s core mission is legal in Illinois like it is in every other state. And local cops can help protect immigration authorities and other federal agents if Illinoisans are violating state laws during the course of the federal agents’ duties. This may not be a perfect example, but it’s local and fairly recent…


Broadview, IL police arrested and cited 3 protesters (all since released) outside the Broadview ICE processing/detention center this morning after a prayer group concluded.

It was a busy morning for transport—reporters witnessed ICE move over a dozen detainees from the facility.

[image or embed]

— unraveled (@unraveledpress.com) August 29, 2025 at 6:29 PM

The Broadview PD is helping ICE, but in a manner that falls within state laws. If we were an actual sanctuary state (which cannot exist under our US Constitution), the local cops would be forced to let the protesters do whatever they wanted. But we’re not because that’s just reality.

As far as I know, the state and the county health departments can’t force inspections of that Broadview facility. DCFS can’t legally demand to check on children being held. Forget it, Jake, it’s federal.

I mean, if this was really a sanctuary state and Chicago was a sanctuary city, then Mayor Brandon Johnson could’ve ordered federal agents to take off their masks, instead of just asking them to.

* Back to Pritzker

I have been very clear about what we do want. What we do want is civilian law enforcement assistance. We want to make sure that we have enough FBI, ATF, DEA on the ground. We have some already. As you know, they do really good work, working in tandem with state police, working in tandem with Chicago Police Department, but we can use more.

OK, but a lot of those federal police are now working with ICE


These numbers represent staggering shares of federal law enforcement agents, being shifted from criminal law enforcement to minor civil immigration offenses www.cato.org/blog/ice-has…

[image or embed]

— David Bier (@davidjbier.bsky.social) September 3, 2025 at 10:53 AM

It’s a bit of a pickle for Pritzker. Ask for more federal help, and all he may do is bring in more immigration reinforcements.

* This is a classic example of how Illinois is not a “sanctuary” state as so many people believe. These folks will receive no protection from the state and the county even in a county courthouse designed for domestic violence cases

A woman was detained by federal immigration agents Wednesday while arriving at Cook County’s domestic violence courthouse, raising concerns among advocates that Donald Trump’s plan to ramp up enforcement in Chicago has taken hold.

Lauren Hanna, an advocate with Metropolitan Family Services, said she saw four plainclothes agents take the woman into custody around 8:45 a.m. One of the agents told Hanna that they wanted to talk to the woman “about her immigration status.”

The woman was a defendant in a case that was scheduled to be heard 15 minutes later. Her domestic violence charges were dismissed during the hearing, and the presiding judge wrote in a court document that the woman was in the custody of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. […]

The woman was the second person detained by immigration officials this week at the courthouse at 555 W. Harisson St., according to Tessa Kuipers, of Family Rescue, who said another person was taken into custody Tuesday. Kuipers said ICE agents hadn’t been spotted at the courthouse previously.

The woman was an accused abuser, but if ICE is around, what are the chances that a victim with a perhaps shaky visa status will refuse to go to court against her abuser? Pretty high, I imagine.

Ugh.

* Amanda Pyron, President & CEO of The Network: Advocating Against Domestic Violence, sent out a press release that basically offered ways to avoid federal police, but didn’t detail any state or local protections because there are none

For survivors who had planned to seek help at the 555 W. Harrison courthouse in the coming days, we encourage you to file for orders of protection online and contact the Illinois Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-877-863-6338 to get connected with legal advocates. The Illinois Legal Aid website has information about how to get started with the paperwork and can connect you with legal support: https://www.illinoislegalaid.org/legal-information/starting-case-get-order-protection. Survivors will need to be able to log into a Zoom account to connect with a judge remotely. Zoom instructions can be found in English and Spanish at the Cook County Court website. For individuals with follow up hearings over the coming days, please reach out to the Clerk’s office for virtual hearing details: (312) 603-5030.

* One more thing from Pritzker

Very importantly, we’ve asked for the public to be ready with your iPhone and any way that you can to record what’s going on in their neighborhoods by ICE, because we think that’s the best way to demonstrate what ice is doing if they’re doing something wrong, or to keep them honest and doing the right thing, because they know they’re being watched.

Aside from possible lawsuits, that’s really all there is.

* Sorry to all sides for the bluntness, but that’s just the way it is. You gotta deal with the reality as it exists, not argue over the lazy hot takes.

  49 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Sep 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Gov. JB Pritzker expecting federal ‘actions’ by weekend as local officials brace for 300 immigration agents. Tribune

    - Local law enforcement near the Naval Station Great Lakes in North Chicago met with federal authorities who on Wednesday morning briefed them on the roughly 300 agents’ arrival and the potential for the National Guard’s deployment, according to Gregory Jackson, chief of staff for North Chicago Mayor Leon Rockingham Jr.
    - The officers will stay in hotels in Waukegan, Gurnee and possibly other area communities. National Guard troops will be used as they were in Los Angeles to protect federal buildings, Jackson said.
    - “I’m not suggesting that I am absolutely certain of whether or not the Texas National Guard will, in fact, end up in the state of Illinois. What I know is that we’ve been told by people who seem to have the credentials to know,” Pritzker said Wednesday at the Metropolitan Peace Academy on the Lower West Side.

* Related stories…

* Governor Pritzker will be in Berwyn at 12:30 to make the start of the school year at Prairie Oak Elementary School. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WCIA | Illinois joins 23 other states in opposing rule change that could cut homecare workers pay: The Trump Administration wants to do away with an Obama era rule that required homecare workers to be paid at least the federal minimum wage, which is $7.25 an hour. The rule also guarantees overtime pay if it is required. “If something bad happens right before my shift ends with that individual that you’re serving, then that worker has to choose between either not doing it for that individual or doing the work without the pay,” Keller said.

* CBS Chicago | Broadview mayor says ICE campaign “will soon be underway” at local immigration facility: Federal officials have informed us that a large-scale enforcement campaign will soon be underway,” Broadview Mayor Katrina Thompson wrote in a letter to residents and business owners. The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility on Beach Street — a brick building with barbed-wire fencing — will serve as the primary processing location for detainees, according to Thompson. “This effort may draw protests and demonstrations, like those seen earlier this year in Los Angeles, where property damage and assaults against law enforcement were reported. As a result, we will be working closely with all businesses along Beach Drive to alert them to the possibility of traffic disruptions that may affect employees and deliveries over the next 45 to 60 days,” Thompson wrote.

*** Statewide ***

* Capitol News Illinois | The federal farm policy trap: why some farmers are stuck raising crops that no longer thrive: In these Mississippi River bottoms, federal farm policy became a trap. Farming is one of the most heavily subsidized industries in America. Each year, Congress allocates billions to keep crops in the ground, cushioning the blow from droughts, floods, fires and market swings — a safety net that dates to the 1930s, when the Depression and Dust Bowl put the nation’s food supply at risk. But today, in some of the most flood- and drought-prone parts of the country, those programs can also keep people hanging on, even when it makes more sense to walk away. That’s increasingly clear along parts of the Mississippi River Valley and especially here in Alexander County, at the rural tip of Illinois. As the climate changes and as aging levees fail, the risk is becoming more predictable, the losses so frequent it is clear some land will no longer yield what it used to.

