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Pritzker, Stratton, Think Big, Giannoulias respond to national election results

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Pritzker…

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker has released the following statement on the results of the 2024 Presidential election:

“Today, I stand with the millions of Americans who voted for our Democratic values in this election. It is clear now that, nationally, a majority of those who came to the polls chose a different path, and President-elect Trump and Vice President-elect Vance won the election. I want to thank Vice President Kamala Harris, Governor Tim Walz, their team, and the hundreds of thousands of volunteers who put their heart and soul into the campaign.

“This morning, our most vulnerable communities woke up to new uncertainty about their future, scared that their rights will no longer be protected, and unsure whether this nation still stands with them. To women whose healthcare is under even greater threat, to our Black, Brown and AAPI communities, our LGBTQ friends and their families, immigrants and first-generation Americans, our most vulnerable Americans and those with disabilities, to all who have been made to feel unsafe and unwelcome by the Trump campaign and its allies - know that Illinois is your ally. You will always be welcome here.

“In 2017, I sought public office in large part because of the threat Donald Trump and his allies posed to Illinois, and as governor, I have helped enshrine into state law protections that uphold our common Illinois values. That work will continue, and it remains my north star. I will always strive to do what is best for the people of Illinois. When that means working with the next presidential administration that is what I will do, and when that means standing up to it, I believe my record is clear on where I’ll be.”

* Lt. Gov. Stratton…

“I am immensely proud of the campaign Vice President Kamala Harris launched only a few months ago for President of the United States. She is a highly qualified and dedicated public servant, and it was my honor to campaign for her throughout Illinois and in battleground states, sharing her vision of a joyful, brighter future for America.

“Needless to say, I am not only grieving the outcome, but my heart also aches for so many of our constituents who are terrified about what the future holds for them. The fear and heartbreak now washing over our country are signs that our souls are still alive. I’m especially energized by the hard work done by the Democratic Party of Illinois in engaging volunteers and activating voters. This is what democracy looks like and it is a testament to the infrastructure we are building in our state to continue the good work of preserving our freedoms, uplifting working families, and protecting the values we hold so dear.

“To every Illinoisan who is mourning the outcome of this election, do not try to wash away your pain; let it transform into the motivation we need to realize an America that does not idolize hate but uplifts its people. Today we mourn; tomorrow, we show up again. Because as Madam Vice President said, “The fight for our country is always worth it.”

* Christina Amestoy at the governor’s Think Big America, which was active in 10 states where abortion rights were on the ballot. They won in 7. Click here for background…

“Last night, in red, blue, and purple states, Americans rejected efforts to rip away women’s rights and affirmed that abortion access must be protected. Think Big America and its founder Gov. JB Pritzker are proud to have supported the successful efforts in Arizona, Maryland, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, and New York to ensure that millions of women can freely exercise their fundamental right to reproductive freedom.

“But our work is far from over. Abortion bans are still in effect in too many states - including Florida where an overwhelming majority of voters supported restoring access - and women’s rights are about to face unprecedented attacks under Donald Trump and his MAGA allies. We know the fight for reproductive freedom is just beginning and we will not stop until abortion access is guaranteed for every woman, regardless of zip code.”

* Secretary Giannoulias…


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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol City Now

It will be a couple of weeks before all the votes in Sangamon County are accounted for. That leaves a couple of close county races in a holding pattern. […]

“We still have work to do,” said Sangamon County Clerk Don Gray. “Any mail-in ballots postmarked by Nov. 5 along with any provisional ballots, will be qualified and added to the final result on Nov. 19.” This additional period allows time for mail-in ballots to arrive and for provisional ballots cast at polling places to be verified.

Currently, there are about 3,510 mail-in ballots that could still come in, though not all will necessarily count. Time will actually tell how many will be received and how many will be qualified. To be valid, the ballots must meet postmark and receipt requirements. Gray said all verified votes will be added on Nov. 19.

The election authority has until Nov. 26 to compile reports so the election can be certified and official results provided to the State Board of Elections. At that point, Gray said, candidates in close races will have a five-day window to request a discovery recount if the margin is less than 5%.

* WICS

Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias announced a series of REAL ID enrollment “pop-up” events at central Illinois airports throughout the month of November, encouraging residents to “Get Real” prior to the federal deadline.

Effective May 7, 2025, the Department of Homeland Security will require airline passengers to present a REAL ID to board a domestic flight or enter federal buildings such as military bases and federal courts. […]

The REAL ID “pop-up” events will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the following airports:

    Wednesday Nov. 6 at Central Illinois Regional Airport
    3201 Cira Drive, Bloomington, IL 61704
    Thursday Nov. 7 at Quincy Airport
    1645 Highway 104, Quincy, IL 62305
    Thursday Nov. 14 at Peoria International Airport
    6100 West Everett McKinley Dirksen Parkway, Peoria, IL 61607
    Thursday Nov. 21 at Abraham Lincoln Capital Airport
    1200 Capital Airport Drive, Springfield, IL 62707

The events will offer REAL ID applications, driver’s license renewals and vehicle registration renewals. Appointments for the events are not required but can be made by emailing publicengagement@ilsos.gov.

*** Election News ***

* Tribune | With 17 races up for election, Illinois Democrats keep a lock on majority of state’s congressional seats: With Republicans winning back the White House and the U.S. Senate on Tuesday and the final balance of power in the House still unclear, Illinois Democrats successfully defended their 14-3 dominance over the GOP in the state’s congressional delegation. In the state’s most closely watched race, first-term Democratic Rep. Eric Sorensen fended off a challenge from Republican Joe McGraw in the 17th Congressional District, a sprawling territory that spans 14 counties and melds Democratic-leaning areas such as Rockford, the Illinois half of the Quad Cities, Peoria and Bloomington-Normal by running through vast expanses of farmland and ruby-red rural communities.

* Tribune | Illinois advisory questions on ‘millionaire’s tax,’ IVF coverage pass easily: Illinois voters on Tuesday overwhelmingly approved three advisory questions put on the ballot by Democrats, including one asking whether the highest earners should be taxed to fund property tax relief, according to unofficial results from The Associated Press. Former Gov. Pat Quinn, chair of the committee that backs a so-called millionaires’ tax, in a statement Tuesday said the provisions proposed in the referendum question would provide “the largest property tax relief measure in state history.”

* The Telegraph | Amy Elik secures third term in Illinois District 111 race: Unofficial results from Madison County show that Elik received 29,840 votes (61.58%), while Raftopoulos received 18,621 votes (38.42%). “I am incredibly honored and grateful to the people of the 111th district for placing their trust in me once again,” Elik said in a statement. “To every supporter, volunteer, friend, and family member who stood by us — thank you. I’m excited to keep fighting to lower the cost of living, bring fiscal responsibility to state government, and hold the majority accountable. Let’s get to work!”

* Tribune | Niles won’t separate into districts, its trustees will continue to represent the whole town after voters appear to reject districts referendum: Niles voters said “no” to the referendum question that asked, “Shall the Village of Niles be divided into 6 districts with one Trustee elected from each district…?” As of late-evening on election night, 70% of voters responded “No” to the binding referendum, according to unofficial results by the Cook County Clerk’s office from the election Tuesday night.

* Beacon-News | Kane County Forest Preserve District in ‘growth phase’ after voters appear to approve tax hike: Unofficial results on Wednesday showed that 58.59% voted in favor of the tax increase while 41.41% voted against it. Numbers are expected to change somewhat as vote-by-mail and provisional ballots are counted. The property tax increase is expected to be around $10 per $100,000 of home value, which comes to about $3 per month for the average Kane County property owner, according to the district’s webpage on the referendum. From that increase, the district would receive around $6.9 million next year, district staff previously said.

* WCIA | Mahomet-Seymour rejects school district bond proposal: The Mahomet-Seymour community has voted to reject a $112,800,000 bond proposition to pay for the cost of school improvements. It failed with 54% of the community voting to reject the measure. If the measure had passed, the money would have been used to build an elementary school building, to replace the existing Mahomet-Seymour Junior High School building, to repair the Lincoln Trail Elementary School building and to improve school sites.

* Block Club | Voters Say Yes To Free Mental Health Clinics In Englewood, Chatham And Southwest Side: Neighbors in these areas voted on a two-part binding referendum, which, unlike non-binding referendums, requires action. The first question asked if a taxpayer-funded program should be created to offer free mental health services in the Englewood and Greater Chatham area or on the Near Southwest Side. That question asked if neighbors would support funding the programs by raising property taxes up to .025 percent for properties within the area.

*** Madigan Trial ***

* Tribune | ‘Don’t put anything in writing’: Jury views undercover videos in Madigan corruption trial: The videos, taken by then-ComEd Vice President Fidel Marquez over a period of weeks in early 2019, go to the heart of the corruption charges against Madigan and Michael McClain, a former lobbyist who allegedly acted as a conduit between Madigan and ComEd, helping funnel a total of $1.3 million to a handful of the speaker’s loyalists from 2011 to 2019 for little or no work.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Felon charged with killing Chicago Police Officer Enrique Martinez: Darion McMillian, 23, from Harvey, faces felony charges of first-degree murder and attempted murder in the shooting Monday night in the 8000 block of South Ingleside Avenue, Police Supt. Larry Snelling announced Wednesday. McMillian also faces felony counts of burglary, possessing a machine gun and possessing a gun as a felon.

* Crain’s | New UIC center will explore how climate change is hurting Chicago’s neighborhoods: UIC’s Center for Climate & Health Equity will receive $4 million over three years from the National Institutes of Health for the work. The center is one of 21 centers nationwide being funded by NIH’s Climate Change & Health Initiative, UIC said in a press release.

* Laura Washington | Washington Park is a palette of Black life in Chicago. I’ll see you there: It’s a good day for a stroll in Washington Park. That is my park, or so I thought and dreamed when I was just a tyke. You can take that walk in a new book by South Side photographer Rose Blouin, “To Washington Park, With Love.” Released recently by Haymarket Books, it presents Blouin’s massive body of work from the summer of 1987, when she visited the park on Chicago’s South Side every weekend to shoot powerful black-and-white images of its people, places and events.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Crain’s | Metra announces schedule for holiday trains: Metra’s special holiday-themed trains will return beginning on Nov. 30 across six lines. The $5 tickets for the experience go on sale beginning at noon on Nov. 11. The special holiday trains will run on Saturdays. All trains will be decorated for the holidays and feature holiday characters on board.

* Crain’s | Lifeway Foods rejects takeover worth over $280 million: Lifeway Foods, maker of kefir and fermented probiotic products, rejected a takeover offer by the multinational food-products company Danone. The Morton Grove-based company announced that its board of directors rejected the “unsolicited offer” to acquire all remaining shares of the company for $25 per share in a deal worth around $283 million. Danone, a longtime shareholder in Lifeway, owns around 23% of its shares.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | Belleville strengthens ordinance that prohibits homeless people from camping in public: Such camping was formerly prohibited by a one-paragraph section of an ordinance that governs “offenses against public peace and safety.” On Monday night, aldermen voted 16-0 to amend and expand it. The ordinance now includes a more detailed, four-page policy, including a formal process by which officials can remove tents, sleeping bags and other personal property from illegal camps.

* WSIL | Judge found dead with apparent gunshot wound in southern Illinois: According to the coroner, Judge Valentine was found dead at his home in Albion, Illinois, with an apparent gunshot wound. No other details are available right now, and the incident remains under investigation by Illinois State Police.

*** National ***

* Tribune | ‘Join or Die’ review: A documentary about why you should join a club — and why these social bonds are essential to democracy: If you’ve been feeling depleted and disconnected from a world of diminished meaningful in-person interactions, “Join or Die” explores one reason why, as laid out by social scientist Robert Putnam. Collectively, we’re less involved in organized gatherings. There are all kinds of reasons for that, but it’s a fundamental shift that’s affected our quality of life, because the social bonds that result when you join a club or organization are not just a matter of “warm, cuddly feelings,” Putnam says in the film. “In area after area of our community life, our communities don’t work as well when we’re not connected.” And that, he says, has far-reaching effects not only on us as individuals, but on democracy itself.

* Crain’s | Cannabis stocks wilt as Florida legalization fails: Shares in Green Thumb Industries, generally the industry’s best-performing stock, opened at a 52-week low before recovering slightly. The stock was down about 18% in mid-morning trading at $8.64. Verano Holdings and Cresco Labs were hit even harder. Verano shares plunged 24% to $2.44, and Cresco’s stock was down 23% to $1.17 per share.

* AP | Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani has surgery to repair labrum tear in shoulder after World Series injury: The Dodgers say the Japanese two-way player is expected to be ready for spring training in February. Ohtani injured his nonthrowing shoulder while sliding into second base on a stolen base attempt, which resulted in a shoulder dislocation. He returned to play the next three games, helping the Dodgers beat the Yankees in five games to win the championship.

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Voters in Harmon’s and Welch’s townships say they want a statewide independent redistricting commission

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Senate President Don Harmon is the Democratic committeeperson for Oak Park Township, and House Speaker Chris Welch is the Democratic committeeperson for Proviso Township, so this is kinda interesting…

Oak Park & Proviso voters demand Fair Maps

Illinois—This election, voters in Oak Park and Proviso townships showed overwhelming support for ending gerrymandering in Illinois. In both townships, voters weighed in on a non-binding referendum question that asked whether or not they wanted an independent redistricting commission to draw legislative and congressional maps. In Oak Park Township 81% of voters said yes to Fair Maps and in Proviso Township 73% of voters said yes to Fair Maps!

These results follow 74% of voters in Peoria showing their support for Fair Maps in the 2022 General Election.

“Year after year, voters in Illinois continue to reaffirm that we need Fair Maps that are community-based and driven by everyday folks, not by the people that stand to benefit from choosing their voters,” said DuShaun Branch, the community organizing director at CHANGE Illinois.

With the support of local groups, such as the League of Women Voters in Oak Park, and everyday people organizing in the community, the record is clear that Illinoisans want to see power restored to the people as it has been done in other states such as California and Michigan. “This was a truly grassroots, community-led effort that gave residents a voice to send a powerful message to their elected officials that voters are determined to end gerrymandering,” said Branch.

CHANGE Illinois will continue to work to end gerrymandering and empower residents across the state to show their unified support for Fair Maps.

Thoughts?

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More election results: Rep. Schmidt declares victory over Greenwood, HD97 called for Rep. Benton (Updated x2)

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. Daily Line legislative reporter Ben Szalinski

* Results as of 11:20

Rep. Kevin Schmidt GOP
22,670
52.1%

LaToya Greenwood DEM
20,825
47.9%

100% of precincts reporting
77.7% of expected votes counted

Speaker Welch pointed to this district as flippable in August.

* HD 97

Harry Benton wins District 97.

AP race call at 8:29 AM on Nov. 6, 2024.

Rep. Harry Benton DEM
24,571
52.1%

Gabby Shanahan GOP
22,546
47.9%

100% of precincts reporting
92.4% of expected votes counted

I’ll be updating this post throughout the day as races are called.

…Adding… Leader McCombie…

Today, Tony McCombie, Illinois House Republican Leader, released the following statement:

“Election night was a victory for House Republicans. Holding our caucus together is a testament to our grassroots operation—the heart of our team, undeterred by the most partisan gerrymandered map in the nation and exponential spending against us. Illinois voters are exhausted by decades of one-party control. House Republicans remain committed to delivering economic growth, ending corruption and putting Illinois families first.”

* …Adding… More…

    * Capitol News Illinois | Early results show Democrats likely to maintain supermajorities in Illinois General Assembly: Preliminary, unofficial election results show no seats in the state House or Senate have changed party hands, although a few races remained too close to call according to the Associated Press. That means Democrats will maintain supermajorities in each chamber of the General Assembly even as President Donald Trump appears to have vastly outperformed his previous two showings in the state in 2016 and 2020.

    * WBEZ | Jennifer Custer wins in Far Northwest Side District 1 Chicago School Board race: Stay-at-home mom and former educator Jennifer Custer beat veteran educator Michelle N. Pierre by just under 2,000 votes in the race to represent District 1 on the elected school board with 98% of precincts reporting, according to the Associated Press. Pierre conceded on Wednesday. Custer, a former assistant principal and suburban union leader was endorsed by the Chicago Teachers Union, which strongly supports a neighborhood school focus.

    * News-Gazette | Election ‘24:’I can’t believe that we have this issue’: The one thing a combustible election didn’t need got a heaping helping of it just as the first wave of voters showed up to cast their ballots Tuesday morning in Champaign County. Polling place problems — and not the kind involving Trump supporters in MAGA hats that led County Clerk Aaron Ammons to hire outside security to patrol precincts — dominated the discussion of the day, drawing unwelcome attention from USA Today, The Associated Press and other media outlets near and far. It started bright and early, at 6 a.m. That’s when Colleen and Mark Ruebke of rural Urbana went to vote at the Somer Township Building, one of 65 polling places due to open at that time around Champaign County. Only when they showed up, they found it closed, along with the three St. Joseph’s Sterling Frye tried on his way to work in Champaign.

