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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Jun 30, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

As senators spent Monday debating President Donald Trump’s sweeping tax bill, Illinois Democrats, advocates and experts warned that the measure’s $1.2 trillion in cuts would cost more than 500,000 Illinoisans their health care coverage and put about 427,000 people at risk of losing food assistance. […]

In total, the Senate bill includes about $4 trillion in cuts and makes Trump’s 2017 tax rates permanent, while also adding new ones, including no taxes on tips. The bill would also provide $350 billion for border and national security, including for deportations.

But an analysis from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office found that 11.8 million more Americans would become uninsured by 2034 if the bill passes. The package would also increase the deficit by nearly $3.3 trillion over the decade, the analysis found.

The Senate package’s largest cuts include $1.2 trillion to Medicaid and food stamps — making states pay a minimum of 5% and up to 25% of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program [SNAP] benefit costs. That would place an astonishing budget cost onto Illinois that could force lawmakers to cut benefits, or the number of recipients.

* Click here for the full list. KSDK’s Mark Maxwell


* Illinois Federation of Teachers…

Illinois Federation of Teachers (IFT) President Dan Montgomery has announced that he will not seek reelection this fall at the union’s convention, concluding 15 years of transformational leadership and decades of service to public education, the labor movement, and working families.

Since his election in 2010, Montgomery has been a tireless advocate for IFT members, public education, state services, and all Illinoisans. He was unanimously reelected by delegates in 2013, 2016, 2019, and 2022, leading the 103,000-member union through a period of significant growth, increased activism, and bold advocacy. […]

A successor will be elected at the IFT convention in October.

*** Statewide ***

* WGN | Law banning little shampoo bottles in Illinois hotels goes into effect Tuesday: This doesn’t mean an Illinois hotel guest will be totally unable to get a small plastic shampoo bottle, for example. The law says a hotel may provide personal care products in small, single-use plastic bottles to a person at no cost, upon request, at a location other than a guest room. In other words, according to the law, if you go to the front desk and ask for a little shampoo bottle, you can still get one.

* Politico | The politics of Dobbs persists: The political action committee that for decades supported candidates who back abortion rights in Illinois — making the state a haven for reproductive choice — is taking its political playbook to red states, including Indiana and Arkansas, which virtually ban the procedure. “Since Roe fell, there are many PACs bubbling up in different states. I’ve been talking to new organizations, sharing our playbook, our questionnaires and ideas about where to start,” Personal PAC CEO Sarah Garza Resnick tells Women Rule.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press Guard | Gov. Pritzker Signs College Access and Affordability Bills into Law: Today, Governor JB Pritzker joined the Illinois Board of Higher Education (IBHE), the Illinois Community College Board (ICCB), the Illinois Student Assistance Commission (ISAC), community college presidents, and legislators to sign bills into law that will support Illinois high school students pursuing higher education. Governor Pritzker signed four bills into law that help improve college access and affordability: HB 2967, HB 3096, HB 3097, and HB 3522. During his February State of the State Address, Governor Pritzker emphasized that support for college admissions would be a priority initiative during this year’s session.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Future of NASCAR’s downtown Chicago weekend is unclear going into the third year of contract: The future of NASCAR in Chicago is murky going into its third edition on the first weekend in July. The three-year contract between the motorsports organization and the city that was announced in 2022 has two mutual options, and their fate is unclear. Giese said there have been “good conversations” between NASCAR and the city, and there is time to work on the possibilities beyond the event. “So really right now the focus is on let’s execute a really great 2025,” Giese said. “We’ll continue to have the conversations with the city. But right now, honestly, the more consistent conversations are the planning conversations.”

* Sun-Times | A once-resplendent bandstand in Garfield Park is getting the $2 million restoration it deserves: The work includes restoring the marble cladding on the bandstand’s 1,600-square-foot cloverleaf-shaped base and also fixing up the mosaic panels along the structure’s parapet. And the bandstand’s most visible feature — an ornately-detailed copper dome that’s a showstopper, even in its long-dulled state — will be restored as well.

* Sun-Times | Park District lifeguard accused of shooting two teens is a ‘terrifying threat to the community,’ judge says: A Chicago Park District lifeguard displayed a “terrifying lack of judgment” when he shot two teenagers outside the Douglass Park pool Thursday night, a Cook County judge said Sunday. The lifeguard, 55-year-old Charles Leto of Lake View, was charged with murder and attempted murder for allegedly killing 15-year-old Marjay Dotson and critically wounding 14-year-old Jeremy Herred. Leto also shot at a third teenager but did not hit him, authorities say. […] Leto then called police and said he was attacked by the boys and shot them in self-defense. But prosecutors said witnesses and surveillance footage do not indicate he was in any immediate danger.

* Tribune | Florida man with ties to Loretto Hospital indicted in massive $233 million COVID fraud scheme : Jamil Elkoussa, 35, who currently resides in Orlando, is the latest to be charged in a fraud scheme involving the small West Side safety-net hospital that became a lighting rod of controversy during the coronavirus pandemic for administering vaccinations to connected insiders and paying millions in contracts to companies with close ties to facility administrators. The indictment made public Monday charges Elkoussa with five counts of wire fraud and seeks forfeiture of a $4.9 million home in Miami, as well as properties in Alsip, Burr Ridge, Homer Glen and South Holland. A lawyer for Elkoussa could not immediately be reached.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Crain’s | Hospital staffer slams cuts at former Ascension hospitals as Illinois senators step up oversight: Complaints continue that cutbacks by Prime Healthcare, the company that took over several Ascension hospitals in Illinois in February, are moving too rapidly — and with limited input from clinicians — at some of these hospitals. Changes to services at Prime hospitals in Joliet, Aurora and Kankakee have been criticized by U.S. Sens. Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth, with the Illinois democrats’ seeking explanations for cutbacks and closures, and urging Prime to maintain current levels of care at all eight of its Illinois hospitals.

* Daily Herald | Republican state lawmaker won’t run for Congress in 14th District after all: Democratic U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood of Naperville has one fewer potential Republican challenger to worry about in 2026. State Rep. Jed Davis of Newark on Monday announced he’ll seek reelection to the state House rather than run for Congress. “Illinois is worth the fight,” Davis said in a Facebook post. “I’m officially running for reelection as your State Representative because the job’s not finished. From helping local families to proposing real solutions — and standing firm against broken policies and politicians — our voices matter now more than ever.”

