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New super PAC backs Stratton, Raja raises $3 million in Q3

Tuesday, Sep 30, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Illinois Future PAC….

Illinois Future, a new political action committee, announced its formation to support Juliana Stratton in the Democratic primary for U.S. Senate. Illinois Future will work to ensure voters have the opportunity to learn about Juliana Stratton’s record of delivering results for Illinois families and aim to boost turnout in key communities across the state. As Donald Trump terrorizes communities and raises the cost of living, Juliana Stratton is the best candidate in the race to stand up to Trump and protect working families in the U.S. Senate

The group aims to show how Juliana Stratton’s record of effective, values-driven leadership has and will continue to deliver for Illinoisans. For too long, politicians in Washington have been all talk and no action. Illinois Future will work tirelessly to send Juliana Stratton—a proven fighter—to the U.S. Senate to deliver for Illinois communities. This independent effort will meet voters where they are to share the facts and build a coalition to win. The group will be led by Quentin Fulks.

The PAC has already raised seven figures and will continue to fundraise for its independent efforts.

* US Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi adds $3 million “and counting” to his Senate war chest. Press release…

Today, the Raja for Illinois campaign announced that it has raised $3 million and counting in the third quarter of 2025, marking a third consecutive quarter of raising more than $3 million. The campaign will end the quarter with over $17.5 million cash on hand.

News of another successful quarter comes as Raja leads by double digits in every single poll of the primary – including those commissioned by outside PACs supporting his opponent. Raja has communicated on televisions across Illinois since July, blanketing airwaves with “Bullies,” “Underdog,” and “29.” Throughout the summer, Raja crisscrossed Illinois on his listening tour, making stops in Moline, Petersburg, Bloomington, East Alton, Mount Vernon, Carbondale, Springfield, Rockford, and more. Last month, Raja released his Trump Accountability Plan, blanketing local news with his plan to rein in Donald Trump’s abuses of power.

Click here for a little more on that poll.

* Playbook

Congresswoman Robin Kelly is staking out progressive territory with a new slate of policy proposals aimed at affordability — and at highlighting the ideological distance between herself and the rest of the field, according to her campaign. “I’ve been going around the state, hearing what people are dealing with and how much things cost,” she told your Playbook host. Her “People Over Profits” plan includes taxing billionaires, raising worker wages, capping child-care costs, expanding Medicare to all, and strengthening Social Security.

Thoughts?

* More…

    * WTVO | Don Tracy aims for balance in Illinois politics with open Senate seat run: Tracy, who served as the chair of the Illinois Republican Party from 2021 to 2024, held a campaign event at Lino’s Riverside alongside State Senator Dave Syverson. He emphasized his commitment to defending the American dream and bringing Midwestern values to Washington, D.C. Tracy is competing against State Representative John Goodman for the Republican nomination, with the primary election scheduled for March 17th.

    * Edwardsville Intelligencer | The Intelligencer interviews Senate candidate Don Tracy: U.S. Senate candidate Don Tracy visited The Edwardsville Intelligencer on Sept. 26 to talk about his campaign and how he will represent the state should he win election in November 2026. Tracy is the seventh candidate and second Republican to participate in the Intelligencer’s Senate interviews.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign update

Tuesday, Sep 30, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Sep 30, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Pritzker says DHS aims to deploy 100 military troops to guard ICE operations here. Crain’s

    - Gov. JB Pritzker says the Illinois National Guard has been told the Department of Homeland Security has asked the Department of Defense for 100 troops to protect Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers and facilities.
    - It’s unclear when or if troops would be deployed or where. DHS did not respond to a request for comment.
    - Jack Lavin, CEO of the Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce, praised the city’s progress on violent crime and said Sunday’s actions “undermine that progress, create a false narrative and undercut our shared goals. It risks slowing the very economic activity we need to keep this city moving.”

* Related stories…

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*************************************************

* At 1:05 pm, Gov. Pritzker will be at the launch of Food Security for Life. At 3 pm, he’ll be at the groundbreaking for PsiQuantum’s new facilities at the Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WTTW | Illinois Prisons Will Now Scan Physical Mail Sent to Incarcerated People: Beginning immediately, non-privileged mail will be opened and inspected for contraband, scanned in color, then be uploaded to an individual’s tablet, the department announced Monday. Nearly all incarcerated people now have tablets, according to the department. That does not include privileged material, such as legal mail. The department is also discontinuing the practice of visitors dropping off publications at facilities.

* Tribune | Mother, children detained by ICE at Millennium Park Sunday held at O’Hare with other families: ‘We never imagined’: Despite the couple’s repeated demands to see a warrant, agents loaded the entire family into a U.S. Border Patrol vehicle parked along Michigan Avenue without much resistance — a scene captured on cellphones as tourists and residents strolled past the arrest in one of the city’s most popular destinations. […] Chavez and her two children are now confined to a room at O’Hare International Airport, awaiting transfer to a detention facility in Texas before deportation to Guatemala, she said.

*** Statewide ***

* Raja Krishnamoorthi’s US Senate campaign…

Today, the Raja for Illinois campaign announced that it has raised $3 million and counting in the third quarter of 2025, marking a third consecutive quarter of raising more than $3 million. The campaign will end the quarter with over $17.5 million cash on hand.

* WCIA | Hunters Feeding Illinois could be entering final year amid funding cuts: Hunters Feeding Illinois is returning for its fourth season, but organizers said one of its major partners may need to end programming after the passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. University of Illinois Extension SNAP-Education is the originator of Hunters Feeding Illinois. In a news release, the U of I Extension said that while federal funding for the SNAP-Ed program officially ends on Sept. 30, scaled back programming will continue through fall 2025 or January 2026.

* PJ Star | Government shutdown could impact thousands of federal employees in Illinois: The federal government employs roughly 2.3 million civilians across the country. There are 45,213 federal civilian employees in Illinois – not including uniformed military personnel or federal contractors, according to the Congressional Research Service.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Center Square | Former state lawmakers endorse, donors support GOP candidate Dabrowski: Former state Reps. Jeanne Ives, R-Wheaton, and Tom Morrison, R-Palatine, announced their endorsements of former Wirepoints President Ted Dabrowski on Monday. Ives supported former state Sen. Darren Bailey, R-Xenia, in 2022 but said there is a better option in 2026. “No one knows the issues better than Ted, and subsequently, nobody is better positioned to attract independent suburban voters on the merits of who can do better for Illinois families,” Ives said.

* Press Release | Attorney General Raoul Files Emergency Lawsuit To Protect Critical Homeland Security Funding From Politically Motivated Cuts: Attorney General Kwame Raoul led a coalition of 12 attorneys general in filing a lawsuit to stop the Trump administration from unlawfully reallocating federal homeland security funding away from states based on their compliance with the administration’s political agenda. On Saturday, without any notice or explanation, and four days before the end of the federal fiscal year, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) significantly cut funding to certain states that are unwilling to divert law enforcement resources away from core public safety services to assist in enforcing federal immigration law while reallocating those funds to other states. The move came days after Raoul secured a permanent injunction along with an opinion holding that the agencies violated the Constitution and the Administrative Procedure Act by conditioning all federal funds from FEMA and DHS on states’ agreement to assist the federal government in enforcing federal immigration law.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | Federal Agents Arrest Southwest Side Organizers As They Filmed ICE Activity, Officials Say : At approximately 9:30 a.m. Sunday, members of the Southwest Side Rapid Response Team responded to a tip of federal agents in Back of the Yards. While they were in the area, three members were “followed, harassed, physically kettled in their vehicles and intimidated by federal officers aiming a firearm at them,” according to the group’s statement. Federal agents were “aggressive” and started to intimidate organizers when they noticed they were being filmed, Ald. Julia Ramirez (12th) told Block Club. A few blocks down, agents in multiple vehicles surrounded organizers, detained them and moved them to an immigration processing center in Broadview, Ramirez said. They were later released, Ramirez said.

* Crain’s | South Works site sold as quantum campus beckons: Completing a long-running effort to sell the sprawling, vacant swath at 8080 S. DuSable Lake Shore Drive, a joint venture of the two Chicago firms partnered with New York-based Blue Owl Capital earlier this month to buy the land from Pittsburgh-based U.S. Steel, Illinois property records show. Related and CRG won City Council approval last year to build the 128-acre Illinois Quantum & Microelectronics Park on the south end of the site, the centerpiece of a broader 59 million-square-foot megadevelopment dubbed Quantum Shore Chicago.

* Tribune | Chicago White Sox shake up their staff, including letting Ethan Katz (pitching) and Marcus Thames (hitting) go: Katz had been the team’s pitching coach since 2021. Thames, Bourgeois and Butera were in their respective roles with the club each of the last two seasons. “Decisions about the coaching staff are incredibly difficult because these are friends and teammates who have been through all the moments and trials alongside you,” said Venable, who just completed his first season as the team’s manager, in a statement. “I cannot thank each of them enough for the hard work and professionalism they brought to the ballpark daily.