    * BND | Schmidt holds onto 114th State House District. What does that mean for southwest Illinois?: Schmidt has said he thinks voters in District 114 support him not because he’s a Republican but because he represents their interests. “I’ll continue to work hard in Springfield and give the people what they need,” Schmidt said Wednesday. “I’m definitely gonna work on funding for infrastructure as far as the sewage/drainage problem — yesterday we all saw how bad it was in Cahokia Heights and East St. Louis — and fight tax increases.”

    * KHQA | 2024 Illinois Election Results: Reproductive Health Ballot Question: With 73% of the vote, Illinois voters said YES to the ballot question: “Should all medically appropriate assisted reproductive treatments, including, but not limited to, in vitro fertilization, be covered by any health insurance plan in Illinois that provides coverage for pregnancy benefits, without limitation on the number of treatments?”

    * Block Club | Trump Attracted More Voters Than Ever In Chicago Amid Overall Victory: While Kamala Harris won Chicago with about 77 percent of the vote, support for Donald Trump went up by up 6 percentage points in the city compared to 2020. In Chicago, Harris received 652,919 votes, or about 77 percent of the vote, while Trump received 187,137 votes, or about 22 percent of the vote, according to early results.

    * WICS | Planned Parenthood of Illinois respond to 2024 presidential results: “This is a devastating loss. I want to reassure the public that the full spectrum of reproductive health care is still safe and legal in Illinois including abortion, gender-affirming care and birth control. However, we will take our rage, sadness, loss and fear to fuel the next phase of our fight. The fight for reproductive freedom does not end here. The majority of Americans believe that sexual and reproductive health decisions — including abortion — should be made by patients, not politicians. PPIA and our supporters will turn our anger into action and work closely with elected officials at both the state and federal levels to continue making Illinois the strongest haven state for reproductive care possible.”

    * News-Gazette | Danos celebrates likely reelection, failed referendum to eliminate office: Democratic county Auditor George Danos appears headed for re-election to an office that will continue to exist, as a referendum asking voters to eliminate it was losing by a margin of 60 to 40 percent and Danos was ahead of his Republican challenger, Alan Anderson, by 54 to 46 percent. “I was gratified to enjoy the loyalty of rank-and-file Democrats, who also agreed with me on the referenda,” Danos said. “The Champaign County Democratic Central Committee, led by Mike Ingram, has egg on its face: when all the votes are counted I’ll have a sound 55-45 victory, despite their treachery. Their pet referenda went down 2-1 (the tax) and 3-2 (the power grab to eliminate the Auditor).”

    * PJ Star | Ranked choice voting referendum passes in Peoria Township: An advisory referendum asking Peoria Township voters if the state of Illinois should implement ranked-choice voting in statewide elections garnered strong support. According to the Peoria County Election Commission, with 100% of precincts reporting, “Yes” leads “No” by more than 11,000 votes, with 22,536 voting in the affirmative (66.98%) and 11,108 voting to reject it (33.02%).

    * Daily Herald | Mosser wins second term as Kane County state’s attorney: Jamie Mosser defeated her Republican rival Tuesday to secure a second term as Kane County’s top prosecutor. Mosser, a Democrat, had 112,962 votes compared to 99,081 for Andrew Sosnowski, her challenger in the race for state’s attorney, according to unofficial totals.

    * Daily Herald | ‘I’m humbled’: Rinehart wins in race for Lake’s top prosecutor: Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart emerged victorious after a tough election against Republican challenger Mary Cole late Tuesday in his bid for another term as the county’s top lawyer. Democrat Rinehart had about 54% of the vote to Cole’s nearly 46%, according to unofficial tallies.

    * SJ-R | All incumbents on Sangamon County Board returned by voters; Milhiser, Roesch other winners: All seven incumbent Sangamon County Board members in contested races prevailed on Tuesday, including one cliffhanger. State’s Attorney John Milhiser and Circuit Clerk Joe Roesch both easily held on to their seats, while Recorder Josh Langfelder, the only Democrat to hold county-wide office, trails challenger Frank Lesko by 68 votes. Eight county board seats up Tuesday were uncontested.

    * WCIA | Champaign County votes ‘no’ to public safety tax: A proposition to increase the sales tax for safety purposes has been rejected in Champaign County. WCIA previously reported that voters were asked if the tax should be raised a quarter cent for every $100 spent in the county. It failed with 66% of the community voting to reject the measure.

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News coverage roundup: Chicago school board election results (Updated)

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* [Note from Rich: I would disagree that CTU picked up four seats. District 1’s apparent winner Jennifer Custer was, indeed, endorsed by CTU, but she criticized the mayor numerous times and, by extension, the union. She won’t be an automatic CTU vote.] Tribune

Chicago voters have rejected Mayor Brandon Johnson’s education agenda as only four of 10 candidates endorsed by the powerful teacher’s union will hold seats on the city’s new hybrid Board of Education.

Though the races began as sleepy provincial contests, they quickly became a referendum on Johnson and his closely allied Chicago Teachers Union. The new mayor, whose 2023 campaign was bankrolled by the CTU, has struggled to retain control of the nation’s fourth-largest public school district and drawn criticism for plans to take out a high-interest, $300 million loan. […]

CTU spent at least $1.7 million in direct contributions to candidates as of Monday, largely in-kind contributions for field staffing, polling, advertising or voter outreach. In all but two races, the CTU-backed candidate had raised the largest sum. Spending caps were also lifted on nine of the races.

The Illinois Network of Charter Schools Political Action Committee had devoted nearly $2.3 million to either supporting or opposing school board candidates during that same time period. A second pro-school-choice PAC, the Urban Center, had devoted another $770,000.

Districts 1, 9, and 10 have yet to be called. Click here for the up-to-date totals.

…Adding… Jennifer Custer wins in Far Northwest Side District 1

* Sun-Times

Three races didn’t yet have a winner, and two of them remained neck-and-neck — the 1st District on the Northwest Side with a union hopeful with a small lead, the other in the South Side’s 10th District with an independent candidate slightly ahead. Another independent led in the 9th District by a wider margin.

With the union failing in six districts, a school system that has been under mayoral control for 30 years now looks likely to have a caucus of board members for the first time who aren’t in the mayor’s corner. Some of the groups that opposed the CTU in these elections called that a victory against Mayor Brandon Johnson, a former organizer for the union that vaulted him into office last year and remains a strong ally. […]

Candidates who received financial support from anti-CTU corners won in the 3rd, 4th and 8th Districts — Carlos Rivas Jr., Ellen Rosenfeld and Angel Gutierrez, respectively.

CTU-backed Yesenia Lopez won in the 7th District, adding to the wins by Brown and DeBerry. Jennifer Custer, another candidate endorsed by the CTU, held a small lead in the 1st District but hadn’t yet been declared the winner by the AP.

* Chalkbeat Chicago

At a union election watch party Tuesday night, Chicago Teachers Union president Stacy Davis Gates led the crowd in a chant of “Whose Schools? Our schools!”

She framed the election, which the union advocated for well before Johnson’s election as mayor, as a success: While not all union-endorsed candidates prevailed, Johnson, a close CTU ally, still gets to appoint 11 out of 21 members of the new, partly elected board.

“You all created an expansion of democracy in an entire society that’s toying with the idea of fascism,” Davis Gates said.

She decried an influx of large checks, including some from out-of-state billionaires, in support of pro-school choice candidates.

* Sun-Times

A pair of candidates running for spots on the first elected school board in Chicago said they were surprised at the level of political attacks against them during the campaign.

“The amount of attack ads from the Chicago Teachers Union was crazy,” Carlos Rivas, running to represent District 3, said at a Chicago Democrats for Education election party in River North on Tuesday night.

Rivas said some were comparing him to Republican former president Donald Trump, which made no sense.

“I’m a gay Latino man raised in the neighborhood,” he said.

* More…

    * Sun-Times | Ellen Rosenfeld wins in North Side District 4 Chicago School Board race: Chicago Public Schools staffer Ellen Rosenfeld pushed past five other candidates — and fellow CPS parents — to become the Chicago school board’s member from the largely wealthy North Side District 4, according to results from the Associated Press. […] Two groups that Rosenfeld did not coordinate with spent $321,000 supporting her or opposing Zaccor. The groups, Urban Center Action and the Illinois Network of Charter Schools Action, can raise and spend without limits but they can’t coordinate with candidates. They both support charter schools and oppose the teachers union.

    * WBEZ | Che “Rhymefest” Smith leads in South Side District 10 Chicago School Board race: Smith was gracious when reached Tuesday night. He said all the candidates in District 10 were solid and he learned a lot from his competitors. At more than $500,000, Norington-Reaves had, by far, the most in financial support. Some of it was spent on behalf of her campaign and not coordinated with it, and some was given to her campaign fund. She was supported by two anti-Chicago Teachers Union, pro-charter school super PACs — the Illinois Network of Charter Schools and Urban Center Action.

    * Axios | Results: Chicago’s first elected school board: he board is only partially elected for now. Mayor Brandon Johnson will appoint the other 10 members, one from each district, and the board president. The 21-member board will start in January and faces a looming budget gap, a CEO at odds with the mayor and an unsettled teachers union contract.

…Adding… INCS Action…

INCS Action Congratulates Newly Elected CPS Board of Education Members

CHICAGO – INCS Action congratulates the newly elected members of the CPS Board of Education and extends its best wishes as they prepare to take office in January. INCS Action is the political and advocacy arm of the Illinois Network of Charter Schools (INCS), an advocacy organization focused on the improvement of public education by establishing high-quality charter public schools.

The INCS Action-backed members of the Board include:

    District 3: Carlos Rivas
    District 4: Ellen Rosenfeld
    District 8: Angel Gutierrez

In addition to the three INCS Action-endorsed candidates who won outright, three other independent candidates secured victory last night, meaning that six of the nine contested races went to candidates who will center students ahead of adult interests in making policy decisions for our state’s largest school district. One of the winners, Carlos Rivas in District 3, is a graduate of the INCS Action campaign school and fellowship program, a program designed to prepare the next generation of elected officials.

“I’m proud to have this opportunity to serve not only the families of District 3, but across Chicago,” said Carlos Rivas, a charter school educator. He noted that his win, “is an example of a candidate thinking for themselves and not being defined by outside groups.”

“The election of these candidates who center school quality, rather than school type, reflects a new beginning for Chicago’s education agenda,” said INCS Action President Andrew Broy. “Despite CTU’s best efforts, independent candidates prevailed because Chicagoans know students are more important than politics. Now that campaigning is over, we look forward to partnering in good faith with all CPS Board members to advance the interests of our city’s school children.”

These Board members will serve Chicago’s 325,000 students, including 60,000 charter students and their families. Charter students, 96.4% of whom are students of color and 85% of whom receive free or reduced lunch, are just as much a part of CPS as their counterparts in district-operated schools. It is our hope that the Board will continue to value these students as they do any other child in our city, and the charter community stands eager and ready to support the Board’s commitment to educational equity.

INCS Action has proudly been politically active in city and state elections since 2014.

* CPS Parents for Buses…

“All ten victorious school board candidates support the restoration of busing to magnet and selective enrollment students, according to their response to our candidate survey.”

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Ex-ComEd VP testifies about no-work contracts for Madigan allies

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

One of the feds’ star witnesses told a jury Tuesday that ComEd funneled more than $600,000 to allies of then-Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan over several years as a “favor” so Madigan would be “more positively disposed toward ComEd’s legislative agenda.”

It’s a crucial piece of testimony in Madigan’s federal corruption trial, but one that comes from Fidel Marquez — the longtime ComEd official who struck a deal with prosecutors with the hope of avoiding prison after pleading guilty to bribery conspiracy in 2020.

Marquez delivered his testimony while discussing Jay Doherty, the former City Club president whose contract with ComEd was used to pay Madigan allies like former 13th Ward Ald. Frank Olivo and longtime Madigan campaign worker Raymond Nice.

Marquez told jurors Olivo was paid $4,000 a month, while Nice was paid $5,000 a month — both allegedly for do-nothing jobs. Prosecutors previously told the jury the scheme netted Olivo a total of $368,000 and Nice a total of $415,000. Neither has been criminally charged.

The payments were made between 2011 and 2019.

* Tribune

As a senior executive with Commonwealth Edison, it was Fidel Marquez’s job to know who was working for the utility as lobbyists or consultants and what exactly it was they were doing for the money.

So when a cryptic email was forwarded to him in 2013 from Michael McClain, a longtime associate of House Speaker Michael Madigan, asking that ComEd shift a contract for one of Madigan’s top 13th Ward soldiers that Marquez had never heard of, he had some obvious questions. […]

What he quickly learned from McClain was that ComEd had been quietly paying two Madigan associates, former 13th Ward Ald. Frank Olivo and precinct captain Ray Nice, as “subcontractors” through consultant Jay Doherty, even though neither had done any work for the utility.

Now, McClain wanted a third person, 13th Ward precinct captain Ed Moody, shifted to Doherty’s contract too.

* Capitol News Illinois

During the course of Marquez’s testimony, which could last the rest of the week, the jury will see several videos he recorded of meetings with his colleagues while wearing an FBI wire in the winter and spring of 2019. He quickly agreed to cooperate and have his cell phone wiretapped when agents approached him early one morning in January of that year. The jury will also hear many calls resulting from that wiretap. […]

After the call with McClain, Marquez said he informed Pramaggiore that he was filled in on the matter and that he’d move Moody from McClain’s contract to Doherty’s. But when he asked if he should then reduce McClain’s monthly rate to reflect that he was no longer carrying Moody, Marquez said Pramaggiore told him to leave it “untouched.” […]

Marquez acknowledged turning a blind eye to the no-work contractors as a prerequisite to improving ComEd’s historically beleaguered relationship with Madigan. But he also said he took steps to prevent a possible ethics concern in late 2016, when Moody was appointed to fill a vacancy on the Cook County Board of Commissioners. Moody was moved from Doherty’s contract to another lobbyist’s.

“There may be an occasion where Jay Doherty would have to lobby Ed Moody, who would’ve been paid under his contract,” Marquez said. “So that would’ve created a clear conflict.”

  12 Comments      


Open thread

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Take a deep breath before commenting folks…

  74 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Democrats poised to keep supermajorities intact in Illinois legislature. Tribune

    - Several races remained undecided as ballots continued to be counted late Tuesday.
    - Republican Rep. Amy Grant, who is vying for a fourth term, was in a 50-50 dead heat with Democrat Jackie Williamson of Wheaton with about 99% of the estimated vote total counted, according to unofficial results from The Associated Press.
    - Republican Rep. Martin McLaughlin held a slight edge over Democratic challenger Maria Peterson, a former labor attorney from North Barrington, with 91% of the estimated vote total reporting.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Block Club Chicago | Man Awaiting Trial For Jan. 6 Attack On Capitol Worked As Portage Park Election Judge: Sen. Robert Martwick, who represents District 10 and is up for reelection, said he recognized Ligas when he went to drop off pizzas at the Shabbona Park polling location about 12:30 p.m. Tuesday. “I walked into the polling place, and he was there holding a clipboard, but he wasn’t wearing any credentials,” said Martwick, who faces Republican challenger Jon Luers. “I thought, ‘Who is that guy? Wait a minute, that’s Larry Ligas — isn’t he under an indictment for January 6th?’”

* WTTW | Barbara Taylor Bowman, Founding Mother of Early Childhood Education, Dies at 96: Bowman is known not only for her lifelong work in the field and for co-founding the Erikson Institute, but also as the mother of Valerie Jarrett, an advisor to former President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama. “Her legacy is one of transformation, not only of Erikson but of the entire early childhood education landscape,” said Erikson President Mariana Souto-Manning in a statement. “She didn’t just shape an institution — she helped shape the very foundation of the field. Barbara’s commitment to justice, equity, and the well-being of all children will continue to animate our mission, inspire our work, and guide the field for generations to come.”

* Eye On Illinois | As this election ends, another campaign cycle is already spinning: In two years we’ll be choosing a U.S. Senator, governor, attorney general, secretary of state, comptroller and treasurer. Only six members of the Senate are older than Dick Durbin, who turns 80 this month. Illinoisans only once elected any governor three times. If Durbin and/or Gov. JB Pritzker opt not to seek reelection – or if Pritzker pursues Durbin’s Senate seat – that shakes up the entire Democratic ballot.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WGLT | Sharon Chung defeats Desi Anderson; fellow incumbents win in Illinois House: Democrat Sharon Chung won reelection to a second term in the Illinois General Assembly with a victory over Republican Desi Anderson. Chung, a Democrat from Bloomington, won 53% of the vote. She defeated Anderson by around 3,500 votes, according to unofficial totals compiled by WGLT and WCBU.