* Fox Chicago | Cook County Down Payment Assistance Program is back open — how to apply: The Cook County Down Payment Assistance Program has opened again. This program helps not only with down payments, but also closing costs and mortgage buydowns. The program provides subsidies of up to $25,000 or 5% of the home’s sale price, whichever is less. The assistance is provided as a forgivable second loan over a five-year term. Households with an annual income at or below 120% of the area’s median income are eligible.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Oswego trustees look at criteria for downtown grant program: The program has undergone revisions from involving facade improvement grants to include various other upgrades over the years. The grant program was last updated in 2018 to permit additional types of improvements. So far this year, $100,000 in grants have been awarded. “The overall intent is to enhance downtown real estate,” Oswego Economic Development Director Kevin Leighty said in a report to trustees.

* Daily Herald | ‘To see this in my lifetime is huge’: Regional 911 facility set to debut in Libertyville: With construction of the $53.8 million Regional Operations and Communication Facility essentially complete, county officials opened the doors for a behind-the-scenes look Friday with nearly 300 in attendance. The facility was built for a new consolidated 911 agency called LakeComm and goes fully operational later this summer. Created in June 2024 to provide faster, more coordinated emergency responses, LakeComm now comprises 25 members representing 30 police and fire agencies in Lake County.

* Daily Herald | Mother-daughter duo unleashes dog-friendly market in Arlington Heights: They offer pet-related products from local vendors and commercial dog food alongside homemade smoked pet treats. Shchekin, a chef by trade, brings culinary expertise to her smoked creations. The event Sunday featured organizations devoted to pet rescue and dog training, as well as services such nail clipping and pet embroideries. Food for hungry pet owners included barbecue, lemonade and baked goods.

*** Downstate ***

* Capitol News Illinois | ‘Hidden gem’: Growing number of visitors discovering southern Illinois as travel destination: Carol Hoffman, executive director of the Southernmost Illinois Tourism Bureau, said the primary draws to southern Illinois are the outdoor recreation activities in Shawnee National Forest, including hiking, cycling, rock climbing and ziplining, as well as another Illinois surprise linked to the unusual terrain: vineyards and five wine trails. The bureau has appealed to riders of the Chicago Transit Authority with a recent signage campaign that invited potential travelers to “go where the bus won’t take you” and to “come see our skyscrapers.”

* IPM | Immigration advocates in Central Illinois face uncertainty, chaos following birthright citizenship ruling: Madelyn Cox-Guerra is a staff attorney with the Normal-based Immigration Project. She represents about 35 immigrant families across Central and Southern Illinois from her office in Champaign. Cox-Guerra said the court’s non-answer on the legality of birthright citizenship, which was enshrined in the 14th Amendment shortly after the Civil War, leaves a great deal of uncertainty. “[The Trump administration has] the option to start enforcing the executive order in whatever way that they can, which will at the very least cause confusion,” Cox-Guerra said in an interview on WGLT’s Sound Ideas.

* WSIL | Marion Ministerial Alliance receives large food donation: The Marion Ministerial Alliance received a large donation of food over the weekend, thanks to a church organization based out of Utah. JR Russell, Executive Director with the Marion Ministerial Alliance, stated they received 9 pallets of food on June 28, part of a large donation which benefitted multiple area food pantries thanks to a distribution grant through the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints out of Salt Lake City.

* WCIA | Gao Grotto holds Thunder on Vermilion boat race: Gao Grotto held its annual Thunder on the Vermilion boat race this weekend, bringing in boaters from all over the Midwest and as far as Long Island, New York. The money raised from the event helps to fund the organization’s two-week summer camp with AMBUCS — an organization dedicated to helping people with mobility and learning disabilities.

*** National ***

* WIRED | ICE Rolls Facial Recognition Tools Out to Officers’ Phones : Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is now using a mobile app called Mobile Fortify that allegedly allows agents to identify individuals by pointing a smartphone at their face or capturing contactless fingerprints, 404 Media reports. The app reportedly taps into government databases, including Customs and Border Protection’s Traveler Verification Service and a DHS biometric intelligence system, in an attempt to match facial images taken in the field against prior government-collected records. ICE says the tool is intended to help officers identify “unknown subjects,” but civil liberties advocates tell 404 Media that it may open the door to surveillance-driven profiling and wrongful arrests.

* AP | NOAA delays the cutoff of key satellite data for hurricane forecasting: The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said Monday it is delaying by one month the planned cutoff of satellite data that helps forecasters track hurricanes. Meteorologists and scientists warned of severe consequences last week when NOAA said, in the midst of this year’s hurricane season, that it would almost immediately discontinue key data collected by three weather satellites that the agency jointly runs with the Defense Department.

* Stereogum | AI-Generated Psych-Rock Band The Velvet Sundown Rack Up Hundreds Of Thousands Of Spotify Streams: A few weeks ago Timbaland unveiled the not-human artist TaTa, who was the first signee of his AI record label Stage Zero. Now there’s a new AI-generated act on the scene called the Velvet Sundown, and they have over 400,000 monthly listeners on Spotify after less than a month of existing. […] Neither the Velvet Sundown nor its four members (“vocalist and mellotron sorcerer Gabe Farrow, guitarist Lennie West, bassist-synth alchemist Milo Rains, and free-spirited percussionist Orion ‘Rio’ Del Mar”) had social media until yesterday (June 27) when they created an Instagram. The pictures of the “band” are very obviously and disturbingly AI-generated.

  7 Comments      


C’mon, man

Monday, Jun 30, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Not good

Mayor Brandon Johnson’s inner circle worked with outside lobbyists who were not registered to lobby on behalf of the city in the Illinois General Assembly, a practice his office defended after repeated inquiries into the makeup of his intergovernmental affairs team in Springfield.

Email records and Springfield sources indicate that three lobbyists — Lakeisha Purchase, Frank Bass and Vincent Williams — coordinated with top Johnson officials during the most recent session. But they did not update their state registration to show the city among their lobbying clients before the Illinois General Assembly adjourned June 1.