* Sun-Times | Crooked Bridgeport bank worker gets home confinement after helping hide embezzlement scheme: Alicia Mandujano — one of 16 people people who had been indicted on criminal charges following the bank’s collapse in December 2017 — was sentenced Monday to two years supervised release, including 12 months of home detention. “Real people who were saving for retirements or a vacation are still working because they lost money, U.S. District Chief Judge Virginia Kendall told Mandujano.

* WGN | ‘All for the Love of Chicago’ campaign aims to boost city’s image: “Chicago, we’ve had a challenging national narrative for a while,” [Kristen Reynolds is the president and CEO of Choose Chicago,] said. “In the last couple of months, it really has escalated with narratives coming out about federal deployment, what’s happening here, ICE obviously, and it became amplified across not only the nation, but really the globe.” […] The “All for the Love of Chicago” social media campaign encourages people to make their own videos – in their own words – why they love the city.

* Sun-Times | Look out, Coco! The food delivery robots introduced in late 2024 now have competition: Beginning Sept. 30, the flamingo-pink food delivery robots you may have seen rolling along city sidewalks are set to get some competition. Los Angeles-based Serve Robotics plans to roll out “dozens” of its own robots, less than a year after Coco Robotics began a pilot program here in the 27th and 34th wards.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* ABC Chicago | Broadview leaders to address what they call ‘unprovoked’ use of chemical agents outside ICE facility: The briefing starts at 11 a.m. Officials expected at the briefing include Broadview Mayor Katrina Thompson, Broadview Police Chief Thomas Mills, Broadview Police Department, acting Broadview Fire Chief Matt Martin, Broadview Fire Department, Oak Park Mayor Vicki Scaman and Forest Park Mayor Rory Hoskins

* Sun-Times | Neighbors near Broadview ICE facility say they’re caught in the middle of clashes between protesters, feds: Employees of cabinetmaker Reveal Interiors complain that tear gas has seeped into its plant and employees have been hit by pepper balls. A fence erected by Immigration and Customs Enforcement across Beach Street has pushed protesters into its property, disrupting work.

* WBEZ | Standing up to ICE in suburban Chicago, the People’s Patrol puts its faith in resistance: Cavazos leads the People’s Patrol, one of many volunteer rapid-response networks countering a Trump administration deportation blitz in the Chicago area. The idea is to locate immigration enforcement activity, record it, document abuses and, right on the spot, voice community opposition. Cavazos’ network focuses on Chicago’s western suburbs. It’s housed at the Casa DuPage Workers Center, a small nonprofit devoted to immigrant rights. “We saw ICE go into a factory about a month and a half ago, looking for someone,” Cavazos tells me on the way to Bensenville. “They freaked out the whole factory and they took some people from there. It’s just really sad, the way the United States crucifies [its immigrant] workers, particularly in this case. They’re essential workers that are in these factories giving us food.”

* Daily Herald | Wheeling Township Mental Health board about to set $1.4 million budget: Wheeling Township’s community mental health board is expected to approve a $1.4 million tentative budget next week as it prepares for its first tax levy nearly three years after the board was created by referendum. Last week, the mental health board reached tentative agreement on the budget. It meets again Oct. 8. Although some of the funding would go toward administration and projects such as transportation, more than $1.1 million is earmarked for grants.

* Daily Herald | District 214 eyeing solar panels at Rolling Meadows, five other schools as incentives set to expire: The Arlington Heights-based district’s energy consultant has spent the last few months exploring the feasibility of putting solar arrays on the roofs of Rolling Meadows and five other schools, as well as the Forest View Educational Center headquarters. But the timeline to get a competitive RFP for solar vendors out on the street tightened with congressional approval of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act in July. Solar installations would need to begin by July 2026, or be done by the end of 2027, to capture federal incentives due to expire, officials said.

* Daily Herald | Why the Daily Herald is ending commenting on online stories:
The comment section was intended to be a tool to spur dialogue among our readers. Sometimes it succeeded in doing that. Over time, however, it has become increasingly negative, with comments crossing the line into hate speech, bullying and name-calling. Too much time was being devoted to moderating the comments so that readers with thoughtful and relevant commentary could still have their views heard. For those well-meaning readers, there are other ways to weigh in on content and issues of the day.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | Opponent of solar farm at Belleville cemetery sues city, developers: The leader of a group that opposes a plan to clear-cut 19 acres of woods to make way for a solar farm at Mount Hope Cemetery in Belleville has filed a civil lawsuit to try and stop it. Berger, 39, of Belleville, filed a 10-count complaint last week in St. Clair County Circuit Court. He named as defendants the city of Belleville, which owns the cemetery, and three solar companies. Berger declined to comment Monday on pending litigation beyond explaining why he filed the lawsuit.

* Muddy River News | Hope House wins Quincy City Council approval; Mayor Moore defends Alderman Reed’s appointment to library board: The home located at 1603 Center Avenue received a special use permit with one condition that the requirement for two stalls per dwelling unit be reduced to one per dwelling unit. The council did not fast-track the ordinance through a consent agenda, but instead required three separate readings of the ordinance to give the operators of the home a chance to talk personally with neighbors who had concerns about the impact the home might have on their neighborhood. Pastor Todd Hastings, who is the head of the Hope House Board, said there were strict codes of conduct for the young mothers to follow while they stayed at the location.

* WSIL | Sleep in Heavenly Peace expands in Herrin: Sleep in Heavenly Peace (SHP), a nonprofit focused on providing beds to children in need, has acquired Sterling Mattress Factory in Herrin, Illinois. This marks the first acquisition in the organization’s history, aiming to bolster its mission of ensuring no child sleeps on the floor. The acquisition will allow SHP to produce more than 10,000 mattresses annually, supporting up to 184 chapters within a 500-mile radius.

*** National ***

* WaPo | National Weather Service at ‘breaking point’ as storm approaches: Some National Weather Service staffers are working double shifts to keep forecasting offices open. Others are operating under a “buddy system,” in which adjacent offices help monitor severe weather in understaffed regions. Still others are jettisoning services deemed not absolutely necessary, such as making presentations to schoolchildren.

* NPR | As sports betting explodes, should states set more limits to stop gambling addiction?: At first, the state regulators tried various strategies to educate customers about the addictive nature of gambling, as well as the financial risks. “It was much more about making sure that there are brochures that are available that explained the odds of whatever game it was,” he says. Since then, Massachusetts has put in place additional regulations on a booming industry that now includes widespread sports betting. For example, there’s no betting on Massachusetts college teams, and no gambling by credit card. All gambling companies have to allow customers to set voluntary limits and sign up for a “voluntary self-exclusion list” that bans them from casinos or sports betting over various time intervals.

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Open thread

Tuesday, Sep 30, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on?

  2 Comments      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Sep 30, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Tuesday, Sep 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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Pritzker: DHS wants 100 “military troops” sent to Illinois

Monday, Sep 29, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. JB Pritzker at a press conference today

Moments ago, the Illinois National Guard received word that the Department of Homeland Security has sent a memo to the Department of War seeking the deployment of 100 military troops to Illinois claiming a need for the protection of ICE personnel and facilities. What I have been warning of is now being realized.

The full speech is here.

The guard has confirmed a request, but says no orders have yet been issued.

…Adding… I asked the governor’s spokesperson if the “military troops” were Illinois National Guard, another state’s guard or the US Military…

We don’t know. DHS requested 100 military personnel from DOW. DOW and/or POTUS need to respond to that request.

Stay tuned.

* ICE, Pritzker said, “is running around the loop, harassing people for not being white.”

After reciting a litany of “authoritarian” events during the past days, Pritzker said

This is not about fighting crime or about public safety. This is about sowing fear and intimidation and division among Americans. It is about creating a pretext to send armed military troops into our communities. This is about consolidating power in Donald Trump’s hands. What he plans to do with that power, now or during the 2026 elections, should worry all of us.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

* Attorney General Kwame Raoul

The mobilization of the military isn’t just an ineffective strategy to address crime, it is illegal. […]

The Posse Comitatus Act, as stated before, limits the federal government’s ability to use the military for domestic law enforcement. A judge in California recognized that fact earlier this month, and the militia clauses of the United States Constitution give Congress sole authority to decide what factual circumstances allow the presidents to federalize the National Guard. They don’t exist here. The President has failed to establish that any other legal prerequisites exist for his efforts to nationalize to federalize the guard, which is why litigation challenging these efforts is now pending in multiple courts, and if the evidence follows, the pattern follows what we’ve seen in Oregon, he should expect a legal challenge here as well. […]

What the President is hoping to do is foment chaos by inciting out of control protests. So I urge Illinoisans don’t take the bait. There is no emergency in Chicago. Don’t help them create one. Exercise your first amendment rights, but do so peacefully, without violence or destruction of property. If you see what you believe to be civil rights being violated. Use your phone or camera to document it.

  38 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Sep 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

Five people are facing federal charges stemming from weekend protests at the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in suburban Broadview that’s become a flashpoint for the Trump administration’s ongoing immigration crackdown.

In court Monday, a federal magistrate judge noted there has been “a tendency for ICE to be very aggressive” in managing the protests and that it was “not a surprise that there was a confrontation” in Broadview that night.

One of those charged, Paul Ivery, 26, of Oak Park, allegedly told an agent “I’ll (expletive) kill you right now” before attempting to evade arrest by jumping onto a car, according to a criminal complaint made public Monday.