* Daily Southtown | Hastings, Joyce lead state Senate races as incumbents lead in House:
In the 19th Senate, unofficial results show, that with 85% of precincts reporting, incumbent Michael Hastings, a Frankfort Democrat, had 59% of the vote to 41% for Republican Samantha Jean Gasca, of New Lenox. Hastings began serving in the Senate in 2013. Gasca was one of three candidates in the Republican primary in March while Hastings was unopposed on the Democratic side.

* KWQC | Bradley Fritts wins Illinois 74th District: Republican Bradley Fritts will serve his second two-year term in the Illinois House of Representatives. Fritts won with a total of 31,350 votes over Democrat challenger David Simpson with 16,934 votes.

*** Ballot Measures ***

* Crain’s | ‘Millionaire tax’ advisory ballot measure appears headed for a win: With ballots still being counted late Tuesday evening, Illinois voters appeared to be overwhelmingly backing an advisory question that could give state lawmakers a tool to push for higher taxes on wealthy residents — a tax that supporters argued would clear the way for property tax relief. With 71% of votes counted as of 11 p.m., the referendum was leading 60.5% to 39.5%, based on 4.2 million total votes cast. Supporters are calling the result a mandate to enact legislation.

* Daily Northwestern | Illinois voters approve advisory measure expanding coverage for IVF treatments: The ballot measure, one of three advisory referenda voters considered in Illinois, won with 72.5% in support and 27.5% in opposition. The Associated Press called the race at 11:39 p.m. The referendum does not have any direct legal effect. However, legislators could consider support for the referendum indexed by tonight’s results when making decisions about assisted reproductive treatments.

* The Daily Northwestern | Election worker protection referendum overwhelmingly favored by voters: Illinois voters voted in overwhelming support of a non-binding advisory referendum to impose civil penalties on candidates who interfere or attempt to interfere with election workers’ duties. With 68% of the votes counted as of 10:30 p.m. Tuesday night, 88.9% of voters were in favor of the referendum, according to data from The Associated Press. The New York Times called the race at about 9 p.m.

* WBEZ | Illinois voters approve an advisory referendum calling for higher taxes on income over $1 million: The tax measure called for imposition of a 3% levy on individual income over $1 million, which state revenue officials say could pump at least $4.5 billion more each year into the state’s treasury to then divert to property tax reduction. […] The measure carried 60% of the vote, with 83% of the estimated vote counted, the Associated Press reported, and the agency called it a win Tuesday night.

* NBC Chicago | 7 Illinois counties vote to explore seceding from state: Iroquois County: With all 37 of the county’s precincts reporting, 72.85% of votes were in favor of the advisory question, with more than 9,000 “yes” votes counted.

*** Chicago ***

* Eater Chicago | Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson Floats a Liquor Tax Increase in His 2025 Budget: The Distilled Spirits Council of the United States, a national lobbying group, has come out against the budget. The council sent out a news release. “The hospitality industry has been relentlessly hit with economic challenges over the last four years starting with the pandemic and followed by supply chain disruptions, staffing shortages, and record inflation,” says Andy Deloney, Distilled Spirits Council’s vice president and head of state public policy.

* Block Club | South Shore Neighbors Vote In Favor Of Housing Protections: About 89 percent of voters in four South Shore precincts showed support for housing protections like property tax relief and affordable housing developments in a non-binding referendum.

* Chicago Mag | In a new exhibition, photographer Mark Ballogg lets us into local artists’ workspaces.: Ballogg brought what he considered an outsider’s eye to the project, despite his own history as a collector of local art and a nearly four-decade career as an architectural photographer. “I have always struggled with calling myself an artist,” he says. “So the project started to become a way for me to suss out my path for myself with my own practice, seeing into the lives of artists and the way they work, and starting to realize that the sky’s the limit and that I can do whatever I decide I want to do.”

* Tribune | Chicago Bears Q&A: What will it take for Matt Eberflus to keep his job? Why wasn’t Shane Waldron demoted?: I don’t believe Eberflus was under a playoffs-or-else mandate when the season began. At 4-4 and coming off consecutive dispiriting road losses, things are trending in the wrong direction. That’s fair to say. But Eberflus’ removal at the end of the season isn’t a fait accompli. A lot of football remains to be played with nine regular-season games, including the entire division slate.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* WTTW | O’Neill Burke Declared Winner in Race to Replace Kim Foxx as Cook County’s Top Prosecutor: The AP declared Burke the winner just before 9 p.m. in one of the most closely watched races on Election Day in Chicago. Burke, a former circuit and appellate level judge who also served as both an assistant state’s attorney and defense attorney, received 65% of votes to defeat Republican former alderperson Bob Fioretti (31%) and Libertarian Andrew Charles Kopinski (4%) with 59% of votes counted, according to unofficial results.

* Daily Herald | Krishnamoorthi declared winner in 8th District reelection bid: AP declared Krishnamoorthi the winner at 8:35 p.m., when an estimated 72% of the vote had been counted. By the time the count reached 91%, Krishnamoorthi was ahead 162,522 votes to 126,448 votes, unofficial results showed. That gave Krishnamoorthi about 56.2% of the total.

* Daily Southtown | Will County incumbent Democrats in countywide races lead with 84% votes counted: Incumbent Jennifer Bertino-Tarrant, a Shorewood Democrat seeking a second term as county executive, had 53% of the unofficial vote while Republican candidate Charles “Chuck” Maher of Naperville had 46% with about 84% of the votes reported. Bertino-Tarrant said she was wanted to continue her work to improve public safety, ensure the county remains the best in the state for job creation and collaborate with the Veterans Assistance Commission to bring a new veterans-centric campus to Joliet.

* WBEZ | Democrat Monica Gordon clinches Cook County clerk seat: In a county where Democratic voters dominate, Monica Gordon easily defeated her GOP and Libertarian rivals Tuesday to become the next Cook County clerk. With more than half of the estimated vote counted, Gordon was headed for a landslide victory, with more than 65%

* Daily Herald | ‘I’m humbled’: Rinehart wins in race for Lake’s top prosecutor: Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart emerged victorious after a tough election against Republican challenger Mary Cole late Tuesday in his bid for another term as the county’s top lawyer. Democrat Rinehart had about 54% of the vote to Cole’s nearly 46%, according to unofficial tallies.

* Crain’s | How this Chicago suburb is riding a retail renaissance: “Schaumburg is lucky because every retailer wants to be there,” said John Melaniphy, president of Melaniphy & Associates, which tallies local retail sales using Illinois Department of Revenue sales tax data. Schaumburg has the third-most retail space of any suburb at 10.7 million square feet and raked in more than $4.2 billion in retail sales in 2023, coming in second behind Naperville, according to data from real estate information company CoStar Group and Melaniphy & Associates.

*** Downstate ***

* PJ Star | Illinois 2024 election results: Ranked choice voting referendum in Peoria Township: According to the Peoria County Election Commission, with over half of all precincts reporting, “Yes” leads “No” by just over 9,000 votes, with 18,449 voting in the affirmative (66%) and 9,397 voting to reject it (34%).

* WSIL | “No Drink Water” order no longer in effect in Vienna: The “No Drink Water” order in the City of Vienna is no longer in effect. The Vienna Police Department posted the update, stating multiple water samples have shown the water is safe to drink. The Illinois EPA sampled the water and approved lifting the order, city officials stated.

  12 Comments      


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

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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*Live* election night coverage - Election results

Tuesday, Nov 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Our live coverage app has been glitching hard tonight, which has distracted me from posting stuff. Rather than delve even further into the intricacies, I’ve decided we will combine the coverage with the election results in one post.

* Election Results: Sun-Times - Tribune - Daily Herald - NYT - Capitol News Illinois - Block Club Chicago

* Live news updates: Sun-Times/WBEZ - Daily Herald - Tribune - NBC 5 - Block Club Chicago - WTTW - 25News Now - Rockford Register Star - Peoria Journal Star

* Our live coverage and results…

  3 Comments      


Late afternoon, early evening precinct reports

Tuesday, Nov 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Our final check-in opportunity of the day. We’ll have live coverage close to 7 pm. Let us all know what’s going on by you. Thanks!

  10 Comments      


CTU president Stacy Davis Gates scolds Gov. Pritzker for expressing opinions on a ‘hyper local issue’

Tuesday, Nov 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s

At the local level, Pritzker said both the current and future members of the Chicago Board of Education should be “listening to the public” before making major decisions for the schools. […]

“I believe that an elected school board is what should dictate Chicago Public Schools,” he said. “Let’s put people in place before they’re making final decisions. I think, by the way, the appointed officials should also be listening to the public.”

CTU president Stacy Davis Gates, who also stopped by Manny’s, told Crain’s she doesn’t “understand a governor weighing in on a hyper local issue.”

“What I would prefer that the governor weighed in on is how 80% of our schools get librarians, how we get fully functioning sports teams that are at our elementary and high schools for fall, winter and spring,” she said. “I would also like his help in making sure that we can narrow the teaching vacancies. These are all things that we can do with the governor, and I look forward to his partnership on things that he can help us with.”

Thoughts?

  36 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Nov 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WAND

A petition filed to extend the voting hours in Champaign County after the county experienced technical difficulties in processing votes Tuesday morning has been withdrawn.

The Champaign County Clerk’s Office posted to Facebook that they are now able to process voters throughout Champaign County after experiencing problems in the first few hours polls were open.

The Champaign County State’s Attorney’s Office had filed a Motion for Injunctive Relief in Champaign County Court requesting that the voting hours in Champaign County at all polling places be extended to 9:00 p.m. to compensate for the hours that voters could not vote this morning due to “connectivity issues with the County’s election services vendor. ” […]

The State’s Attorney told WAND News after researching, officials believe anyone voting after 7 p.m. would have been counted as a provisional ballot, which would take longer to get results. Provisional ballots get 14 days to be counted.

*** More Election News ***

* Naperville Sun | Naperville voters turn out in large numbers to cast ballots in Tuesday’s election: Nearly 60% of registered voters in DuPage County had voted early, mailed in their ballots or visited their precinct polling place as of noon Tuesday to make their selections for president, judges, DuPage County offices and other races, reflecting the trend seen all over the country on Election Day.


* Lake County News-Sun | Lake County residents flock to polls on Election Day; ‘Democracy is in the air’: Tens of Thousands of voters cast their ballots within less than six hours of the polls opening Tuesday across Lake County marking their choice for president, Congress, the Illinois General Assembly, a variety of county offices and nine referendums. “Democracy is in the air,” Lake County Clerk Anthony Vega said just after 10 a.m. “We had a big morning rush, and things are now steady. It will pick up again after work.”

* WCIA | Sangamon County Democrats call on voters to double check after some complain of getting incorrect ballots: Sangamon County Democrats want voters to double check their ballots before they cast their vote. The party said they’ve received multiple reports of voters receiving the wrong ballot. “One time, in my opinion, is too much,” Sangamon County Democratic Party Chair Bill Houlihan said. “I mean, if someone gets the wrong ballot that shouldn’t have happened.”

* WJBD | Marion County Clerk sees steady lines at polling places: Marion County Clerk Steve Fox is reporting steady lines at many polling places, but so far no issues, in Tuesday’s general election. He feels confident his 65-percent voter turnout projection will stand. In addition to the Presidential race, there are contested races in Marion County for State’s Attorney and Coroner, County Board seats in District Two and Four, as well as Congressman.

* WSIL | Law enforcement and election officials share plans for voting safety concerns: Robin Harper-Whitehead is busy running the election process for Johnson County. Like many election officials, she is concerned about safety. […] Harper-Whitehead says they have security at the courthouse, and on call for their polling places. She says they also gave their election judges extra training to help mitigate any problems they might have.

* Bloomberg | Experts Worry Election-Betting Markets Are Skewed Ahead of Vote: Economists have long loved prediction markets. Even niche platforms such as the Iowa Electronic Markets and betting pools inside companies like Ford Motor Co. have been praised for their fortune-telling prowess. And now, the online emporiums have entered the big leagues with the 2024 presidential election.

* Press Release | FBI Statement on Bomb Threats to Polling Locations: The FBI is aware of bomb threats to polling locations in several states, many of which appear to originate from Russian email domains. None of the threats have been determined to be credible thus far. Election integrity is among the FBI’s highest priorities. We will continue to work closely with our state and local law enforcement partners to respond to any threats to our elections and to protect our communities as Americans exercise their right to vote.

*** Madigan Trial ***

* Tribune | Ex-ComEd VP, crucial witness against Madigan, takes stand in corruption trial: The former ComEd vice president who secretly recorded his colleagues as part of a federal corruption probe began testifying against ex-House Speaker Michael Madigan on Tuesday, the first of what is expected to be multiple days on the stand. One of the prosecution’s star witnesses, Fidel Marquez’s cooperation with federal investigators provided the backbone of prosecutors’ allegations that Madigan and his co-defendant Michael McClain supported ComEd-friendly legislation in exchange for benefits from the utility, such as do-nothing contracts for their associates.

* Sun-Times | Former ComEd exec who wore a wire for the FBI takes the stand in Michael Madigan’s trial: Meanwhile, Marquez is likely to revisit much of his testimony from last year’s case about an alleged bribery conspiracy at ComEd. He took the stand around noon Tuesday, after a later than usual start to the trial day. U.S. District Judge John Blakey gave the jury an extra two hours to vote in the morning. The judge appeared on the bench with an “I Voted” sticker on his robe. At least two jurors could also be seen wearing their own “I Voted” stickers, and at one point Madigan defense attorney Tom Breen waved his around the courtroom.

*** Statewide ***

* NPR | Farmers in Illinois could be surveyed by USDA before spring: The USDA will be tapping farmers across the U.S. to participate in a conservation survey. The statistics and conservation branches of the agency are reaching out to farmers, ranchers, and agricultural landowners to gather in-depth information about the conservation practices they use. Nearly 12,000 operators will receive the 2024 Conservation Effects Assessment Project survey. The 2024 Conservation Effects Assessment Project survey will collect data that paints a picture of conservation practices across the agriculture landscape.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Kaegi sizes up the Loop, completing city reassessment: Loop office buildings are worth less than they were three years ago, but the plight isn’t as bad as recent deals suggest, according to Fritz Kaegi. Releasing his final batch of data in a reassessment of all city property, the Cook County assessor last week illustrated his relatively rosy view of the vacancy-plagued downtown office market.

* Block Club | CTA Says Rail Service Restored To Pre-Pandemic Levels, But Some Experts Remain Skeptical: But the new schedules — which went into effect Sunday — are unlikely to match the reality for riders on the system, at least at first, said Brandon McFadden, a cybersecurity analyst who independently tracks CTA reliability. On the first two days of the new schedules, Sunday saw 81 percent delivered service while Monday had 88 percent delivered service, according to McFadden’s data. That’s a dip from a 90 percent or better mark the CTA was delivering regularly under its previous schedule, McFadden said.

* ABC Chicago | Chicago police officer killed in East Chatham shooting ID’d; 2 in custody: Superintendent Snelling said one of the suspects was under electronic monitoring, but may have cut off his ankle monitor. “We have to do everything that we can to keep violent offenders off the street, especially those who are repeating these acts,” Snelling said. “If we don’t do that, then we’re failing our citizens. We’re failing our children. We’re failing their futures. We have to keep violent offenders off the street.”

* Crain’s | Tempus buying genetics lab company for $600 million: Tempus AI announced today it is acquiring genetic testing and laboratory service provider Ambry Genetics in a $600 million deal that the Chicago-based oncology biotech says will broaden its offerings and move the startup closer to breaking even. Tempus will pay $375 million in cash and $225 million in shares at closing. The deal is expected to be financed in part through a $300 million increase in short- and long-term debt provided by Ares Management, Tempus’ current lender, the company said in a release. Tempus noted $100 million of the price will be locked up for one year.

* Crain’s | Stefani group to close Bar Cargo, citing changes in River North: Anthony Stefani attributed the closure in part to what he sees as broader changes to the River North neighborhood’s dining scene. “It’s just not what it was pre-COVID,” he said, citing other recent restaurant closures nearby, including Boka Restaurant Group shifting gears on Le Select and closing GT Fish & Oyster. He thinks much of Bar Cargo’s target clientele now gravitates toward Fulton Market.

* Crain’s | Why Revolution is closing its beloved Logan Square brewpub: “Sometimes when you hear about a restaurant closing, it’s because the lease was up, or they’re raising the rent, or the bank is foreclosing on them,” said Revolution founder and CEO Josh Deth. “It’s none of that with this.” Rather, the 15-year-old institution is closing up shop simply because the brewpub is bleeding money. Sales have been declining for years, and Deth cannot justify staying open. “It’s like throwing in the towel in the later rounds to avoid injury (to the rest of the business),” he said. “We ran out of options.”

