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Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Sep 16, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois lays new pathway for internationally trained doctors to earn licenses here. Crain’s

    - Illinois has a new licensing process designed to expand the health care work force by enabling internationally trained physicians to practice in the state.
    - Applications for the limited, two-year license is available to international medical graduates now, IDFRR said in a press release.
    - Over the course of the two-year limited license, IMGs must practice under the supervision of a fully licensed physician at an approved sponsoring institution, the release said.

* Related stories…

* Governor Pritzker will attend an 11:00 am luncheon with Lutheran Social Services of Illinois to receive the Paul Simon Courage in Public Service Award. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Federal immigration agents sweep across Chicago area as advocates try to make sense of ‘patchwork’ enforcement: “We don’t know the true scale, but we know activity has increased” in the area over the last couple of weeks, said Brandon Lee, spokesperson for the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights. The organization is mostly relying on intake numbers from legal partners, hotline calls and networks of community members to get a sense of what is happening and who has been affected.

* Capitol News Illinois | Amid backlash, Pritzker calls for leaders — especially Trump — to tone down rhetoric: Gov. JB Pritzker said political leaders — starting with President Donald Trump — need to do more to condemn political violence. “He actively fans the flames of division, as he did on Friday, regularly advocates violence for political retribution, and in more than one case, declares we are at war, not with a foreign adversary, but with each other,” Pritzker said. “I don’t believe any of that.” Pritzker’s critique of the president comes after the governor faced backlash last week for immediately tying conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s assassination to Trump’s rhetoric.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Joseph Johnson has launched a bid against Rep. Marty Moylan in the 55th House District. Press release

Joseph Johnson, small business owner, first-time candidate, and father of four, today announced his campaign for State Representative in the 55th Legislative District. Johnson, a first-time state representative candidate and political outsider, is running to unseat longtime incumbent Marty Moylan, who has served in Springfield for over a decade.

“I have watched too many friends and family leave Illinois because of the failed policies coming out of Springfield,” Johnson said. “High taxes, unsafe streets, and a lack of opportunity are driving working families out of our state. Illinois is my home, and leaving is not an option. I’m running to tackle these issues head-on and fight for the future of our communities.”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | In a spirit of pride, Pilsen turns out for El Grito celebration: The Mexican Cultural Committee of Chicago hosted the annual Mexican Independence eve celebration — El Grito, on Monday evening at St. Paul’s Catholic Church in Pilsen. However, the mood was subdued amid concerns of increased enforcement activity in Chicago by agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Committee president Teresa Fraga says she doesn’t regret hosting the event under the current circumstances.

* WBEZ | South Chicago charter school may abruptly close, stranding 250 students: Epic Charter School in South Chicago with about 250 students informed CPS on Aug. 21 that it was facing “persistent enrollment declines and rising operational costs,” according to the district. The board of the privately managed, publicly funded school is expected to formally vote on the closure at its meeting Wednesday. “While CPS is not making this decision, we are deeply committed to supporting Epic students, families and staff throughout any transition,” district officials said in a statement.

* WTTW | 2 More Developments Designed to Transform Chicago’s Financial District Into a Residential Neighborhood Advance: The Chicago City Council’s Finance Committee endorsed the $241 million plan from Riverside Investment & Development/AmTrust to transform the 1.3 million-square-foot building that used to be home to Bank of America at 135 S. LaSalle St. into an apartment building with 386 units, including 116 units set aside for low- and moderate-income Chicagoans. The project relies on $98 million in city subsidies, and includes “event and cultural spaces as well as a fresh-market grocer,” according to the developer.

* NYT | 20 Years Ago, Alinea Electrified Chicago Dining. Does It Still Matter?: Flames leap. Ice smokes. Servers march and whirl. You’re in for a show, and maybe for the price, you’d better be. This can be fun when it’s not domineering. “Eat immediately,” I was warned in the blandly elegant Salon upstairs. “And keep your mouth shut.” Servers in the more intimate Gallery downstairs were gentler, recasting commands as helpful advice: If you don’t shut your mouth, the contents of the exploding raviolo will likely end up all over the table.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | Federal agents make immigration arrests in West Chicago and at West Side courthouse: More than a dozen people were taken into custody by federal immigration agents Monday in raids near a west suburban police station and a Chicago courthouse, according to a state lawmaker and court officials. State Sen. Karina Villa, D-West Chicago, said her office received reports that immigration agents would be out across DuPage County early in the morning, and she spotted about nine agents in the West Chicago Police Department parking lot.

* Evanston Now | Grocery tax passes, Biss promises veto: Once Biss formally vetoes the ordinance, the six members of the City Council in favor of reinstating the tax are expected to add a veto-override vote to the regularly scheduled Sept. 29 City Council meeting. The state set a deadline of the end of September for municipalities to reinstate the tax locally, after abolishing it statewide last year.

* ABC Chicago | Some seek East Aurora school board member’s resignation over alleged racially insensitive comments: On Monday night, District 131 School Board member Mayra Reyes publicly apologized for comments she allegedly made a year ago during an interview for a then-vacant school board position. “I deeply apologize for the hurt and frustration. Clearly, it was never my intention to offend or discriminate in any way, shape, or form against any minority group,” Reyes said.

* Tribune | Black leaders concerned about ‘unwelcome’ climate in East Aurora School District: According to audio obtained by The Beacon-News of last year’s interview for the vacant school board position, Reyes claimed she was “not as in support of (the dual language program) as I once was” because “I struggle with the fact we are now giving the advantage that Spanish speakers may have at one point … over somebody who wasn’t bilingual.” According to the audio recording, she went on to say, “Now we are making all of us kind of all even in that playing field.” And as an example Reyes on the recording described “an African American kid who did not grow up speaking Spanish” now being able to speak Spanish “along with the kid who did grow up speaking Spanish” and might seek a job as a translator. “And now the African American kid can, too,” she said on the audio recording of the interview. “So I feel like that advantage has been taken away.”

* Daily Herald | Pace reveals passenger upgrades at Schaumburg bus hub but specter of fiscal cliff looms: After years of being exposed to the elements, riders at Pace’s Northwest Transportation Center in Schaumburg finally have a place to warm up, cool down and stay dry. Officials marked the opening of a $7.2 million renovation that includes a large indoor waiting room, expanded park-n-ride lot and the region’s first ADA paratransit transfer facility last week.

* Daily Herald | Schaumburg, Hoffman Estates to establish emergency connection of water systems: They along with the neighboring suburbs of Elk Grove Village, Hanover Park, Mount Prospect, Rolling Meadows and Streamwood found themselves already prepared to rely on backup sources during the four-day repair of a leak in a Northwest Suburban Municipal Joint Action Water Agency water main in the spring. Hoffman Estates Mayor Bill McLeod said his village had kept its wells in working order for such an eventuality in addition to having already completed an emergency interconnect with unaffected Palatine.

* Tribune | Suburban La Luz Del Mundo church leader ordered held in child sex trafficking case: A federal judge in Chicago on Monday ordered the pastor of a local chapter of the La Luz del Mundo megachurch held in custody to face federal charges alleging he helped cover up a widespread child sex trafficking operation that authorities say victimized young members of the church for decades.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Toxic bacteria shut down this town’s water supply. Fertilizer runoff is fueling the issue: After that crisis, Toledo installed sensors and carbon filtration to ensure its water supply is clean. Similarly, in August, the Mattoon City Council voted to invest in new measures to help protect its water system from algal blooms. The city will spend roughly $300,000 to spray algaecide to control algae blooms in both of its reservoirs and replace a broken water pump. City Manager Kyle Gill said that eventually, they’ll need to dredge both reservoirs to get rid of fertilizer-laden silt.