Also arrested were a husband and wife, Ray Collins and Jocelyne Robledo, of the South Side of Chicago, who each allegedly had loaded guns with them as they scuffled with officers who were trying to widen a security perimeter, another complaint alleged. Both have lawful permits to carry the firearms.

Sun-Times federal courts reporter Jon Seidel


Paging ISRA!

* The Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition…

On Tuesday, September 30, advocates with the Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition (ICJC) will join clean energy companies, legislative champions and consumers hurt by a massive, statewide electricity price spike to urge the General Assembly to pass the Clean and Reliable Grid Affordability (CRGA) Act (SB25), in the October veto session. New state analysis shows that the CRGA Act, even under the most conservative estimates, will lead to lower bills for consumers across Illinois–relief that is desperately needed.

WHAT: Press conference calling for the passage of the Clean and Reliable Grid Affordability Act in the October veto session

WHEN: Tuesday, September 30, 2025 at 10:00am CT

WHERE: The Imperial Room, Allegro Royal Sonesta Hotel, Chicago Loop, 171 W. Randolph Street, Chicago, IL 60601 and live-streamed via facebook.com/ILCleanJobs/live_videos.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Governing | Illinois Considers Unusual Approach to Gun Regulations: An Illinois bill proposes a novel approach to gun regulation and gun violence prevention. The Responsibility in Firearm Legislation (RIFL) Act, if passed, would subject firearm manufacturers to a variable licensing fee: The more often their guns are found to have been used in injury-causing incidents, the higher their fee. The money would go toward compensating gun violence victims or to cover other costs associated with gun violence.

* Treasurer Michael Frerichs, Daniel Elliot | It’s time to turn down the temperature and treat each other with dignity : Our offices can’t pass laws to fix the country’s divisions. But we can set an example: Lead with respect, work together where we can and remember that behind every vote, every opinion and every bumper sticker is a person who wants to be heard. It’s the spirit of our country that must remain intact. So, the next time you’re tempted to fire off that angry Facebook comment, stop and think. Let’s all try to turn down the temperature, listen more and treat each other with decency. That’s how we make our communities stronger and our country better. Civility isn’t weakness — it’s the first step toward a stronger America.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Downtown aldermen rip ‘public relations stunt’ day after Border Patrol agents patrolled busy Chicago streets: Ald. Brendan Reilly, 42nd, called the parading federal agents, who walked along Michigan Avenue and in front of Millennium Park, a “bizarre image to see on a beautiful image,” and said the move “only served to scare people and intimidate people.” On Monday morning, there appeared to be no sign of the agents’ reappearance. Speaking at an unrelated news conference, Reilly said his constituents were “deeply disturbed” by the moves, which stem from the Trump administration’s increased efforts to crack down on illegal immigration. U.S. Border Patrol agents have recently joined federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers as part of a surge in which often masked agents have detained people across the city and suburbs. An ICE officer on Sept. 12 fatally shot an undocumented father, Silverio Villegas-Gonzalez, after a traffic stop in Franklin Park.

* Sun-Times | Deportation fears are new stressor for many Chicago youth: Now, our 2025 Youth Survey continues that work but asks new questions to get to the heart of what it means to grow up in Chicago right now. This summer, we heard from hundreds of youth citywide between the ages of 10 and 24. While mental health remains a top concern, this year’s results reveal new and urgent trends, including the impact of deportation fears, the drivers of chronic absenteeism and the lack of safe, welcoming spaces for youth. These are not just numbers, these are the lived experiences of our city’s young people.

* Block Club | What Will Downtown Look Like In 2045? Plan Calls For Better Transit, Riverwalk Extension And More: Last week, the city released its vision with a draft Central Area Plan, a blueprint for economic development and growth Downtown. Last updated in 2003, the plan charts a 20-year course to add tens of thousands of housing units, create jobs, convert vacant offices, cut carbon emissions and expand green space while boosting transit and Downtown culture.

* Crain’s | UChicago sells market data unit to Morningstar in $375M deal: The University of Chicago is selling off Center for Research in Security Prices, CRSP, in a $375 million transaction with Chicago-based research and investment firm Morningstar. The university in a news release said proceeds from the transaction will provide support for university research and education. It will also continue to have access to CRSP’s data for university researchers.

* Block Club | Pilsen Neighbors Urge City To Reject Fisk Power Station Demolition Permits: The city has yet to approve the permits, officials said Wednesday at a community meeting held at Dvorak Park and virtually. More than a dozen neighbors raised concerns about the city’s and contractor’s plans, calling on the city to implement better measures to protect neighbors in a neighborhood that’s already disproportionately affected by pollution and environmental racism.

* Sun-Times | Lake Street bridge to close for repairs, won’t reopen till 2028: The Lake Street Bridge will close Oct. 6 for a years-long rehabilitation project. It’s the latest city bridge to be shut down for major construction work. The 109-year-old bridge will be under construction until January 2028, according to the the Chicago Department of Transportation. The bridge, which stretches over the south branch of the Chicago River, will fully close for cars and pedestrians. CTA service on the Green and Pink lines will continue while the bridge is closed except for two shutdowns planned for fall 2026 and spring 2027, according to the transportation department.

* Crain’s | Political consultant Lisa Schneider Fabes dies at 60: Schneider Fabes served as transition manager for Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administration after her election in 2019. At the time of her death, Schneider Fabes was managing Phil Andrew’s campaign in the crowded race to succeed Jan Schakowsky in the 9th Congressional District. “Anyone doing anything hard and impactful needed Lisa on the team,” Andrew said in a written statement. “Her energy, skill, sharp wit and tongue always brought humanity to good works. Our lives and community are better for Lisa. She was a gift.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora considering voluntary staffing cuts to help balance budget: The “2025 Voluntary Reduction In Force Incentive Plan” currently being considered would offer eligible employees two months of pay and benefits if they agree to leave their job at the city. That’s according to Chief of Staff Shannon Cameron, who gave a short presentation about the potential plan at a specially-called Aurora City Council meeting on Thursday. The plan was only discussed at that meeting, and the Aurora City Council did not formally vote. Cameron said the plan is expected to formally come before the Aurora City Council for approval on Oct. 14, which is the next regularly-scheduled meeting.

* ABC Chicago | Cook County launching relief fund for homeowners who saw high property tax increases: Eligibility requirements include: A property tax bill increase of at least 50% in any year since the 2021 tax year An income at or below 100% of the Area Median Income for the applicant’s household size. For example, a four-person household making $119,900 or less would be eligible. The home must be the primary residence of the applicant.

* ABC Chicago | New temporary Illinois DMV to open in Orland Park Monday: In July Orland Township trustees voted to close the Secretary of State’s office at Village Hall. At that time the Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias promised to find a new location. Monday, local officials opened the new temporary SOS office in Orland Park. […] “Our new Orland Park DMV is bigger and will offer more services to accommodate more southland residents,” Giannoulias said. “It is conveniently located just five miles drive south on LaGrange Road from the old facility and right off of the I-80 Expressway,”

* Aurora Beacon-News | Oswego board OKs repayment agreement with District 308 over water billing issue: New water meters were installed across the village starting in 2019 including at Oswego High School and Oswego East High School, village officials said. After the installation of the new 6-inch meters, the two schools were only billed for one-tenth of the actual water used, Oswego Finance Director Andrea Lamberg said in a report to trustees. […] Village staff members reached out to the district to review the billing history and discuss a repayment agreement, Oswego officials said. Both sides agreed to a repayment arrangement to run from Sept. 15, 2025, to July 15, 2034, Lamberg said.

* Daily Southtown | 56-year grassroots effort at Park Forest’s Thorn Creek needs volunteers as members retire: But the Halloween and Garlic events stopped as the organizers behind them left or retired, and Chamberlain, 84, said she is worried about getting a new generation of people to lead the preservation association, known as Friends of Thorn Creek Woods, which celebrates its 56th anniversary this year. “It’s a good feeling to know that there are so many good people that volunteer, but the only problem is now they’re all getting old,” Chamberlain said. “That’s why we need people to step up and volunteer and we need some new officers because most of our board is elderly.”

* Daily Herald | Double diploma: Students will be able to get Harper College degree while in high school: Harper College and the three districts — Northwest Suburban High School District 214, Palatine-Schaumburg High School District 211 and Barrington Area Unit District 220 — are launching the College Now dual degree program, which will have motivated high schoolers taking college-level coursework on the Palatine community college’s campus starting in the fall of 2026. […] Starting this week, the three high school districts will host information sessions for students and families to learn more, with initial applications from interested sophomores due Oct. 15. Should they meet the program’s qualifications for grades and attendance, they’ll be notified of acceptance within the week.

* Daily Herald | ‘A sense of comfort and peace’: How some suburban care facilities are using doll therapy for dementia and Alzheimer’s patients: As it progresses, dementia takes away who a patient is but leaves behind elements of who the person was, said D’Agostino, a geriatric psychiatrist with Ascension Alexian Brothers Behavioral Health Hospital in Hoffman Estates. “A lot of things that mattered to them still matter to them on some level,” he said. For many, that includes caring for a child. Replicating that experience with a doll can help calm a patient, particularly when confusion, anxiety or restlessness escalate.