* Tribune | Fall foliage tracker 2025: Where and when to go leaf peeping in Illinois, the Midwest and throughout the U.S.: The National Weather Service’s Climate Prediction Center expects above normal temperatures and normal chances of precipitation from September through November. So, the sweaters might have to stay tucked away for a bit longer. What does the weather forecast mean for leaves? When will they change color? Since 2013, SmokyMountains.com has used historical temperature, precipitation and regional tree data and feedback from foliage fans around the United States to produce a map that shows a county-by-county view of the best times to visit for peak leaf-peeping.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Republican Jimmy Ford has announced a bid against Rep. Katie Stuart. Press Release…

Jimmy Ford, a community leader, small-business owner, and father of three, today announced his campaign for State Representative in the 112th District, pledging to bring tough, compassionate leadership to Springfield and work for the people of the Metro East.

“Our state is broken because politicians in Springfield care more about themselves than the people they’re supposed to serve, and we are all paying the price with a higher cost of living as prices for energy, gas, groceries, and healthcare have become unaffordable for working families,” Ford said. “I’m running because you deserve someone tough with compassion on your side. I’ll stand up for you when others don’t. I won’t take any crap when it comes to standing up for you and delivering results.”

Rep. Stuart won the district by 9 points in 2024. The last Republican to win it was President Trump in 2016, by a slim margin. Kamala Harris won the district by 6 points in 2024.

* Sun-Times | Illinois attorney general joins push for bond hearings for detained immigrants: In the amicus brief, Raoul and 19 other attorneys general rejected the federal policy giving Immigration and Customs Enforcement the authority to detain unauthorized immigrants without giving them opportunity to attend a bond hearing. The policy was implemented in July as a new interpretation of an existing law that says immigrants in the U.S. without legal status “shall be detained” after their arrest, according to The Washington Post. In a memo sent to immigration enforcement employees, ICE acting director Todd Lyons said such immigrants should be detained “for the duration of their removal proceedings.”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | ICE detains woman at Chicago courthouse as Trump threatens to ramp up immigration enforcement: Lauren Hanna, an advocate at the courthouse, said she saw four plainclothes agents take the woman into custody around 8:45 a.m. One of the agents told Hanna that they wanted to talk to the woman “about her immigration status.” The woman was a defendant in a case that was scheduled to be heard 15 minutes later. Her domestic violence charges were dismissed during the hearing, and the presiding judge wrote in a court document that the woman was in the custody of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

* Sun-Times | CTU calls for remote learning option for families amid looming immigration raids: Union President Stacy Davis Gates said the district should have a plan to shift those students to online learning to minimize the impact of being outside of the classroom. But Gates wasn’t optimistic that the district would be able to achieve that. “CPS is not ready for that,” she said, though she noted CPS was in a better position to stand up remote learning than it was when the pandemic hit.

* Sun-Times | Pilsen Mexican Independence Day parade to be held with precautions amid potential deportation campaign: Volunteers stationed along the route will carry radios, cellphones and whistles to quickly report any issues, said Rigoberto Gonzalez Jr., executive director of the Pilsen Chamber of Commerce. “We want people to feel safe,” he said.

* Second City Cop | FOP Charges Filed (huge post): We’re told that five charges were filed against the president of Lodge 7 Tuesday afternoon. We don’t have a list yet, but supposedly this will be THE topic discussed at the Board Meeting Wednesday with a possible suspension pending investigation.

* FOP President John Catanzara’s response to the “drama”


* Sun-Times | As Chicago braces for troops, a reminder — soldiers have been here before, and often made things worse: That first military effort in Chicago — for years called the Fort Dearborn Massacre, but really a battle, a minor skirmish in the War of 1812 that went very badly for one side — was a mixed bag. The Army’s presence planted the seeds of the city. They also got its residents killed by mishandling relations with the local Native Americans. The history of American soldiers in Chicago — about to get a significant new chapter with President Donald Trump planning to deploy the National Guard to the city — is also checkered.

* MediaIte | Daily Wire Host Calls for the Execution of Chicago’s Mayor: Daily Wire host Matt Walsh accused Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson of treason and said Johnson should be “given the requisite punishment for a capital offense.” Speaking on Wednesday’s edition of The Matt Walsh Show, which airs on Ben Shapiro’s Daily Wire platform, Walsh expressed support for President Donald Trump’s deployment of National Guard soldiers to large cities controlled by Democrats, ostensibly to combat crime.

* Sun-Times | City-owned vacant lots near United Center could become housing, retail: The city of Chicago is looking for developers to revive more than a dozen vacant lots near the United Center, ahead of the arena’s ownership kicking off construction of its $7 billion 1901 Project. The city opened up requests for proposals last month for four clusters of city-owned lots, totaling 19 sites, along West Madison and West Fifth streets in the Near West Side and East Garfield Park. On Wednesday, it held a presubmission meeting for interested parties.

* Chicago Reader | Nancy Faust transformed the sound of baseball: During a particularly good Sox season in 1972, Faust and announcer Harry Caray ramped up the showmanship. When she was hired, Faust had been asked to play the state song of each batter as he strolled to the plate, but she also had license to get more creative. In ’72, she debuted a customized version of “Jesus Christ Superstar” for popular White Sox slugger Dick Allen.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Batavia alderman to resign: Batavia is looking for a new 7th Ward alderman, as Alderman Sarah Vogelsinger is resigning. Mayor Jeff Schielke announced the news at Tuesday’s city council meeting. Vogelsinger said she is doing so due to increased obligations to her family because her husband is working more hours at his job. “It was a really hard decision,” she said. “I have thoroughly enjoyed the time here learning from all the experts” on topics that come before the council, she said.

* Daily Herald | A ‘terrible desecration’: Antisemitic graffiti painted outside Vernon Hills synagogue: A retaining wall near the parking lot at Congregation Or Shalom, 21 Hawthorn Parkway, was vandalized about 8:30 p.m. Sunday night. Someone used spray paint to draw a lewd symbol and write a short phrase targeting Jews, Vernon Hills police said. The graffiti, which faced the synagogue, was discovered Tuesday morning by an employee arriving for work, Rabbi Ari Margolis said. It was being removed Wednesday in a laborious process.

* Daily Herald | Aurora mayor says broadband service mismanaged its finances: Aurora Mayor John Laesch is shaking up OnLight Aurora, saying the fiber-optic broadband service has mismanaged its funds and is deep in debt. He is questioning more than $337,000 in marketing expenses that the former chairman of the city-affiliated not-for-profit paid since 2018. Laesch said there is little to show for the money that was spent. The list of expenses includes $7,206 on what the mayor called adult entertainment and $50,937 in debit card withdrawals at ATMs by OnLight’s former chairman.

* Lake & McHenry County Scanner | ‘Reckless and dangerous’: County board member to introduce resolution opposing ICE, National Guard in Lake County: Lake County Board Member Esiah Campos said Wednesday that he will call for an emergency meeting of the Lake County Board. Campos said he is introducing a resolution opposing President Donald J. Trump’s decision to deploy National Guard units and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents to Naval Station Great Lakes in Lake County. Campos, a Navy reservist, said the resolution is about defending the values of Lake County and rejecting federal action that would bring fear and division into the community.

* Patch | Addison Township Official’s Home In Question: Bobby Hernandez, a Democrat, is currently the supervisor of Addison Township. In the April election, he ousted Republican Dennis Reboletti, who served two terms. On Oct. 15, he registered to vote at a house in the 400 block of West Diversey Avenue in Addison. He remains registered there, according to records from the DuPage County Clerk’s Office. Two months later, Hernandez, 36, used that address in a filing with the state Board of Elections as the chairman of Democratic Candidates for Addison Township. The Diversey house is now in foreclosure, with more than $253,392 still owed, according to DuPage County court records.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Oswego Village Board discusses possible extension of 1% grocery tax: Oswego trustees meeting as a committee of the whole Tuesday evening directed village staff to prepare an ordinance to locally extend a 1% state grocery tax set to expire at the end of the year. The Oswego Village Board is set to take a formal vote on the measure Sept. 16. However, trustees have yet to decide whether the funds generated by the proposed grocery tax extension should remain in the village’s general fund or to direct some or all of the revenue to the Water and Sewer Fund to help with debt service payments.