* BND | What Trump priorities, EPA firings mean for sewage spills in metro-east city: At the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the employee tasked with coordinating the local, state and federal response in Cahokia Heights and tracking the projects and funding was assigned to a different job in January, according to the lawmakers. Other employees at the EPA were fired under former Trump adviser Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency. Duckworth said the regional EPA office that oversees Cahokia Heights is now understaffed.

* WGLT | Young Democrat Montez Soliz to challenge incumbent Eric Sorensen in 17th District primary: Montez Soliz is another example of the trend. The Rockford native said he’s running against Democratic U.S. Rep. Eric Sorensen in the March primary for the 17th Congressional District in Illinois. “My platform runs on three basic points: economic justice, health care and rights and building strong communities. I believe that we need to be making work pay with better wages and benefits, legislatively, expanding earned tax income credit, child tax credit,” said Soliz.

* Capitol City Now | Massey Commission shares final recommendations for change following Sonya’s death: Johnson says they also recommend a publicly-accessible database for incidents of potential officer misconduct. Another recommendation was that some officer training should be given before they leave the academy, and not, in some cases, after a couple of years of work on the street — especially in the area of de-escalation.

* WCIA | Champaign Co. Circuit Clerk offering Amnesty Week: The Champaign County Circuit Clerk’s office has announced that it’ll host Amnesty Week in October, helping people save money when paying fines. Amnesty Week will run from Oct. 20 to Oct. 31. The Circuit Clerk’s office said during that time, anyone who owes money on any criminal, traffic, DUI, ordinance violation or conservation violation can avoid paying late fees and collection fees.

*** National ***

* NYT | Appeals Court Says Lisa Cook Can Remain on Fed Board: A federal appeals court on Monday denied a last-minute attempt by President Trump to fire Lisa Cook, a Federal Reserve governor, and prevent her from participating in a crucial two-day Fed meeting to set interest rates. As a result, Ms. Cook will be able to cast a vote at the gathering, which begins on Tuesday.

* Art News | Trump Orders National Park to Remove Famed Photograph of Formerly Enslaved Man: Following a threatened crackdown on what he his administration called “corrosive ideology” in American museums, Donald Trump has ordered a national park to remove a famous photograph of a formerly enslaved man baring his scarred back. The Washington Post, which first reported the news on Monday night, did not specify which park would be impacted by the removal of the photograph and cited anonymous sources. But the article said it was one of “multiple” parks impacted by the orders, which target “signs and exhibits related to slavery at multiple national parks,” per the article.

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Open thread

Tuesday, Sep 16, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Sep 16, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Tuesday, Sep 16, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Sep 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Chicago Tribune

Public transit riders could soon know which of their bus routes and train lines will get cut if the CTA, Metra and Pace don’t secure hundreds of millions of dollars in additional state funding.

That’s because the board of the Regional Transportation Authority, which oversees the three public transit agencies, has directed them to get specific.

RTA board Chairman Kirk Dillard sent a letter to his counterparts at the CTA, Metra and Pace telling them to come prepared to talk about service cuts in detail at the Oct. 3 meeting of the RTA’s Ad Hoc Committee on Transit Funding. The leaders of each agency were also copied on the letter, dated Thursday. […]

On Oct. 3, the three agencies should be ready to detail exactly what types of service cuts they plan to make “with as much specificity as possible,” the letter said. They should also be prepared to say when service cuts and fare increases will take place and when layoff notices will go out to workers, it said.

* From Rich: US Rep. Jonathan Jackson attended Sen. Willie Preston’s congressional fundraiser over the weekend. Preston is running in the open 2nd Congressional District. Another possible contender is Congressman Jackson’s brother, Jesse Jackson, Jr. So, make of this what you will…

*** Statewide ***

* Sun-Times | Head Start preschool remains open to all regardless of immigration status, two judges rule: The Illinois Head Start association filed a lawsuit, along with other Head Start and parent advocate groups and the American Civil Liberties Union, to halt the changes to the rules announced by the Trump administration. Another suit was filed by Illinois and 19 other states with Democratic attorneys general, plus the District of Columbia. This week in both cases, Republican-appointed federal judges agreed to block the changes.

* Bloomberg | Illinois toymakers’ tariff challenge puts Trump’s deficit plan at risk: “We called in every favor we had” in the effort to shift out of China, get safety tests done and go into production in India, Ruffman said. “All to come in at a higher tariff than it would have if we’d kept it in China” she said — referring to how the president last month jacked up the US surtax on Indian imports to 50%. Meantime, the added levy on goods from China has come down to 30%. So far this year, Ruffman said her company has paid more than $5.5 million in tariffs, compared with just $2.3 million for all of 2024. And the bill would be much higher if the company hadn’t paused production on many of their goods to avoid significant price hikes, Ruffman said.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* The Bond Buyer| Moody’s upgrade buoys Cook County as it prepares to sell bonds: Cook County, Illinois, plans to go to market Oct. 1 with $150 million of sales tax revenue bonds. The deal comes on the heels of a Moody’s Ratings upgrade to Aa3 from A1 on Thursday.

* Tribune | Lake County’s 911 consolidation rift resurfaces: ‘What do we do now to protect and serve the county?’: The $100,000 was for getting the Sheriff’s 911 dispatchers emergency medical dispatch training and certification, which is a state requirement, although a waiver has been in place since 2022. The board, in a split vote, ultimately put the item on indefinite hold, with Chair Sandy Hart saying it would reopen the item if the state were to end the waiver. Those in favor of the delay argued it was a case of duplication of services, something LakeComm was created to address, and urged the Sheriff’s Office to move towards consolidation to address more fundamental issues. Those opposed felt the training was important regardless of the consolidation controversy, and should not be delayed.

* Tribune | Federal immigration agents make arrests in Chicago and West Chicago with sightings in several other suburbs: State Sen. Karina Villa, a Democrat from West Chicago, said she saw the federal agents assembling at a West Chicago Police Department station parking lot early Monday. When she confronted them about why they were present, they dispersed, she said. At some point, she said there were “probably over five” arrests, though she said that was not confirmed independently by federal or local law enforcement. Villa said volunteers in the community were dispatched to take video or photos of immigration enforcement activity, and the agents were wearing vests that identified them as being from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and they were in “unmarked vehicles.”

* Daily Herald | ICE activity reported in West Chicago: District 33 Superintendent Kristina Davis said the “secondhand reports” indicated people have been detained. “We were only hearing rumors,” Davis said about noon Monday, nearly five hours after first being notified of ICE activity. “We have not verified any of that,” she said. “But at this point in terms of who or how many people, we have heard that there have been some people detained, but we have not been given any names or verification of who that might be, at this time.”