*** Downstate ***

* WSIL | Building Bold Futures: Cairo Students Explore Careers at Construction Industry Expo: The event gave students a firsthand look at the wide range of careers in construction, engineering, and skilled trades. From hands-on demonstrations to conversations with industry leaders, the expo offered real-world experiences designed to spark curiosity and guide future career paths. Students tested equipment, explored multiple job tracks, and gained valuable insights into industries that are in demand and shape the infrastructure of Southern Illinois and beyond.

* STLPR | Illinois historic home could become a visitor center thanks to preservation grant: An effort by Calhoun County, Illinois, to preserve a historic home to tell more of its history has gotten a boost from a statewide nonprofit. The county’s Historic Preservation Commission was one of six groups that recently received $5,000 from Landmarks Illinois’ Preservation Heritage Fund. The commission will use the money to study the possibility of creating a visitor center at Perrin’s Ledge in Kampsville, about 70 miles northwest of St. Louis.

*** National ***

* National League of Cities | Local Official Checklist: Navigating a Federal Government Shutdown: In other words, federal discretionary grants that are administered to local governments from shut down federal agencies will be unavailable for reimbursement to local governments, and the application process for new grants will be paused until the shutdown ends. Federal agency staff will generally be unavailable to answer questions or offer technical assistance throughout the duration of a federal government shutdown. Federal contractors and employees across the country will likely stop receiving paychecks through the duration of the shutdown and local employees funded by federal grants may also be required to stop work.

* AP | Trump’s Transportation Department Pulls Trail and Bike Grants Deemed ‘Hostile’ to Cars: The department recently sent letters to local governments in at least six states — Alabama, California, Connecticut, Illinois, Massachusetts and New Mexico — informing them it was withdrawing money awarded under the $1.1 trillion infrastructure law former President Joe Biden signed in 2021. The reversals are among the clearest signals yet of the drastic shift from the Biden administration’s emphasis on alternative transportation, such as transit and biking, to the Trump administration’s focus on preserving and expanding lanes for cars and trucks.

  11 Comments      


Catching up with the congressionals

Monday, Sep 29, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Just ahead of the end of the quarterly reporting period comes a poll from the Democratic Lieutenant Governors Association

Date: September 29, 2025

A poll of likely Democratic primary voters in Illinois finds that the race for U.S. Senate is beginning to take shape as a two-person race. After spending more than $3 million, Raja Krishnamoorthi has opened up a name identification advantage on the rest of the field. Our polling continues to find that voters find the message of Lieutenant Governor Juliana Stratton appealing.

Some key findings from the survey include:

    ● 41% of voters say they are undecided in the Senate primary. Raja Krishnamoorthi leads at 33% of the vote compared to 18% for Juliana Stratton, and 8% for Robin Kelly.
    ● Since our May poll, Raja Krishnamoorthi has spent more than $3 million on television. That spending has resulted in a gain in recognition, from 50% name identification to 62%. That increase in name ID has allowed him to gain 13 points from our May poll, moving from 20% to 33%.
    ● Juliana Stratton has spent nothing on television ads and gained 5 points since May, moving from 13% to 18%. Robin Kelly has lost a point of support.
    ● After voters learn more about the background and message of Juliana Stratton, 74% say they would be more likely to support her and she vaults into the lead with 45%, Krishnamoorthi drops to 18%, while Kelly earns only 4%.

Public Policy Polling surveyed 576 likely Democratic primary voters from September 25-26, 2025. The margin of error is +/- 4.1%. 77% of the interviews for the survey were conducted by text message and 23% by landline

Looks like the LG group is trying to make the case that Robin Kelly should drop out. I don’t blame them for that, but I also don’t yet see any evidence of that ever happening.

* Politico

Melissa Bean has been endorsed by Congressman Bill Foster (IL-11) in the race for Illinois’ 8th Congressional District seat. “As Donald Trump and Republicans drive up costs and gut our healthcare, we need fighters in Washington who will work day and night to defend working families,” Foster said in a statement. “I’ve seen Melissa take on and win some of the toughest battles — beating an anti-choice incumbent in one of Illinois’ reddest districts, fighting to pass the Affordable Care Act and passing reforms to hold Wall Street accountable.”

* From an email sent by Hoan Huynh’s congressional campaign team to a prospective donor and then forwarded to me…

Um, the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act was signed into law in September of 2021. Huynh didn’t take office until January of 2023.

* More from Isabel…

    * Sun-Times | Senate candidate Robin Kelly releases ‘people over profits’ policy platform: Kelly’s platform — with more than five months to go before the March 17 primary — focuses on fighting for affordability in healthcare, housing and childcare. “These are things, some of them that I’ve been working on for awhile, but I did tele-town hall meetings and town hall meetings, spoke to constituents when I was in the grocery store shopping myself and also meetings that we’ve had in D.C. with other Democrats,” Kelly told the Sun-Times. “These are the topics that came up most often. I am very concerned about ICE, definitely, and other things, but these are the topics that people think about, worry about every day.”

    * Shaw Local | La Salle Dems forum tackles healthcare, economy, campaign Reform: Krishnamoorthi opened the event by describing growing up in an immigrant family and the struggles his family faced, but overcame the challenges by receiving government assistance. “Every night at the dinner table [my father] would remind us of the following,” he said. “He would say think of the greatness of this country….and whatever the two of you do, my brother and me, just make sure it’s there for the next families who need it.”

    * Advantage News | Raley drops out of congressional race: A former St. Louis radio personality and one-time congressional candidate is dropping out of the race for Illinois’ 15th District seat. In a social media post over the weekend, Randy Raley said a recent health scare has brought him to the decision to bow out. Specifically, Raley stated he had recently suffered a heart attack, and the prognosis is that it will happen again. He says the cardiologist discovered a problem with one of the blood vessels in his heart. It is too small to stent, and it has blockage. There is at least one other Democrat that has announced a run for that same office: Edwardsville’s Jennifer Todd. Illinois 15th District seat is currently held by Republican Mary Miller.

    * Evanston Roundtable | Biss picks new names for Finance and Budget, after incumbent asks ‘too late’ for second term: The city’s Finance and Budget Committee is set to have new resident members for the first time since its creation, albeit with opposition from at least four councilmembers to one of Mayor Daniel Biss’ selections, Candance Chow. Biss picked Chow, a recent council candidate, over incumbent Leslie McMillan, who says she intended to apply for a second term but apparently did so too late. […] The appointees gave similar responses: McGuire said her donation had “zero to do” with her selection, and Chow said she “absolutely” doesn’t think there’s a link. “Yes, I support Daniel Biss for Congress … I also want to continue to support and serve Evanston,” Chow said. “And certainly, there’s no linkage between one and the other.”

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What the state AG could do about recalcitrant sheriffs if he was so inclined (Updated)

Monday, Sep 29, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background on Adams County Sheriff Anthony Grootens is here, here, here and here if you need it. Capitol News Illinois and the Medill Illinois News Bureau

As the U.S. government escalates immigration raids in Illinois and nationwide, some Illinois sheriffs are expressing support and a desire for greater cooperation with federal immigration enforcement despite state laws that limit their involvement.

A survey of Illinois sheriffs by the Medill Illinois News Bureau for Capitol News Illinois revealed that over two-thirds of those who responded are frustrated by the state law and would favor repeal or changes. A few described actions that appear to conflict with state restrictions.

“What are they going to do to you?” Adams County Sheriff Anthony Grootens asked regarding the consequences of violating state law. “Are they gonna have me lock myself up in my own jail?”

The sheriff’s question isn’t really answered in the story.

* From Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s most recent local law enforcement guidance

…Illinois law enforcement agencies are subject to the Illinois TRUST Act, which helps bolster community trust and cooperation by affirming that law enforcement agencies in Illinois are largely prohibited from participating in immigration enforcement. And, under the Voices of Immigrant Communities Empowering Survivors (“VOICES”) Act, Illinois law enforcement officers must follow specific procedures to support immigrants victimized by violent crime or human trafficking who help law enforcement investigate or prosecute criminal activity. In 2021, the Illinois General Assembly expanded the protections and obligations in both these laws through a new law, the Way Forward Act. The Way Forward Act also authorizes the Attorney General of Illinois to conduct investigations and bring civil enforcement actions to ensure compliance with the TRUST Act and the VOICES Act.

* From state statute

(5 ILCS 825/30)
Sec. 30. Attorney General enforcement provisions. In order to ensure compliance with this Act:
(a) The Attorney General shall have authority to conduct investigations into violations of this Act. The Attorney General may:

    (1) require a law enforcement agency, law enforcement official, or any other person or entity to file a statement or report in writing under oath or otherwise, as to all information the Attorney General may consider necessary;

    (2) examine under oath any law enforcement official or any other person alleged to have participated in or with knowledge of the alleged violation; or

    (3) issue subpoenas, obtain records, conduct hearings, or take any other actions in aid of any investigation. In the event a law enforcement agency, law enforcement official, or other person or entity fails to comply, in whole or in part, with a subpoena or other investigative request issued pursuant to this paragraph, the Attorney General may compel compliance through an action in the circuit court.