* Naperville Sun | Naperville D203 contract keeps current school day, increases base salary: A new four-year contract for members of the Naperville Unit Education Association, approved unanimously Wednesday by Naperville District 203 School Board, calls for the current school day structure to remain as is and the annual base salary to increase between at least 2% and 3.85%. The ratification ends several contentious weeks during which members of the teacher’s union overwhelmingly voted to strike after teachers started the school year without a contract and bargaining sessions failed to produce results.

* Daily Herald | Naperville city council to vote on appointing Supna Jain to vacant spot: Jain was first elected to the District 204 board in 2021 and won reelection this past April. She is the principal lecturer in communication and media studies at North Central College in Naperville.

* Fox Chicago | Suburban attorney accused of forging hundreds of service hours for client, prosecutors say: The indictment alleges Luster “knowingly delivered to the DuPage County Circuit Court Clerk’s Office a false document apparently capable of defrauding another, being a volunteer community service documentation form … dated Dec. 16, 2024, that indicated” her client had completed 247.5 hours of community service at a daycare facility in Calumet City.

* Lake County News-Sun | Lake County Forest Preserves wage war on invasive buckthorn; ‘Lots of people hate this’: While visually unremarkable to the layman, the plant is the bane of people like Matt Ueltzen, the manager of restoration ecology with the forest preserves, who is one of dozens of staffers and teams of volunteers that work year-round to combat the invasive species that has detrimental impacts on local ecosystems. Today, more than 50% of Lake County’s trees are buckthorn. At the Edward L. Ryerson Conservation Area, Ueltzen pointed out a few small buckthorn shrubs, maybe a few feet high. The tips of their trunks have a pair of buds resembling deer hooves. […] But its competitive advantages have allowed it to outperform native plants. Ueltzen said it spreads seeds at a young age, leaves out earlier in the spring than native plants and remains green into the fall.

*** Downstate ***

* WTVO | Could Illinois ICE surge extend to Rockford? City officials issue warning: The City posted a notice to its Facebook page in both English and Spanish, saying, “We are aware that Homeland Security recently confirmed plans to expand ICE operations in Chicago. While there is no confirmation that these operations will extend to Rockford, we recognize it is a possibility. And, we also recognize the fear and uncertainty this news may cause.” “It’s also important to be clear – the Rockford Police Department follows the Illinois Trust Act. We do not participate in ICE raids, nor will we,” the statement continued. “To our immigrant neighbors: please know this — you are valued, you are cared for and you are an important part of who we are.”

* Tribune | A year after opening, Hard Rock Casino Rockford looks to add hotel as it anticipates competition from Wisconsin: One year after launching its $300 million permanent casino, the Hard Rock Casino Rockford is looking to add a hotel and other amenities to defend its turf against the Ho-Chunk Nation, which is building a casino complex 18 miles away in Beloit, Wisconsin. The casino border war could see millions of dollars in play across state lines in an escalating competition for customers when Ho-Chunk Gaming Beloit opens next summer. Both sides are preparing for battle.

* WTVO | Over 1 million guests visit Hard Rock Casino Rockford in first year: Since its opening, the casino has generated over $8 million in tax revenue for Winnebago County. A significant portion of this revenue supports the Rockford Promise Scholarship Program, which benefits local students.

*** National ***

* OCPA | Federal judge strikes down Oklahoma’s in-state tuition for illegal immigrants: In his order and final consent judgment in United States of America v. State of Oklahoma, U.S. District Judge Ronald White declared that the Oklahoma law is “unconstitutional and invalid.” […] The Higher Ed Immigration Portal notes that Oklahoma state law allowed illegal immigrants to receive in-state tuition if a youth graduated from high school in Oklahoma, resided in Oklahoma with a parent or guardian for at least two years prior to high school graduation, and had applied with the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) for legal status.

* The Hill | Oz backs Florida dropping school vaccine mandates: In an interview on “The Story with Martha MacCallum,” the Fox News host asked Oz whether he agrees with officials who want to make Florida the first state in the nation to end childhood vaccine requirements and whether Oz would “recommend the same thing to your patients.” “I would definitely not have mandates for vaccinations,” the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) administrator told MacCallum.

  14 Comments      


Good morning!

Thursday, Sep 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Jesse Welles

joy’s gonna save you from
joy’s gonna save you from
yerrrrrself

And what say you?

  6 Comments      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Thursday, Sep 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Thursday, Sep 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.

  1 Comment      


Pritzker says Trump trying to set a legal trap by demanding the governor call him

Wednesday, Sep 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Gov. JB Pritzker’s press conference today…

Q: [Some people are saying] this is all political. You won’t call the president, because you have your own aspirations…

Pritzker: That’s silly. That is absolutely ridiculous. Let me be clear, the President is begging me to call him, to ask him to do something that we don’t want. He wants me to call him and ask him to call in National Guard to the city of Chicago. We don’t want it. So that’s why I’m not calling the president.

I have been very clear about what we do want. What we do want is civilian law enforcement assistance. We want to make sure that we have enough FBI, ATF DEA on the ground. We have some already. As you know, they do really good work, working in tandem with state police, working in tandem with Chicago Police Department, but we can use more. We can interdict more drugs and more guns that are coming across the border, into the city, into the state of Illinois. And there’s more work that we can do to make sure that we’re fighting crime with, again, civilian law enforcement. And I’ve been very clear about that. The President wants me to call him about National Guard. I’m not going to do that. […]

Q: Don’t you think if you maybe called him, you can lower the temperature and all of this, and you can ask for the civilian resources, the law enforcement, not military resources that you just talked about. For example, sir, if you were president, and you wanted someone to call you, would you want them to call you?

Pritzker: No, I would pick up the phone and call them. What I don’t understand, why everybody doesn’t understand this. It’s as if he’s begging me to call him because he wants me to ask him for National Guard. That is what he is trying to do.

There’s a second reason, and you should pay close attention to this. He wants to set into the fact pattern that the governor called him to ask for help. Why? Because he’s going to end up in court. He’s going to end up in court, and that will be a fact that they will use in court that the governor called to ask for help. And I’m sorry I’m not going to provide him with evidence to support his desire to have the court rule in his favor. I’m just not going to do that.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

  22 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Sep 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Sun-Times has more details on what federal agents will be up to at Naval Station Great Lakes

Hundreds of federal agents who are being sent to a north suburban naval base this week are expected to leave the facility before dawn each morning to carry out President Donald Trump’s mission to curb crime and make immigration arrests in Chicago, officials have been told.

The 230 agents, at least some of whom work for U.S. Customs and Border Protection, are coming from Los Angeles, where an immigration blitz this summer spurred protests that pushed Trump to call in the National Guard, sources familiar with the planning said.

At least 30 agents already have arrived at Naval Station Great Lakes near North Chicago, where they’ve been practicing crowd control with shields and flash-bang grenades, the sources said. Similar training has been underway for several months. […]

Roughly 140 unmarked vehicles that will be used in the operation have been sent to the base, which is the Navy’s largest training station and the largest military installation in the state, according to sources. Officials are seeking to establish a no-fly zone to keep away news helicopters and drones that aren’t already prohibited from flying in the area.