* Shaw Local | Data center construction could be more expensive in Yorkville with increased building fees: “Current permit and plan review fees were not designed to address the scale and technical complexity associated with data center facilities, which often include millions of cubic feet in building volume and require hundreds of inspections per structure,” Krysti Barksdale-Noble, community development director, states in city documents. City officials looked at the towns of Aurora, Elk Grove Village, and Hoffman Estates, all which have data center developments, to craft their own figures.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | City Council Finance Committee backs $90M payout to resolve 176 lawsuits tied to corrupt cop Ronald Watts: A City Council committee tried Monday to write a $90 million ending to one of the ugliest chapters in the Chicago Police Department’s checkered history of disgraced cops. A Finance Committee that has closely scrutinized and occasionally stalled prior settlements tied to allegations of police wrongdoing unanimously jumped at the chance to resolve 176 lawsuits tied to former Chicago police Sgt. Ronald Watts in one fell swoop.

* NBC Chicago | Bears fan vowed to run a mile for every point the team loses by. Then Sunday happened: “The Chicago Bears could destroy my legs today,” Bandolik posted on TikTok ahead of the game, making a vow that sparked plenty of attention. His video quickly garnered hundreds of thousands of views as fans watch the numbers during the Bears-Lions game quickly climb. “Just start running from Chicago to Detroit,” one commenter said.

* Sun-Times | Chicago directors are leaning into film’s favorite new genre: the tech bubble-inspired horror comedy: Both locally sourced and set films screen at the 32nd Chicago Underground Film Festival, which opens Wednesday and runs through Sept. 21. Co-founded by Bryan Wendorf, the 2025 edition of this maverick nonprofit fest lines up 26 features and 38 shorts (lengths range from two minutes to over three hours). Wendorf expects about 60 filmmakers to attend audience talkbacks after showing their work.

*** Downstate ***

* Pantagraph | Delayed McLean County audit preventing release of $18M in tax revenue: The release of roughly $18.7 million in property tax revenue for McLean County is contingent on when the county can submit its 2024 annual audit, which is three months overdue, to the Illinois Comptroller’s Office. This delay has also caused the county to pay thousands in additional billing services to its external auditor, CliftonLarsonAllen. State statute also allows the comptroller to assess daily fines for overdue audits.

* STL PR | East St. Louis affordable housing development quickly sells out : All the units of a new affordable housing development in downtown East St. Louis, 38 apartments and townhomes, have already been spoken for since going on the market just a couple of months ago. Called Winstanley Park, the $13 million development offers one- to four-bedroom units that primarily serve working families. The project, spearheaded by a Baptist church’s economic development arm and the Illinois Housing Development Authority, aims to breathe new life into East St. Louis and will serve as a stepping stone for more development, according to the project’s backers.

* WCIA | Secretary of State announces $28 million for IL libraries, literacy programs: More than $28 million is going to libraries across the state — including several in Central Illinois — courtesy of Secretary of State and State Librarian Alexi Giannoulias. Giannoulias’ office announced a series of grants on Monday that will go toward regional library systems and literacy programs.

* WGLT | Normal Town Council to consider allowing more pets per household: Town staff say in a memo to the council that pet limits are common among Illinois communities “as an exercise of police power to protect public health, safety and welfare.” The proposed ordinance would increase the number to three animals per species. So, if approved, three cats or three dogs would be allowed in a home, compared to current limit of two.

*** National ***

* 404 Media | Airlines Sell 5 Billion Plane Ticket Records to the Government For Warrantless Searching: The contract provides new insight into the scale of the sale of passengers’ data by the Airlines Reporting Corporation (ARC), the airlines-owned data broker. The contract shows ARC’s data includes information related to more than 270 carriers and is sourced through more than 12,800 travel agencies. ARC has previously told the government to not reveal to the public where this passenger data came from, which includes peoples’ names, full flight itineraries, and financial details.

* AP | Trump threatens to take over DC police again over immigration enforcement: Trump’s emergency order, which took over the local police force, expired last week. Hours before it elapsed, Mayor Muriel Bowser said that the city would not cooperate with Immigration, Customs and Enforcement in their continued operations in the nation’s capital. Earlier, she had said the city would work with other federal agencies even after the emergency order expired. In an early-morning social media post on Monday, Trump said his intervention into the D.C.’s law enforcement had improved crime in the city, a claim Bowser has backed up, though, data shows crime was already falling in Washington before the law enforcement surge began.

* Politico | ‘The whole thing is screwed up’: Farmers in deep-red Pennsylvania struggle to find workers: In Tioga County, where President Donald Trump won 75 percent of the vote in 2024, farmers are losing patience with the White House’s promise of a quick solution for farm workers. Their urgent need is highlighted by stories like those of a multigenerational dairy farm that sold off all its dairy cows because the owner could not find workers and another where a farmer’s job listings have received no responses.

* AP | Abortion advocates raise alarm about social platforms removing posts in apparent overreach: Clinics, advocacy groups and individuals who share abortion-related content online say they are seeing informational posts being taken down even if the posts don’t clearly violate the platforms’ policies. […] The [Electronic Frontier Foundation] says it received close to 100 examples of content takedowns from abortion providers, advocacy groups and individuals on Meta platforms such as Instagram and Facebook, as well as TikTok and even LinkedIn.

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Pritzker says amount of threats received in past few days has been an ‘enormous multiple’ of those that were received in the days before

Monday, Sep 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Isabel told you earlier that Gov. Pritkzer listed several fairly recent acts of political violence. A reporter followed up

Q: Speaking about the list you ticked off at the beginning of this, all of the violence targeted at elected officials. How are you feeling personally? Are you talking with your family, with your security team about the temperature change? How has it changed since your first day of office to today?

Pritzker: Well, without revealing any of you know, what I think the State Police does in their protective efforts for elected officials in the state, I’ll just say they’ve done a terrific job of keeping my family safe. We have the best State Police in the country, and I really mean that. We have the best Executive Protection Unit in the country. I’m very proud of the people that I work with.

But if you’re asking, you know, the number of threats that have come in over the last few days has been an enormous multiple of those that were coming in in the days before. And and we’ve seen an increase in threats in the state of Illinois over the last seven, eight years, seven years, at least, since I’ve been governor six and a half, seven years. And not just about me. I’m just saying I think this is happening across the country and it’s happening in the state of Illinois.

But the truth is that the number of threats and the number of people who seem to want to engage in political violence has increased substantially. And I would like very much for people to just take a breath, take a step back, and recognize that, you know, there’s political violence that occurs against people on both sides and on both parties, and that our country would be a lot better off if people would see that. Democracy is really the method by which we avoid political violence. And I think over the course of the history of the United States, that’s been what makes this country great.

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Rep. Smith won’t run for reelection

Monday, Sep 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Rep. Nick Smith (D-Chicago)…

After much thought and careful consideration, I’ve decided not to seek reelection. Serving as a member of the Illinois General Assembly in the House of Representatives has been an honor of a lifetime. Serving the people of the 34th Representative District and the state of Illinois has been an absolute privilege. As I look forward to the next chapter in my life, I’m confident the next representative of the mighty 34th District will serve with distinction, integrity, and honor.

Rep. Smith told me he’ll serve out his term. He said he has not picked a favorite to replace him, but his district’s ward and township committeepersons have all been notified.

He’s gonna be missed. A lot.

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Pritzker on political violence, impeachment, Nazis, National Guard, ICE shooting, Gov. Jim Edgar

Monday, Sep 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Governor JB Pritzker started off a morning news conference today with a speech condemning political violence. An excerpt

Pritzker: Last week, as you all know, the assassination of Charlie Kirk added to that fear both about gun violence and about being killed for speaking your mind, this is a moment when Americans must come together and say clearly that threats and political violence are not the answer, because, well, we are now living in a moment when there’s an alarming trend in this Country.