* Block Club | You Can Rent A Private Sauna At North Avenue Beach This Winter: The Fire and Ice Sauna Experience, 1600 N. DuSable Lake Shore Drive, is a collaboration between Thunder Domes and the Park District that aims to provide visitors with a wellness-focused winter escape. The private sauna experience is available 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Fridays and can be booked in 25-minute or 60-minute sessions.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Mount Prospect mayoral hopeful says town’s new ethics rules target her: Mount Prospect mayoral hopeful Trisha Chokshi said she was singled out by changes in the village’s ethics rules that resulted in her departure from the town’s finance commission. Chokshi had been serving as chair of the commission, which helps oversee the village’s financial decisions and provides input during the budget process. But in September, the village made changes in its code to prohibit spouses of village trustees from serving on commissions. Choskshi’s husband, Trustee Augie Filippone, recently announced he is not running for another term.

* Daily Herald | Why you can’t ditch old pumpkins in forest preserves: The leftover seeds will sprout in the spring and hurt conservation efforts, according to a forest preserve district video posted on social media. “Pumpkin dumping represents a disconnect between our daily habits and the long-term health of our natural areas,” said Scott Kobal, a district ecologist, in a statement. “When we introduce foreign organic matter, like pumpkins, we inadvertently tip the scales, impacting not just wildlife but also the soil. These changes to the forest floor might take years to reverse.”

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora church to hold early Thanksgiving dinner to help those in need: Wesley United Methodist Church in Aurora will host an early Thanksgiving dinner for people in need this weekend. The Rev. Tammy Scott, Wesley lead pastor, said the “Feast of Hope” event will be held from 3 to 9 p.m. Saturday at the church, 14 N. May St. in Aurora.

* Crain’s | Walgreens agrees to pay $100 million to settle drug overcharging claims: Walgreens Boots Alliance has agreed to pay $100 million to settle a proposed class-action lawsuit claiming the Deerfield-based pharmacy giant fraudulently overcharged customers when they purchased generic drugs through private insurance, Medicare and Medicaid plans. A lawsuit, first filed in 2017 by a consortium of individuals and unions, accused Walgreens of wrongly requiring insured customers to pay more for drugs than members of its Prescription Savings Club. The program allowed Walgreens customers to buy prescribed generic drugs at discounts without insurance.

* ABC Chicago | Misspelled name caused man to sit in Cook County morgue for 6 weeks, family says: The family said they started calling the medical examiner’s office weeks after Davis went missing. “I gave description that he’s very tall, 6′4″ with freckles, very distinctive looking,” sister Deborah Smith said. “She said, ‘We don’t have anyone by that name here.’”

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Urbana High School students ‘Walk to the Polls’ for first votes: Five local organizations and the City or Urbana are sponsoring a “Walk to the Polls” for UHS students and the community on Election Day. This will take place at 10:30 a.m. Mayor Diane Marlin, as well as the Urbana High School Tiger Marching Band Drumline, plan on attending the walk as well. It will take place on the south side of the Urbana Free Library.

* WMBD | CI Hero: Tremont historical secretary finds 13 lost veterans: Secretary Kay Sommer researched and uncovered 13 new veterans who have gone unrecognized dating back to the Civil War. “During my research, I discovered in 1918, we lost some from Tremont and they died from the Spanish Flu because it was a major epidemic at that time,” said Sommer.

*** National ***

* TEXT:


  4 Comments      


Fioretti claims shenanigans, but it doesn’t check out

Tuesday, Nov 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I posted this earlier today…


* From a Fioretti press release…

Cook County State’s Attorney candidate Bob Fioretti lambasted the various “Election Hotlines” relating to today’s Cook County elections are non-existent.

WTTW posted a phone number for voters to call the US Attorney’s office if they spot any election irregularities. Fioretti called that number to see what would happen. The person who answered the phone said there is nobody from the US Attorney’s office on the ground, and any call would be referred to the appropriate election authority hotline. The Cook County Clerk does not even have a hotline to investigate election problems. The Chicago Board of Elections does have a number prominently displayed. Fioretti called that number three times. The phone rang and rang and rang. Nobody answered any of the three calls. Fioretti noted that all three government entities are headed by Democrats.

“We hear often from Democrats about how much they care about ‘democracy,’” Fioretti, a former two-time Chicago Alderman from Chicago’s Historic 2nd Ward, said. “As usual, those who scream the loudest about ‘democracy’ actually care the least about it.”

The only civil rights lawyer to ever run for Cook County State’s Attorney, Fioretti wonders what recourse voters have if they find problems with the election. “The media and election ‘experts’ say there are very few ‘proven cases of election fraud,” Fioretti said. “How could there be, if the election authority won’t even answer the phone to take down the complaint? It is easy to see how voters who have seen irregularities could tire of this shell game played by election authorities.”

Fioretti said voters who suspect election fraud should call an actual number at which someone will actually investigate the matter. Protect The Vote at 312-500-8312.

Part of the State’s Attorney’s office involves enforcing election integrity. “There was a time when the office deployed 400 Assistant State’s Attorneys to be on call to investigate election day shenanigans,” Fioretti said. “When I’m State’s Attorney, election integrity will be a priority again.”

OK, let’s take this one point at a time.

* 1) I called the US Attorney’s office and was told the hotline number is basically just an intake complaint hotline. People are referred to the proper authorities. However, I was told, most of the calls they get are mostly like “Where can I park at my polling place?” and “What time does my polling place close?”

Prompted by the US Attorney, I asked the Fioretti campaign what question(s) Fioretti asked when he called. I have not heard back. If Fioretti did have a valid voter fraud complaint (which he has never actually disclosed), this press release explains what would happen next.

On the rare instance when things like voter/worker intimidation is an issue, people are advised to call 911 and notify the police.

* 2) On to the Cook County Clerk…


From the county sheriff

The Sheriff’s Office encourages anyone who sees suspicious activity at their polling location to call 911 or Sheriff’s Police at 847-635-1188.

* 3) I called the Chicago Board of Elections’ hotline number (312.269.7870) at about 1:30 and somebody picked up on the first ring. Easy peasey.

* 4) That “Protect the Vote” hotline in Fioretti’s release was set up by the Illinois Republican Party. When you call it, you get a recorded message from Lara Trump that asks you for further info. The state Democratic Party also has a hotline number, (855) 458-6837, as does the attorney general…

Raoul urged voters to call his office if they encounter suspected improper or illegal activity. Chicago and northern Illinois voters can call 1-866-536-3496. Central and southern Illinois voters can call 1-866-559-6812. Individuals with hearing or speech disabilities can reach the office by using the 7-1-1 relay service.

Also…


  13 Comments      


Some midday campaign updates (Updated)

Tuesday, Nov 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a subscriber in the 66th House District, currently held by Rep. Suzanne Ness (D-Bennington)…

If the [mail-in/early voter] numbers I see are correct, I think it may be closer than some of the districts that have been targeted.

Before the remap, Skillicorn almost won in 2020 despite having moved to AZ and not campaigning. The new lines helped Ness but she only won by 6 in 2022. They’ve spent a ton on Ness despite Parman having almost nothing. That was smart on their part.

Rep. Ness has reported raising $697,700 since July 1.

* Chicago…

Please see below for the updated Chicago Voter Turnout as of 12:00 Noon on Election Day, 11/5/24:

729,075 total ballots cast (includes Early Voting and Previously Processed Vote By Mail)
1,498,873 active registered voters in Chicago
48.64% citywide turnout so far

Ballots Cast By Age Group:

18 -24: 49,097 ballots cast
25-34: 152,098 ballots cast
35-44: 127,334 ballots cast
45-54: 106,888 ballots cast
55-64: 114,801 ballots cast
65-74: 105,888 ballots cast
75+: 72,951 ballots cast

Ballots Cast By Gender:

Female: 406,296 ballots cast
Male: 320,666 ballots
Non-Binary/X: 685 ballots cast
Undeclared: 1,428 ballots

Ballots Cast Per Hour:

6:00am-7:00am: 20,442
7:00am-8:00am: 13,876 (*updated as epollbooks caught up past 9:00am)
8:00am-9:00am: 35,960 (*updated as epollbooks caught up past 9:00am)
9:00am – 10:00am: 35,513
10:00am – 11:00am: 35,320
11:00am – 12:00pm: 14,089 (as reported by epollbooks at this moment, will be updated)

* Cook County…


* DuPage County…

DuPage County Noon Voter Turnout Update

As of Noon on Nov. 5th, 2024 in DuPage County, IL:

Election Day Voters: 83,553 (13.1% turnout)
In-Person Early Voters: 210,426 (33.0% turnout)
Vote-By-Mail Ballots Processed: 81,953 (12.8% turnout)

Total Turnout: 375,932 out of 638,103 registered voters (58.9% turnout)

“24,211 voters turned out for the last day of in-person Early Voting, nearly double the 12,846 who voted the day before Election Day in 2020. This enthusiasm has continued into a strong start to voting this morning,” DuPage County Clerk Jean Kaczmarek says. “DuPage County voters are encouraged to take advantage of the opportunity to Vote Anywhere today and visit whatever polling place is most convenient to cast their vote if they have not done so already.”

* WCIA

UPDATE (8:44a) – Voting locations in Champaign County are back online. Voters are now able to vote this morning normally after the earlier issues have been resolved.

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (WCIA) – Many voters in Champaign County are not able to vote this morning after an issue that has brought most polling locations down.

The Champaign County Clerk Aaron Ammons confirmed to WCIA this morning that there are network issues that are preventing people from voting. He told us there is no timeline to be resolved. He states it is all polling locations.

More…


* WCIA

Sangamon County Clerk Don Gray is letting residents know that polling locations are completely up and running.

In a statement Tuesday morning, Gray said despite inaccurate reports, all polling locations in the county are fully operational, and have been since opening at 6:00 a.m. He acknowledges that other state counties are facing major issues, but not Sangamon County.

The only issue he noted is one that has been plaguing all of Illinois.

“This morning, as part of a statewide vendor error, we did face a minor inconvenience: The new same-day voter registration process required an additional phone call to our downtown office from the polling place,” Gray said. “Voters could still register in person at the courthouse without any issue.”

The third-party vendor is Platinum Technology Resource.

* This was a problem in several places

Platinum Technology Resource, a Batavia, Illinois-based election service provider, called this morning’s database system failure “a temporary issue that affected the speed of voter searches and not a system outage.”

In an email to clients like the Rockford Board of Elections, Platnium explained that its database, which stores and protects the city’s electronic voter registration log, locked up causing an error message.

…Adding… No extended hours…


* Sun-Times

Election Day got off to a rocky start at Ogden Elementary School, 24 W. Walton St. in Chicago’s Gold Coast neighborhood, where some voters were told their entire precinct had already cast their ballots.

The issue, which affected 12th precinct voters only, stemmed from the site’s electronic pollbooks, said Max Bever, director of public information for the Chicago Board of Elections. Poll workers directed voters to instead go to the nearest voting center if they could not stay in line or to return before polls close at 7 p.m.

An election official on site told WBEZ shortly before 9 a.m. that the issue had been resolved and that things were now running smoothly.

* From a pal on the Southwest Side…

I think this combined with the Jesse Jackson endorsement should push him over the top 🤣

More…


* Democratic Party of Illinois…

Chicago, IL — Today, Democratic Party of Illinois Chair Lisa Hernandez and Illinois Democratic leaders will hold a press conference at Manny’s Deli to stress what’s at stake this election, encourage Illinoisans to cast their ballots before polls close and highlight why down-ballot races are critically important. The press conference follows weeks of voter information, voter protection and get out the vote efforts by the Party.

WHO: Democratic Party of Illinois Chair Lisa Hernandez, U.S. Senator Dick Durbin, U.S. Representative Danny Davis (IL-7), U.S. Representative Jonathan Jackson (IL-1), Cook County Board of Commissioners President Toni Preckwinkle, Illinois State Comptroller Susana Mendoza, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul and Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias

WHAT: Remarks followed by brief media availability

WHEN: Tuesday, November 5, 2024
1:00 PM - 1:30 PM CT

WHERE: Manny’s Cafeteria & Delicatessen
1141 S Jefferson St.
Chicago, IL 60607

From Manny’s…


* Live updates from various news organizations…

* More from Isabel…

    * Fox 32 | Gov. J.B. Pritzker among Illinois politicians visiting Manny’s Deli for Election Day: It’s an Election Day tradition for local politicians to head to Manny’s Deli while voters hit polling places.

    * Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago high schoolers get a crash course on the city’s first school board election: Inside Room 105, Odeth and 20 of her peers dug into the day’s civics lesson: Chicago’s historic school board elections. They would learn that the board has immense power, including to change school policies and curriculum and adopt the district’s budget. “I feel like the fact that they’re being elected in the first place is really cool, because I feel like we should have a say in deciding, like, how we’re going to learn,” she said. “It was interesting to learn how much they actually control.”

    * USA Today | Georgia secretary of state blames polling place bomb threat on Russians: Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger confirmed Tuesday a bomb threat was made against a polling place, but he said it was of Russian origin and not credible. Raffensperger later clarified in a subsequent press conference that the threat affected between five and seven precincts in multiple Georgia counties. “In the interest of public safety, you always check that out,” Raffensperger said. “They’re up to mischief it seems,” he added, about the Russians. “They don’t want us to have a smooth, fair and accurate election.”

    * CNN | A pro-Trump influencer says a Russian agent paid him $100 to post a fake voter fraud video. It wasn’t the first time: The pro-Trump influencer, who uses the @AlphaFox78 handle on X, is an American man living in Massachusetts, CNN has learned. He agreed to speak to CNN about the posts on condition of anonymity. […] “I don’t have any idea where it came from or anything - I’m just the guy who shared it,” he said. The man said Simeon Boikov, a Russian propagandist podcaster known online as “AussieCossack,” offered him $100 to post the video, which he agreed to. A person with knowledge of the situation confirmed to CNN that multiple payments were sent from Boikov to the Massachusetts man.

    * NYT | What We’ll Know and When We’ll Know It: A Guide to Election Night: Like in 2020, the vote count will still feature “blue mirages” or “red mirages,” in which one candidate builds a fleeting lead simply because mail or Election Day ballots are counted first. (Mail ballots have tended to be more Democratic, and Election Day ballots more Republican.) But this year, these mirages won’t be as extreme.

    * Forbes | These Key Swing States Don’t Count Mail Ballots In Advance—Results May Take Days: Pennsylvania: The state will be one of the slowest to release results from mail-in ballots because officials can’t start processing absentee ballots—taking steps like removing ballots from envelopes and verifying voter signatures—until the morning of Election Day, and cannot record any vote totals until after polls close at 8 p.m.

    * USA Today | Sign of the times in front yard political wars: A campaign to make America laugh again: In the thicket of political campaign signs at a busy intersection in Goffstown, New Hampshire, Andy Brown decided to plant a message of his own: “Andy Brown: Not running for anything. Just wanted a sign.” Soon a friend of a friend surprised Brown by adding another sign “paid for by friends of Andy Brown.” So, Brown doubled down on the joke and headed back to the sign store for a 3-foot-by-5-foot custom banner with a new campaign slogan. “I like big signs, I cannot lie” − a creative riff on the Sir Mix-A-Lot lyrics − struck a nerve on social media where one local person responded: “And G-town can’t deny…”

  5 Comments      


Mid-day precinct reports

Tuesday, Nov 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* What do you see? What do you know? Make sure to tell us where you are. Thanks.

  12 Comments      


Energy Storage Can Minimize Price Spikes

Tuesday, Nov 5, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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Batteries, or energy storage, are currently the best solution to minimize this price spike—but building them at the pace we need will require legislation. The added benefit is the ability to store cheap electricity for use when demand peaks during the day—lowering energy bills and making the grid more reliable.

Learn more about legislation that builds urgently needed energy storage here.

Paid for by Counterspark.

  Comments Off      


Mid-morning precinct reports

Tuesday, Nov 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* What’s happening by you? Give us a flavor of what’s going on and remember to tell us where you are. Thanks.

  39 Comments      


Jury hears tape of Madigan being informed of plan to pay aide ousted for sexual harassment

Tuesday, Nov 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

Jurors in Michael Madigan’s corruption trial on Monday heard a key wiretapped phone call in which the speaker’s longtime confidant told him about a plan to kick payments to a loyal ward aide who was ousted after being accused of sexual harassment.

On the August 2018 call, Michael McClain tells Madigan he’d “put four or five people together that are willing to contribute to, uh, help with monthly things for the next six months like I mentioned to ya for Kevin Quinn,” the brother of Madigan’s handpicked 13th Ward alderman, Marty Quinn.

McClain then asks Madigan if he wanted to call the alderman first to let him know, or just stay out of it.

“Yeah — I think I oughta stay out of it,” Madigan could be heard saying.

* Sun-Times

Marty Quinn had a similar response when he got his own phone call from McClain about the plan to help his brother.

“I’d rather stay in the dark,” Marty Quinn told McClain.

Neither one protested or told McClain to shut the plan down.

Prosecutors say that episode — and the tale of the Madigan allies in the “fox hole” together — is evidence of a criminal enterprise Madigan led for nearly a decade, with McClain acting as his agent.