(b) Upon his or her own information or upon the complaint of any person, the Attorney General may maintain an action for declaratory, injunctive or any other equitable relief in the circuit court against any law enforcement agency, law enforcement official, or other person or entity who violates any provision of this Act. These remedies are in addition to, and not in substitution for, other available remedies.
(Source: P.A. 102-234, eff. 8-2-21.)

And we’re still waiting on action.

…Adding… Isabel asked AG Raoul why he has yet to take action. His response…

I don’t do my investigations in the press.

He later said, “We are in touch with Sheriff Grootens and we’re going to be having a conversation, and that’s all I’m going to give you.”

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Grain tour brings global buyers to Illinois farms as China snubs US soybeans

Monday, Sep 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Reuters last week

Chinese buyers booked at least 10 cargoes of Argentine soybeans after Buenos Aires scrapped grain export taxes, three traders said on Tuesday, dealing another setback to U.S. farmers already shut out of their top market and hit by low prices.

Argentina’s temporary tax move boosts the competitiveness of its soybeans, prompting traders to secure cargoes for fourth-quarter inventories in China, a period usually dominated by U.S. shipments but now clouded by Washington’s trade war with Beijing. […]

The deals are a fresh blow for U.S. farmers, who are missing out on billions of dollars of soybean sales to China halfway through their prime marketing season as unresolved trade talks freeze exports and rival South American suppliers led by Brazil step in to fill the gap, traders and analysts have said.

“Every time China turns to South America instead of the U.S., soybean farmers and our farm families here at home lose out,” said Caleb Ragland, a farmer from Magnolia, Kentucky, and president of the American Soybean Association.

* Fortune

During Trump’s first administration, U.S. farmers lost $27 billion in agricultural exports between mid-2018 and 2019 as a result of a trade war with China, according to a 2022 report from the USDA. During that same period, the U.S. market share of Chinese soybean imports plummeted to a 30-year low of 19%, the ASA reported. Brazil’s market share reached its peak of 75%. Years later, U.S. soybean farmers have yet to fully recover, Todd Main, the director of market development at the Illinois Soybean Association, told Fortune.

“The takeaway that we have from the data of the last time we did this is that the U.S. lost about 20% of our market share, and it never came back,” Main said. […]

Farmers aren’t banking on a bailout, either. They’re looking for a trade deal—or at least stable enough ground to grow their businesses, Illinois Soybean Association’s Main said.

“We can grow anything. What we really want is good relations with our trading partners,” he said. “We want markets. We don’t want bailouts.”

According to the Illinois Soybean Association, “60 percent of the soybeans grown in Illinois find their way to international markets.” In 2023, Illinois exported $4.5 billion worth of soybeans.

* WQAD yesterday

Representatives from six Middle Eastern and Asian countries will tour Illinois in a four-day event. The Illinois Department of Agriculture (IDOA) is hosting international buyers from China, Vietnam, Egypt, Jordan, Singapore and the island of Mauritius.

“To be very blunt with you, with the tariffs, trade situation, the instability that’s been created in agriculture, (means) these relationships are more important than ever,” IDOA Director Jerry Costello said. “We’re thrilled to have it here in the state of Illinois.” […]

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Economic Research Service reports that China bought $12.64 billion of soybeans from the U.S. [last year.] This year, China has not accepted one order of soybeans from the U.S. […]

“You know who’s benefited? Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay,” Costello said. “Since the last set of tariffs that went into effect, starting, I think they were put in place in 2017. If you look at just soybean-specific trade, Brazil has probably at least tripled, if not quadrupled, its soy sales to China.”

* Brownfield Ag News

[Illinois AG Director] Costello tells Brownfield the state can’t circumvent federal tariffs, but it can work to build relationships with export partners.

“Trying to make sure that we’re retaining relationships and also recruiting new buyers, letting these folks know the state of Illinois wants to do business with them,” he says. […]

“Our grain tours last year did about $159 million worth of business just from those tours, which was up $30 million from the year prior,” he says.

* More…

    * Pontiac Daily Leader | Illinois grain tour brings global buyers to Midwest farms: The Illinois Department of Agriculture is preparing to host its second Illinois grain tour of 2025. The event will welcome international buyers from six countries including China, Vietnam, Egypt, Jordan, Singapore and the island of Mauritius, according to a community announcement. The four-day tour, scheduled for Sept. 29 through Oct. 2, aims to foster relationships that could boost export sales of Illinois agricultural products. Last month, buyers from Latin American countries participated in a similar tour. This year, the groups were split due to the program’s success and the high number of interested participants.

    * Politico | China weaponizes ag imports to target Trump and US farmers: It’s a strategy that appears to be working. Powerful agriculture lobbying groups, traditionally Trump allies, have flooded the White House with complaints that the tariffs are responsible for China’s snub of the U.S. soybean crop. A person close to the administration said it was “ruffled” and “completely caught off guard,” by the outcry from soybean farmers warning of the potential for financial ruin. That prompted a rush to brief senior officials as well as the president in recent weeks. “There was an information gap. But that was a learning opportunity,” said the person, who was granted anonymity to speak candidly.

    * AP | Trump’s trade battle with China puts US soybean farmers in peril: China’s retaliatory tariffs also hit U.S. growers of sorghum, corn and cotton, and even geoduck divers have been affected. But soybeans stand out because of the crop’s outsized importance to U.S. agricultural exports. Soybeans are the top U.S. food export, accounting for about 14% of all farm goods sent overseas. And China has been by far the largest foreign buyer. Last year, the U.S. exported nearly $24.5 billion worth of soybeans, and China accounted for more than $12.5 billion. That compared with $2.45 billion by the European Union, the second-largest buyer. This year, China hasn’t bought beans since May.

    * NYT | China Bought $12.6 Billion in U.S. Soybeans Last Year. Now, It’s $0: The sale of soybeans in the spring and summer is always slow, as China and other countries turn to Brazil, which harvests in February and March. Typically, more than half of American soybean exports are sold between October and December. If Chinese buyers continue to stay away, American soybean farmers will be in a rough place. Continued slow sales of soybeans, and an expected bumper corn crop in a number of states, are raising worries that there will not be enough storage space for grains this fall. There are fears that grain elevators, which buy and store large quantities of crops before selling them, will simply stop accepting soybeans, as they lack confidence they’ll be able to export them.

  27 Comments      


Unclear on the concept

Monday, Sep 29, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Wirepoints

One credit card to another: Illinois converted $186 million of pension debt into bonded debt – Wirepoints Quickpoint

An under-reported part of the State of Illinois’ most recent bond sale is noteworthy. State pensions will get $186 million of the borrowed money. That’s important because it’s really no different than moving debt from one credit card to another. The state’s unfunded pension liability will drop, thanks to the new money, but the state’s bonded debt will increase by the same principal amount.

In other words, the $186 million is really just a pension obligation bond (POB) wrapped inside a bond that was otherwise for something different — funding capital projects. We and many others have heavily criticized POBs in the past when they’ve been used by the state and some municipalities.

Politicians use the results of POBs to claim reductions in their pension problems, but they usually don’t mention that they run up bonded debt to pay for it. Either way, taxpayers remain on the hook for the principal amount.

It also means the state will be rolling the dice on the interest cost of the debt. Whether the shift reduces interest costs is unpredictable because that depends on how markets perform. The debt on the new, taxable bonds, issued September 1, bears interest at a true cost of 4.55%, according to The Bond Buyer. The borrowed money will be invested by the pensions in stocks and other investments, which may or may not earn more than that. The net result with past POBs therefore has sometimes been positive and sometimes not.

Um, this goes well beyond replacing high-cost soft pension debt with lower-cost hard bonding debt. It’s not a Blagojevich-style POB (which was a scam because they drew down the savings all at once). Not mentioned anywhere in the piece is that this bonding will fund another round of pension buy-outs.

As we discussed last month, the buy-out program has knocked off a chunk of the state’s unfunded liability ($2.5 billion) by convincing people to give up their annual compounded automatic annual retirement increase in exchange for a lump-sum payment at retirement. It’s basically the only avenue anyone has found so far to devise a constitutional voluntary system to reduce state pension costs.

* The governor’s office confirmed last week that this borrowed money is, indeed, the pension buy-out funding…

Yes, part of the $1.775 billion General Obligation Bonds, Series of September 2025, will fund the State’s pension buyout program. About $186 million from the Series 2025A Bonds is deposited into the State Pension Obligation Acceleration Bond Fund, which pays buyouts when participants choose one of the two options.

* The “father” of the state’s pension buy-out plan, former Republican Rep. Mark Batinick, told me this last year

On the broader pension issue, Batinick had this to say: “When it comes to state pensions, both Republicans and Democrats need to look in the mirror and admit a hard truth. Republicans need to realize that while pensions are still a big line item in the budget, the problem is getting better, not worse. Pension costs are declining as a percentage of the budget. We are healing. Democrats need to realize that much of the money that has been available for new spending the last few years has come from that healing, not budget magic.”