It’s been going on for the last several years, the attempted assassination of President Trump, arson at Governor Josh Shapiro’s home, the murders of folks at the US Capitol on January 6, bomb threats against the Texas House Democrats when they were here in the Chicago area, plots to kidnap Governor Gretchen Whitmer, bomb threats at both political parties’ headquarters, the assassinations of Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband, and the shootings of State Senator John Hoffman and his wife, the assassination of Charlie Kirk. Political violence has increased substantially against both Republicans and Democrats. Democracy is designed precisely to avoid political violence, and it’s now incumbent upon leaders of all stripes to work together to stop it, most especially this should come from the top.

Yet with each new crisis in recent years, we are reminded that we cannot rely on President Trump to tamp down the anger and the passion in the aftermath of political violence. Instead, he actively fans the flames of division, as he did on Friday, regularly advocates violence for political retribution, and in more than one case declares we are at war, not with a foreign adversary, but with each other.

I don’t believe any of that. Our people are not at war with one another. In these moments, real leaders offer words of solace and calm, except for one, every president in my lifetime has done this in the wake of political violence. They take action for positive change. They bring people together. They make Americans feel safe. They let them know violence is never the answer.

This is a watershed moment in our country. We can choose to stay silent and live in fear of more political violence, or we can choose to be loud for peace, for compassion and for an America where people settle their political differences through free speech and at the ballot box. Let’s be those people. That’s the path Illinois chooses, and I implore the president to do the same.

* Gov. Pritzker was asked about his comments and the impeachment articles filed by Rep. Chris Miller, who claims the governor has incited violence

Reporter: From your initial comments about Charlie Kirk and comments today, there was been some pushback from Republicans, some said they would like to file articles of impeachment… Some might even perceive these comments today as a ‘Sorry, but.’ You’re still blaming President Trump, and they’re going to say that this is not the appropriate time.

Pritzker: Anyone who is fomenting attacks, anyone who is saying things that, especially in this moment when we should have calm, when we should have someone at the top who is asking people to take a step back, anyone who’s doing that deserves criticism, and I think it’s incumbent upon me as the leader of this state, to tell people that we need to act with calm in this moment, that people need to act peacefully in this moment.

Reporter: You’ve called Republicans Nazis…

Pritzker: No, I have not. That is completely false. I have never called Republicans Nazis.

Reporter: I’m glad to clear that up because…

Pritzker: Well, that’s what they’d like to say. They’re lying. They’re lying.

Click here for his initial comments on Charlie Kirk. Background on the Nazi accusation is here and here. Please re-read them both.

* On President Trump sending the National Guard to Memphis instead of Chicago

Reporter: What’s your level of confidence on whether the Guard won’t actually show up?

Pritzker: Well, I’m pleased that the President has said that he is not sending National Guard or military troops to Chicago. So we should all celebrate that comment of his. And I’m glad to hear it. On the other hand, as you’ve heard, the President says things one day and then goes back on them the next day, changes his mind from week to week. So we never really know what he intends to do. All I can say is that sending troops into any American city is a terrible idea. The law and the Constitution only allow it in the case of insurrection or a national emergency, and those are not taking place in any city across the United States,

Reporter: So, no updates…

Pritzker: Have not heard anything more than what the President said on Friday.

* On the Franklin Park ICE shooting

Pritzker: We need more information. We’ve asked ICE for all of the information around it. They have given very little. I know that there is an ICE agent who was taken to the hospital. [I] don’t currently know that person’s condition, don’t exactly know what the injuries were, or for exactly from what. But it’s important for us to know that as well as what were the circumstances that were leading them to pursue this person in the way that they did. This is somebody who, as I understand, was on their way home, perhaps from dropping their children off at daycare. We don’t exactly know what all the circumstances were, so it’s hard for me to make comments about it, but the important thing is we should have transparency. Just like there’s frustration over people wearing masks and throwing people into vans in a way that does not seem American to me. It does not seem constitutional to me. We now see that ICE is unwilling to share the details of what has happened.

If this were the Chicago Police Department, if this were the sheriff’s office in Cook County, if this were Illinois State Police, you would have had a lot more information already released. But apparently, ICE is unwilling to provide the transparency that I think the American public and the public here deserves the over.

Reporter: [Asked if there will be an Illinois State Police investigation.]

Pritzker: Well, again, this is the federal government. We don’t have the ability to have state or local resources focused on investigating the federal law enforcement agencies. But again, this is the most unusual situation I’ve seen in my entire lifetime, where we have no transparency, and the federal government is not policing itself, even the offices of inspector generals are being dismantled under this administration, so we may never really know what the truth is.

* On Gov. Jim Edgar’s death

Pritzker: I think many of you know Governor Edgar, have met him, or have seen him or experienced his leadership. I got to know him as I was running for governor and when I became governor, and he’s somebody who carried with him a dignity, an honor and an honesty that is worthy of praise and worthy of emulation. And so many, many times over the last seven years, I have reached out to him for advice, to seek his observations, to get ideas from him. He is somebody, he was a Republican, but he understood that that people in public service are trying to do what’s best for the state of Illinois. And so I had a very dear fondness for him, and I will miss him terribly. I got to honor him just recently in Springfield when we named a room at the library, Reading Room, which is very appropriate for him, and where he got to speak and hear many of us extol his virtues. And I’m very sorry for his family. I had the chance to speak with his family last night, and we’re going to do everything we can to help honor his legacy in this country and in this state.

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No end in sight

Monday, Sep 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Having lived through and closely covered the Bruce Rauner gubernatorial administration, I’ve been getting a strong sense of déjà vu lately as several famous “wise old men” have publicly advised Gov. JB Pritzker to call President Donald Trump and make some sort of deal that settles their disagreements.

This effort by political consultant David Axelrod and others was highlighted earlier this month when a Chicago TV reporter asked Pritzker: “Don’t you think if you maybe called [Trump], you can lower the temperature?”

Those of us who lived through the Rauner era heard and even futilely asked that very question time after time for more than two years.

But the truth was Rauner was fighting an existential battle with labor unions. To accomplish that goal, he set out to damage and even destroy the state’s human services network and their clients by refusing to sign a state budget to force the Democrats to gut unions of their power in the workplace and the state legislature.

Then-House Speaker Michael Madigan, for all of his gigantic faults, recognized the dispute for what it was. This wasn’t a simple “budget impasse,” as the news media still prefers to call the fight.

The battle cut deep into the very fabric of the Democratic Party itself. There could be no real negotiations by either side, as evidenced by Rauner’s opposition to the then-Senate Republican leader’s attempts to broker a compromise with the then-Democratic Senate president.

All talk of a possible “grand bargain” was fake. The same holds true today.

Pritzker has made the point that if the president’s beef was really about crime, then the federal government would start by sending troops and cops to cities with higher violent crime rates than Chicago (like Memphis), and with more undocumented immigrants than this state’s largest city (like Houston).

Plus, he said, the military isn’t trained to fight crime in America and can’t legally be used to do that anyway.

The basic Pritzker argument is that Trump has been targeting Chicago and Illinois to please his base and set the stage for even greater attacks on civil liberties.

It’s always been difficult to see how either Pritzker or Trump could negotiate in this environment. They both clearly want capitulation, and they both say they believe they are the true patriots.

Trump has withheld federal anti-violence program money; he’s slashed programs like Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, (which studies have shown reduce violence); and he hasn’t significantly increased federal spending on local law enforcement.