* The Tribune

The nearly 30,000 people incarcerated in Illinois prisons may begin having their mail scanned and subjected to other security measures following reports that those incarcerated and staff members who work in state prisons were in danger of being exposed to harmful chemicals from illegal drugs and other substances being smuggled into the facilities.

The stricter security rules, which are being implemented for the next five months on an emergency basis, were quietly imposed a few weeks ago by the Illinois Department of Corrections. They allow, but do not mandate, IDOC to implement a process to electronically scan and digitize incoming mail and print it for a person incarcerated or send it to them electronically. The head of IDOC also would have the authority to exclude incoming mail from the process.

Authorized through the state’s bipartisan Joint Committee on Administrative Rules, the new measures went into effect Aug. 14 and come amid a protracted push by Republican lawmakers in the General Assembly’s superminority and a union representing IDOC employees raising concerns that the department was failing to protect workers and people behind bars against drugs such as fentanyl and other substances apparently being sent covertly through the department’s mail.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois’ tourism push includes millions for NASCAR events: State records obtained by Capitol News Illinois show the state has spent nearly $7 million hosting or sponsoring the sport since 2022. That includes sponsorship of the Enjoy Illinois 300 scheduled for Sunday at World Wide Technology Raceway in Madison just across the river from St. Louis. The state-sponsored race is the second playoff race on the Cup Series schedule. It’s one of four NASCAR races scheduled to take place in Illinois this year.

* Sen. Lakesia Collins | Prioritize funding after-school programs: As chair of the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus, I’ve fought to secure $50 million in the state budget for after-school grants. But I also know that funding without timely follow-through is an empty promise. Delays in releasing those funds are already putting these programs at risk — and families can’t afford to wait. I’ve spoken with parents who are desperate to find care that matches their work schedules. I’ve met youth workers and mentors who’ve had to walk away from kids they’ve known for years, because their programs were defunded. I’ve seen the heartbreak and the uncertainty. And I refuse to accept it as normal.

*** Chicago ***

* Injustice Watch | Superintendent of Chicago’s youth jail might not live here, records show: Nine current and former employees of the detention center — many of them critical of what they describe as mismanagement and poor leadership at the facility — told Injustice Watch that Dixon is rarely seen. And a trail of public records ties Dixon to a suburb outside Detroit, where he ran the juvenile detention center for nearly two decades before agreeing to move to Cook County for the superintendent job in 2015. Dixon has been registered to vote in Michigan since 1995, and he has voted absentee consistently since 2012, including, most recently, in the 2024 primary and general elections, records show.

* Sun-Times | Family of teens shot at Douglas Park pool sue former lifeguard, Chicago Park District: “Kids [are] supposed to be able to go to the park to play,” Jeremy Herred Sr., Jeremy’s father, said at a new conference announcing the lawsuit Wednesday. “Our kids went to the park to play and got shot by an employee. It’s crazy.” The boy’s families filed a lawsuit this week against Leto and the Chicago Park District, who they alleged hired and promoted Leto despite reports of aggressive and threatening behavior.

* Block Club | CPS To Pay $700,000 To Fired Lincoln Park High School Principals After 2020 Scandal: The settlement follows a May decision by former CPS CEO Pedro Martinez to remove both principals from the district’s “do not hire” list. “This case shows the choice for CPS should not be either protecting students or treating their teachers, coaches and principals with dignity and some due process. It needs to do both,” Bill Choslovsky, the attorney who represented Thuet and Brumfield, told Block Club. “That’s the ultimate lesson of this five-year saga.”

* Crain’s | Howard Brown nurses authorize strike over pay, staffing: The Illinois Nurses Association, which represents 32 registered nurses at the LGBTQ-focused health care provider, says Howard Brown Health’s cost-of-living increases fail to keep up with inflation and the strike would come following “years of alleged chronic understaffing” and turbulent labor disputes between Howard Brown Health and the non-nurses HBH Workers United union. “Nurses argue that chronic understaffing and sub-standard pay have made their jobs worse in recent years,” the union said in a press release. “They believe staffing issues will persist until HBH makes nursing jobs more attractive to applicants.”

* Sun-Times | Northwestern Medicine opens outpatient clinic in Bronzeville: The 120,000-square-foot center also has free parking for patients. There is a large community space and a room for local retail in the clinic’s building. “Increasing access to world-class health care in Bronzeville will make a generational impact on the health and wellness of this community,” Dr. Kimbra Bell, medical director at the Northwestern Medicine Bronzeville Outpatient Center, said in a statement.

* Tribune | Veterans, advocates urge National Guard members to resist potentially unlawful Trump orders: “Service members signed up to uphold the Constitution,” Brad Thomson, a member of the National Lawyers Guild’s Military Law Task Force, said at a news conference Tuesday at Federal Plaza in the Loop. “Service members did not sign up to become pawns for a president trying to score political points against the opposing party.”

* Tribune | After killings in Mexico, lawyer seeks help from Chicago attorney — but Trump-era cuts hamper their work: With cuts earlier this year and Washington’s further retreat from international aid, reinforced by the $9 billion rescissions package Congress approved this summer and Trump’s $4.9 billion proposed pocket rescission last week, the federal funding that helped pay for Lee’s work was decimated, and the program’s future is uncertain. The initiative, Justice Defenders, is run by the American Bar Association, which said it received up to $3.4 million annually in federal assistance for the program from the U.S. Department of State. For years, the program has supported lawyers’ work in dozens of countries, shedding light on human rights abuses and strengthening rule of law standards in criminal justice systems. While Lee and other lawyers offered legal services for free, the federal funds helped cover travel, research and other costs.

* Crain’s | Mary Dixon moves off ‘Morning Edition’ as WBEZ revamps its lineup: Starting Sept. 15, the local NPR affiliate WBEZ-FM 91.5 will add “In the Loop with Sasha-Ann Simons,” a local news talk show airing from 9 to 10 a.m., and “Say More with Mary Dixon & Patrick Smith,” a live show featuring conversations with Chicago listeners from 10 to 11 a.m. Dixon, who had been the local host for NPR’s “Morning Edition,” will be replaced by WBEZ anchor and reporter Clare Lane, who has filled in as an anchor at “Morning Edition” before, as Dixon moves into her role with “Say More.”

* Chicago Mag | Mike Reed’s Next Act: The result is Sound & Gravity, a five-day, six-venue event with a more intimate and esoteric appeal. Running September 10 to 14, it features headliners like Drag City troubadour Bill Callahan and Nigerian desert-blues shredder Mdou Moctar. They’ll share stages with Chicago jazz mainstays Michael Zerang and Ken Vandermark, plus more than 50 other acts from around the world — a wide-ranging mix of rock outliers, free-jazz improvisers, and contemporary classical performers that reflects Reed’s varied interests. The lineup expands on what Constellation does year-round. Says Reed: “I want to keep doing music the way I want to do it, outside the desires and the trends of the popular culture.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | National Republican movement visits Orland Park in push for stricter voting measures: The Republican advocates on tour, called the Tea Party Patriots, argue the proposed Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act, which would require states to obtain documentary proof of citizenship in order to register to vote in federal elections, would close a loophole in voter registration rules, according to Jenny Beth Martin, honorary chairman of Tea Party Patriots Action. Advocates from Will County Now, a chapter of the National Organization for Women, said on social media they planned to protest the event because it was “dangerous misinformation,” and the proposed legislation would “actually disenfranchise legitimate voters way more than it prevents those who are ineligible from voting.”

