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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 accuser? 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.

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Consumers Are Getting Slammed With Higher Electric Rates – Don’t Add Fuel To The Fire With ROFR

Thursday, Sep 4, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois consumers are feeling the heat, both from triple-digit temperatures and soaring electricity bills. Ameren customers are seeing 18–22% rate hikes. ComEd has customers paying as much as triple-digit increases.

And it’s going to get worse. In July, the PJM Capacity Auction hit another record high - a 22% increase on top of the record highs everyone just started paying. This will already lead to further rate increases next year!

As frustration heats up, lawmakers must choose: support competition that drives prices down or fan the flames of electricity inflation with “Right of First Refusal” (ROFR) legislation.

ROFR kills competition and boosts prices by giving incumbent utilities exclusive rights to build transmission lines. It’s so anti-competitive that both presidents - Biden and Trump - opposed it in 2020 and 2023.

As the ICC has said, “The Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) believes that competition among transmission developers spurs innovative results and helps control costs.”

ROFR would send electricity prices even higher. Springfield should focus on long-term strategies to lower electricity bills, not raise them. As ROFR may resurface this fall, legislators should reject it and stand up for cost-cutting competition that benefits consumers.

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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.

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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?

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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.

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PREVIOUS POSTS »
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Stuff
* The reality behind the rhetoric
* Consumers Are Getting Slammed With Higher Electric Rates – Don’t Add Fuel To The Fire With ROFR
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* Good morning!
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Live coverage
* Pritzker says Trump trying to set a legal trap by demanding the governor call him
* Yesterday's stories

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