His alternative is massive immigration sweeps and deploying the National Guard and even (in the case of California) the U.S. Marines. And he has wanted Pritzker to submit to all of those things in the name of law and order, claiming Pritzker is anti-American for not standing with him.

Pritzker has demanded a restoration of federal anti-violence money, more funding for local police, a reversal of congressionally mandated social program spending cuts and increased cooperation with federal crime-fighting agencies. He has also opposed massive immigration sweeps and flatly rejected military intervention.

You can argue with credibility that Pritzker at least partially opposes harsh immigration enforcement to prevent the state from losing more than one congressional seat in the next reapportionment. But losing national influence can also be grounds for refusing to negotiate.

You can also argue that Pritzker is doing this to bolster his presidential ambitions. But that argument means surrender would destroy his ambitions. That’s not a policy argument or a justification, by the way, it’s just political reality.

So, as we saw with Rauner on a smaller scale, both sides lob powerful rhetorical grenades at each other in the hopes one or the other is vanquished. Total Democratic victory (which Illinois Democrats eventually achieved over Rauner) seems highly unlikely in the coming months.

That is definitely an argument for compromise, but it’s also the same one used here starting in 2015, the first year of the Rauner impasse that didn’t end until July 2017 when a bipartisan super-majority broke the impasse by passing an income tax increase and overriding Rauner’s veto.

Trump, for his part, spent weeks waffling over whether he would indeed send in the National Guard. On Friday, he said he’d skip Chicago for now and instead send troops to Memphis, where the Republican governor welcomed the deployment.

But this fight is far from over. Both Rauner and Madigan scored temporary wins back in the day, after all.

Expect more opportunities for another clash.

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RETAIL: The Largest Employer In Illinois

Monday, Sep 15, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Sep 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Jim Edgar, Illinois’ 1990s-era moderate GOP governor, dies at 79. Capitol News Illinois

Jim Edgar, Illinois’ 38th governor who served from 1991 to 1999, died Sunday after disclosing an aggressive cancer diagnosis earlier this year. He was 79.

Though he’d been out of power for 26 years — more time than the two decades he spent in office as an elected official — the former governor was still active in Illinois political circles until the end of his life, heading a bipartisan program to develop up-and-coming leaders from across Illinois.

In a statement Sunday, Edgar’s family confirmed he’d died “from complications related to treatment for pancreatic cancer,” a diagnosis he’d made public in February.

“We are deeply grateful for the love, support and kindness so many have shown to Jim and our family over these last several months,” the statement said.

* Governor JB Pritzker will hold a roundtable at Harold Washington College at 9:45 am to discuss how federal deployments are affecting students. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WWQC | Rock Island County Board member Porter McNeil dies at 65: A Rock Island County Board member passed away after a four-year battle with cancer Friday afternoon. Porter McNeil served as a member of the Rock Island County Board since 2021, he was active in helping to drive community economic efforts, as well as by volunteering with numerous local community organizations, those who knew McNeil said.

* Daily Herald | New state program widens higher education access to Illinois students: Gov. JB Pritzker, the Illinois Board of Higher Education, Illinois Community College Board, and Illinois Student Assistance Commission recently launched the One Click College Admit program for Illinois public universities and community colleges. The program will allow Illinois high school seniors and community college transfer students to be accepted into the state’s public universities.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | In announcing bid for governor, Republican Ted Dabrowski leaves more questions than answers: And while Dabrowski introduced his newly minted running mate, emergency room Dr. Carrie Mendoza, neither he nor his campaign team made her available to answer questions about her background opposing transgender-affirming care procedures, in which she likened the “orthodoxy” behind them to sterilizations and mutations conducted in Nazi Germany. Dabrowski did allow his mother, Blanca, to speak, and she said her son would “bring Illinois back into the glory of the ’60s” but did not elaborate.

* Aurora Beacon News | As federal immigration enforcement ramps up in Chicago area, Aurora state Rep. Hernandez holds ‘Know Your Rights’ session for businesses:
Just days after President Donald Trump’s Department of Homeland Security announced a surge of immigration law enforcement in Chicago, dubbing it “Operation Midway Blitz,” state Rep. Barbara Hernandez, D-Aurora, is saying that all suburbs should prepare in case federal law enforcement activity extends into their towns. On Thursday, Hernandez hosted an informational session with a representative from the Illinois Coalition on Immigrant and Refugee Rights and several Aurora aldermen meant to address what local businesses can do if federal agents arrive at their workplaces. The training addressed topics like distinguishing between federal and local law enforcement badges, how individuals can respond to federal law enforcement agents’ presence in both public and private business spaces and what to do if apprehended by federal agents.

* Sun-Times | Gov. JB Pritzker signs executive order to protect COVID-19 vaccine access under RFK Jr.: Soon, with consultation from the state’s Immunization Advisory Committee, Pritzker’s order could make it easier for people to get the shot outside the FDA’s limited recommendations. “This is about making sure no family in Illinois is left wondering if they can protect themselves against preventable serious illness,” Pritzker said in a statement. “When the federal government abandons its responsibility, Illinois will step up. We will follow the science, listen to medical experts, and do everything in our power to enable families to receive the care they need.”

*** Chicago ***

* In These Times | ICE Abducts Man Suing Off-Duty Police for Abusing Day Laborers: Gimenez, who is in his late 30s and is from Venezuela, is one of five migrant day laborers involved in a federal lawsuit claiming that, among many other things, they ​“endured physical violence at the hands of off-duty Chicago Police Department officers” who were working as security officers for Home Depot, according to the complaint. The lawsuit also alleges ​“a conspiracy to criminalize day laborers’ attempts to find work in Chicago.” Speakers at a Saturday morning news conference organized by workers’ advocates said they believe he was intentionally targeted because he is a plaintiff in that suit. (An ICE spokesperson, after In These Times and Workday requested comments about the abduction, defended the arrest but would not say where Gimenez was taken or being held.)

* Tribune | Outside ICE facility, friends of detained day laborer call for his release: Willian Giménez González, who came to Chicago from Venezuela in 2023, was with his wife when he was detained Friday, attorney Kevin Herrera said in Broadview. Neither Herrera nor Giménez González’s wife have heard from him since, Herrera said, and they do not know where he is. “These are trying times for the legal system and the rights it protects,” Herrera said. “But the community assembled here knows that people hold the powerful to account. We will fight for Willian, and we will see to it that he is free to be with us in Chicago and to contribute to the city in all of the ways he has since he arrived. That’s a promise.”

* ABC Chicago | Dead rat, ‘derogatory’ handwritten note found at alderman’s office, Chicago police say: In a statement on Facebook, Alderman Vasquez said, “Tonight, the Chicago Police Department alerted us of an incident at the 40th Ward Office. A dead rat was left in front of our office, along with a threatening note taped to the door that, among other things, referred to undocumented immigrants as vermin. In this current political climate, we take these threats seriously, and are working with the Chicago Police Department to investigate. In the meantime, the 40th Ward Office will remain open. We are and will always be steadfast in our commitment to serving 40th Ward neighbors and supporting the rights of the immigrant community.”

* Crain’s | As Trump steps up Fed attacks, Chicago finance execs weigh in: With the U.S. Federal Reserve expected to make its first interest rate cut of the year this week, Chicago finance executives are voicing confidence in Chairman Jerome Powell in the face of fresh attacks from President Donald Trump on the independence of the central bank. “I think people feel like Chairman Powell is an honest broker and this number is legitimate,” John Rogers, founder, chairman and co-chief executive officer of Ariel Investments, told Crain’s in an interview on the expected rate cuts.