Maybe a phone call could’ve cleared it up before they wrote that. /s

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign update

Monday, Sep 29, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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BIPA may snag energy omnibus

Monday, Sep 29, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

One of the reasons a giant energy-related bill failed to pass the Illinois General Assembly last spring was because organized labor remained neutral. At least one union opposed the bill, but overall, the unions weren’t helping to move the ball forward — and they have a whole lot of much-needed legislative muscle.

That’s why the goal of the majority Democrats has always been to have support from unions and the major environmental groups when it comes to these big energy bills. And this one was big. A major electricity storage program and an amped-up energy-efficiency component were just two of the items.

But last week, a top official with the Illinois AFL-CIO confirmed the organization is still neutral on language being circulated by negotiators.

Unions often tend to support their employers on issues like this. If something is going poorly for an employer of large numbers of union workers, then (unless the employers are viewed as hostile) the unions will push to improve their lot. This is particularly true in the public utility and energy spaces and has been forever.

So, what’s the issue here? Well one of them is data centers. An environmental lobbyist expressed dismay last week, saying labor support for building more data centers has a 50/50 chance of derailing the entire energy omnibus process.

John Pletz recently had a very comprehensive and informative story about the data center industry in Crain’s Chicago Business.

Bottom line, the industry says the state’s Biometric and Information Privacy Act is stalling construction of new data centers, which generate millions of dollars in local taxes and employ union workers.

For your background, the Legislature did not include data centers when it revised the law in 2024 to protect many businesses from gigantic lawsuits for collecting biometric data without informed consent. The data centers want the same sort of protections for allowing customers to store biometric information in “the cloud.” Others say they’re already covered by the law, but the companies still don’t want to take any chances in court.

Pletz’s piece included some strong statements of support for the data centers’ position from a business manager for the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 134. About half the local’s membership works in data centers, which rely on lots of trained electricians to keep the centers running. They’re becoming a vital source of jobs in an era where big Downtown Chicago construction projects have dried up.

The legislative working group on energy has people discussing data centers (which use a ton of electricity and water). And, because of that, the issue has seeped into the energy bill talks.

There are those who say a compromise could be reached. A couple of the “hyperscalers,” who operate gigantic data centers, want to be exempted from the Biometric and Information Privacy Act for doing things like using facial recognition in artificial intelligence learning. But that’s probably impossible to pass, say some negotiation participants.

Instead, the idea is to grant the data centers their more modest ask of being treated like other businesses under the act. That could reopen the doors here to more construction and likely prevent neighboring states from poaching the centers, possibly polluting shared air with purpose-built natural gas electricity plants, draining shared water and sucking up electricity from the shared grid system, without any Illinois benefit. In return, some reforms could be put into the bill, particularly on transparency of water and electrical usage and banning the use of diesel backup generators.

But there’s a big problem with this plan. The Illinois Trial Lawyers Association is expected to hotly oppose any effort to block or limit lawsuits, which is what they always do. Labor and trial lawyers association are historical allies, and they’re both very prominent members of the Democratic Party’s coalition, so some unions have been given the task of neutralizing the trial lawyers. I talked with a lawyers association executive late last week who said he has not yet been approached about this topic in relation to the energy bill. Either way, it’s up to the unions to resolve the dispute.

Would resolving this issue break the logjam and bring labor on board? I have no idea. There are so many moving pieces right now that it’s impossible to tell. But what I do know is that if the unions aren’t somehow moved to proponent status, or if the two issues can’t be separated from each other into two different bills, the energy legislation is in a world of hurt come the fall veto session.

Sen. Dave Koehler (D-Peoria) told one of his local TV stations yesterday that he didn’t think the energy bill would pass this fall. We’ll see.

  13 Comments      


When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds

Monday, Sep 29, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Findings of a recent economic study are clear: the retail sector is a cornerstone of the state’s economy and crucial to our everyday lives. Retail in Illinois directly contributes more than $112 billion in economic investment annually – more than 10 percent of the state’s total Gross Domestic Product.

Retailers like Diana Hamann in Evanston enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA are showcasing the retailers who make Illinois work.

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ICE coverage roundup

Monday, Sep 29, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* As we told you over the weekend, the Illinois State Police has reached out to offer assistance to Broadview with its criminal investigation of this incident. CBS 2

The Village of Broadview said they’ve launched a criminal investigation after a CBS News Chicago reporter had a projectile fired at her vehicle by an ICE agent late Sunday morning.

Reporter Asal Rezaei said there was no active protest or protesters at the facility, and she was alone with no one around her at the time of the incident.

In a report filed with Broadview police, Rezaei said she was driving her truck with her driver’s side window down, while approaching the 25th Avenue entrance to see if any activity was taking place, before leaving the area.

That’s when she said a masked ICE agent, who saw her window down, shot a pepper ball about 50 feet from the inside of the fence, hitting her truck’s driver’s side panel, causing the chemical agents to engulf the inside of her truck.

* The governor will undoubtedly be asked about the offer of ISP help for Broadview’s investigation this afternoon…

Daily Public Schedule: Monday, September 29, 2025

What: Governor Pritzker will hold a press conference with community leaders responding to increased federal deployments in Illinois.

When: 3:00 PM

Where: Press Room, 555 West Monroe, Chicago, IL, 60661

Watch: www.illinois.gov/livevideo

Note: There will be availability to follow.

* I imagine this topic will come up as well. Sun-Times

Dozens of federal immigration agents took individuals into custody during a winding patrol Sunday through downtown Chicago, and a top U.S. Border Patrol official told WBEZ the agents were arresting people based on “how they look.”

The agents, clad in military fatigues, roamed past some of Chicago’s most well-known landmarks on a beautiful Sunday afternoon. The highly visible show of force came just three days after Border Patrol boats carrying armed officers appeared on the Chicago River.

Gregory Bovino, commander at large of the border force, contrasted the people being arrested with a white WBEZ reporter, saying agents consider a person’s appearance before taking them into custody. […]

“You know, there’s many different factors that go into something like that,” Bovino said. “It would be agent experience, intelligence that indicates there’s illegal aliens in a particular place or location.

“Then, obviously, the particular characteristics of an individual, how they look. How do they look compared to, say, you?” he said to the reporter, a tall, middle-aged man of Anglo descent.

These would be known as “Kavanaugh Stops.” A possible example of one such recent Chicago attempt is parodied here.

* Click here for the filing. Sun-Times

Federal agents recently detained at least three U.S. citizens amid President Donald Trump’s aggressive deportation campaign in Chicago, according to lawyers mounting the most significant court challenge yet to the president’s “Operation Midway Blitz.”

The arrests are detailed in a new federal court filing from the National Immigrant Justice Center and the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois, arguing that ICE arrested 27 people without warrants or probable cause and in violation of an existing consent decree.

The filing describes how one person getting ready for work in Elgin allegedly “saw red lasers all over the kitchen and the front door” before an explosion suddenly rang out, signaling the start of a raid. Another arrest was allegedly documented in part by a 14-year-old recording from the backseat of a car. […]

The settlement stems from a 2018 class-action lawsuit challenging ICE agents’ use of traffic stops and other tactics to make warrantless, unlawful arrests.

The original consent decree expired in May, and the two civil rights groups filed a motion to extend it for three years in March, noting over two dozen violations during the first weeks of President Donald Trump’s second term.

The court has yet to issue a final ruling on the motions. In the meantime, the attorneys said ICE has dropped the policy despite the court’s order that it remain in place as the motion proceeds.

* More…

    * ABC Chicago | Broadview police chief says he was verbally attacked by ICE agent; mayor criticizes ICE in letter: Broadview Police Chief Thomas Mills told the ABC7 I-Team he was verbally attacked by an ICE agent during a protest outside of the facility earlier this month. “I’ve been doing this job a long time now, but I was shocked,” Mills said. “I was shocked. I’ve never been spoken to by a fellow law enforcement officer in such a way.” […] Mills then detailed that as he was walking across a skirmish on September 12, he endured multiple expletives by an ICE agent, calling him a coward, accusing him of neglecting his duties during protests that got physical.

    * Sun-Times | Broadview officials say ICE agents warned that mayor’s comments would bring consequences: Broadview officials said Saturday that their police department was warned by federal agents there would be “a s— show” in the west suburb in response to Mayor Katrina Thompson’s comments that ICE is “making war on my community.” Their comments came as, for a second day in a row, federal agents launched tear gas and other chemical irritants near protesters gathered outside the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview.

    * Sun-Times | ICE arrests tamale vendor in Back of the Yards, online fundraiser launched to assist vendors: Ozuna and a group of residents decided to sell tamales from Murillo’s stand the following morning with café de olla courtesy of Back of the Yards Coffee. The effort, led by the nonprofit Increase the Peace, resulted in the sale of more than 300 tamales, with the proceeds going to supporting Murillo and her family. “It’s been a very scary and tough time for us right now,” said Maria Orozco of the Street Vendors Association, whose parents sell food in Oak Lawn. “It’s been over 20 days since the majority of our vendors haven’t gone out to sell because of the political climate … a lot of them are just hiding out, making sure they’re not coming out of the house, having family members taking them food, groceries and stuff like that.”