* ABC Chicago | Valley View District teachers file ‘intent to strike’ notice: The district covers Romeoville and Bolingbrook The teachers union there filed an official notice of their intent to strike. The teachers and the district are arguing about an additional 20 minutes being added to the school day. District officials say the extra instructional time will lead to higher test scores. Teachers say it puts unnecessary burdens on staff.

* Evanston Roundtable | Chicago Stars to play 2026 season at Northwestern Medicine Field: The Chicago Stars officially named Northwestern Medicine Field at Martin Stadium as their home for the 2026 National Women’s Soccer League season on Wednesday morning, confirming a decision rumored after the city of Evanston granted the team zoning permission. This decision comes just days before the team will play their “Lakefront Faceoff” on Sunday.

* Daily Herald | Waukegan finalist for Netherlands-based solar panel maker’s U.S. headquarters: The former Johns Manville Corp., property on the far northeast side of the city is one of two locations being considered as Solarge USA reaches the final stage of a national site selection process for its first U.S. facility. An unspecified site in Kansas is the other potential location, a company official said last Thursday during a presentation to the Lake County Board’s finance and administrative committee, which is expected to discuss and make recommendations on potential incentives.

* Evanston Now | City’s call for ban on masked agents advances: The resolutions will head to the City Council on Sept. 8 for final consideration, just as Chicago braces for a federal immigration blitz that Gov. JB Pritzker on Tuesday said was imminent. The city’s Human Services Committee passed the resolutions with little conversation, backing both proposals that stemmed from a referral by Ald. Parielle Davis (7th) in July, cosponsored by Alds. Shawn Iles (3rd) and Clare Kelly (1st).

*** Downstate ***

* Daily Egyptian | SIU denies FOIA request asking for all syllabi: SIU refused to comply with a mid-August Freedom of Information Act request from a media organization, Metric Media, for a complete list of classes, professors and syllabi from the spring 2025 term. The request, which professors say is a scare tactic, was sent to SIU among other schools around the country. […] Metric Media is an online media company registered in Missouri but based out of Delaware. Their content has been described by the Columbia Journalism Review and Deseret News as “pink slime journalism,” a term coined in 2012 by journalist Ryan Smith to draw comparisons between processed, low quality meat and low quality, templated or stolen content.

* IPM Newsroom | U of I will offer students on-campus abortion access starting this fall, following new Illinois law: Awais Vaid, the executive director of U of I’s McKinley Health Center, said the law allows the university to have a contractual agreement with a provider in the community. “If a student comes to us with medication abortion requirements, we will do the intake in house, and then we’ll do what is called a warm handoff,” Vaid said. McKinley is partnering with Planned Parenthood in Champaign. Warm handoffs will occur on a “priority basis,” Awais said, meaning students will be seen in order of urgency.

* WGEM | WIU to continue ROTC program : The Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) program will continue at Western Illinois University. According to WIU, the U.S. Army announced plans to maintain the ROTC program at the university after it was inactivated at the end of June. WIU said the ROTC program has been active for over 50 years at the university and has developed more than 1,000 cadets. Click here for some background.

* PJ Star | Washington moves step closer to repairing damaged historic bridge: After the initial bid to repair Tazewell County’s oldest bridge was tabled and then rejected by the city, the project will once again go up for bidding in September. The Washington City Council approved an amended resolution for work on the city’s historic Candlewood Bridge, built in 1894. The bridge showed significant deterioration over the years, and was closed in 2023 at the recommendation of the city’s bridge inspector and the Illinois Department of Transportation after a wingwall collapsed into the below creek. In May, the council passed a resolution approving $356,188 in motor fuel tax funds to repair the bridge. The resolution approved Monday was higher, putting $550,000 toward the project.

* WGLT | Littered fishing line in waterways concern Bloomington-Normal bird experts and residents: Also known as “Local Tarzan,” Cavalera said he has rescued “hundreds” of birds from fishing line, and has a video of himself rescuing two geese tied together in fishing line at Miller Park Lake. Cavalera said his solution to preventing this issue is not going to be everyone’s favorite. […] Cavalera said if people have the integrity to get the $15 license every year to fish, they are probably less likely to throw trash and discarded fishing line around the lakes.

*** National ***

* Chalkbeat Colorado | Banana phones and cozy corners: Colorado’s third year of universal preschool gets off the ground: It was the first day of preschool in the Otters classroom at El Nidito, a bilingual child care program at The Family Center in Fort Collins. The little boy and his 11 classmates are among 40,000 children enrolled in Colorado’s universal preschool program this year. The $349 million program offers tuition-free preschool — typically a half day — to all children in the year before kindergarten. […] But wrinkles remain. The state is still fighting two lawsuits brought by religious preschools that objected to non-discrimination rules protecting LGBTQ children, families, and employees. Both suits are pending in federal appeals court. And the national early childhood group found that Colorado meets only two of 10 benchmarks meant to ensure that preschool classrooms are high quality.

* NYT | Florida Says It Plans to End All Vaccine Mandates: Florida plans to become the first state to end all vaccine mandates, including for schoolchildren, rejecting a practice that public health experts have credited for decades with limiting the spread of infectious diseases. […] He added that the administration would be “working to end” all vaccine mandates. “Every last one of them is wrong and drips with disdain and slavery,” Dr. Ladapo said.

* WaPo | The group behind Project 2025 wants a ‘Manhattan Project’ for more babies: It hopes to steer funding for child care away from programs like Head Start and toward individual families — specifically to encourage parents to stay home and rear children. And the group wants Trump to issue executive orders requiring all proposed policies and regulations to “measure their positive or negative impacts on marriage and family” — then overhaul or end programs that score poorly.

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Tariffs Impact Everyone

Wednesday, Sep 3, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Businesses in urban and rural areas alike are navigating the uncertainty of tariff expenses. County Junction in Clinton has had to adjust items they carry and the prices they charge. Owner Julie Hinds says shipping prices for inventory and vendor suppliers are changing rapidly. “I wish the government would kind of stop and slow down and think about the small businesses. The ‘mom and pops’ like us are the ones that keep America alive.”

Retailers like Julie enrich our economy and strengthen our communities, even during the uncertainty of increased tariff expenses. IRMA is showcasing some of the many retailers who continue to make Illinois work.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign stuff

Wednesday, Sep 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Is Trump hedging again about Chicago? (Updated x2)

Wednesday, Sep 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* AP

President Donald Trump suggested Wednesday that New Orleans could be his next target for deploying the National Guard to fight crime, potentially expanding the number of cities around the nation where he may send federal law enforcement. […]

“So we’re making a determination now,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office during a meeting with Polish President Karol Nawrocki. “Do we go to Chicago? Do we go to a place like New Orleans, where we have a great governor, Jeff Landry, who wants us to come in and straighten out a very nice section of this country that’s become quite, you know, quite tough, quite bad.” […]

“We could straighten out Chicago. All they have to do is ask us to go into Chicago. If we don’t have the support of some of these politicians, but I’ll tell you who is supporting us, the people of Chicago,” Trump said Wednesday.

He does enjoy keeping people off balance.

Anyway, your thoughts?

…Adding… Ken Klippenstein

The Department of Homeland Security has requested military assistance for upcoming ICE operations in Chicago, according to a “For Official Use Only” memo that I’ve obtained. A military advance team has already arrived.

The document requests “immediate Department of Defense support” for ICE’s Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) activities “to address public safety and national security.” It suggests that the support will be provided by active duty troops, making no mention of the Illinois National Guard.