* Block Club | Little Village’s Mexican Independence Day Parade Sees Thousands Take A Stand Against ICE: Thousands of revelers packed the sidewalks for the 26th Street Mexican Independence Day Parade, waving flags and blowing plastic horns. In stark contrast to the muffled turnout for Saturday night’s typically raucous car caravan celebrations, Sunday’s parade didn’t disappoint with a crowd only slightly smaller than typical, multiple parade-goers said. “I think people just feel more comfortable going out during the day when they’re surrounded by people in the community,” said Damaris, who attended both Saturday and Sunday’s celebrations. “I have family members afraid to go out at night — afraid of the police, so it makes sense that there weren’t as many people out [Saturday]. We really have to just keep checking on each other.”

* Tribune | Chicago Bears defense has no answers for Jared Goff and the Detroit Lions in ‘ugly, ugly, ugly loss’: The Bears gave up 50 points for the first time since 2014. The Lions ran circles around them. There wasn’t a whole lot to say, especially for the Bears who were trying to defend Goff, St. Brown and the Lions. “You go back to work,” defensive tackle Grady Jarrett said. “Second game of the season, man, obviously it was an ugly, ugly, ugly loss.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Unraveled Press | What happened to Silverio Villegas-Gonzalez: As Villegas-Gonzalez drives away from the agents—not toward them, as DHS claimed—the agent on the passenger side aims his weapon at the back of Villegas-Gonzalez’s car. Two gunshots can be heard in a separate security video. The second agent is not visible during the shooting, and it remains unclear which agent fired their weapon.

* Tribune | Outside hotels and a naval base, suburban Chicago protests immigration ‘blitz’: More rallies have been scheduled in Broadview and in other communities in the coming days, as suburbs that were once Republican strongholds have turned reliably Democrat-blue in the past decade. The demonstrations reflect both the disdain for Trump among an increasingly less conservative electorate and a significant suburban immigrant population that surpasses that of the city itself. “It’s been historic,” said Cristobal Cavazos, co-founder of Immigrant Solidarity DuPage and Casa DuPage Workers Center. “I’m just so proud of our level of activity. When I first got into activism, the suburbs were seen as a land of conservative white folks. But that’s changing.”

* Daily Southtown | Blue Island officials seek assurance about controversial license plate cameras: A little over a month after two suburbs moved to deactivate cameras that read license plates due to privacy concerns, Blue Island officials discussed Thursday whether to approve a contract reauthorizing eight of the city’s 14 license plate cameras. Blue Island police Chief Jason Slattery told the City Council it has a month to decide. The city entered a contract with Flock Safety, an Atlanta-based company that manufactures the automated cameras, to install eight cameras in 2021. Six cameras were added later, he said.

* Daily Herald | ‘More than a dozen meetings and … a dozen months’: How the Bears stadium approval process might look: Mayor Jim Tinaglia said he is talking at least a half hour every week with team President/CEO Kevin Warren on Zoom — while their respective staff of planners, engineers, lawyers and consultants have meetings of their own — to determine the precise location of the team’s domed stadium on the sprawling site, as well as other aspects of what would be one of the largest redevelopment projects in Illinois history. “We’ve been in this roller coaster ride of, ‘Are we out in Arlington Heights or are we down in Chicago?’ And now we’re back in Arlington Heights, and all indicators are that they are 1,000% focused on only Arlington Heights,” Tinaglia said. “So we’re looking at it with that level of sincerity that we think everybody is on the same page.”

* Daily Herald | Lake in the Hills raises cannabis dispensary tax to maximum allowed: Lake in the Hills has raised its local cannabis dispensary tax from 2% to 3%, the most allowed under state law. Village officials said Lake in the Hills was the only municipality in McHenry County with a population over 5,000 and allows dispensaries that didn’t have the maximum tax on the books. In addition, McHenry County has a 3% county sales tax on marijuana.

* AP | Chicago suburb where Pope Leo XIV grew up celebrates his 70th birthday with gospel music, balloons:
“It’s a good time for the community to come together,” said Village President Jason House. “It shows that great people come out of the village of Dolton.” The village purchased the house in July in hopes of boosting tourism and claiming a piece of papal history of the first American pope. They’re also trying to drum up a positive message about the community where there’s been political turmoil in recent years, including misspending allegations surrounding a previous mayor. Village officials said they tried to contact the pope but did not hear back.

*** Downstate ***

* Tribune | In central Illinois, carbon capture project’s proximity to Mahomet Aquifer raises fears: Scientists say that the project is unlikely to contaminate groundwater, since the CO2 is stored hundreds of feet below the aquifer. But failures in carbon sequestration technology aren’t impossible, and they’ve happened before in Illinois, most recently at ethanol company Archer Daniels Midland’s carbon injection site in Decatur last year. “In the case with ADM, they did not necessarily come forth right away and admit they had leaks,” said Brent Lage, a grain farmer who lives near Lasser on the outskirts of Gibson City. “That’s definitely a concern for me, as well as with this One Earth project.”

* WJBD | Odin School Board Puts Off School Consolidation Study Until State Funding Available: The Odin School Board, on Thursday night, decided to wait for state funding to be available for a consolidation study with the Sandoval and Patoka School Districts. Superintendent Quinton Marcum believes state money will become available in next year’s budget, but the state is not funding any consolidation studies this year. The board rejected a proposal for the three districts to pay between $6,600 to $8,800 each for the study.

* WGLT | State grant to help pay for sewer study in Colonial Meadows subdivision: The $30,000 Illinois Environmental Protection Agency Unsewered Community Grant partially offsets the $50,000 cost of work by the Farnsworth Group to prepare a formal sewer planning study and survey of the best location to run the sewer and connect to the existing city sewer on Oakland Avenue.

* WAND | Visitors get taste of Springfield through new festival: Saturday marked Springfield’s first 217 Foodie Festival at The Railyard on 66. Many visitors compared the event to the Taste of Chicago, but organizers were going for the taste of Springfield. “We have a good community that is always wanting to find something new to do,” said Festival Co-Organizer Nicole Shomidie-Copp. “A lot of people were missing the ethnic festival, so we decided to try and recreate that kind of environment and bring that to the community with different ethnic vendors and regular vendors that are on site.”

*** National ***

* Stateline | DOJ is sharing state voter roll lists with Homeland Security: The Justice Department said in its own statement that state voter roll data provided in response to requests from the department’s Civil Rights Division is “being screened for ineligible voter entries.” Noncitizen voting is extremely rare. One study of the 2016 election placed the prevalence of noncitizen voting at 0.0001% of votes cast. The data sharing marks a next step in President Donald Trump’s efforts to exert more federal influence over state-administered elections. Trump signed an executive order earlier this year that sought to require individuals to provide proof-of-citizenship documents to register to vote, a rule quickly blocked in federal court. He has also threatened to sign another executive order attempting to restrict mail ballots.

* NYT | China’s Snub of U.S. Soybeans Is a Crisis for American Farmers: For the first time in the history of their 76-year-old operation, their biggest customer — China — had stopped buying soybeans. Their 2,300-acre soybean farm is projected to lose $400,000 in 2025. Soybeans that would normally be harvested and exported to Asia are now set to pile up in large steel bins. Since President Trump imposed tariffs on Chinese goods in February, Beijing has retaliated by halting all purchases of American soybeans.