In an interview on Friday, the mayor’s new lead Springfield IGA director, John Arena, argued those lobbyists did not need to register because their contracts with the city were still “pending.” In the meantime, Purchase was only “helping facilitate” lobbying, while Bass was coordinating with the city’s team in his capacity as a lobbyist for the Chicago Teachers Union and Williams as one for the Chicago Transit Authority, Arena said.

* From the statute

“Lobby” and “lobbying” means to communicate, including the soliciting of others to communicate, with an official as defined in subsection (c) for the ultimate purpose of influencing any executive, legislative, or administrative action at the State, municipal, county, or township government level. […]

Sec. 3. Persons required to register.
(a) Except as provided in Section 9, any natural person who, for compensation or otherwise, undertakes to lobby, or any person or entity who employs or compensates another person for the purposes of lobbying, shall register with the Secretary of State as provided in this Act

Always err on the side of caution. If someone might remotely be considered a lobbyist, then register that person.

Just fill out the freaking paperwork, for crying out loud.

* Scroll down through the Tribune story

“This is the most, I would say, emaciated I’ve seen a lobbying team for a mayor of the city of Chicago in Springfield,” said state Rep. Curtis Tarver, a Chicago Democrat and an assistant majority leader in the Illinois House. “They’ve not had a comprehensive agenda. It’s hodgepodge.”

Um, the city’s top Statehouse lobbyist John Arena was paid almost $11,000 to run Josef Michael Carr’s 2022 Democratic primary race against Rep. Tarver. Some hard feelings might perhaps remain, but Tarver is far from alone in his opinion.

  13 Comments      


Pritzker on community colleges, property taxes and the grocery tax

Monday, Jun 30, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The governor was asked today about his failed push to let community colleges offer four-year degrees

Pritzker: Let’s all remember that’s the goal of what I have proposed is to fill some specific types of positions that we don’t produce enough degree holders for in the state of Illinois. There are a number of those but it’s a limited number. We may have programs across the state that have degree opportunities for people but they may produce hundreds when we need thousands. And so just in those very specific niche areas, that’s what we’ve been focused on.

It’s not about opening 48 community colleges to offer four year degrees of every sort. It’s really in these niche areas, some parts of nursing, some parts of advanced manufacturing and so on where we need more people than we are currently producing.

So obviously, the universities want to take up as much of that opportunity as they can, but you have to remember the benefit of having programs like this. And again, these niche programs in community colleges it’s less expensive for people, and they will typically be people come from the surrounding area, because community colleges don’t typically offer dormitories or a place to live. And so you’re talking about people live in a local area.

So yes, I’m excited to continue on the pursuit of it. I want to remind you, for people who think, Oh, hey he proposed something that didn’t pass. I want to look at all the legislators behind me and ask them if everything that they propose in any given General Assembly is something that gets done in that General Assembly? Or do you sometimes have to work two, four, six years, maybe longer, to get something done?

And I would point out that my my deputy governor, Andy Manar, when he was a state senator for 10 years, proposed this, I think, more than 10 years ago, to try to get this done. And it’s been around for quite some time. So I’m going to continue to work at it. I don’t give up on something that’s a good idea.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

* Pritzker talked about property taxes on the campaign trail last week. From the Peoria Journal Star

Pritzker said during a campaign stop in East Peoria that property tax reform is big in his purview.

“We need to address the property tax problems that face people across Illinois,” Pritzker said Thursday. “That takes a lot of work because it’s not just a one-time solution, it’s something that requires us to increase investment in education, that is the biggest problem. You get your property tax bill, most of that is paying for education locally.”

Pritzker then blamed high property taxes on a lack of education investment in Illinois in years past.

“We were last in the nation when I became governor at funding education from the state of Illinois,” Pritzker said. “Now, we went from 24% funding to 40% funding. We’ve got a little ways to go to be the best in the country, but I’d like to just be average. We went from being last — being average would mean getting to 46%. So that’s a big deal, we’re going to keep working on that and that’s something that would require getting reelected.”

* Grocery tax

During a campaign announcement celebration in Springfield, Pritzker was asked how he squared with that fact that cities like Jacksonville reinstated the [1 percent grocery tax]. His response was that municipalities should have found other ways to make up funding.

“I think that the grocery tax is very, very regressive, and that’s why we took it away from the state, we no longer have a state grocery tax,” Pritzker said. “So, I’ve discouraged that – there are other ways for local governments to fund their needs.”

After the June 9 Jacksonville City Council meeting, Mayor Andy Ezard said keeping the tax going just made sense and that local grocery prices wouldn’t really change.

“I think the council realized that this tax has been in effect for over 30 years, and if we eliminated it – we do like eliminating taxes – but if we eliminate this one, it takes up about a half million dollars of our revenue,” Ezard said.

Discuss.

  7 Comments      


A look at the Republican gubernatorial candidates

Monday, Jun 30, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* On the day JB Pritzker announced his first reelection bid in July of 2021, three already announced Republican opponents issued responses: Darren Bailey, Paul Schimpf and Gary Rabine.

The declared Republican field so far this year

DuPage County Sheriff James Mendrick announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for governor in February. Lake Forest businessman and former 10th Congressional District candidate Joe Severino joined the GOP field in April. Phil Perez, a mechanic and member of the Posen Park District Commission, is also running.

More from those folks

Mendrick said Pritzker is offering Illinoisans more of the same and might not finish his term.

“For him, an election is like, ‘Hey, can I buy that election on aisle three because I want to buy a different election on aisle four in a couple years.’ It’s just fast food, pay-to-play politics,” Mendrick told The Center Square.

Severino has criticized other Republicans and said the GOP nominee must not be someone who has helped shield Democrats.

“We have to draw a distinction between the Republican agenda and ideologies and values versus what we’ve had for the last six-and-a-half years. I think when there’s a stark contrast rather than blurring the lines with these pseudo-Republicans, people will shake off the voter fatigue and show up at the ballot box and it will favor the Republicans,” Severino told The Center Square.