* Courthouse News

On one August 2018 call with ex-Illinois Democratic state Representative John Bradley, McClain floated the idea of Quinn investigating who public officials’ “sugar daddies” were. McClain suggested the work would be part of a consulting gig, in case the IRS asked any questions.

“I think you can hire him as a consultant. Because I think at the end of the day, you’re gonna write it off,” McClain told Bradley on the call.

“I think you can hire him as a consultant. Because I think at the end of the day, you’re gonna write it off,” McClain told Bradley on the call.

McClain made the same suggestion on another 2018 call to former Madigan political staffer Will Cousineau, who was on the stand from last Tuesday afternoon through this Monday morning. Jurors heard that call last week. […]

Prosecutors showed the jury Monday that Quinn did receive checks from McClain, Bradley, Cousineau and two other Madigan associates — either directly or via the associates’ consulting firms — in late 2018. None of the checks jurors saw was worth less than $1,000.

* ABC Chicago

It was along that same vein that the government’s next witness, ComEd executive Keisha Parker, took the stand. She testified to helping McClain, who was then an external lobbyist for the utility, to set up campaign fundraisers on behalf of Madigan and the Democratic Party of Illinois.

She also said she was part of setting up a contract for Ed Moody. Moody is one of the five men, all Madigan loyalists, identified by the U.S. Attorney’s Office as being hired by ComEd through various subcontractors for little to no-work jobs allegedly worth over $1.3 million.

“I recall there not being enough funds in the government affairs budget,” Parker said. “We had to work to secure additional funding, and we got information we would be covering from the CEO’s budget.”

Former Democratic Party of Illinois campaign worker Alaina Hampton was also expected to take the witness stand Monday, but will likely be pushed to Tuesday.

* Capitol News Illinois

Also on Monday, the jury heard more wiretapped recordings from the tense hours and days after Madigan fired his longtime chief of staff Tim Mapes after his own sexual harassment allegations were made public in early June 2018.

McClain stepped away from a wake to take a call from Madigan the afternoon of Mapes’ allegations and subsequent firing, telling the speaker that the “only tears” he’d shed that day were over the whole situation. McClain then pivoted to asking permission to contact a crisis management public relations firm on Madigan’s behalf.

A few days later, Madigan updated McClain on the progress he’d made speaking to women on the Democratic State Central Committee, and told him that his new chief of staff, who was a woman, had called every female member of the House Democratic Caucus to ask “what we can do better or different.”

In late June, McClain asked Madigan what he thought of Democratic strategist Anita Dunn, who the speaker’s inner circle was vetting to handle PR in the wake of the harassment allegations that had hit Madigan World in recent months.

“Oh I think she’s fine,” Madigan said. “I think she’s fine, yeah.”

* More…

    * WGN | Prosecutors focus on sexual harassment, no-show jobs in ongoing Madigan corruption trial: FBI agents took the stand to testify about the 2019 raid of former Madigan staffer Kevin Quinn’s home in 2019. Quinn was fired over sexual harassment allegations from fellow Madigan staffer Alaina Hampton. “We were looking for proof of residence, financial records, and documents,” said Supervising Special Agent Prince Prempeh about the search of Quinn’s Beverly home. According to prosecutors, the search warrant also uncovered a plot to send money to Quinn. Madigan’s fixer, Michael McClain, allegedly orchestrated a series of little-to-no-work jobs to funnel money to the former associate.

    * Sun-Times | Judge in Madigan corruption trial urges jurors to vote, calling the U.S. a ‘bright moment in human history’: Eighteen jurors headed home from Chicago’s latest public corruption trial Monday for what would likely be their final opportunity to cast a ballot in Tuesday’s election — but before they left, they got a reminder that “freedom is not a spectator sport.” “If anyone knows that, that’s you guys,” U.S. District Judge John Blakey told them.

  11 Comments      


Roundup: Election security updates

Tuesday, Nov 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here for background if you need it. WCIA

Less than 24 hours away from Election Day, Champaign County is ramping up security to ensure everything runs smoothly.

For the first time, Champaign County Clerk Aarons Ammons has brought in third party security to patrol the polls. […]

“We’ve seen more aggression and violence in the polling locations, so we wanted to take some preventative measures to help address this,” Ammons said.

Since Saturday, three unarmed, plain clothes security personnel have been monitoring the county’s early voting locations.

FYI: News Gazette: System failures that led to inoperable voting machines at polling places throughout Champaign County Tuesday morning have been resolved, Clerk Aaron Ammons said shortly after 8 a.m.

* CBS Chicago

A man has been charged with punching an election judge at a polling place in Orland Park, after refusing to wait in line for early voting on Sunday morning.

The 74-year-old longtime election judge said in his nearly 40 years volunteering at the polls, there have been a few arguments—but nothing like the violence he faced Sunday. […]

The longtime election judge asked CBS News Chicago to conceal his identity, but said over the phone that it all started Sunday when Schmidt skipped a line of about 100 people waiting to vote at the early voting location at the Orland Park Township Office, at 14807 Ravinia Ave. […]

“I got in his way to stop him,” the election judge said. “We exchanged some words, and then he hit me in the left side of my face.”

Schmidt also struck an 81-year-old woman and knocked her off balance, police and Cook County prosecutors said.

The election judge said another poll worker and a voter stepped in and wrestled Schmidt down until police came. Police said Schmidt resisted officers as well.

“Nothing political. He didn’t sound like he was from either party,” the election judge said. “He just sounded like he wanted to have his way, and that we were stopping him from having his way.”

* ABC Chicago

Full statement from the Cook County Clerk’s Office:

Incidents of this nature are extremely rare in suburban Cook County, and this was an isolated event. No similar issues have been reported at any of our other 53 Early Voting locations.

Our election judges are trained to call 911 in the event of any security emergency, and we thank the Orland Park Police Department for their prompt response.

The safety of our poll workers is a top priority for the Cook County Clerk’s Office, and we go to great lengths to provide a safe and secure environment for election workers as well as voters at all of our polling locations.

* Cook County Sheriff

Sheriff’s Police will be at polling sites across suburban Cook County on Tuesday to ensure the safety of poll workers and of residents exercising their right to vote, Sheriff Thomas J. Dart announced today.

Sheriff’s Police has been working closely with the Cook County Clerk’s Office, which is the election authority for suburban Cook County, on polling place security during this election cycle and will continue to do so on Election Day.

“We want the citizens of Cook County to feel safe and secure while exercising their right to vote,” Sheriff Dart said.

Sheriff’s Police will also investigate reports of prohibited conduct at polling locations, such as electioneering, preventing people from voting and failing to comply with an election judge’s order.

* 25News Now

Peoria County Election Commission’s Executive Director, Elizabeth Gannon, said it is partnering with the emergency management team and the sheriff to ensure the safety of election judges and voters for the big day on Tuesday.

There won’t be security guards or police officers at the polling locations, but more deputies will be nearby.

Gannon also says they started a new training program for election judges this year.

“For the first time, we’ve added de-escalation training to our online training for our election judges,” said Gannon. “They have the information, hopefully, they don’t have to put it into place, but we do go over these things in training now.”

Tazewell County will also have two additional deputies nearby.

* Peoria Journal Star

Election officials in Peoria, Tazewell and Woodford counties told the Journal Star about how they are working to practice transparency and ensure election integrity ahead of the Nov. 5 Presidential election between Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Kamala Harris.

Elizabeth Gannon, Executive Director of the Peoria County Election Commission, said one significant aspect of election security is sealing and tracking voting equipment.

Before voting begins, election commissions must run a public test to ensure voting equipment and tabulating software are running accurately. The test is open to the public and simulates election day by creating a test deck that gives every contest and candidate a vote. If the test comes back with mistakes, the election commission knows it was simply human error. […]

County clerks and local election authorities have bolstered efforts to be transparent and open to questions and conversations with the public. Tazewell County clerk John Ackerman says this looks like inviting the public to take tours of the building to see how election equipment operates or to have one-on-one discussions with election officials. […]

Peoria County’s Gannon urges voters to make the election authority their top source for information rather than social media or word of mouth.

* Meanwhile, KWQC

The Rock Island County Clerk’s Office asked Republican candidate Joe McGraw to keep at least 100 feet from where voters were lining up. […]

The county clerk’s office confirmed it asked McGraw to stay 100 feet from the entrance of the county courthouse.

McGraw’s campaign said he was always 100 feet away from the polling location.

A viewer had called KWQC-TV6 to say McGraw was approaching voters in line Monday evening. […]

KWQC has a piece of campaign material voters said he was passing out.

* More…

    * DNYUZ | On Telegram, a Violent Preview of What May Unfold on Election Day and After: Groups backing former President Donald J. Trump recently sent messages to organize poll watchers to be ready to dispute votes in Democratic areas. Some posted images of armed men standing up for their rights to recruit for their cause. Others spread conspiracy theories that anything less than a Trump victory on Tuesday would be a miscarriage of justice worthy of revolt.

    * WSJ | The Proud Boys Have Regrouped and Are Signaling Election Plans: While it isn’t clear what the far-right group is planning or how coordinated its plans are, many chapters are amplifying election-cheating claims made by Trump or his allies and discussing potential responses, according to a review by The Wall Street Journal of dozens of accounts on Telegram, the messaging app, and Trump’s Truth Social platform. Chapters have gathered across state lines, talked about watching polls and have been boasting about attending Trump rallies to protect the former president.

    * The Guardian | Republican mega-donors asked their employees who they will vote for in survey: The Republican mega-donors Dick and Liz Uihlein, who are the third largest donors in this year’s US presidential election, have sought information about who employees at their company Uline will be voting for in Tuesday’s ballot. A screenshot seen by the Guardian shows how employees at the private Wisconsin paper and office products distributor were asked to take part in what was called an anonymous survey to track who the employees were voting for on 5 November.

    * Reuters | US states worried about election unrest take security precautions: A defense official said on Monday that Alabama, Arizona, Delaware, Iowa, Illinois, North Carolina, New Mexico, Oregon, Wisconsin and Washington state have current National Guard missions while Washington DC, Colorado, Florida, Hawaii, Nevada, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas and West Virginia have troops on standby.

    * Press Release | U.S. Attorney’s Office in Chicago Announces Telephone Hotline To Report Voting Rights Complaints on Election Day: Assistant U.S. Attorneys and other staff will monitor the hotline. The hotline numbers, staffed on Election Day only, are (312) 469-6157 and (312) 469-6158. The Office’s Election Day Program will be supervised by Assistant U.S. Attorney Megan DeMarco.

  8 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Nov 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois Election 2024: Live results Axios

    -Polls are open 6am–7pm Tuesday in Illinois.
    - Results will begin populating in the first half-hour after polls close and be updated live as counted votes roll in.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Illinois to receive $40 million in opioid settlement with Kroger: Under the agreement, Illinois will receive more than $40 million of the $1.37 billion that the grocery chain agreed to pay in the deal, Raoul’s office said. The majority of Illinois’ money will go to the Illinois Remediation Fund to be used for drug abatement programs throughout the state.

* Tribune | Long lines and a blustery Election Day greeting Chicago-area voters — weather befitting the end of a turbulent campaign season: “Very windy yet mild and only sporadically showery weather is due Election Day,” iconic Chicago meteorologist Tom Skilling predicted. “It’s kind of fitting, isn‘t it, that strong winds are to buffet the area? Kind of fitting a tumultuous election would fall on a day with strong winds.”

* Press Release | Government Alliance for Safe Communities Announces $100 Million in Grant Opportunities for Violence Prevention and Community Violence Intervention Initiatives: The 2025 GASC funding initiative includes two grant opportunities for programmatic CVI funding totaling approximately $57 million, with additional funding opportunities to follow. These grant opportunities are available through the Reimagine Violence Prevention Services Program, sponsored by the Illinois Department of Human Services, and the Lead Organization for Expanding Capacity for Community Violence Interventions - Street Outreach Services sponsored by the City of Chicago.

*** Statewide ***

* WCIA | Attorney General reminds IL voters of their rights ahead of Election Day: The Illinois Attorney General has got extra staff working on Election Day to keep the election as free from interference as possible. More than 200 investigators and assistant attorney generals will be working on the day to monitor the election and polling places for illegal activities and to ensure all polling places remain accessible.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | If You Block A Bike Lane Downtown, You’ll Now Get An Automatic Ticket Or Warning: During the first 30 days of the program, the city will only be issuing warnings via mail to registered car owners found parking in bike and bus lanes. Starting Dec. 5, drivers found in violation will receive a mailed notice for the first offense and then will be fined for subsequent violations, according to a press release.

* Tribune | The issues facing school board candidates at a contentious time for CPS: Off-year elections in Chicago, such as mayoral and aldermanic races, typically favor traditional Democratic and progressive activists, according to Wayne Steger, a political science professor at DePaul University. This year’s school board race coinciding with the presidential election means voter turnout will be higher, but unpredictable — as former President Donald Trump’s supporters may bring differing opinions to the polls, Steger said.

* Block Club | City’s Largest Migrant Shelter Closing Next Week: The largest city-run migrant shelter is slated to close next week as Chicago continues to scale down its new arrivals mission by the end of the year. Inn of Chicago — steps away from the Magnificent Mile at 162 E. Ohio St. — has housed more than 1,500 migrants since opening as a shelter more than two years ago, when some of the first buses of asylum seekers began arriving in Chicago. The shelter will close Nov. 15, ending two-plus years of contention between the shelter and the area’s aldermen, city officials confirmed to Block Club on Monday.

* Cook County Record | ‘Palpable injustice:’ Appeals panel says Cook Co. judge wrongly allowed ‘one-sided’ trial vs restaurant owner: A state appeals panel says a Cook County judge wrongly allowed Loyola University to move forward with a “one-sided” trial, in which the court ultimately ordered a Chicago restaurant owner to pay more than $500,000 in allegedly past due rent and court costs, even though the restaurant owner’s lawyer was hospitalized, amid a fight over whether Loyola legally evicted his new fine dining restaurant from a Loyola-owned building after preventing the restaurant from reopening during the Covid pandemic. The decision from a three-justice panel of the Illinois First District Appellate Court reversed the decision of Cook County Judge Robert F. Harris.

* Sun-Times | Young Chicago police officer who ‘courageously protected this city’ shot to death in Chatham, 2 in custody: The slain 6th District officer would have marked three years on the job in December. The attack unfolded after officers stopped a vehicle with three occupants about 8 p.m. in the 8000 block of South Ingleside, Snelling said. As officers approached the vehicle one of the occupants opened fire on Martinez, Snelling said, adding that “it sounded like rapid fire.” The officer was struck multiple times. One of the occupants of the vehicle was also struck and killed by the gunfire.

* Sun-Times | Hotel tax could increase to boost tourism budget: Chicago’s hotel tax — already the highest among convention cities — may soon rise to 18.9% at downtown hotels to generate more than $50 million in annual revenue to help market the city. One year after the Illinois General Assembly authorized the concept, Choose Chicago is laying the groundwork to create a so-called Tourism Improvement District that would more than double the marketing agency’s annual budget by increasing the tax from the current 17.4%.

* ABC Chicago | PepsiCo facing union lawsuit after abrupt closure of Chicago plant: Teamsters Local 727 filed the suit in federal court, claiming the company unlawfully shut down the facility by violating the WARN act, or the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act. Teamsters Local 727 filed the suit in federal court, claiming the company unlawfully shut down the facility by violating the WARN act, or the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act. […] Some workers said they have been with the company for more than 45 years. The workers said they came to work as normal, and were told the plant was closing and to go home.

* Sun-Times | New manager Will Venable lays out plan on how he will manage White Sox: He also will try to impress upon suffering Sox fans that he doesn’t think the organizational picture is hopelessly bleak and that he accepted this job because he’s unbowed — and invigorated — by the sheer size and scope of the task at hand. ‘‘I understand the challenges and the adversity clearly,’’ he said, ‘‘and am looking forward to all of it.’’

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | CTA shrugging off pandemic service lows; how about Metra and Pace?: As of Monday, Metra is running at nearly 100% of pre-pandemic trips overall, and in 2025 those numbers could increase a bit, officials said. Breaking it down, the commuter railroad is running 96% of the trains it provided before COVID-19 on weekdays, or 665 currently compared to 692, spokesman Michael Gillis said. On weekends, Metra is surpassing its 2019 levels.

* Tribune | Melrose Park police remove Trump campaign flag from building: Posting a campaign sign on public property, such as a police department, is illegal under Illinois law. Melrose Park Police Department representative Andrew Mack said the department did not know who had put the flag there and said it was taken down around 9:30 a.m., after State Rep. Norma Hernandez’s office alerted the department. Neither Hernandez’s office nor the Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office, which enforces campaign signage laws, immediately returned requests for comment Monday evening.

* Patch | Video Gaming In Downers Grove? Voters To Weigh In With Referendum: When Downers Grove voters head to the polls on Election Day, they’ll weigh in on some important issues, including whether to allow video gaming within the village. In October 2023, village officials opted to present the referendum during the 2024 General Election. The move came in the wake of a unanimous vote to amend an ordinance that would have permitted video gaming as of Jan. 1, 2024.