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Good morning!

Monday, Sep 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Los Tigres Del Norte

We are more American than the son of an Anglo-Saxon

How are you?

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and a campaign update

Monday, Sep 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Monday, Sep 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Sep 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Monday, Sep 15, 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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Jim Edgar (Updated and comments opened)

Sunday, Sep 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

[Comments are now open.]

* Press release…

The following statement was released by the family of former Illinois Governor Jim Edgar:

“It is with heavy hearts we share the news that our beloved husband, father and grandfather Jim Edgar passed away this morning in Springfield from complications related to treatment for pancreatic cancer. We are deeply grateful for the love, support and kindness so many have shown to Jim and our family over these last several months.”

The family will share additional information about services in the coming days.

This post will be updated.

…Adding… Senate Minority Leader Curran…

Illinois Senate Republican Leader John Curran (R-Downers Grove) released the following statement on the passing of former Illinois Governor Jim Edgar:

“I extend my sincere condolences to the family, friends and colleagues of former Illinois Governor Jim Edgar. His legacy of common sense, bipartisan leadership will continue on through his many accomplishments here in Illinois.”

* Tribune

Jim Edgar, the two-term Republican governor who guided Illinois through much of the 1990s with a low-key yet intense persona and a meticulous focus on fiscal matters aimed at preparing the state for the 21st century, died Sunday. He was 79.

Edgar died in Springfield, where he had been hospitalized due to an adverse reaction to treatment for the pancreatic cancer that he had been diagnosed with in January friends and associates said. […]

He fulfilled a politically risky campaign promise to make permanent a temporary increase in the state’s income tax for education. He also engaged in severe budget slashing, exhorting lawmakers to tear up the state’s “credit card” after years of passing pork-barrel projects.

Four years later, he defeated Democratic state Comptroller Dawn Clark Netsch in one of the state’s largest electoral landslides, capturing 64% of the vote, winning by more than 900,000 ballots and taking 101 of the state’s 102 counties, including Cook County. Netsch narrowly won tiny Gallatin County in downstate Illinois.

* Crain’s

Born in Vinita, Okla., and raised in Charleston, Ill., Edgar was the son of a single mother after his father died in a car accident. He attended Eastern Illinois University, where he met his wife, Brenda, and later began a career in state politics as a legislative intern. After a failed bid for the Illinois House in 1974, he won election in 1976 and went on to serve two terms before being appointed secretary of state in 1981. In that role, he championed tougher drunken-driving laws and mandatory auto insurance.

Elected governor in 1990 to succeed Jim Thompson, Edgar inherited a recession and nearly a $1 billion deficit. He fought through a months-long budget impasse, preserved a temporary income-tax surcharge, and led Illinois during the Great Flood of 1993, the costliest natural disaster in state history. His first term also saw initiatives in prenatal care and early childhood education.

After undergoing quadruple bypass surgery in 1994, Edgar returned to win reelection by a wide margin over Democrat Dawn Clark Netsch. In his second term, he focused on schools, child welfare and government reform, often citing Chicago school reform as his proudest achievement. He also sparred with Mayor Richard M. Daley over the fate of Meigs Field, casino gambling and a proposed domed stadium for the Chicago Bears. […]

In retirement, Edgar remained active in civic and political life, often teaching, advising and weighing in on state finances. He became an outspoken critic of Donald Trump, calling him “the biggest disaster we’ve ever had in American government,” and later campaigned with Republicans who crossed party lines to back Kamala Harris. Earlier this year, he revealed he was battling metastatic pancreatic cancer, though he continued to make public appearances.

* SoS Giannoulias…

Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias on the passing of former Governor Jim Edgar

Jim Edgar was an amazing man and an incredible public servant. More importantly, he was a great friend and advisor to me. His leadership will be missed, his friendship even more so. My family and I send our deepest condolences to his family.

Jim spoke frequently about the importance of the ‘Three C’s’: Civility, Compromise and Compassion – words that resonate more than ever today. Together, he believed they served as the foundation of a healthy democracy, knowing that as Americans, we work best when we collaborate and work out our differences, show compassion toward those who need help, and treat one another with respect and dignity. For Jim, compromise was not surrender; compassion was not weakness; and civility was not placation. Together, these principles give us the space to stand firm in our beliefs and to speak passionately without being disrespected, dehumanized or attacked.

As we mourn his death, we can honor Jim by choosing to believe that - regardless of our differences - a better world is possible through kindness. While the need for a civil, a collaborative and a compassionate political climate is more important than ever with today’s polarizing politics – the duty and responsibility of restoring the Three Cs begins with each one of us.

* Gov. Pritzker…

Today, Governor JB Pritzker released the following statement:

“MK and I are deeply saddened to hear of the loss of Governor Jim Edgar. Governor Edgar was a model public servant, a devoted father and husband, and an honest and honorable man.

“I was lucky enough to consider him a friend and mentor and have found myself drawing from his words of wisdom on countless occasions. His commitment to reaching across the aisle in service of the people of Illinois undeniably made our state better.

“Now more than ever, we should channel that spirit and resolve to live as Governor Edgar did: with honesty, integrity, and an enduring respect for all.

“He will live on in the incalculable number of lives he touched and in the stronger institutions he helped build. To honor his legacy, I will direct flags across Illinois to half-staff.

“My thoughts are with Brenda, Brad, Elizabeth, and his entire family. May his memory be a blessing.”

* LG Stratton…

Statement from Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton Following Passing of Former Governor Jim Edgar

“Former Governor Jim Edgar was a man of principle and a passionately dedicated civil servant. He saw past political divides and emphasized the importance of unity in leadership by making a point to always extend his hand across the aisle. He was practical, gave great advice, and did everything he could to build up the next generation of future leaders so that Illinois can continue to grow.

“I was part of the 2016 Edgar Fellows cohort, a program developed by Governor Edgar to strengthen Illinois’ future by preparing young leaders for the world ahead. Together, we worked to embody some of the tenets that made Governor Edgar such a strong leader: listen to understand, speak to be understood, and operate in a way that makes clear disagreements do not have to be disrespectful. When he invited me to become a member of the Edgar Fellows Advisory Board, I was honored to accept. Now, I have the privilege of sharing his steady perspective and deep care with future leaders.

“Today, I send my deepest condolences to the love of his life, Brenda, and their entire family. His legacy is one of lasting impact.”—Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton

* Darren Bailey…

Darren Bailey is issuing the following statement on the passing for former Governor Jim Edgar.

“Please join Cindy and me in keeping the family of Governor Jim Edgar in your prayers. While we certainly found ourselves on opposite sides of issues from time to time, I have always had a tremendous respect for the decades of public service he gave to the people of Illinois.

From his time as Secretary of State to his two terms as Governor, Jim Edgar led with a steady hand and a deep commitment to the institutions of our state. He was a man of integrity and strong moral character who dedicated his career to public service. His contributions to Illinois will not be forgotten. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family during this time of loss. We are grateful for his years of leadership and the example of service he leaves behind.”

* Chicago Federation of Labor President Bob Reiter…

The Chicago Labor Movement mourns the loss of former Illinois Governor Jim Edgar. Governor Edgar was a true statesman who understood the importance of working across the aisle to deliver for Illinoisans. While I attended Eastern Illinois University studying Political Science in the mid-1990’s, I was always struck by the significance of the sitting governor as an alumni of the same university. And his legacy will continue to thrive through his Edgar Fellows program. A program designed to bring Republicans and Democrats together to learn how to work together after elections are won or lost. As a 2017 graduate of the program, I’ve learned important lessons and made incredible friendships because of Governor Edgar’s leadership.