Other Republicans rumored to be considering a run include Illinois U.S. Rep. Darin LaHood, R-Peoria, and state Rep. Blaine Wilhour, R-Beecher City. […]

“The current administration hasn’t done a good job of being straightforward with the people of Illinois. I think that honesty is going to be the best policy in this campaign,” Perez told The Center Square.

Perez called the Pritzker administration’s taxing and spending “outrageous” and said his biggest priority is to get Illinois back on track.

* More from Sheriff Mendrick

“It’s disappointing where we are right now, I think, in Illinois. We’ve been basically taxed back into the Stone Age. I didn’t think it could get any worse till I hear they want to tax mileage on your car and put in a device to track you while they do it,” Mendrick said. […]

“It’s the definition of insanity electing someone like him again. Do you really think it’s going to be different the third term or do you think we’re going to have more of the same taxation, violation of law?” Mendrick asked.

Nice to see the sheriff is buying into deliberately false Facebook posts.

* Rep. Dan Ugaste has said he’s considering a bid…

Last week in East Peoria, Governor Pritzker stated that enacting property tax reforms is now a legislative priority as he intends to seek a third term in office. Yet, for the last seven years the Governor has been in office, he and the supermajority Democrats have done nothing to help Illinois residents with enacting any reforms to help lower sky-high and ever-increasing property tax rates.

The problems could not get much worse. Illinois has the second worst effective property tax rate in the nation, according to Rocket Mortgage. In addition, a study from SmartAsset named Peoria as the city with the highest property taxes in the nation relative to median home value.

“It is absolutely outrageous for the Governor and Democrat supermajority to now come out and say they want to lower property taxes in Illinois,” stated Rep. Dan Ugaste (R-Geneva). “After seven years of doing nothing, now we should trust that the Governor and his party’s supermajorities plan on addressing the problem? I’ve filed real legislation to provide relief, and I’ll drive to Springfield today if the Governor is ready to finally stand up for working families and join me.

“If the Governor is serious, then stop campaigning and start governing,” Rep. Ugaste continued. “Call a Special Session. Let’s vote. My bill, HB 9, which would have provided nearly $2.8 billion dollars in property tax relief this year alone, has been ready to go since last Session. Once fully implemented, some areas of the State could see a 50 percent reduction in their property tax levy. It is estimated this plan could save Illinois property taxpayers approximately $82 billion over the next 21 years.”

HB9 would take the difference between 25 percent of all state general funds appropriations and what’s spent on pensions and then use that money for the property tax relief fund. By my calculation, that would be $3.3 billion in the coming fiscal year. The bill does not specify how that new payment would be funded. But that’s a lot of cuts and/or tax hikes.

* Freedom Caucus…

Illinois Governor JB Pritzker has made his bid for a third official, but the Illinois Freedom Caucus is urging Illinois voters to stop him from doing to the country what he has done to Illinois by stopping his re-election bid.

Under Governor Pritzker’s watch the budget has grown from $40.3 billion to a whopping $55 billion. He has consistently refused to exercise any fiscal restraint. He has spent hundreds of millions on illegal immigrants. Instead of getting tough on crime, he continues to target honest gun owners. The Illinois Freedom Caucus is issuing the following statement on JB Pritzker’s re-election announcement.

“By every measure, JB Pritzker’s tenure as Governor has been a complete disaster. Despite massive state spending, we have done nothing to address Illinois’ pension crisis, nor have we done anything to lower property taxes under his watch. Even when confronted with a massive budget hole, Governor Pritzker still signed into a law yet another record spending bill. The combination of high taxes and the Governor’s far-left policies has made Illinois a leader in the nation in outmigration. If Governor Pritzker’s leadership was so great – why is Illinois consistently a leader in outbound moves every year? We can’t allow Governor Pritzker’s presidential bid to get any momentum and the way to do that is to stop him in 2026. He has already set our state back financially and morally. For the good of the country, we must not give him a third term.”

Those spending growth claims are debunked here and here.

* Related…

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RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois

Monday, Jun 30, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

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What Pritzker says he’s looking for in a running mate (Updated x2)

Monday, Jun 30, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The governor was asked about potential running mates today during an unrelated press conference

Pritzker: Mostly, there have been people who have reached out to me to let me know about people they want to advocate for. Certainly, over the last few months, since our great lieutenant governor, Juliana Stratton, decided and announced that she was going to run for United States Senate. There have been folks who hoped that I might run for re-election and choose a running mate, so that’s really all there have been. But terrific people recommended to me a number of just excellent candidates to choose from. […]

Pritzker: Again, you understand what my criteria are. I start out with the question: Is this person qualified to be governor of the state? Because that’s really the question that we’re asking when we choose a lieutenant governor, first. And then again, a question about: Has this person demonstrated that they care deeply, as much about people who live in areas that they don’t live in, or who have different views than they do, in parts of the state that they’re not from?

So those are, like I said, those are mostly the, at least the first part of vetting.

And then we go through for appointees in the administration. I mean, broadly, everybody from a cabinet secretary in the cabinet of my administration to people who serve on important boards and commissions. We do a vetting process for them, that you understand what those things are. I think we want to make sure that whoever it is has the qualifications that they say they do and things like that.

So those are very simple. But again, most of the people that were recommended to me, that I’ve thought of, are people who meet all of those standards to begin with. And the ones at least that are on my short list, meet all those standards.

…Adding… On if the Governor will serve a full term if re-elected

Reporter: How likely do you think that the person you select might actually have to step into the role of governor, say in the next two years?

Pritzker: I don’t know I feel like I’m in decent health. My doctor says so. So I hope that wouldn’t be a reason. And I don’t know, I whatever the odds are that a lieutenant governor, you could probably look back in the history of since 1818, when we became a state of Lieutenant Governors stepping in. So I don’t know what those odds are, but it’s happened a few times, but not too terribly often.

But I also think that that person becomes a prominent person in public life, like Juliana Stratton has and and whether they end up running for governor at some future date, rather than just rising into the position, or they end up running for other statewide office. I think being lieutenant governor is a really important position to hold, and they have duties that are quite important for people all across the state.