    * WGN | ICE detains Chicago tamale vendor on Southwest Side, community rallies in support: Murillo came to the United States from Mexico 20 years ago. She has three daughters, the youngest is 12-years-old and has special needs. Murillo also owns a small restaurant on the city’s Far South Side with 20 employees.

    * Sun-Times | Broadview police probe federal agent who shot pepper rounds at CBS reporter’s vehicle: The National Lawyers Guild Chicago confirmed five of the 11 people detained Saturday night were still in federal custody. The group called agents’ attacks on the news media and protesters alike “alarming and violent.” “The violence was an indiscriminate, unprovoked, and illegal use of force,” said Amanda Yarusso, a volunteer attorney with the National Lawyers Guild Chicago. “These unlawful actions by federal agents demonstrate this administration’s complete disregard of constitutional standards.”

    * Tribune | In show of force, dozens of armed federal immigration agents patrol downtown Chicago: Roughly 20 bystanders and passersby started following the officers, chanting “ICE, go home!” The agents stopped at the intersection with Oak Street. Several got in vans that drove away. For another 15 minutes, the crowd of protesters around them grew bigger, yelling “shame.”

    * Block Club | Armed Federal Agents Patrol Downtown To Chants Of ‘Shame’: It is unclear how many arrests were made during the operation. Multiple construction workers were reportedly arrested at a Downtown construction site and a food cart was left vacant near the Art Institute of Chicago, officials said at Sunday’s press conference.

    * WaPo | Videos of fatal ICE shooting in Chicago raise questions about DHS account: DHS said an officer was “seriously injured” by an undocumented immigrant who hit and dragged him with his car. Video indicates the officer suffered minor injuries he dismissed as “nothing major.”

    * Reuters | A Mexican town mourns father slain by ICE in Chicago: Silverio Villegas Gonzalez left Irimbo, in Mexico’s Michoacan state, for the United States 18 years ago. He returned on Thursday in a coffin after he was shot dead by a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent on September 12. […] Both Illinois Governor JB Pritzker and Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum have called for further investigations into the ICE agents’ tactics.

    * NYT | Trump Fired a U.S. Attorney Who Insisted on Following a Court Order: The top federal prosecutor in Sacramento was fired hours after she reminded a Border Patrol chief to abide by court-ordered restrictions on immigration raids.

    * Capitol News Illinois | Illinois law prohibits sheriffs from assisting ICE with civil immigration enforcement. Some wish they could: The Medill Illinois News Bureau and Capitol News Illinois sought to survey Illinois sheriffs about how they perceive their roles in immigration enforcement. Of the 102 Illinois sheriffs, 28 responded to reporters or answered survey questions electronically. Medill Bureau reporters reached out to unresponsive sheriffs at least three times over several months by phone, mail, email and sometimes in person. Sheriffs surveyed come from geographically diverse regions of the state, although the state’s 21 northernmost counties, aside from Cook County, did not respond. Sheriffs’ views varied widely. Some said they had no opinion due to their county’s lack of immigration activity. Others said they favor repealing or revising state limits to allow more cooperation with federal immigration enforcement.

    * Playbook | Feds stage show of force in Chicago: “This is not making anybody safer — it’s a show of intimidation, instilling fear in our communities and hurting our businesses,” Pritzker said in a statement about the Department of Homeland Security officers who patrolled areas along Michigan Avenue. “We cannot normalize militarizing American cities and suburbs. Make sure you know your rights and stay alert.” […] Watch for Willie Wilson, the conservative Chicago businessman and former political candidate, to testify Tuesday before the full U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee regarding crime in Chicago “and why the National Guard is needed,” according to a statement from his team.

    * Sun-Times | Feds march into downtown Chicago; top border agent says people are arrested based on ‘how they look’: Gregory Bovino, commander at large of the border force, contrasted the people being arrested with a white WBEZ reporter, saying agents consider a person’s appearance before taking them into custody. “You know, there’s many different factors that go into something like that,” Bovino said. “It would be agent experience, intelligence that indicates there’s illegal aliens in a particular place or location. “Then, obviously, the particular characteristics of an individual, how they look. How do they look compared to, say, you?” he said to the reporter, a tall, middle-aged man of Anglo descent.

  19 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Sep 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: As Illinois congressional delegation seeks answers, ICE cancels meeting. Capitol News Illinois

    - Immigration and Customs Enforcement leaders in Chicago canceled a meeting scheduled for Friday with members of Illinois’ congressional delegation.
    - Illinois’ Democratic members of Congress had asked for a meeting with ICE Chicago Field Office Director Russell Hott. They were seeking to learn more about ICE and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s immigration enforcement operations known as Operation Midway Blitz in the Chicago area.
    - Friday’s meeting was rescheduled to an unspecified day in October, the delegation said.

We will have a full ICE roundup posted later this morning.

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* Governor JB Pritzker will hold a press conference with community leaders responding to increased federal deployments in Illinois at 3 pm. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* AP | Regulators struggle to keep up with the fast-moving and complicated landscape of AI therapy apps: “The reality is millions of people are using these tools and they’re not going back,” said Karin Andrea Stephan, CEO and co-founder of the mental health chatbot app Earkick. […] Earkick’s Stephan said there is still a lot that is “very muddy” about Illinois’ law, for example, and the company has not limited access there. Stephan and her team initially held off calling their chatbot, which looks like a cartoon panda, a therapist. But when users began using the word in reviews, they embraced the terminology so the app would show up in searches.

* Daily Herald | Experts, parents push back on misleading Tylenol-autism claims: Illinois parents, doctors and medical associations are among those speaking out against claims made by President Donald Trump that the pain reliever Tylenol is linked to autism. “As both a mom of a child with severe autism and a business owner serving autistic families, I don’t believe there’s enough science to say Tylenol or vaccines cause autism,” said Linda Lynn, founder of Crystal Lake-based Rockin’ the Spectrum. “Making statements without evidence only spreads fear. What families truly need are reliable research, resources and compassion — not misinformation.”

* Daily Herald | Paratransit riders hit with major cuts to rideshare program starting this week: But with a multimillion dollar public transit shortfall looming in 2026, money is tight. Following a recommendation by the Regional Transportation Authority, rides on RAP and the related Tax Access Program (TAP) will shrink from an average of 240 a month to 30 a month and costs will rise from $2 a trip to $3.25 effective Wednesday.

*** Statewide ***

* Sun-Times | Senate candidate Robin Kelly releases ‘people over profits’ policy platform: Kelly’s plan, which she dubs the “People Over Profits Platform,” places a focus on “kitchen table issues.” It includes support for a minimum tax on individual taxpayers whose net worth for the taxable year exceeds $10 million and raising the minimum wage to at least $17 per hour by 2030. Kelly’s platform — with more than five months to go before the March 17 primary — focuses on fighting for affordability in healthcare, housing and childcare.

* Daily Herald | ‘He will be missed beyond measure’: Al Llorens, statewide education union president, dead at 73: Earlier in his career, Llorens taught fourth-grade phonics and middle school reading in Champaign, and as a math and science teacher in Kankakee and Chicago. He is remembered for his kindness, passion for public education and unions, his ability to put students first, dedication to IEA members. “Whether in the classroom or leading the Illinois Education Association, Al cared deeply about empowering the next generation and worked tirelessly to invest in their future,” said Gov. JB Pritzker in a news release. “He molded the minds of countless students and leaves behind a more equitable, supportive, and enriching education system.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Republican gubernatorial candidate Ted Dabrowski

Illinois’ business donor base is rallying around Ted Dabrowski’s gubernatorial campaign.

Richard Uihlein, CEO of Uline, is the most notable donor to the campaign given his major support of Republican candidates in recent elections. Uihlein contributed $250,000 to the Ted for Illinois campaign on Friday of last week.

James Perry, co-founder of Chicago-based private equity firm Madison Dearborn, has also contributed $250,000 to the campaign. Perry is joined by co-founder and Chairman Emeritus of Madison Dearborn, John Canning, with a $100,000 contribution.

Other donors contributing $100,000 or more include Chicago investor Noel Moore; Vince Kolber, CEO of Residco; Ed Bachrach, retired chairman and CEO of Bachrach Clothing, Inc.; and Alex Melvin, owner and chairman of Rural King.

Gerald Beeson, COO of Citadel, has also donated $50,000 to Ted for Illinois. […]

In all, Dabrowski has raised more than $1.2 million, the leading amount among candidates in the Republican primary, since announcing his candidacy on September 12, 2025.

* Tribune | New law has Illinois creating statewide office to support public defenders amid ongoing justice reforms: A new state law, recently signed by Gov. JB Pritzker, could eventually ease the workloads for county public defender’s offices, which represent people who can’t afford to hire private lawyers. The law, dubbed by supporters as the Funded Advocacy & Independent Representation Act, or FAIR Act, calls for the creation of a statewide public defender’s office to support underresourced, county-level public defenders. The new state office would provide access to more attorneys, forensic experts, paralegals and other office staff members to help address resource disparities between public defenders and county prosecutors.