The request specifically seeks “support infrastructure,” including highway access, fuel, and “other logistical nodes…” with the military staging out of the Great Lakes Naval Station in North Chicago, some 30 miles from downtown.

Dated August 27, the request is from Department of Homeland Security Executive Secretary Andrew Whitaker to Defense Department Executive Secretary Anthony Fuscellaro. Whitaker is a former Ralph Lauren Brand Ambassador and a longtime Trump politico.

...Adding… Again, your guess is as good as anyone’s right now…


  25 Comments      


Alternative electricity suppliers cry foul, claim AG Raoul suing them to fund Trump fight

Wednesday, Sep 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From last month

Customers of ComEd and Ameren Illinois have lost more than $2 billion over the past 10 years to alternative electricity suppliers — businesses known for ringing people’s doorbells and promising great deals, according to an analysis of state data by the nonprofit Citizens Utility Board.

CUB Executive Director Sarah Moskowitz called Illinois “a buyer-beware market.”

The offers are legal, but often they don’t deliver long-term savings, according to the consumer watchdog, which is calling for better consumer protections.

* This week

Companies that say they offer consumers choice on their electric bills have accused Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul of unconstitutionally teaming up with Chicago-based plaintiffs’ law firms in a bid to use the power of the state to extract big settlements from the companies, generating big fees for the lawyers and millions of dollars to help Raoul finance his office’s politically-driven court actions opposing policies and goals of the administration of President Donald Trump.

On Aug. 20, so-called alternative retail energy suppliers Residents Energy LLC and IDT Energy Inc. filed suit in Chicago federal court against the Illinois Attorney General’s office and Raoul in his official capacity as the state’s top legal officer.

The lawsuit accuses Raoul of violating the rights to due process afforded to Residents, IDT and other alternative retail energy suppliers (ARES) under both the U.S. Constitution’s 14th Amendment and the Illinois state constitution.

Specifically, the lawsuit asserts Raoul violated those constitutional protections by deputizing three plaintiffs’ law firms, who normally specialize in class actions and other similar lawsuits, to take point on legal actions against Residents, IDT and other ARES. […]

The companies further noted that Raoul, a Democrat, has publicly stated that his office’s financial resources have been further strained in recent months by Raoul’s politically-driven legal actions opposing policies, executive orders and other initiatives from the Trump administration.

“These admissions reinforce that the Attorney General has an institutional and political interest in maximizing enforcement revenue - a profit motive that aligns with and exacerbates the bias created by his illegal contingency-fee arrangement with the deputized private-law-firm (Special Assistant Attorneys General),” the companies said in their lawsuit.

Um, the money generated by Raoul’s office goes to the General Revenue Fund.

The full lawsuit is here.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Another supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Sep 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Once again, Sen. Willie Preston to the rescue!

Wednesday, Sep 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* A little more than two years ago

Illinois State Senator Willie Preston came to the rescue of a driver whose truck had flipped onto its side in Chicago last week.

Sen. Preston, who represents Illinois’ 16th District, was driving near 79th and Kedzie last Friday when he saw people recording something on their phones.

He said he then saw a semi that had flipped onto its side. It was smoking, and the driver was trapped inside.

Sen. Preston had a tool in his car, which he used to break the windshield and then helped the driver out of the cab.

Video is here.

* Yesterday

Kathleen Miles is a north suburban mother to 11 kids and the grandmother to seven more. She’s the rock of her family, but now she’s recovering after getting rocked by a man in the Loop, who has spent time in jail for doing just that to several other women years ago.

“This has rocked our whole family cause the rock needs someone to take care of her,” Miles said from her Lake Villa home on Tuesday.

Miles has worked in the Loop for the last two decades, and a couple of weeks ago, she said she was walking to the train with a coworker along West Washington Avenue when a stranger blew through them and struck her in the face.

The attacker, WGN-TV was told, watched as she lay on the ground bleeding before a good Samaritan, who turned out to be state senator Willie Preston, stepped in, took off his shirt and tried to stop the bleeding. […]

“I think every system has failed [the attacker], whether it’s mental health or the justice system, I feel he’s been failed,” Miles said. “And as a result, we’ve all been failed.”

* I’ve been pleasantly surprised by Preston’s congressional campaign. This happened two weeks ago and Preston didn’t cravenly rush to post video or whatever on his social media platforms (especially since it happened the day before his formal campaign announcement). Maybe that’s my own soft bigotry of low political expectations, but I came by those low expectations after 35 years covering this stuff. /s

* Also, his videos have so far been pretty solid. Labor Day


  13 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Sep 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Appeals court upholds ban on concealed weapons on CTA, Metra. Sun-Times

    - The appellate court decision released Tuesday reverses the ruling of a federal judge downstate, who found the law banning concealed firearms on public transit systems was unconstitutional under current U.S. Supreme Court standards.
    - “[The Second Amendment] does not bar the people’s representatives from enacting laws — consistent with our nation’s historical tradition of regulation — that ensure public transportation systems remain free from accessible firearms,” the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals wrote in its ruling.
    - Four concealed carry permit holders sued over the law in 2022, claiming it prevented them from carrying weapons for self-defense when traveling via the Chicago Transit Authority and Metra.

* Related stories…

* Governor JB Pritzker will visit the Metropolitan Peace Academy at 3 pm to meet with community violence intervention leaders preparing to respond to potential federal deployments. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Capitol News Illinois | As Trump declares ‘we’re going in,’ Pritzker says ‘terror and cruelty is the point’: Gov. JB Pritzker said Tuesday he expects Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to employ the same aggressive strategies they used in Los Angeles earlier this summer after President Donald Trump said he will deploy the National Guard to Chicago. The information, Pritzker said, was not directly communicated to him, but rather gleaned from anonymous sources in the federal government, military and “well-sourced” news reports. He said he’s been told members of the Texas National Guard are being readied for deployment to Chicago and many of the same federal ICE and Homeland Security groups that worked in L.A. are being relocated to Chicago.

* Subscribers know more. WTTW | Feds File Lawsuit Targeting Illinois Law That Provides Financial Aid to Undocumented Students: The Department of Justice on Tuesday filed a lawsuit against Gov. JB Pritzker, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul and the state itself arguing that by providing in-state tuition and scholarships to undocumented students, they are unconstitutionally discriminating against U.S. citizens. “Under federal law, schools cannot provide benefits to illegal aliens that they do not provide to U.S. citizens,” U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a statement. “This Department of Justice has already filed multiple lawsuits to prevent U.S. students from being treated like second-class citizens — Illinois now joins the list of states where we are relentlessly fighting to vindicate federal law.”

* WCIA | Champaign County advocates voice concerns about SNAP cuts: Food security advocates in Champaign County are concerned about the impacts of recent cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, also known as SNAP. On Monday, the first of about $300 billion was stripped from the program after the “Big, Beautiful Bill” was passed in July. Champaign County Health Care Consumer’s Adani Sanchez said there’s a chance the lack of funding could get picked up by the states, and, right now, the program is still working off last year’s money.

*** Statewide ***

* CBS Chicago | Illinois Climate Education Hub gives teachers head start on climate curriculum: Ahead of that, the Illinois Climate Education Hub is launching later this week. It is a platform to help teachers implement the required learning next year, but some teachers are already getting a head start. “It’s super exciting to really expand climate learning in Illinois,” said Katie Nahrwold of the nonprofit Subject to Climate, state lead for the Illinois Climate Education Hub. “All of the lessons and resources are aligned to Illinois state standards.” With no state learning program in place, and no money set aside for one, the Illinois Climate Education hub is made possible through a nonprofit — and aims to fill those gaps.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Republican Robert Vrankovich announced a bid for retiring Rep. Amy Grant’s seat.…

Robert Vrankovich, husband, father, successful entrepreneur, and longtime community leader, today announced his campaign for State Representative in the 47th Legislative District.