…Adding… The Illinois Latino Agenda…

Following Governor JB Pritzker’s announcement that he’s running for re-election while Lieutenant Governor Juliana Stratton pursues a bid for U.S. Senate, the Illinois Latino Agenda calls on Governor Pritzker to partner with a Latino running mate:

“As the state’s second largest racial or ethnic group and one of the most rapidly growing demographics, Latinos consistently contribute to Illinois’ economy through labor, homeownership, purchasing power and entrepreneurship. It’s essential that our state government understands and is accountable for including Latinos in its priorities – especially in the face of a federal government that’s actively working to eliminate and punish our presence.

“For all of those reasons, the Illinois Latino Agenda calls on Governor JB Pritzker to leverage this opportunity to select a Latino running mate for Lieutenant Governor as he pursues re-election. A statewide executive office that reflects the communities it serves, includes Latino leadership in decision-making roles, and elevates Latino voices is one that has greater trust from more communities and deepens future civic engagement.”

* Related…

    * Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker is running for reelection. Who will he pick as his No. 2?: “They’ve got to be somebody who can do the job — if something happens and they had to take over,” Pritzker said, describing his ideal running mate to reporters Thursday in Chicago. “And I think just as importantly, somebody who really has a heart for the people of the state of Illinois. That’s not in everybody, right? But you got to have somebody who actually cares about all parts of the state.”

  19 Comments      


Do better, be better

Monday, Jun 30, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

“I ran for governor in 2018 to change our story,” Gov. JB Pritzker told a Chicago crowd on Thursday as he announced his bid for a third term. “I ran for governor in 2022 to keep telling our story. And I am running for governor in 2026 to protect our story.”

This general theme of protecting what Pritzker maintains is Illinois’ progress from damage by President Donald Trump will be the foundation of the governor’s reelection bid — at least for the foreseeable future.

The governor’s state office provided an example of this potential harm when it warned of a provision in the congressional budget proposal to shift billions of dollars in Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program costs from the federal government to the states.

“For Illinois, that shift could mean taking on more than $1.2 billion in additional costs annually, placing a massive strain on Illinois’ budget and threatening funding for other essential services like education and healthcare,” the statement read.

The U.S. Senate’s parliamentarian had originally ruled against the SNAP provision in the chamber’s budget reconciliation bill, but the majority Republicans revised the language and it was approved Thursday.

That $1.2 billion will likely pale in comparison to expected Medicaid cuts. Illinois simply doesn’t have the recurring revenue needed to make up the difference.

“Earthquakes are coming,” Pritzker warned in his address about the coming months and years.

So, for now, it’s “Pritzker the Protector.”

But, eventually, it would be nice to see some fresh and new ideas.

The governor’s 2021 reelection announcement was all about looking back at his leadership during the pandemic. Four years later, his latest announcement was heavy on his accomplishments and had little about the future, except that it looks really bleak under Trump and he will do his best to shield the state from it.

The Trump references were so thick that you could conceivably call this the first kickoff speech of the 2028 presidential campaign.

“The workers of today and tomorrow choose Illinois because we built an iron wall around their freedoms — and because we told the fascist freak show fanatics to run their experiments on ending democracy somewhere else,” the governor said.

Except Pritzker is currently only running for reelection. Maybe try one election at a time. And while 2019 — his first year in office — was a whirlwind of activity, much more still needs to be done.

For example, the Illinois Economic Policy Institute and the Project for Middle Class Renewal at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign released a study this week showing the state has an existing housing shortage of 142,000 units and needs to build 227,000 new homes over the next five years “to keep pace with demand.”

The governor said housing costs too much during his speech but didn’t say what he’d do about it.

You may recall that Pritzker demanded action on the housing shortage during his State of the State address in February, saying his special task force on housing affordability had come up with some solutions and those should be enacted. But, after some progress, the bill stalled out.

One of the panel’s short-term ideas was to require the state’s pension funds to invest in housing development. But the provisions to require or incentivize local governments to remove barriers to new housing was a big sticking point.

Pritzker’s implementation record leaves much to be desired. Six years after legalizing cannabis, for instance, the original equity promises are nowhere near fulfilled. If they were, it would be a whole lot easier to convince the Illinois House to regulate the intoxicating hemp “gray market.”

And the governor was right when he said, “the answer starts with growing Illinois’ economy.” But economic growth as a whole has most definitely lagged here.

“Let me be clear,” Pritzker said. “There is no Mission Accomplished banner to stand under today. Yes, we have addressed so many of our old problems — but new ones always arise. History is an endless relay race. Our job is not to look for the finish line but to protect the baton as we run our assigned leg.”

Are we better off as a state than we were in 2018? Governmentally, yes. Of course. I would never want to revert to the state governments we had during the first 18 years of this century.

Could we as a state be much better? Absolutely. And it’s time to try. But that requires some concrete plans.

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Why Are Tax-Exempt Hospitals Getting Rich?

Monday, Jun 30, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Across Illinois, big hospital systems and PBMs are abusing the 340B drug discount program – making massive profits while patients drown in medical bills. One whistleblower called it “laundering money.”

Here’s how the scam works: big hospitals buy discounted 340B drugs, bill patients full price, then split the difference with for-profit pharmacies and PBMs.

340B was meant to help Illinois communities in need. But there are no rules requiring hospitals and PBMs to pass savings on to patients. No transparency. No oversight. Just higher costs for working families, small businesses, and taxpayers.

Meanwhile, tax-exempt hospitals cash in – and PBMs get a cut too.

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Open thread

Monday, Jun 30, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The heads, they talk

Hug me, squeeze me, love me, tease me

Keep it Illinois-centric please. Thanks.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Jun 30, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: ‘Having Medicaid keeps me alive’: Illinois residents anxiously watch as Congress considers Medicaid cuts. Tribune

    - The “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” would slash the program, which provides health care coverage to people with low incomes, in order to help pay for tax cuts and border and national security. President Donald Trump and congressional Republicans say the bill would cut waste, fraud and abuse from Medicaid, providing coverage only to those who truly need it.

    - But Democrats, health care leaders and patients say it would devastate those who rely on the program, and the hospitals that serve all patients. Across Illinois, 3.4 million people are on Medicaid — about one-fourth of the state’s population.