* Patch | Cappel, Deane-Schlottman Vie For 49th District Seat: IL Election 2024: The voters in the State Senate 49th District will decide in Tuesday’s election whether to keep incumbent Shorewood Democrat Meg Loughran Cappel in office or replace her with Katie Deane-Schlottman, the Republican challenger from Joliet. According to the incumbent’s website, “A mother of three and caregiver to her elderly father, Meg knows what it’s like living paycheck to paycheck. Meg knows firsthand how important pensions are to working families, as she and her husband, Jason—who is also a public school teacher—have paid into Illinois’ pension system their whole professional careers.”

* Patch | Larry Walsh Jr., Jim Lanham Eye 86th District Seat: IL 2024 Election: State Representative Lawrence “Larry” Walsh, Jr., a prominent Democrat in Will County politics, faces competition in Tuesday’s general election from Republican challenger Jim Lanham in the race to represent the people of the 86th District. The 86th District includes parts of Joliet, and other towns such as Elwood, Channahon and Shorewood. Larry Walsh Jr. is seeking re-election.

*** Downstate ***

…Adding… News Gazette: System failures that led to inoperable voting machines at polling places throughout Champaign County Tuesday morning have been resolved, Clerk Aaron Ammons said shortly after 8 a.m.

* WCIA | Champaign County Polling Places Down: Many voters in Champaign County are not able to vote this morning after an issue that has brought most polling locations down. The Champaign County Clerk Aaron Ammons confirmed to WCIA this morning that there are network issues that are preventing people from voting. He told us there is no timeline to be resolved. He states it is all polling locations. Ammons also told us he got a call from Sangamon County that there are issues in that area as well.

…Adding…

* WCIA | Schools, government offices across Illinois closed for Election Day: The public school systems in Decatur, Springfield, Urbana, Champaign, Effingham and Danville are all listed as closed, according to the district websites. Private schools have the choice in Illinois to stay open or close.

* Herald-Whig | Amazon distribution center coming to Quincy: Quincy Mayor Mike Troup and Great River Economic Development Foundation President Kyle Moore announced plans Monday morning for the 59,000-square-foot warehouse and distribution center on the north side of Wismann Lane between 42nd and 43rd Streets. Troup expects construction to begin “in coming weeks” at the site and take nine months to a year to complete.

* SJ-R | Cafe Moxo won’t return to East Adams Street following summer fire: A City of Springfield Building and Zoning Department permit for demolition has been issued to bring down the remnants of 413 E. Adams St. after a fire on June 19. Nickell said the demolition could begin as early as Nov. 11, but may be delayed due to the current stabilizers being installed on the adjacent building which once housed Cafe Moxo.

* Daily Journal | Farm community rallies around injured friend, shares message of road safety: “We’ve been through a lot,” said his wife, Lisa, who remains by his side and uses Facebook to keep friends and family posted each step of the way. “We have a huge community helping us,” she said of friends, family and neighbors doing hog chores, moving hay, selling pork and raising money to help with hospital expenses. […] VanWassenhove, who also works with the Illinois Department of Ag, hopes to eventually be fitted for a prosthetic leg but will also have a very long road to recovery. He has started physical therapy to strengthen his upper body. When ready, he will move to the Shirley Ryan AbilityLab in Chicago, she said.

*** National ***

* Seattle Times | Boeing Machinists approve new contract, ending strike: The Boeing strike is over after 53 days. Machinists union members voted Monday to approve the company’s most recent contract offer, enabling Boeing to restart work at assembly plants in Everett and Renton and at parts plants throughout the region.

* WaPo | Fencing, boarded-up windows and prayers: D.C. readies for Election Day: For weeks, D.C. officials have sought to reassure residents anxious about the possibility of unrest. With polls showing the race deadlocked, officials said they are bracing for the possibility of days of uncertainty as states tally ballots but know of no credible threats.

* WGEM | Missouri Secretary of State sues DOJ for monitoring voting rights compliance: Missouri Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft announced his office, along with that of Attorney General Andrew Bailey, filed a lawsuit intending to block the U.S. Department of Justice from monitoring a polling place in the St. Louis area for compliance with federal voting rights laws. The Department of Justice is the federal government’s law enforcement arm, and performs these compliance checks every election cycle. Until 2022, no Missouri polling place was on the list of those to be monitored by the DOJ.

* WGN | The median age of US homebuyers has risen to an all-time high, Realtor report says: The median age of a first-time homebuyer in the United States has risen from 35 to 38 over the last year, according to the highlights of an annual report from the National Association of Realtors. When it comes the average U.S. homebuyer overall (i.e., people who purchased first homes, second homes, or had owned homes in the past), the median age rose even more drastically, from 49 in the 2023 report to 56 in 2024, the data suggests. This is the highest median age recorded since 1981, when the National Association of Realtors began keeping track.

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Early morning precinct reports

Tuesday, Nov 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* What are you seeing out there today? How’s the weather? How’s the turnout? How’s the mood? Remember to give us an idea of where you are. Thanks.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Tuesday, Nov 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Tuesday, Nov 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Tuesday, Nov 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Nov 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Nov 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Lee Enterprises’ Brenden Moore with the latest early voting numbers


* FYI


* RTA Board Chair Kirk Dillard in the Sun-Times

I noted with interest your Oct. 24 editorial, “Merging Chicago area transit agencies could be just the ticket for riders.” As a lifelong transit rider, advocate and chair of the Regional Transportation Authority, I am focused on outcomes and on what will ensure our transit system works better for riders today and in the future.

The RTA is ready to implement critical reforms that will make meaningful improvements to the system and help riders by providing greater safety, frequency and reliability. Yet, we do not believe full consolidation of the transit operators into a newly created agency is the best way to deliver on those common goals.

The survey referenced in your editorial mentioned that consolidation would “save” $250 million. Readers should understand that would require the elimination of more than 1,000 employees at a time when riders are demanding more and better service, and historically, Chicago’s transit system has the lowest operating cost per mile of any peer system.

The RTA is advocating for $1.5 billion in new operations funding to come with reforms that would establish a stronger RTA that directly interacts with riders to address their day-to-day issues. Sadly, the state of Illinois ranks last among state support for mass transit operations.

*** Statehouse News ***

* BND | Where do IL House 114th District candidates Greenwood and Schmidt stand on the issues?: The race for Illinois State House of Representatives 114th District in the metro-east features the incumbent, Rep. Kevin Schmidt, R-Millstadt, against the previous incumbent, LaToya Greenwood, D-East St. Louis. Greenwood and Schmidt each completed a candidate questionnaire from the Belleville News-Democrat.

* RiverBender | Senator Erica Harriss Honored as ‘Friend of Agriculture’ by Illinois Farm Bureau: “Since taking office, Senator Harriss has shown strong support for our local farming community and continues to maintain an open line of communication with our office and beyond,” said Paige Langenhorst, President of the Madison County Farm Bureau. “We appreciate her support and look forward to working together on policies and legislative ideas for the future.”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Here’s why that early voting line was so long: “We are seeing some long lines,” said Max Bever, director of public information for the Chicago Board of Elections. “A good number of locations are bottlenecked today and some places over the weekend had upwards of three-hour long waits.” One reason for the long lines: Only one early voting site is open in each of the city’s 50 wards. On Election Day, thousands of precincts will be open. Early voters also tend to go to the nearest locations, or those in locations they are most familiar with. The downtown supersite also has been busy, but with 72 voting machines, the line moves much faster.

* WTTW | Push to Use Cameras to Bust Chicago Drivers Who Park in Bus, Bicycle Lanes Finally Starts: Eight city vehicles will be equipped with cameras to enforce parking violations. Next year, six CTA buses on priority routes will be equipped with cameras to snap pictures of scofflaws. The program will also be used to ticket cars parked at an unpaid meter, officials said. After the incriminating photo is reviewed by city staff — much like the speed violations captured by cameras mounted near schools and parks — the registered owner of the vehicle will get a ticket in the mail. Violators will get a warning until Dec. 4, and the first ticket for each driver will also serve as a warning, officials said.

* Tribune | Decades-long uptick in attacks on transit workers, including on the CTA, carries implications for employees and riders: In 2023, there were 90 major assaults on CTA workers: 52 on bus employees and 38 on rail workers, federal data shows. Across both bus and rail, it was the highest number of major attacks on employees since at least 2008, the data shows. Complete data isn’t yet available for 2024, but through June there had been 13 attacks on rail workers and 26 on bus workers.

* ABC Chicago | CTA increasing train trips by 20 percent for fall schedule: This will add more than 1,200 weekly rail trips, a 20-percent increase from the spring schedule. The CTA hopes to return service to pre-pandemic levels by the end of this year.

* Sun-Times | CTA Yellow Line train operator in crash faces firing under alcohol use rules — but agency can’t take action yet: The employee faces automatic termination under employment rules, but the CTA hasn’t had the opportunity to begin disciplinary action because the operator remains off the job due to injuries he suffered in the November 2023 crash.

* Block Club | Rogers Park Squirrels Dying In Droves — Likely Due To Rat Poison: ‘It’s Terrifying’: Hadden’s office has been “investigating” in recent weeks and is reaching out to local building management companies, she said. “Right now, it seems it just might be an individual doing this,” Hadden said. “If you are that individual, please stop.” When reached by Block Club on Thursday, Hadden said there was no update. Police did not return a request for comment.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Battle for control of U.S. House includes suburban matchups: A music school owner, a software consultant and a real estate agent are among the Republicans hoping to unseat Democratic congressional representatives serving the North, West and Northwest suburbs. Even though state lawmakers deliberately drew the borders for the suburban congressional districts to favor Democratic candidates, none of the incumbents is getting a free pass to reelection. Every one of them has a challenger.

* Daily Herald | Buffalo Grove Fire Department performed largest smoke detector installation blitz in Illinois: The Buffalo Grove Fire Department (BGFD) installed 539 smoke detectors in senior housing units from Oct. 22-24, marking the largest effort of any fire department in the state participating in the “blitz.” Approximately 50% of the units had no fire protection (no detectors, bad batteries or old batteries).

* Tribune | Politics feel like a circus? Go see ‘The Great Farce,’ an art exhibit now at Northwestern: Some of the obvious faces in “The Great Farce” — marching, firing rifles, waltzing, greeting Native Americans in pre-colonial wilderness — include Donald Trump and Julius Caesar. I spotted Napoleon in there. And Marie Antoinette, George Washington, Idi Amin. They have the ghostly, gliding marionette aura we associate with motion-captured digital bodies. And also, the crazed, undead faces of children’s drawings. All of it is shown against a backdrop so kinetic, stuffed and saturated with color, it’s as if we are seeing it from behind a kaleidoscopic downpour of ticker tape in Times Square.

* Lake County News-Sun | Lake County Black Lives Matter co-founder going to jail on contempt charge: ‘They said I was trying to incite a riot’: Black Lives Matter in Lake County had to scrap plans this year for a traditional Thanksgiving turkey and ham giveaway, along with taking underserved children on a school-break field trip, because its co-founder Clyde McLemore is headed to jail to serve a negotiated 40-day sentence for contempt of court, starting Wednesday. The misdemeanor charge stemmed from his taking cell phone photos during a Lake County court hearing in August and posting them on social media. McLemore, 65, also posted a video admitting to the breach in protocol. Although he had a press pass, he was not properly credentialed through court services, authorities said.

* Lake and McHenry County Scanner | County board advances plans for path project anticipated to be most popular path in Lake County: The Lake County Board is looking to spend $30 million to build what they hope will become one of the county’s most popular paths extending from Libertyville to Naval Station Great Lakes. The Lake County Board approved a resolution at its Oct. 8 meeting moving segments 2 and 3 of the proposed Patriot Path into Phase II Engineering.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Iroquois Co. burn ban lifted after three weeks: Ashkum Fire Chief Jeff Glenn determined the decision as the President of the Eastern Illinois Mutual Aid Fire Association, and announced it to the Iroquois County Emergency Management Agency. Glenn put the ban on place on Oct. 11. “Recent rainfall has provided enough moisture to safely remove the burning restriction,” Iroquois County EMA Coordinator Scott Anderson said.

* SJ-R | Ten-story Myers Building in downtown Springfield to go on auction block: The nearly century-old Myers Building in downtown Springfield is going up for auction, one of its heirs and minority owners confirmed to The State Journal-Register. The ten-story building at the southwest corner of Fifth and Washington streets was the longtime location of Myers Brothers Department Store, which later became Bergner’s before closing in 1989. The building had been for sale, said Michael Myers, 79, a Springfield attorney, and its last major tenant was the Illinois Treasurer’s Office, which moved to the former Marine Bank.

* WSIL | Millstone Water District informs customers of arsenic levels above drinking water standards: We routinely monitor for the presence of drinking water contaminants. Testing results we received on Monday, October 7h, 2024 show that our system exceeds the standard, or maximum contaminant level (MCL), for arsenic. The standard for arsenic is 0.010 milligrams per liter (mg/L). The average level of arsenic over the last year was 0.011 (mg/L).

*** National ***

* 60 Minutes | Doctors say strict abortion laws in Texas put pregnant women and their physicians at serious risk: In 2023, Dani Mathisen joined 19 women with similar stories in a lawsuit against the Texas government for denial of care. The lawsuit did not seek to overturn the bans. rather, to clarify which exceptions were allowed under the law. The Texas Supreme Court ultimately rejected their case. But after the women filed their lawsuit, Texas legislators quietly passed a new law to include two exceptions to the ban – one for ectopic pregnancies – when a pregnancy occurs outside the uterus. the other, when a woman’s water breaks prematurely.

* Migration Policy Institute | Explainer: Noncitizen Voting in U.S. Elections: Claims that migrants are being allowed into the United States so they can vote rest on the unfounded assumption that immigrants can quickly become voters. But to become U.S. citizens and thus be eligible to vote, immigrants must first receive legal permanent residence (aka getting a green card) and typically spend five years in that status (three if married to a U.S. citizen) before becoming eligible to naturalize. In the case of migrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border, they face a complicated path of a decade or longer to U.S. citizenship and may not ever have any pathway at all.

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After calls for her resignation, Harmon says Feigenholtz ‘will need to do additional work in order to rebuild trust with her colleagues and constituents’

Monday, Nov 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. From Senate President Don Harmon…

Islamophobia must be rejected along with all forms of discriminatory and hateful speech. The Senate Democratic Caucus encourages a culture that fosters diversity and inclusion. The posts shared by Senator Feigenholtz stand in contrast to our values. While her apology is a first step, she will need to do additional work in order to rebuild trust with her colleagues and constituents.

In a climate full of heated rhetoric, it is important to pause and think about what you are saying and sharing — and consider whether it is helpful or hurtful, uniting or dividing, and whether it is a true reflection of who you are or want to be.

Discuss.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list

Monday, Nov 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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GOP pollster has Sorensen ahead by 6; Fioretti closing ad focuses on Dem opposition to Burke; Suburban man charged after punching election judge

Monday, Nov 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Republican pollster shows Democrat leads in CD17

M3 Strategies conducts unique and very powerful exit polling, combined with traditional polling to be able to make strong predictions in the days and weeks leading up to Election Day. In this survey, M3 Strategies surveyed 753 voters in Illinois’ 17th Congressional District from November 1 -3rd. The survey has a margin of error of 3.57%.

Respondents were randomly selected from a pool of individuals who already voted or who are likely to vote. All responses were generated via SMS to web survey.

KEY FINDINGS

IL 17th Congressional Race:

    • Eric Sorensen will win reelection by 5.7% with 52.3% of the vote compared to Judge Joe McGraw’s 46.6%,

RESULTS
Who did you / do you plan to vote for in the 2024 Presidential Election?
Prez

    Donald J. Trump (Republican) 47.7%
    Kamala Harris (Democratic) 49.8%
    Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (Independent) 0.2%
    Other / Unsure 2.3%

Who did you / will you vote for in the election for U.S. Congress?
Percent

Congress

    Eric Sorensen (Democratic) 52.3%
    Joseph G. McGraw 46.6%(Republican)
    Refused 1.0%

More here.

* Republican state’s attorney candidates uses Democrats against Democratic opponent in broadcast TV ad

Transcript

What’s worse, Eileen O’Neill Burke railroading an innocent 11 year old Black child after a coerced confession, or calling the innocent child a ‘whole new breed of criminal’? Even fellow Democrats are disgusted. One top Democrat said this racist statement is disqualifing. Tony Preckwinkle called it systemic racism. 24 elected Democrats wrote, ‘The choice is clear, we can’t have a state’s attorney who thinks about our children this way. Punch 55 to elect Bob Fioretti Cook County State’s Attorney.