* Sen. Lakesia Collins | Why I sponsored an Illinois ‘squatter bill’: To be clear — this measure isn’t about punishing vulnerable groups, displacing legitimate tenants or undermining civil procedures. It is simply a way to give the authorities the power and tools to protect the rights of property owners. Property owners will be required to provide proof of ownership or legal authority before law enforcement can intervene to ensure that innocent parties are not caught in the middle of a wrongful dispute.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Chicago budget fight a political minefield for Mayor Brandon Johnson: To close a $1.15 billion 2026 funding gap by the end of the year, the freshman chief executive will have to dance through a minefield. He faces a restive crew of aldermen who are deeply skeptical of the mayor’s political standing, labor groups whose continued support may hinge on Johnson sparing their city union jobs and grassroots activists trying to push him left to live up to his “tax the rich” pledges while the business community chafes against those hopes.

* Sun-Times | City Council leader wants to raise maximum age for starting police officer to 55: Villegas said he introduced the ordinance at Thursday’s City Council meeting to “force a discussion” about creative ways to attract more candidates to a job that has lost its luster. “We’re finding it harder to fill this position. It forces the discussion to figure out how we are going to deal with the lack of interest from younger” applicants, he said.

* Block Club | Bruce Sagan, Hyde Park’s Newspaperman And Renowned Arts Patron, Dies At 96: Bruce Sagan, a Hyde Parker who counted among his many achievements a presidential recognition, the relocation of a prestigious ballet company to Chicago and seven decades at the helm of his neighborhood newspaper, died Sunday following a brief battle with cancer. Sagan, 96, was a longtime newspaperman, arts patron and “renaissance man” instantly recognizable by his bowtie and cardigan, loved ones said.

* Crain’s | These Starbucks stores in Chicago are on the chopping block: Starbucks did not publicly list which locations are closing. However, the company’s website appears to offer hints. The “store hours” pages for some specific locations now read as “closed” for the entire week starting Sept. 29. […] Separately, Starbucks workers have begun posting online about their stores receiving closure notices. The store addresses included in those posts are largely consistent with the stores Crain’s identified through the company’s website.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Aurora Beacon-News | Trips, bars and adult entertainment clubs: How officials say Aurora fiber network got $1 million in debt: OnLight Aurora is losing $27,000 each month, a large part of which is because of debt payments, Laesch said during a presentation to the Aurora City Council earlier this month. “Stunned is an understatement,” Aurora Ald. Ted Mesiacos, 3rd Ward, said after the presentation. “What you are showing us is of serious concern for our financial security.” Laesch alleged during the meeting that the organization got to its current financial state in part because of three failed attempts to bring internet service through city fiber to residents’ homes, including one that ended up costing over $110,000 in legal fees. And the organization, which had two employees, had a payroll of around $200,000 each year, he said.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Kane County considering allocating earned interest to close budget gap: At a meeting on Wednesday, Kane County Board Finance Committee Vice Chair Bill Lenert noted the possibility that interest earned through the county Treasurer’s Office may be able to balance the budget, and provided an update about the county’s budgeting process. Lenert said that he, the State’s Attorney’s Office and Treasurer’s Office think the county may be able to balance its budget using the earned interest rather than pulling money out of cash reserves, which the county has been doing since 2023.

* Fox Chicago | Northwestern University students barred from enrolling after refusing antisemitism training: In an open letter to university administrators, more than 200 current students and graduate workers, alumni, staff, faculty, and parents, claimed that training videos on antisemitism and “anti-Muslim, anti-Arab and anti-Palestinian biases” would actually reinforce discriminatory bias. The university’s administration said the students received reminders of the required training for several months before their registration was withheld.

* Crain’s | Metra to test cafe cars with free snacks on select lines: Metra will begin testing its new cafe car prototype on select routes next week. It plans to give free snacks and iced coffees to riders who offer feedback on the service. Workers gutted the second level of a car to create the prototype. For now, there is only one model, and Metra plans to move it between routes to reach as many riders as possible.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Central Illinois Republicans rally for increased student privacy: All In cross references voter rolls with college directories, which HCC students may opt out of having made public. The Family Education Rights and Privacy Act [FERPA] prevents only the sharing of educational data such as grades and disciplinary records.

* WGLT | Austerity and persuasion key to Bloomington passing grocery tax: City Manager Jeff Jurgens said council sentiment evolved over time. Some of that involved staff conversations about the impact of not continuing the tax. “Coming with what unfortunately had to be a strong recommendation that the City of Bloomington needed to keep this tax. It was a tax that was already in place,” said Jurgens. “Our finance department projected it to be a very substantial number, $3 million to the city. And had we failed to keep it, it really would have put us in a position where we were not able to move forward on a number of projects, and likely would have faced some pretty severe cuts.”

* Illinois Times | Citizens Club discusses Springfield’s dysfunctional downtown: Dozens of Springfield residents, including government officials and concerned business owners, attended the Citizens Club of Springfield’s Sept. 26 meeting about a decades-old issue – the state of downtown Springfield. The meeting was moved from its typical location upstairs at the Hoogland Center for the Arts to the main floor LRS Theatre to accommodate the larger-than-usual crowd.

* Pantagraph | Gibson City solar project expected to connect to grid by 2026: The project will allow Archtop’s solar generation to use the infrastructure that connects the Gibson City Energy Center to the grid. Company officials said the project is intended to support Illinois’ clean energy transition. […] The Gibson City Energy Center’s interconnection switchyard will also be used by the Archtop Solar Project. Earthrise said that arrangement helped speed study and construction of the new array. The company said the additional power will help meet rising energy demand in Illinois.

* BND | Fairview Heights man who said he rammed police car on purpose is charged: Officer Travis Montgomery had stopped a 2016 Nissan Rogue for an expired license plate sticker, which police said was five years past due, around 9 a.m. Wednesday. As Montgomery approached the passenger side of the Nissan, Jennings allegedly drove his gray 2018 Chevrolet Camaro into the rear of the squad car, with its emergency lights activated. “The driver, now identified as Jennings, quickly exited his vehicle and approached the officer, who had his body camera activated,” the Fairview Heights Police Department said in a news release. “The driver admitted he had consumed alcohol and weed gummies. He then volunteered he purposely drove into the police vehicle because he does not like police officers.”

* WCIA | Teutopolis honors victims two years after chemical spill: The Teutopolis Fire District said the St. Francis Church bells will toll at 8:41 p.m. on Sept. 29 to honor the five victims who died in the anhydrous accident. Community members are invited to pay their respects at the church entrance or the courtyard west of the main entrance.

* WSIL | New initiative aims to boost SIU alumni businesses in Southern Illinois: Southern Illinois offers a business-friendly environment with flexible zoning, incentives for new and expanding businesses, and state and local support. Carbondale resources include the Enterprise Zone, Downtown Façade Improvement Program, and Tax Increment Financing Program.

* Shaw Local | Dolly Parton library lands in Kankakee County: The program will begin immediately and could cost about $200,000 annually to administer as partnerships grow over the coming years, said Mariah Vail, executive director of the local United Way. The program is being funded through United Way and the Community Foundation, as well as contributions from the Kankakee and Herscher school districts. The program costs nothing to families. Parents simply need to sign up to receive a children’s book monthly.

*** National ***

* AP | Private equity sees profits in power utilities as electric bills rise and Big Tech seeks more energy: In recent weeks, private equity firm Blackstone has sought regulatory approval to buy out a pair of utilities, Albuquerque-based Public Service Company of New Mexico and Lewisville, Texas-based Texas New Mexico Power Co. Wisconsin earlier this year granted the buyout of the parent of Superior Water, Light and Power and the owner of Northern Indiana Public Service Co. last year sold a 19.9% stake in the utility to Blackstone.

* Fortune | Larry Ellison predicts rise of the modern surveillance state where ‘citizens will be on their best behavior’: George Orwell’s 1984 warned of a future where Big Brother watches every move. Today, modern technology is making that vision a reality, and Oracle founder Larry Ellison—the world’s second-richest person—sees a growing opportunity for his company to help authorities analyze real-time data from millions of surveillance cameras. “Citizens will be on their best behavior, because we’re constantly recording and reporting everything that is going on,” Ellison said in an hour-long Q&A during Oracle’s Financial Analyst Meeting last week.

* NYT | ‘I’m From Here!’: U.S. Citizens Are Ending Up in Trump’s Dragnet: U.S. citizens, many of them Latino men, have been stopped and in some cases taken into custody by law enforcement officers who are carrying out President Trump’s immigration crackdown and who suspect the men are living in the country illegally. While many of those detained have immediately declared their U.S. citizenship to officers, they have routinely been ignored, according to interviews with the men, their lawyers and court documents. In some cases they have been handcuffed, kept in holding cells and immigration facilities overnight, and in at least two cases held without access to a lawyer or even a phone call.

* OPB | Hundreds protest at ICE building after Trump’s announcement of troop deployment to Portland: The memorandum deploying 200 members of the Oregon National Guard to Portland, as part of a larger deployment of troops to cities across the country, stated it was “to protect U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other U.S. Government personnel” carrying out the actions of the administration. ICE did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the demonstration.

  15 Comments      


Open thread

Monday, Sep 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please…

  8 Comments      


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

Monday, Sep 29, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Sep 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Monday, Sep 29, 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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