    - Though the bill was still in flux as of Friday afternoon, multiple proposals in recent weeks have included work requirements for some people who receive Medicaid, changes to rules surrounding so-called provider taxes, and have threatened coverage for more than 770,000 Illinois residents who receive Medicaid as part of the Affordable Care Act’s expansion of the program.

* Related stories…

* Governor Pritzker will sign college access and affordability bills into law at 9:30 am. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Route 66: The last (or first) 300 miles in Illinois: About 50 miles north, Pontiac also appears to have capitalized on its position along the route. Among its attractions is the Route 66 Association Hall of Fame & Museum. There, visitors can find a school bus-turned-land yacht and a Volkswagen van belonging to Bob Waldmire, whose family opened the Springfield, Illinois, institution Cozy Dog on Route 66 and claims to have invented the corn dog.

* Daily Herald | ‘Why risk it?’: Despite state ban, fireworks injure on average 150 each year in Illinois: While most fireworks are prohibited in Illinois, hospital emergency rooms statewide still treat on average 150 fireworks-related injuries each year. That’s according to Illinois State Fire Marshal’s office figures that also show on average 12 of those injuries each year result in amputation or dismemberment. And the majority will happen over the course of the next week.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker is running for reelection. Who will he pick as his No. 2? : Among those who likely top the list are Andy Manar, the former downstate state senator and Pritzker’s current deputy governor on budget issues; Christian Mitchell, a former state representative from Chicago and ex-deputy governor for Pritzker; state Rep. Jehan Gordon-Booth of Peoria, who was previously a lead budget negotiator in the House; and state Rep. Elizabeth “Lisa” Hernandez of Cicero, chair of the Illinois Democratic Party.

* Evanston Now | Is Philly transit crisis a preview for us?: The funding crunch for mass transit in Philadelphia is the canary in the train tunnel, and what is happening right now is a sign of what could happen in across the Chicago region, including Evanston. Last Thursday, the board of the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority approved a budget which starts chopping commuter rail, bus, subway and trolley service effective Aug. 24, with elimination of 32 bus routes and reduction of rail trips.

* Press Release | AG Raoul reaches $1 million settlement with temporary staffing agency for use of no-poach agreements, wage fixing: Attorney General Kwame Raoul today announced a settlement with Midway Staffing Inc. (Midway) that resolves allegations the temporary staffing agency entered into no-poach agreements and engaged in wage fixing with other staffing agencies. This settlement requires Midway to pay $1 million to compensate temporary workers impacted by the unlawful activity. Midway was the last remaining defendant in a lawsuit Raoul’s office filed against three staffing agencies and their client. The settlement with Midway means the litigation is now fully resolved, with the office recovering a total of $5.5 million from all four defendants.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson faces tough task with Chicago Housing Authority CEO search: Mayor Brandon Johnson, who has made housing a cornerstone of his policy agenda, must make an important decision in the coming weeks on a new leader for the embattled agency. Some residents and housing advocates, including CHA board member Francine Washington, did not like the way former CEO Tracey Scott conducted business and have told the Tribune they are eager to see someone who is more engaged with residents. The new CEO will be tasked with rebuilding residents’ trust, boosting staff morale and addressing safety and environmental concerns at its properties while shepherding more housing developments in a city where housing has become increasingly less affordable.

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s ‘pending’ Springfield lobbyist team draws ethics questions: Email records and Springfield sources indicate that three lobbyists — Lakeisha Purchase, Frank Bass and Vincent Williams — coordinated with top Johnson officials during the most recent session. But they did not update their state registration to show the city among their lobbying clients before the Illinois General Assembly adjourned June 1. In an interview on Friday, the mayor’s new lead Springfield IGA director, John Arena, argued those lobbyists did not need to register because their contracts with the city were still “pending.” In the meantime, Purchase was only “helping facilitate” lobbying, while Bass was coordinating with the city’s team in his capacity as a lobbyist for the Chicago Teachers Union and Williams as one for the Chicago Transit Authority, Arena said.

* Tribune | Last weekend’s heat wave shows gaps in Chicago’s network of cooling centers: According to the city, besides the splash pads, 152 cooling locations were open last weekend. But a Tribune analysis found all 79 public libraries were only open for four hours on Sunday. Five community colleges and 27 Park District field houses were closed at least one day during the heat wave. Five of the six community centers and all 21 senior centers were closed for the whole weekend. On Monday, all of the city cooling centers were open for regular business hours. When asked by the Tribune how many cooling centers do not have air conditioning, city officials from the mayor’s office, the Office for Emergency Management and Communications, the Department of Family and Support Services and the Department of Public Health said in a joint statement: “All facilities on the map have air conditioning.” But they did not specify which sites only had one air-conditioned room.

* Crain’s | Chicago investor buys Tribune Tower retail space: NARE has scooped up several properties in Chicago’s North Michigan Avenue and State Street retail corridors at steep markdowns. The strategy of buying those properties at a low basis has paid off, and the firm has been getting lots of interest from retailers who want a presence on the Magnificent Mile as downtown foot traffic recovers to pre-pandemic levels, Er said.

* Tribune | Amid celebration, Pride Parade calls for resistance to federal incursions on LGBTQ+ rights: This year’s theme was “United in Pride,” as the Pride Chicago organization emphasizes community solidarity in an uncertain political time for the LGBTQ+ population in America and celebrates 10 years of legalized same-sex marriage. Pride Month wraps up as the federal government has moved to restrict services and rights for many in the LGBTQ+ community. Earlier in June, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld Tennessee’s ban on gender-affirming care for minors and allowed parents to opt their kids out of curriculum involving LGBTQ+ themes. The Trump administration will also end the 988 suicide hotline’s specialized services for LGBTQ+ youths in mid-July.

* Sun-Times | Undaunted, Chicagoans put on a colorful display at 54th annual Pride Parade: Janae said they weren’t there just to party, but to show her daughter what love and acceptance can look like. “I want her to know that everything that’s going on here is normal and that hate is not an option,” Janae said. The mother-daughter pair were also at the parade in support of LGBTQ+ family members, including an uncle who died of AIDS in the ‘90s.