* I hope we don’t see too much of this tomorrow, but hope is not a plan

A 24-year-old Orland Park man faces charges after he punched an election judge Sunday at an early voting site, police said Monday. […]

An election judge posted at the entrance told Schmidt to go to the back of the line and wait his turn, which Schmidt refused, police said. At that point, another election judge called to assist also instructed Schmidt to go to the back of the line, police said.

Schmidt attempted to push past that election judge and was prevented from entering by
that judge and several other employees. Schmidt began to yell profanities and
punched the election judge in the face, police said.

At that point several other people jumped in and restrained Schmidt until officers arrived, police said.

Schmidt is charged with two counts of aggravated battery to a person over 60 years of age as well as misdemeanor charges of disorderly conduct and resisting arrest, according to police.

Sun-Times

Schmidt refused after two election judges told him to go to the back of the line and when one of the judges prevented him from entering, Schmidt allegedly “pushed past” that judge and several other workers and began to yell profanities, police said.

After Schmidt allegedly punched an election judge in the face, knocking their glasses off, several patrons “jumped in” and held Schmidt until officers got there, police said.

While being placed under arrest, Schmidt, of Orland Park, also resisted Orland Park officers. He was held overnight and taken to the Bridgeview Courthouse for a detention hearing.

* More Center Square huffing

Illinois Republicans are questioning the integrity of mail-in ballot envelopes from the Chicago Board of Elections.

The Illinois GOP joined Cook County State’s Attorney candidate Bob Fioretti, Cook County Clerk candidate Michelle Pennington, Fourth District U.S. congressional candidate Lupe Castillo and registered voter Jaime Martello in a complaint filed Friday in Cook County Circuit Court.

Fioretti said mail-in voters in Chicago are asked to declare their political party on envelopes used to mail the ballots, in violation of the Election Code. According the the complaint, “No part of the Code provides for the inclusion of any space for party designation of the political party of the voter.” […]

Chicago Board of Elections Director of Public Information Max Bever offered a statement in response.

“The party-affiliation line on the Vote By Mail ballot return envelope is clearly identified as ‘For Primary Election Only.’ These ballot return envelopes are routinely used for each election in Chicago. As November 5th is not a Primary Election, voters are not expected to fill out this line and it is not required in order to process the ballot. All qualified Vote By Mail ballots will be counted for the November 5th Presidential Election. No Vote By Mail ballot will be rejected because this line is or is not filled out,” the statement read.

* 17th Congressional District…

    * Rockford Register Star | Illinois 17th: Heated race for congress pits former weatherman against former judge: This is is a key race in the 435-seat House where Republicans hold a slim eight member majority with three seats vacant. It is listed as one of 70 competitive Congressional House races by the Cook Political Report. but likely to be won by the Democrat. Although Sorensen retains a sizable cash advantage, Republicans have poured money into McGraw’s campaign in an effort to flip a seat red.

    * WBEZ | Illinois’ 17th Congressional seat gets competitive in matchup between incumbent Eric Sorensen and Joe McGraw: Sorensen is Illinois’ first openly gay U.S. representative. He spent most of his career as a TV meteorologist in Rockford and the Quad Cities. “I don’t have a background in politics, which means I can be a different kind of person in Washington,” he said. Sorensen chatted with WBEZ after a campaign event in Green Valley, just south of Pekin, where he had received the endorsement of ACTIVATOR — the Illinois Farm Bureau’s political arm. “He was one of only four Democrats to vote for the farm bill out of the House Ag committee, and for that we’re grateful,” said Mike Deppert, president of the Tazewell County Farm Bureau. “We need more bipartisan leadership and Congressman Sorensen is… exhibiting that.”

    * Advocate | Gay U.S. Rep. Eric Sorensen bridges divide in rural Illinois: Since taking office, Sorensen has been a vocal advocate for LGBTQ+ rights, standing up to a wave of anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric that has made its way from the states to the halls of Congress. “We have taken some incredibly terrible votes on LGBTQ rights that are so hurtful,” Sorensen reflected. “Sometimes I wonder to myself, where are we? Where are the people that should be standing up and shouting that this isn’t OK?”

    * Rockford Register Star | Joe McGraw campaigns on border crisis, ‘transgender agenda’ in battleground Illinois race: McGraw also accuses Sorensen of “embracing the transgender agenda,” in which puberty blockers are made available to underage children “without parental consent or knowledge” and children born male can play sports on a female team. He also says that Sorensen sponsored “drag shows for kids.” Sorensen denies these accusations and major news outlet fact checkers have reported that parental consent is required across the U.S. for transitioning surgical procedures and non-surgical gender-affirming medical treatments like puberty blockers and hormone therapies.

    * Rockford Register Star | In a heated race for Congress in Illinois, Democrat Eric Sorensen pledges to keep promises: Ahead of his last election, Sorensen said it was all about “protecting our democracy and securing reproductive rights.” Although he says there are other critical issues including the passage of a new farm bill to protect agriculture at stake in this election, those remain priorities as he faces Republican Joe McGraw, a former Rockford area circuit court judge.

* Cook County State’s Attorney race…

* Elected Chicago school board…

    * NBC Chicago | Endorsement guide for the 2024 Chicago Public Schools Board elections: The 2024 elections are just days away, and while voters will be deciding on the next President of the United States and members of Congress, voters in the city of Chicago will also be electing Chicago Public Schools Board members for the first time. The elections follow a tumultuous few months for the district, which included the full resignation of the previous Board, the appointment of seven new members by Mayor Brandon Johnson and the recent resignation of appointed president Rev. Mitchell Johnson over antisemitic and misogynistic remarks.

    * WBEZ | Mayor Johnson vs. Donald Trump? In CPS School Board races, big money defines messaging, voters’ choices: Jennie Jiang is still deciding who’ll get her vote in Chicago’s 3rd District school board race on the Near Northwest Side. But as she looks for information ahead of Tuesday’s election, she’s found herself “annoyed at the messaging and the politics.” One ad she received claimed a candidate would raise her property taxes 40%. Another claimed the opposing candidate was supported by former President Donald Trump and would gut the public schools.

    * WBEZ | CPS School Board: The race in the North Side’s 4th District: Like many districts in Chicago’s first-ever school board elections, progressive and conservative groups have coalesced behind two opposing candidates in the North Side’s 4th District. But that doesn’t tell the whole story in this district, where there are six candidates with varying views on key education issues. The lakefront district is one of the city’s wealthiest, with 33 schools in Lincoln Park, Lake View, North Center and most of Uptown. All six candidates are Chicago Public Schools parents and all have worked in education in some form.

    * Sun-Times | Who are the people who will vote in Chicago’s school board elections?: A WBEZ analysis finds that a majority of voters could be Chicagoans who don’t have kids currently enrolled in Chicago Public Schools. Roughly 3 in every 4 Chicago households don’t have kids, according to data from the 2022 American Community Survey from the U.S. Census Bureau. And nearly 1 in every 6 Chicago students — of those enrolled in kindergarten through 12th grade — attend private school.

    * Beatriz Diaz-Pollack and Zindy Marquez | Chicago school board election is about the fight for public education: The truth is, this election is about much more than the dollars funneled into the race by special interests. That analysis is important, but ultimately reductive, focused on shorter-term outcomes such as how it will impact the next labor contract or the cementing of “school choice” policies. The true question is: Will we reaffirm our commitment to public education as a public good to serve all of our children? Access to quality education should not be a privilege for those who can afford it or win it through a competitive system, but a fundamental right. The school board election is an opportunity to choose candidates who will protect public education, rather than funnel public dollars into privatized models under the guise of “school choice.”

    * The Columbia Chronicle | Chicago makes history with first school board election: One of the biggest issues for many parents and voters is the selective enrollment system that CPS uses for high school. There are 11 selective enrollment high school programs designed to provide academically advanced students with a challenging pre-college experience. Applicants can apply to up to six of these programs, but seats are limited and admission is highly competitive.

    * Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago high schoolers get a crash course on the city’s first school board election: A handful of Jimenez’s students, like Odeth, are of voting age this year, he said. One of them is 18-year-old Luis Garcia, a senior at Hancock. Like Odeth, he didn’t know about Chicago’s first school board candidates until he took Jimenez’s class. Luis said he knows where he stands politically. But in Jimenez’s class, he learned that “it’s good for me to learn about the other side.”

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More on election security

Monday, Nov 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Federal Bureau of Investigation

In the United States, elections are administered at the state and local levels of government, which has resulted in a diverse landscape of election systems and technologies across the country. Throughout the election cycle, many people are involved in administering or carrying out responsibilities that support elections, including election workers, officials from other divisions of government, vendors, contractors, temporary workers, and volunteers. Understanding what constitutes insider status and how insiders can present risks to an organization are important components of developing a comprehensive insider threat mitigation program.

An insider threat can be an individual or group who uses their authorized access or special knowledge to cause harm to an organization or entity. This harm can include malicious acts that impact the security and integrity of election systems and information. Insider threats could manifest as current or former employees, temporary workers, volunteers, contractors, or any other individuals with privileged access to election systems and information. This could include individuals who work outside of the immediate election office in roles that support or interact with infrastructure that the election office relies upon.

* ABC Chicago

At a west suburban Geneva country club in September, “Captain K” took the mic.

“What I do well is I promote the gospel that the 2020 election was stolen,” said former Army Captain Seth Keshel, who goes by Captain K. […]

“If you want to fix elections, you can start right here in Kane County,” Keshel said. “We got plenty of influencers. We don’t have enough middle managers and we definitely don’t have enough infantrymen.”

Keshel declined the I-Team’s request for an interview but said in an email that, “poll watchers are needed to prevent fraudulent practices at polling locations,” and that he has never “suggested the use of violence in dealing with the problems related to our elections.” […]

Even in non-battleground counties and states, the “insider threat” is on the minds of Kane County Clerk John Cunningham and other local election officials.

“We’re worried about Election Day,” Cunningham said. “They tried the last election, they sent a lot of their group, one of the groups, sending a lot of poll watchers. Now they’re trying to become judges. So we got to watch for that.”

* Yesterday in Will County…



He was a pollwatcher for the Will County Republican Party, according to Jack Londrigan, who took the photo.

What I was able to find out about the patches:

    - The owner of the jacket is likely a member of the Fugarwe Tribe Motorcycle Club (FTMC)

    - The US Department of Justice classified the Fugarwe Tribe as an Outlaw Motorcycle Gang (not to be confused with the Outlaw motorcycle club) in 1991. Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs are organizations whose members use their motorcycle clubs as conduits for criminal enterprises.

    - Blackstone: Blackstone, IL is the location of Fugarwe‘s Illinois Chapter.

    -F.F.F.F.: Fugarwe forever, Forever Fugarwe.

    - You can see the patch that puts the F’s in a swastika/iron cross formation.

* Meanwhile, WAND

The Illinois State Board of Elections monitors social media for misinformation well before Election Day. There are multiple ways the state can counter false information to ensure voters have a safe and secure election process.

Early voting expanded for suburban Cook County and the city of Chicago last week, but that also led to an increase in misinformation. State leaders saw a post on X, formerly Twitter, noting a suburban polling place was destroying ballots and tricking voters.

“There’s no truth whatsoever to it,” said Illinois State Board of Elections spokesperson Matt Dietrich. “What had happened in this early voting site in Schaumburg was they had a problem with one of the tabulators. These things happen in every election. Those tabulators are very sensitive pieces of equipment.” […]

The Illinois State Board of Elections has a full time employee that works in the State Police Terrorism and Intelligence Center in Springfield. Dietrich told WAND News this employee monitors social media looking for key words pertaining to elections across the state.

“When they see these things, they alert us, we alert our digital media director, and we can counteract those posts with our own posts,” Dietrich said.

* KWQC

Rock Island County Clerk Karen Kinney said an early voter claimed a machine in her office altered votes and posted the machine’s serial number, which led to others making the same claim.

“We did change up the machine, the one that received the first complaint, just in case there was some validity to the complaint,” Kinney said. […]

The person who posted the claims also said Kinney replied that it “happens from time to time.“

“That the machine jumps — yes — if you use your finger and not the stylus. It happens from time to time that the machine may jump, but somebody cut off what I said,” Kinney said. “I did say that; I admit to that, but I also said, following that comment, I said, ‘you have every chance to correct it.’”

Voters have seven opportunities to check their ballots before submission, she said.

* Shaw Local

The DuPage County State’s Attorney’s Office will deploy teams of assistant state’s attorneys and Investigators to respond to reports of any suspected irregularities that may arise at DuPage County polling locations on Election Day.

Prosecutors and investigators will be available at the state’s attorney’s office and at the polls from 6 a.m. through 7 p.m. Nov. 5 to respond to suspected violations of the Illinois Election Code.

State’s attorney office staff will also maintain communications throughout the day with officials at the DuPage County Clerk’s Office. This coordinated effort will help enforce compliance with the Election Code while ensuring that every voter properly qualified is able to cast their ballot.

“As we have done in every election since I became state’s attorney, my office will again deploy teams of assistant state’s attorneys and Investigators throughout DuPage County to canvass polling places and to respond to suspected violations of the Election Code,” DuPage County State’s Attorney Robert Berlin said in a news release. “In addition to my staff, local law enforcement officers as well as sheriff’s deputies will blanket polling places throughout our county.

* More…

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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Monday, Nov 4, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Retail provides one out of every five Illinois jobs, generates the second largest amount of tax revenue for the state, and is the largest source of revenue for local governments. But retail is also so much more, with retailers serving as the trusted contributors to life’s moments, big and small.

We Are Retail and IRMA are dedicated to sharing the stories of retailers like Kasia and Britni, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

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Question of the day

Monday, Nov 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Block Club Chicago

During an unprecedented election year, 8-year-old Maura Workman-Mandell wants to make history of her own: She wants to vote.

The Portage Park resident, who will turn 9 on Nov. 16, is holding a rally for child voting rights Tuesday outside her elementary school. Maura, a third-grader at Beaubien Elementary School, was recently elected class president and has been advocating for a lower voting age quite literally since kindergarten. […]

In Illinois, 17-year-olds can vote in primary elections as long as they are 18 by the general election.

Maura has a slightly younger voting age in mind.

“Probably not 4-year-olds because I feel like they would just pick whoever, but maybe 6-, 7- or 8-year-olds,” Maura said while sitting cross-legged and backwards on a park bench during a recent afternoon.

* Yes! Magazine

Thousands of high school students in Oakland, California, will be voting for the first time this November after a successful ballot measure gave 16- and 17-year-olds the right to vote in local school board elections.

Ashley Tchanyoum, a high school junior in Oakland, says she has been encouraging her classmates to register in the lead-up to the election and looks forward to exercising her right to vote for the first time. “It empowers students to have a voice in shaping the policies that affect them every day,” she says.

The Oakland initiative is part of a growing movement in the United States to lower the voting age to enfranchise 16- and 17-year-olds. Proponents of the change argue that young people are already shaping the nation’s politics through influential organizing movements, including March for Our Lives and Sunrise Movement. Those student-led organizations respond to issues that disproportionately affect young people, including gun violence and climate change. With so much on the line, lowering the voting age would give young people a more direct means of intervening in the political process to shape policy on issues that affect them and their futures.

A dozen municipalities have already enfranchised 16- and 17-year-olds in either school board elections, such as in Oakland, or all municipal elections, meaning young people can also vote on local ballot measures and for municipal representatives. The majority of these municipalities are in Maryland. There are also ongoing campaigns to lower the voting age in Washington, D.C., and municipalities in New Jersey. This November, voters in Albany, California, will decide on a similar measure. Meanwhile, statewide campaigns to lower voting age in Missouri, Rhode Island, and Oregon are growing and have garnered support from both Republicans and Democrats.

* New Trier High School senior Logan Gouss

As an 18-year-old high school senior, I’m excited to finally vote in the fall election. However, it’s troubling that I was denied the right to vote in the 2022 midterm elections at 16, a right also denied to millions of politically active young people solely based on age.

When the 26th Amendment lowered the voting age from 21 to 18 in 1971, it enfranchised more than 10 million 18- to 20-year-olds, but it drew an arbitrary line.

In Chicago, 16-year-olds can drive, pay taxes, be tried as adults and are subject to labor laws but are denied a say in the issues that affect them. While Illinois does allow 17-year-olds to vote in primaries if they’ll be 18 by the general election, more must be done. […]

Illinois should allow municipalities to lower the voting age to 16 in municipal elections, helping to create a generation of lifelong voters. This move would bring us closer to a democracy that genuinely reflects the voices of all those affected by its decisions.

* Last year, Rep. Kam Buckner introduced HB4168

Amends the Election Code. Changes the minimum voting age to 16 years old (instead of 18 years old) for State and local elections. Makes conforming changes.

The bill did not move.

* The Question: Should Illinois lower the voting age? Explain your answer please.

  47 Comments      


C’mon, Harry

Monday, Nov 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

As usual, plenty of false claims have been made during this state legislative election cycle.

But the campaign I keep going back to in my own mind is the battle in the 97th House District.