“Illinois is my home, and I will help reverse the course Springfield has set,” Vrankovich said. “It’s time to cut taxes and costs, make our communities safer, and turn Illinois into a business-friendly state where families can thrive.” […]

A proven entrepreneur, Vrankovich was the genesis of a start-up propane company 25 years ago, starting with zero customers and building it into a national operation generating more than $110 million annually.

…Adding… Rep. Grant’s district is a tier-one target for House Democrats. Rep. Grant won by just 292 votes last year.

* WGN | North suburban mother of 11 recovering after attack from serial woman puncher: The attacker, WGN-TV was told, watched as she lay on the ground bleeding before a good Samaritan, who turned out to be state senator Willie Preston, stepped in, took off his shirt and tried to stop the bleeding.

* Daily Herald | Elburn trustee is latest to announce bid for Illinois Senate seat DeWitte is leaving: Elburn Trustee Chris Hansen announced he will seek the Republican Party nomination in the 2026 primary election for the state Senate 33rd District, according to a news release. […] Hansen will vie with Blackberry Township resident Jessica Breugelmans and Cody Holt of Elgin for the GOP nomination.

* Daily Herald | Wilmette’s Dabrowski preparing gubernatorial campaign: In recent weeks, Dabrowski, a Republican from Wilmette, formally created a campaign committee and filed paperwork with the Illinois State Board of Elections indicating that he’ll self-fund the organization. He also lent the campaign $250,000 and then an additional $100, state records filed Tuesday indicate. Also Tuesday, the Wirepoints nonprofit research and media company announced Dabrowski has resigned as its president and no longer will write columns for the organization. Wirepoints research director John Klingner resigned to join Dabrowski’s campaign, too, the company revealed. Wirepoints founder and executive editor Mark Glennon also resigned.

* Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker appoints two members, including a downstate ally, to controversial parole board: Pritzker on Friday appointed two new members to the state parole and release board, including Timothy Nugent, who as mayor of Manteno helped Pritzker two years ago secure the construction of a Chinese-owned electric vehicle battery manufacturing plant despite complaints from residents and Republicans. Pritzker appointed Nugent and Tracy Buckley, a contractor for the review board, as board members, pending Senate approval. Buckley previously served as the board’s chief of operations and as an administrator, the governor’s office said.

* Patch | First Assistant Deputy Gov. Ryan Croke Honored with 2025 IARF Champion Award: Illinois First Assistant Deputy Governor Ryan Croke has been named a 2025 IARF Champion Award recipient, recognized for his decades-long commitment to advancing human services and supporting Illinois’ intellectual and developmental disability (I/DD) system. The award was presented at IARF’s annual Educational Conference & Expo in Bloomington-Normal last week. IARF President Josh Evans noted Croke’s role in helping secure wage increases for Direct Support Professionals (DSPs).

* Legal Newsline | IL A/G Raoul wrongly teaming with private lawyers to extract bucks: Lawsuit: Companies that say they offer consumers choice on their electric bills have accused Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul of unconstitutionally teaming up with Chicago-based plaintiffs’ law firms in a bid to use the power of the state to extract big settlements from the companies, generating big fees for the lawyers and millions of dollars to help Raoul finance his office’s politically-driven court actions opposing policies and goals of the administration of President Donald Trump.

* The Caucus Blog | House Republican licensing reforms aim to get Illinois working: In 2024, several Republican legislators introduced a plan and legislative package aimed at improving the licensing process and ultimately keeping healthcare providers practicing here in Illinois. The proposed measures would require IDFPR to accept online payments, lower costs, allow for reciprocity, and expedite licenses for critical shortage occupations, especially in healthcare.

*** Chicago ***

* WBEZ | Chicago sees its fewest summer murders since 1965: Murders in June, July and August totaled 123, the lowest number for those months since 1965, when the Chicago Police Department reported 117 victims, according to city data and historical CPD data obtained by WBEZ using the Illinois open records law. Overall violent crime numbers, meanwhile, have dropped more than two-thirds since peaking in 1991, a WBEZ review of CPD annual reports has found.

* Tribune | CPS prepares students, parents amid National Guard threat: In the midst of the uncertainty, Chicago Public Schools has reiterated to parents and students that school is a safe place to be in a letter sent out Thursday. No families in the district are required to share their immigration status with CPS, and the district is committed to not working with or sharing student records with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers, also known as ICE. The concerns come after repeated remarks from Trump indicating his intent to send troops to Chicago to curb perceived violence in the city, despite a drop in crime rates in the last year. The threat was made seemingly more real last week when the Trump Administration asked to use the Great Lakes Naval Base in North Chicago ahead of a potential “immigration operation.”

* NBC Chicago | Pritzker ‘deeply concerned’ about ICE targeting Mexican Independence Day events: The governor warned that “unidentifiable agents in unmarked vehicles with masks are planning to raid Latino communities and say they’re targeting violent criminals,” while noting that timing of such a deployment could be intentional. “We have reason to believe that Stephen Miller chose the month of September to come to Chicago because of celebrations around Mexican Independence Day that happen here every year,” Pritzker said. “It breaks my heart to report that we have been told ICE will try and disrupt community picnics and peaceful parades. Let’s be clear: the terror and cruelty is the point, not the safety of anyone living here.”

* NBC Chicago | Texas border patrol chief expected to lead increased immigration efforts in Chicago: Gregory Bovino, who most recently led immigration enforcement efforts in Los Angeles – which at times have devolved into violent clashes between authorities and protesters – has been tapped to lead the efforts in Illinois. […] In an emailed statement, a spokesperson for Illinois State Police would not provide specifics about the conversation, only saying: “Consistent with normal law enforcement protocol, ISP continues to communicate with a variety of federal agencies, including border patrol, to ensure the safety of officers and the public. ISP operates within the requirements of the TRUST act and is not involved in immigration enforcement.”

* Tribune | Should retired police be able to sell marijuana? Alderman says no, blocks dispensary: Ald. Andre Vasquez, 40th, came out in opposition late last month to the proposal by the Kaneh Group, which includes 10 former Chicago cops as members. The progressive alderman said he supports opening a dispensary in the ward, but decided to halt the bid after resident pushback emphasized “a fundamental justice concern” with the retired police ownership. “I have questions and concerns about people who were paid to arrest people who might still be in jail for selling cannabis, selling cannabis,” Vasquez told the Tribune. “There’s just something fundamentally unfair and unjust about it.”

* Tribune | ‘The guy behind the guy’: Gang lifer takes stand in federal RICO trial against reputed Wicked Town boss, associate: Deshawn Morgan was immersed in Chicago’s West Side gang culture before he was even out of grade school, dealing drugs at age 12 and rising in the ranks of the Mafia Insane Vice Lords. Along the way, Morgan told a federal jury last week, he befriended key players in the complex hierarchy of gang factions in the city’s Austin and West Lawndale neighborhoods. His testimony provided a rare glimpse at the kind of gang conflicts that often drive Chicago violence.