* Tribune | The struggle that produced Pride: Before Pride was about celebration, it was about protest. It was, and still is, about human dignity refusing to cower in the face of hateful opposition. It has taken on weightier relevance today, with the institutional silencing of LGBTQ history and the concerted targeting of transgender people and drag performers. Like that of many big cities, the history of Chicago features major mile markers in the movement for acceptance and enfranchisement. It was here where the first gay rights organization in the United States was founded, by Chicagoan Henry Gerber in 1924. But the most potent decades in the LGBTQ community’s fight in Chicago came in the 1970s and ’80s, with the early years of the AIDS crisis and the Stonewall riots in New York serving as major catalysts for the urgency of queer Americans to be seen as human. Advocacy, including from Mayor Harold Washington, and pressure from activists led the Chicago City Council to pass the Human Rights Ordinance in 1988 and include sexual orientation in prohibiting discrimination in employment, housing and public accommodation.

* Popular Mechanics | The Rodents of Chicago Are Evolving in Real Time, Scientists Say: While both chipmunks and voles have experienced changes to their skulls in response to urban navigation and hearing needs, chipmunks have also grown larger because of the availability of human food scraps (especially high-calorie processed foods).

* Sun-Times | City outlines safety protocols for Damen Silos demolition: City officials and contractors presented the proposed demolition plan during a community meeting Friday evening at Arturo Velasquez Westside Technical Institute. Residents are concerned about risks to air quality and health from demolition work. A permit for a teardown has not been issued.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Cook County tax board commissioner, staff face multiple fines from ethics board: Cook County’s Board of Ethics fined Board of Review Commissioner Samantha Steele and aides for a series of breaches this week, finding that she provided confidential information to the press about the Chicago Bears’ Arlington Heights property and wrongly allowed a staffer to attend a conference on county time. A top Steele aide was separately fined for attending Cubs games and traveling for personal trips on county time. Reached Friday, Steele said she “absolutely disagreed” with the findings but declined to comment further.

* Daily Herald | ‘Stand up for our hometowns’: Suburban mayors slam transit proposal: A coalition of 25 suburban mayors is beseeching lawmakers to think twice before approving a transit rescue plan they say is seriously flawed. “We are asking you … to stand up for our hometowns and your constituents in northeastern Illinois,” reads a letter spearheaded by Hanover Park Mayor Rod Craig and signed by leaders across Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry and Will counties. The Suburban Mayors Coalition for Fair Transit criticizes new taxes proposed in a bill approved by the state Senate to avert a $771 million shortfall facing Metra, Pace and the CTA in 2026.

* Daily Herald | Vape vending machines facing pushback from some suburbs: A fledgling Elmhurst-based company that distributes vending machines offering electronic cigarettes and vaping products is facing pushback from some suburbs. Among them are Hoffman Estates, which last week banned the machines from the village. “The sale of tobacco and tobacco-related products … is fairly regulated in terms of where it’s sold and point-of-sale locations,” Village Manager Eric Palm said. “(Village) staff just doesn’t feel that having these in establishments that could be more easily reached by minors and other people who shouldn’t be buying them is appropriate.”

* Tribune | Sharp drop in arrests, other long-term crime trends shown in new Cook County data dashboard: Throughout 2019, Chicago police officers made nearly 80,000 arrests before scaling them back significantly during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic the following spring. Now five years later, that drop appears not to be just a COVID-era blip: In recent years, arrests have rebounded slightly, but annually police still are recording tens of thousands of fewer arrests than they did in 2019. The trend is among a number of long-term shifts in how the criminal justice system operates in Cook County, according to Loyola University researchers who in partnership with local officials produced a data project that seeks to shed light on how “shocks to the system” like the pandemic have reshaped how crime and violence are handled in Chicago.

* Daily Herald | Mount Prospect factory’s neighbors win round in court: Cook County Judge Clare Quish ruled Thursday that the neighbors’ experts can tour the Prestige Feed Products facility at 431 Lakeview Court while it is operating. Quish also ruled the neighbors’ attorneys can take depositions of two witnesses who previously conducted testing and odor analysis at the site. Prestige had refused entry into the facility and the depositions, the plaintiffs’ attorneys said.

* Daily Southtown | Trial concludes in Calumet City document destruction lawsuit against Clerk Nyota Figgs: Cook County Judge Joel Chupack said he will present an update Aug. 4 on his deliberation on whether Figgs improperly destroyed two truck loads of documents shortly after Mayor Thaddeus Jones took office in 2021. Figgs and those supporting her have claimed the records lawsuit represents a targeted political attack from Jones, with whom she was previously involved in a romantic relationship. “The reason (the lawsuit) was brought has nothing to do with records were being destroyed,” James Kelly, attorney for Figgs, said Friday. However, the city contested that Figgs destroyed the documents “surreptitiously and without approval” during an audit, and requested Chupack hold her accountable by filing an injunction against unlawfully destroying records in the future.

* Daily Herald | ‘The life of an angel’: Plainfield monument dedicated to slain 6-year-old Palestinian-American boy: The monument at Van Horn Woods East Playground in Plainfield preserves the memory of Wadee, who was stabbed to death Oct. 14, 2023, in an anti-Palestinian, anti-Muslim hate crime in Plainfield. […] Trisha Mathias, Wadee’s teacher at Bonnie McBeth Early Learning Center in Plainfield, shared aspects of Wadee’s personality: He always wore his snow boots to school, always chose the red ball on the playground, loved graham crackers and goldfish crackers, and “was obsessed” with the planets.

* Daily Herald | Elburn rejects proposal to allow golf carts on streets: The possibility of allowing golf carts on the streets of Elburn has been a topic of board discussion since November. Resident Melissa Bollivar brought to the village a petition with 582 signatures in favor of a village ordinance permitting it. Village Trustee Luis Santoyo said he didn’t think the village could determine that public safety would not be jeopardized without additional due diligence, such as traffic studies. That would cost money that is not in the village’s budget, officials said.

* Daily Herald | High bacteria levels close beaches in Lake, McHenry counties: The closings, some of which have been in place since Thursday, come as high temperatures are expected to remain in the upper 80s and low 90s throughout the Fourth of July holiday week ahead. Among the sites closed, according to the Illinois Department of Public Health, are Lake in the Hills’ Indian Trail and Butch Hagele beaches; Crystal Lake’s Main Beach; Veterans Park Beach in Island Lake; Waukegan North and South beaches; North Pointe Marina Beach in Winthrop Harbor; and Moraine Park Dog Beach in Highland Park.