* Treasurer Michael Frerichs…

Gov. Edgar was a gentleman and a statesman. He broke with his party when he felt it was right for the state. He didn’t put partisanship above the state.

He bravely faced health challenges and did not stop serving Illinois once his time in office ended. Gov. Edgar worked to bring people together across the aisle to learn about policy and share good ideas.

I was honored to be part of the inaugural class of Edgar Fellows in 2012. We related to each other as Downstaters. He was always open to discussing and offering advice or help, and I am grateful for that and his service to Illinois.

* Jen Walling, Illinois Environmental Council…

We are deeply saddened by the passing of Governor Jim Edgar, whose legacy as a steward of Illinois’ lands, waters, and natural resources will be felt for generations. Throughout his leadership, he dramatically expanded recycling programs and preserved more land than any governor before him—including the Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie—and championed Conservation 2000, investing $100 million in conservation, water quality, and open space. His vision and partnership with the Illinois Environmental Council ensured that environmental concerns were heard in Springfield and translated into lasting policy change. To his family, friends, and all who admired his work, we extend our deepest condolences.

* Sen. McClure…

State Senator Steve McClure (R-Springfield) released the following statement on the passing of former Governor Jim Edgar:

“I am deeply saddened to hear of the passing of Jim Edgar. As one of our greatest governors, he increased adoptions of foster children by 500 percent, reformed welfare, and heightened sentences for murderers and sex offenders. I first met him when I was a young man while my mother was serving as his director of personnel at the Secretary of State’s Office. Governor Edgar is one of the people that inspired me to enter into public service. He worked tirelessly to encourage the next generation of leaders and was always available to speak with the high school students taking part in my Youth Advisory Council. I was honored to be an Edgar Fellow. My family and I send our deepest condolences to Brenda Edgar and the entire Edgar family.”

* Former Lt. Gov. Bob Kustra…

It was an honor to serve as Jim Edgar’s Lieutenant Governor. By any standard, he was a Republican whose integrity guided his time in office and who managed one of the most successful periods in Illinois state government. A student of history, he learned from those who came before him and now leaves a legacy with the Edgar Fellows he created to inspire and prepare future generations of Illinois leaders. Kathy and I send our deepest sympathy to Brenda and to Brad and Elizabeth and their families.

* Former Gov. Quinn…

Gov. Pat Quinn has issued the below statement on the passing of Gov. Jim Edgar:

“Gov. Jim Edgar was a good and decent man who cared deeply about the people of Illinois. He believed in property tax reform and a quality education for everyone.

“May God rest his immortal soul.”

* Speaker Welch…

House Speaker Emanuel ‘Chris’ Welch released the following statement Sunday following news of the passing of Gov. Jim Edgar:

“Some people run for office to be something, and some people run for office to DO something.”

“Illinois is grateful to Governor Jim Edgar for doing something good during his two terms in office. He restored credibility to our state government, and he was always a true statesman who worked across the aisle with both parties. I could not be more proud to call myself an Edgar Fellow.

“With the passing of Gov. Edgar earlier today, we lost a good man, a good friend and a damn good governor. May his memory be a blessing.”

* Ted Dabrowski…

Dabrowski Statement on the Passing of Governor Edgar

September 14, 2025 - I mourn the passing of former Governor Jim Edgar. He was a decent, family man. I respect him and his family and his service.

I disagreed with many of his policy choices as governor from tax increases to public sector pension ramps.

I disagreed with many of his choices after his tenure as Governor from his endorsements for governor to his aiding and abetting Pritzker.

But while Jim Edgar and I had different ideas about proper fiscal governance of the state and stands on matters of cultural importance to our electorate as well as standard-bearers for our party, I respected Jim Edgar and I am saddened by his passing.

Now more than ever we need to separate political disagreements, even within our party, from the ties that bind us as a free society: appreciation for family, respect for differences of opinions and a commitment to compete for the people’s support within a free marketplace of ideas.

I extend my prayers for Jim Edgar and his family during this difficult time.

* Senate President Don Harmon…

“Jim Edgar was a true statesman for Illinois. His leadership both in office and out made our state a better place. My sympathies go out to his family and his many, many friends.”

* House Minority Leader Tony McCombie…

“It is with deep sadness that I join Illinoisans in mourning the passing of Governor Jim Edgar. Governor Edgar was a dedicated public servant who led with independence, humility, and a genuine commitment to bringing people together.

“Throughout his distinguished career, he worked tirelessly to build bridges across party lines, strengthen Illinois’ fiscal foundation, and put the needs of our citizens ahead of politics. His steady leadership and principled example earned respect from Republicans and Democrats alike.

“I extend my heartfelt condolences to his wife Brenda, his family, and all who loved and admired him.

“May he rest in peace!”

* Illinois AFL-CIO…

Today, Illinois AFL-CIO President Tim Drea released the following statement in response to Governor Jim Edgar’s passing.

“Governor Jim Edgar was a true public servant in every sense of the word. He led Illinois with compassion, integrity and respect for all viewpoints. Although organized labor did not always see eye to eye with the Governor, he always listened and worked to find agreement on both sides of the aisle to support Illinois’ working families.

He was a good man who cared about the future of our state, and we are grateful for his leadership. Governor Edgar will be missed, and our thoughts are with his family as we mourn this tremendous loss.”

* Loleta Didrickson…

The following is attributed to Loleta Didrickson, who served as Illinois Comptroller from 1995 to 1999 and earlier as Director of the Illinois Department of Employment Security under Governor Jim Edgar:

“Working with Governor Jim Edgar was one of the greatest privileges of my career. He was not only a mentor but also a friend, and I learned so much from his integrity, work ethic, and commitment to the people of Illinois. His principled and steady leadership inspired all who served alongside him. His legacy will continue to guide future leaders with the same honesty and decency that defined his life of service.”

* Shirley and Mike Madigan family statement…

Shirley and our family express our condolences upon Jim Edgar’s passing.

We send sympathy and prayers to Brenda, Brad and Elizabeth.

We worked with Jim; Shirley as the Chair of the Arts Council, I as the Speaker.

We found him to be at times conservative, but generally moderate, as when as a Republican he supported the pro-choice position concerning reproductive rights.

We worked with him to find common ground among competing interests in developing the State budget, where he was always supportive of the Arts Council.

We found him to always be respectful of others; personally and with regard to governmental and political views.

Illinois is a much better place because of Jim Edgar

Shirley and I have lost a good friend

* AFSCME Council 31…

“AFSCME joins in honoring the legacy of former Governor Jim Edgar, who served the people of Illinois with honesty and integrity. While we did not always see eye to eye, Governor Edgar respected the role of organized labor and sought to find common ground,” Council 31 executive director Roberta Lynch said.

“During and after his time in office, he was known for taking positions because he believed they were right, even if they contradicted others in his political party. And the Edgar Fellows program he created to develop leaders from every part of the state and across the political spectrum continues to benefit Illinois and its residents.

“Let us all work toward a state and nation with more leaders who share that kind of commitment to public service and our democratic institutions.”

The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) Council 31 is the largest union of public service workers in Illinois and a leading voice for all working families.

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