* Forbes | Chicago’s Hot Dog King Dick Portillo On Selling Out And Moving On: It’s been 11 years since Richard “Dick” Portillo sold Portillo’s, the restaurant chain offering up Chicago-style hot dogs and Italian beef sandwiches that he founded in 1963. Sitting in the living room of his 9,000-square-foot home in the Chicago suburbs—a short drive away from the location of the original Portillo’s he opened more than 60 years ago—the 85-year-old former Marine is feeling nostalgic. “I’m sorry I sold. I didn’t owe 10 cents to anybody,” he says. But ultimately, he knew it was the right decision to make. “There were 24 private equity groups that were interested in buying Portillo’s. The timing was right.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Clarendon Hills village manager’s status in question: The employment status of Clarendon Hills village manager Zach Creer appears to be in question. He has not responded to phone calls or emails over the past couple of weeks, and the word from Village Hall is simply that Creer is “out of the office.” Multiple calls to his cell phone went unanswered; however, he did confirm via text that it was the correct number.

* Shaw Local | State inspectors to assess Will County storm damages Wednesday, Thursday: Residents in Will County are advised by police to be aware that storm damage assessments taking place in their communities this week. One team will start in the north -Plainfield, Crest Hill, Joliet, Romeoville - another team will start on the east side of the county - Crete, University Park, Frankfort, Mokena, Lockport).

* Naperville Sun | Naperville makes more ranking lists, including one for most ‘underrated’ cities in Illinois: Most recently, Naperville was named one of WorldAtlas’ seven Most Underrated Cities In Illinois. The publication did not provide a methodology for its determination, but cited the city’s shops, riverwalk and outdoor areas were among the factors that make the city so desirable. DuPage Children’s Museum, Naper Settlement and the city’s 72-bell Millennium Carillon were contributing factors. The other six cities to make the list were Champaign, Evanston, Frankfort, Grafton, Peoria and Schaumburg.

* 21st Show | Why is a New Yorker singing about Aurora, Illinois?: Cassandra Jenkins is an artist and musician, living in New York City. But one of our producers stumbled upon her track titled, “Aurora, I-L.” As in Aurora, Illinois. He wondered about the origin of the song and what it means.

*** Downstate ***

* WIFR | Tornado siren repairs underway in Winnebago County, sheriff says: As of Sept. 2, nearly 60 out of the 79 tornado sirens in Winnebago County are working, according to Sheriff Gary Caruana. This is a difference from July when 26 of county-wide sirens were reported as not working.

* WMBD | Shoppers react to proposed sales tax in Glen Hollow: City Council on Aug. 26 approved a public hearing on whether to turn Glen Hollow into a business development district. This change would allow the property owners to levy a 1% sales tax on all purchases. Shoppers at the strip had no idea this proposal was made. Brandon Houseworth, who’s shopped at Glen Hollow for eight years, said this could make more people go online to get their goods.

* WCBU | ICC seeks community input on search for next president: The college’s board of trustees has hired RH Perry & Associates to lead the search, and consultants will be conducting a pre-search study to gather feedback from students, employees, and other community members. ICC has scheduled three in-person open focus group sessions for Thursday (at 8 a.m., 10 a.m., and 2 p.m.), as well as a virtual Zoom meeting. Additionally, the college has set up an on-line survey to gather perspectives toward shaping an “executive search profile.”

* WCIA | Long stretch of dry weather creating field fire risk in Central Illinois: “We thought we had a bumper crop going into the beginning of August, because we had timely rains, the heat kind of hurt and then it turned off dry,” Lucas Roney said. Duane Hopkins has been a firefighter in Arthur for 40 years, and has sold seed with Prairie Green Seed for 30. He helped nearby farmers with the harvest this past weekend — and noticed the impact of the recent weather. “The crop has dried down exceptionally fast, and creates a tinder box per se, it doesn’t take much to get a fire started,” Hopkins said.

* WIFR | Town of Beloit votes to end firefighting contract with South Beloit: Prior to the meeting, a memo from Town Administrator Tim Wellnitz and Fire Chief Daniel Pease shared the Town of Beloit lost out on a FEMA SAFER grant. That funding would have hired nine new firefighters for a three-year period. Without it, the leaders argue TOB can’t meet the staffing required to fill the SB station. Just before Tuesday’s vote, Board Supervisor John Pelock described the arrangement as a failed experiment.

* Pantagraph | Bloomington enacts treatment to improve water taste, odor: The city said in a Tuesday news release that its most recent water quality test showed “a notable increase in taste and odor compounds.” Levels had been steady at about 4-5 nanograms per liter for the past month, the city said, but that number has risen recently to 9-10 ng/L. The city said this is likely due to dry conditions in the area, noting that a “significant lack of rainfall” has dropped the water level in Lake Bloomington, where the city sources its water, by more than a foot.

* WGLT | District 87 considers easing graduation requirements for students new to the country: District 87 is considering an alternate graduation timeline for Bloomington High School students new to the United States. About 15 to 20 students at Bloomington High School fall into the “newcomer” category of students new to the country when they enrolled in high school. These students start school later than their peers, but current District 87 expectations maintain they still must earn 23.5 credit hours to graduate. An alternate graduation pathway would allow these students to instead earn 16 credits, which is the amount mandated by the State of Illinois.

* News-Gazette | Black Dog Champaign closed indefinitely after smoker causes fire: Kelsey Jamerson, Black Dog’s kitchen line manager, said she saw smoke from outside, which prompted her to pull the fire alarm and escort customers out of the building. She watched from the sidewalk as firefighters put out the blaze. “I’m just praying (the food and electric) is fine,” she said. Heller said “it’s undetermined whether one or two of the smokers are still working, so we won’t know anything for probably a day or two.”

* Herald Whig | Adams County Bicentennial finale goes country: All Beach Boys tickets already sold will be honored for the performance by Gretchen Wilson and Montgomery Gentry. Tickets remain available online at AdamsCo200.org and at all Liberty Bank locations, Quincy Hy-Vee stores, First Bankers Trust at 12th and Broadway in Quincy and in Mendon and Farm and Home Supply in Quincy.

*** National ***

* The Bond Buyer | A $165 billion bond authorization reflects data center subsidy boom: A New Mexico county last week advanced a massive data center project that calls for an eye-popping $165 billion of taxable industrial revenue bonds as a way to access tax breaks, one of the latest local governments to offer generous incentives to tech companies racing to build the facilities across the country.

* WaPo | A red state community bet on carbon capture. Trump is blocking it.: The Heidelberg plant in the town of Mitchell was meant to be a model for the world, a place where the United States could take the lead in cutting carbon dioxide emissions from cement manufacturing — an increasingly urgent goal for construction projects. Yet the administration’s cancellation of the $500 million grant for machinery to trap and bury the plant’s greenhouse gas left the staunchly Republican community stunned and cement industry officials questioning if the U.S. will be equipped to keep up with a fast-evolving global marketplace.

  37 Comments      


Good morning!

Wednesday, Sep 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Oh….

But now she sucks her thumb and wonders
By the banks of her own lagoon

What’s up?

  8 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Sep 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Wednesday, Sep 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Sep 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Sep 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.

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* Mayor: 'ICE is seeking to intimidate the Village of Broadview... We will not be intimidated' (Updated x2)
* Reader comments closed for the weekend
* Charges withdrawn, but Chicago FOP President Cantanzara agrees to voluntary leave of absence as First VP of Illinois State Lodge during probe
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Catching up with the congressionals
* Wirepoints' deficit spending continued as assets were further depleted ahead of staff exodus
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Softball
* It’s just a bill
* Competition Works: Lower Bills. Reliable Power. Say NO To Right Of First Refusal
* Isabel’s morning briefing (Updated)
* Open thread
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Addendum to today’s edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Live coverage
* Yesterday's stories

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