* Daily Herald | ‘People don’t know this’: Why MLK came to DuPage County in 1967: Almost four years after his “I Have a Dream” speech, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. arrived at a tent-in demonstration in DuPage County. King sat in front of a gaggle of microphones. Behind the civil rights leader, green tents were pitched on the grounds of a retreat house run by the Cenacle Sisters. Huge “trees shade the area along Batavia Road near Warrenville,” reported the Roselle Register newspaper. .[…] Around the Martin Luther King Jr. federal holiday and wanting to learn more about the history of the forest preserves, Gieser saw a photo online of King with a caption referring to the Cenacle property. He checked newspaper databases and read various accounts from the time to “definitely verify” the date of King’s visit: June 23, 1967.

*** Downstate ***

* WAND | Illinois Innocence Project pushes for DNA samples to enter state’s database in Slover case: The Illinois Attorney General’s Office has entered the courtroom in the Illinois Innocence Project’s effort to overturn the Slover family’s murder convictions. In early June, the Illinois Innocence Project (IIP) filed a motion asking the Illinois State Police (ISP) to submit DNA profiles into the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) in hopes of identifying the true killer(s) of Karyn Hearn Slover. The IIP said newly discovered DNA evidence could exonerate Michael Slover Sr., Jeanette Slover, and Michael Slover Jr.

* WGLT | ‘Love and rainbows’: LGBTQIA+ community and allies push for equality at Bloomington protest: The “Stop the Assault on LGBTQ+ and Trans Rights” peaceful protest was sponsored by Bloomington-Normal 50501 and the Prairie Pride Coalition. Threats to gender-affirming healthcare, proposed budget cuts to HIV and AIDS research and treatment, the banning of transgender military servicemembers and cutbacks to DEI programs are a few examples of motivations for Saturday’s gathering, according to demonstrators.

* WCIA | Vermilion Co. poultry show takes place amid uncertainty: It wasn’t because they were too chicken to hold it: People didn’t know whether or not the fair’s poultry show would take place until a few weeks ago because of the widespread bird flu. When they found out that there would be one, the contestants were overjoyed.

* WGLT | Home Sweet Home launches $750,000 fundraising campaign for The Bridge shelter village: On June 24, HSHM closed on the purchase of a former Connect Transit lot at 104 E. Oakland Ave. near downtown Bloomington. The non-congregate shelter will have 48 private sleeping cabins, a central community building with on-site support and other accommodations. It is on track to open this winter. The first donation The Bridge has is a $100,000 commitment from Eastview Christian Church. Lead Pastor Brandon Grant expressed his excitement with the project.

*** National ***

* Crain’s | Vaccine experts reject new RFK Jr.-backed federal panel, urge use of past guidance: The Infectious Disease Society of America is telling its members they should use the vaccination schedule recommended by the previous iteration of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control & Prevention’s vaccine advisory council because the new federal advisory group’s recommendations “can’t be trusted,” according to the group’s president, an immunization expert at Northwestern Medicine and Lurie Children’s. IDSA President Dr. Tina Tan said this afternoon she expects a coalition of health care groups, including her organization, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Medical Association, will soon provide further guidance, likely later this summer, on what vaccines should be administered and at what doses.

* Post-Tribune Environmental activists explain concerns with U.S. Steel deal: About one week after a partnership between U.S. Steel and a Japanese company was finalized, environmental activists called on the companies to address the health, climate and economic impacts of the deal. “It’s our conclusion that, whether in Japan or the United States, emissions from blast furnaces cannot be significantly mitigated,” said Roger Smith, Asia lead at SteelWatch. “The company should transition to a renewable energy-based approach that would achieve its net-zero target and fulfill its obligations as a leading global steelmaker.” Speakers at a press conference organized by the Sierra Club highlighted their concerns with blast furnaces, which Nippon Steel has previously said is a technology it plans to invest in through the deal.

* WaPo | This punctuation mark is semi-dead. People have thoughts: No piece of punctuation, though, stirs people up more than the humble semicolon. Too demure to be a colon but more assertive than a comma, the semicolon was introduced in 1494 by Venetian printer and publisher Aldus Manutius. What a useful little tool it has been in its primary role of inserting a graceful pause between two related independent clauses, as in: “RFK Jr. came to my house; he tore out the medicine cabinet with a crowbar.”

* Politico | Blackburn, Cruz find potential truce on state AI moratorium, child online safety: Commerce Chair Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) are planning to pitch significant changes to a state AI moratorium in the Republican megabill that has split the conference and alarmed GOP governors. The pair, who have publicly championed opposing views on the potential ban, have reached a deal that would cut the proposed 10-year moratorium in half and make accommodations for internet protections, according to a draft amendment obtained by POLITICO.

* ARS Technica | SCOTUS upholds part of ACA that makes preventive care fully covered: The ruling means that tens of millions of Americans can continue getting a variety of preventive services for free under their plans. Those cost-free services include an array of screenings, such as cancer screenings like mammograms and colonoscopies, as well as screens for obesity, lead exposure in children, high blood pressure, diabetes, and some sexually transmitted diseases, to name a few. The free services also include recommended vaccines for children and adults, well-baby and well-child doctor visits, birth control, statins, PrEP HIV prevention drugs, and fluoride supplements and varnishes for children’s teeth.

* NPR | The Trump administration is building a national citizenship data system: The tool, which is being rolled out in phases, is designed to be used by state and local election officials to give them an easier way to ensure only citizens are voting. But it was developed rapidly without a public process, and some of those officials are already worrying about what else it could be used for. NPR is the first news organization to report the details of the new system. For decades, voting officials have noted that there was no national citizenship list to compare their state lists to, so to verify citizenship for their voters, they either needed to ask people to provide a birth certificate or a passport — something that could disenfranchise millions — or use a complex patchwork of disparate data sources.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Monday, Jun 30, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Monday, Jun 30, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Jun 30, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Monday, Jun 30, 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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* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
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* RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois
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* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
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