The race features freshman incumbent Rep. Harry Benton, D-Plainfield, a union ironworker and a former local elected official. The Republican challenger is Gabriella Shanahan, an executive assistant with the Illinois Policy Institute.

Organized labor is keen on this race because the Illinois Policy Institute is known for its anti-union crusades, and Benton is one of their own.

The 97th District had been held by the Republican Party before the 2021 remap, so the Republicans really want to win it back.

But the remap did a number on this district. Donald Trump lost the old district by 8 percentage points in 2020 and 3 points in 2016. Trump lost the precincts that make up the newly redrawn district by more than 10 points in 2020 and 6 points in 2016. Every statewide Democratic candidate has won the precincts in the new district going back to 2016 except one, appointed Republican Comptroller Leslie Munger won it by less than 4 points.

The freshman incumbent and the Democrats have been playing some games there, despite having a huge fundraising advantage of close to $2 million for Benton to $525,000 for the Republican Shanahan (including a $100,000 loan from herself on Nov. 1), as I write this four days before the election.

My associate Isabel Miller reported a while back that Benton told WSPY Radio earlier this year he was “pretty happy to see that the grocery tax is going away,” after the governor proposed eliminating the tax during his State of the State message in February.

Some of Benton’s campaign mailers even claimed the incumbent “supported the elimination of the grocery tax.”

But when it came time to vote on eliminating the grocery tax, Benton didn’t vote either way.

Benton told Isabel that some of his municipalities would lose lots of money since the 1% grocery tax was solely collected for local governments.

But when Isabel asked him why he was touting a position that he didn’t officially take, Benton said, “Since I didn’t vote on HB 3144, people wouldn’t have known my position. I wanted to let people know before anyone could misrepresent my position that while there were parts of that bill I didn’t agree with, I had spoken out about cutting taxes on groceries.”

Um, OK.

Last month, the Democrats ran a digital ad blasting Shanahan for accepting contributions from politicians who “voted to block funding for testing rape kits,” among other things.

That allegation was based on campaign contributions from Republican state legislators who voted against the state budget, which included funding for rape kit testing. Shanahan has indeed received money from several of those GOP members.

However, wanna take a guess who also voted with those very same Republicans against the omnibus appropriations bill (Senate Bill 251)? If you said, “Rep. Harry Benton,” you win a prize.

A person close to Benton said at the time the freshman incumbent had no veto power over the House Democratic ads.

Well, the incumbent’s personal campaign fund, Friends to Elect Harry Benton, then began running a Chicago broadcast TV ad that made the same exact hypocritical charge.

“Gabby Shanahan won’t protect women,” Benton himself said in the voice-over. “She’s backed by extreme politicians who voted to block funding for testing rape kits.”

In other words, he was personally, with his own voice, blasting his opponent for taking money from Republican legislators who made the same exact “No” vote that he did on the budget.

Benton also said this in the ad: “I voted against a new tax on retirement savings for our seniors.” No bill number was flashed on the screen as a reference, and I have no idea what the heck he was talking about.

The almost comically lopsided imbalance in campaign money this year means that Democratic candidates can basically say whatever the heck they want without any sort of consequence.

And the collapse of local news media in the state means that almost nobody in the district will ever hear about this, and the incumbent won’t be called to account.

The Democrats know all this, of course, which is why they do it.

  18 Comments      


Your early voting reports

Monday, Nov 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* What have you seen or experienced at early voting sites so far this year and particularly over this past weekend? Let us know where you are. Thanks.

  41 Comments      


Chicago Bears open thread

Monday, Nov 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The horror. The horror.

  42 Comments      


Open thread

Monday, Nov 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  10 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Nov 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois faces a $3 billion shortfall in 2026, a new report shows. WBEZ

Subscribers know more.

    - Without new revenue or spending cuts, Pritzker’s budget office estimates a $3.17 billion budget shortfall at the end of Fiscal Year 2026, which would be mid-2026 as the gubernatorial election is in full swing.
    - To confront the problem, it’s not clear whether the governor and Democratic supermajorities in the Illinois House and Senate would favor tax or fee increases; spending cuts; delays in paying state bills; use of the state’s $2.2 billion rainy day fund; or a combination of those choices.
    - The governor’s Office of Management and Budget estimates that year-over-year sales tax revenues — one of the main revenue drivers of the state budget — will decline slightly in Fiscal Year 2026.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Powerful suburban Chicago political operation fueled by Uihlein money spends millions on far right causes: Doug Truax has nurtured small, politically conservative groups based in west suburban Downers Grove into a sprawling empire of organizations pushing far right agendas and election denialism — buoyed by contributions of more than $150 million from Illinois’ Richard Uihlein, one of the country’s biggest Republican donors.

* WAND | Illinois State Board of Elections monitoring social media for misinformation: Early voting expanded for suburban Cook County and the city of Chicago last week, but that also led to an increase in misinformation. State leaders saw a post on X, formerly Twitter, noting a suburban polling place was destroying ballots and tricking voters. “There’s no truth whatsoever to it,” said Illinois State Board of Elections spokesperson Matt Dietrich. “What had happened in this early voting site in Schaumburg was they had a problem with one of the tabulators. These things happen in every election. Those tabulators are very sensitive pieces of equipment.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Pantagraph | Illinois Democratic elected officials hit the campaign trail for Harris: As a result, Duckworth and other Illinois elected officials, including Gov. JB Pritzker, other statewide constitutional officers and state lawmakers, have hit the road, traveling to crucial battleground states in the Midwest and across the country to campaign for Harris and Democrats down the ballot.

* Nadig | State Senator Martwick faces challenge from Republican Luers in 10th District: In the Nov. 5 general election state Senator Robert Martwick (D-10) faces a challenge from Republican Jon Luers, who in 2022 ran an unsuccessful write-in campaign. Martwick, an attorney and former prosecutor, was first elected to the Illinois House in 2012 and in 2019 he was appointed to the Senate after John Mulroe left his District 10 seat to become a judge. Martwick also has served as a Norridge trustee but now lives in Chicago and serves as the 38th Ward Democratic committeeperson.

* Pantagraph | Illinois Statehouse reporter Brenden Moore’s predictions: In the General Assembly, Democrats will maintain their supermajorities. I’d expect no change in the 40-19 Democrat-to-Republican makeup of the Senate. But Democrats appear primed to gain seats in the House, where they hold a 78-40 advantage over Republicans. If I were a betting man, I’d say Democrats net three seats.

* Jennifer Bishop Jenkins | Marsy’s Law has been putting crime victims at the forefront for 10 years: It has now been 10 years since the good citizens of Illinois overwhelmingly voted, by one of the highest margins in state history, to approve expanded and enforceable rights for crime victims. The constitutional amendment known as Marsy’s Law was adopted on Nov. 4, 2014, and has, in the words of one Illinois state’s attorney, been “transformative for crime victims.” Prior to the passage of the new language, crime victims’ rights had been few and were symbolic, lacking any legal means of enforcement.

* WMAY | AG: Illinois joins coalition of states calling for ban on price gouging: This past week, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul announced the state would join a coalition of 15 attorneys general urging Congressional leaders to pass a national ban on price gouging. While price gouging is unlawful in Illinois and more than 40 other states, there is no federal law specifically banning businesses from raising prices on essential goods to increase their profits during an emergency.

*** Madigan Trial ***

* Tribune | Testimony from ex-campaign worker who sparked Madigan’s #MeToo moment could add intrigue to corruption trial: Seven years ago almost to the day, Alaina Hampton sent a private letter to then-House Speaker Michael Madigan about sexual harassment from a co-worker that became a turning point in Madigan’s record-setting reign. “I do not want to hurt any of you — I care very deeply about people involved,” she wrote in the letter, which she later made public. “I only needed to tell you because it has been very painful to experience alone.”

* Center Square | Former staffer claiming harassment expected to testify in Madigan corruption trial: Former Democratic Party of Illinois campaign worker Alaina Hampton is expected to take the witness stand after former Madigan and Democrat staffer Will Cousineau. Cousineau began testifying Tuesday afternoon, continued Wednesday and Thursday, and was expected to return to the stand for additional cross-examination on Monday morning.

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | All politics is national. Illinois may be flyover country for presidential candidates, but their campaign themes dominate local races.: Illinois has been flyover territory for the nation’s presidential candidates, its preference for Democrats assured since 1992 when it chose Bill Clinton over George H.W. Bush, who had won the state and the election four years earlier. But some of the themes Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump have emphasized heading into Tuesday’s election are being echoed in campaigns throughout Illinois’ down ballot contests.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Johnson was in the dark on CPS board pick’s comments because of a vetting ‘gap’: Mayor Brandon Johnson said today he was unaware of the inflammatory social media posts that led to the resignation of his pick to lead the Chicago Board of Education because of a “gap” in the vetting process. Rev. Mitchell Ikenna Johnson resigned the position he was sworn into less than a week earlier yesterday after a groundswell of calls, including from Gov. JB Pritzker and 40 members of the City Council, for him to step aside after past antisemitic, conspiratorial and misogynistic Facebook comments were unearthed.

* Block Club | Revolution Brewing Closing Logan Square Brewpub After Nearly 15 Years: Revolution’s brewpub at 2323 N. Milwaukee Ave. will close Dec. 14 after almost 15 years in business, the company announced Saturday. It will consolidate into its brewery and taproom location a 2240 N. Kedzie Ave. The brewpub served up food as well as Revolution’s line of beers, helping popularize brews including Anti-Hero IPA. But the brewpub operated “more as a restaurant” than the Kedzie Avenue location, which doesn’t have a kitchen, Revolution founder Josh Deth said in an interview.

* WBBM | Chicago mortgage lender accused of redlining fined $105K: The U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) announced that Chicago-based Townstone Financial will pay a $105,000 fine for allegedly discouraging loan applicants based on their race or where they wanted to live. The watchdog agency accused the company of calling predominantly Black neighborhoods “crime-ridden” and “the jungle” in marketing programming that aired on the radio and on podcasts in 2020.

* FOX Chicago | Chicagoland residents urged to conserve water ahead of heavy rainfall: The area was hit by scattered showers Sunday and heavy rainfall is expected to begin Monday with more wet weather Tuesday. After consecutive days of rain, there is less capacity for the MWRD to hold and treat the additional water.

* Tribune | In 1949, a union official invited colleagues to his Englewood home. Some were Black. Violence ensued.: Race riots were a sadly persistent theme of American history. But this one was a bit different. In 1949, on Chicago’s South Side, white people fearful of Blacks moving into their neighborhood were pitted against whites who sympathized with Blacks who had been denied their civil rights. Bindman didn’t foresee that issue when he bought the house on Peoria Street. Bindman and his wife, Louise, were nonobservant Jews and former members of the Communist Party. But they hadn’t bought a home in Englewood in order to preach the gospel of Karl Marx in a working-class neighborhood. They simply needed an affordable place to live in a post-World War II era when the price of homes was skyrocketing. The Bindmans previously lived in a one-bedroom apartment in the Kenwood neighborhood and wanted to start a family.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Shaw Local | DuPage County State’s Attorney, clerk’s office to monitor polling places: The DuPage County State’s Attorney’s Office will deploy teams of assistant state’s attorneys and Investigators to respond to reports of any suspected irregularities that may arise at DuPage County polling locations on Election Day. Prosecutors and investigators will be available at the state’s attorney’s office and at the polls from 6 a.m. through 7 p.m. Nov. 5 to respond to suspected violations of the Illinois Election Code.

* Sun-Times | Tuberculosis outbreak reported at Elmhurst University: DuPage County health officials are investigating cases of tuberculosis reported this week in students at Elmhurst University. Two students tested positive for the contagious infectious disease Thursday, Elmhurst University President Troy VanAken said in a statement. They have been isolated and placed under medical supervision. The school and the DuPage County Health Department said they have been working to identify and contact people who may have been in close contact with the two infected students. Those who were in close contact with them are being provided with free testing.

* Daily Herald | What suburban parents need to know about rise of ‘walking pneumonia’ in children: “We are definitely seeing a lot more pneumonia, in general, across the board, from toddler to school-aged children and teenagers,” said Dr. Molly Antoniolli, a Vernon Hills pediatrician with Endeavor Health. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in early October reported the uptick in infections caused by the bacteria mycoplasma pneumoniae, which can cause walking pneumonia. According to recent CDC studies, the percentage of infection from this particular bacteria increased from 1% to 7.2% among children ages 2 to 4 years old and 3.6% to 7.4% in children ages 5 to 17 years old.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Security hired to patrol Champaign Co. voting locations: Champaign County is ramping up security ahead of Election Day. For the first time, Clerk Aaron Ammons is bringing in an outside organization to patrol various polling locations. “I never really sort of thought we’d have to go this far,” Ammons said.

* SJ-R | County-wide, county board seats up for election. Here are some key races on the ballot: A.D. “Andy” Van Meter, who has spent 30 years on the county board and 24 years as chairman, is locked in a rematch with Maureen Duffy Bommarito. The two are neighbors in Leland Grove. In 2022, Van Meter won by a little less than 13 percentage points in the District 24 race.

* Tom Kacich | Biggest backers of tax increase for Mahomet-Seymour schools? Contractors : Some of the biggest backers of Tuesday’s proposed $112 million construction-related tax increase for Mahomet-Seymour schools are contractors who would benefit from the work. Citizens for Mahomet-Seymour Schools is the advocacy group supporting the bond referendum, which would increase property taxes by nearly $1 per $100 of assessed valuation. Estimates show the district’s tax rate would rise from $4.63 to $5.59 per $100 of assessed valuation.

* WCIA | Muncie may reverse a 100-year-old no-alcohol ordinance: For almost 100 years, alcohol has been illegal to buy in Muncie, Illinois. However, that trend may change in the very near future. An ordinance that’s been on the books for about a century is now on the ballot for the small Vermilion County village. Muncie has been a dry village since prohibition. Mayor Synthia Lane said they’re the only village in the township that can’t sell alcohol, and maybe in all of the county.

*** National ***

* WaPo | Quincy Jones, musical innovator and impresario, dies at 91: From bebop to hip-hop, Quincy Jones exemplified the producer and arranger as star. He elevated the voices of dozens of entertainers — most indelibly Michael Jackson, but also Frank Sinatra, Paul Simon and Aretha Franklin — with his unsurpassed artistry in combining jazz, rhythm-and-blues and classical orchestration. By the time of his death on Nov. 3 at 91 at his home in the Bel Air section of Los Angeles, he had become a renaissance impresario of music, film and television, catapulting the careers of Oprah Winfrey and Will Smith and smashing barriers for other African Americans. Mr. Jones’s death, of undisclosed causes, was announced by his publicist, Arnold Robinson, and in a family statement.

* WIRED | Canvassers for Elon Musk’s America PAC Were Fired and Stranded in Michigan After Speaking Out: Muldrow and the rest of her canvassing group of roughly a dozen people had just been fired en masse, after WIRED reported that they had been tricked and threatened as part of Musk’s get-out-the-vote effort. Speaking publicly for the first time about her ordeal, Muldrow says that the canvassers in her group were fired with little explanation beyond a complaint that someone had spoken with the press. Many, including her, were still owed money. Muldrow had to find her own way home; others are still stranded in Michigan.

* US Department of Labor | Reports distressed pension assistance program has protected benefits for more than 1.2M workers, retirees, families: Today President Biden will travel to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to announce that the Biden-Harris Administration has protected more than 1.2 million pensions because of the American Rescue Plan’s (ARP) Butch Lewis Act, according to a new report from the Department of Labor. During the visit, President Biden will announce actions to prevent cuts to the earned pension benefits of 29,000 United Food and Commercial (UFCW) workers and retirees, primarily in Pennsylvania, Delaware, and New Jersey. Thanks to the American Rescue Plan – which zero Republicans voted for – the Biden-Harris Administration has protected the pensions of over 65,000 Pennsylvanians, 80,000 Michiganders, 78,000 New Yorkers, 73,000 Illinoisans, 63,000 Ohioans, 63,000 Californians, 42,000 Floridians, 38,000 Missourians, 36,000 Texans, and many more to date.

* Democracy Docket | Sheriffs Are Ready To Challenge Election Results: In March of 2024, at the Ahern Luxury Boutique Hotel in Las Vegas, “constitutional sheriffs” like Washington State’s Sheriff Bob Songer and Michigan’s Sheriff Dar Leaf took to a makeshift stage, stood next to the stars and stripes and proclaimed that they were ready to challenge the 2024 presidential election results, using force if necessary.

  26 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Monday, Nov 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Monday, Nov 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Monday, Nov 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

  Comments Off      


Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My generation’s Elvis

That’s what you get if you go chasing after vengeance

  Comments Off      


Sen. Feigenholtz under fire

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Earlier this week…


Issa is one of the same reporters granted an exclusive interview with the Chicago School Board President who posted several anti-semitic and mysoginist comments and promoted a 9/11 conspiracy theory. Rev. Mitchell Johnson resigned the next day.

* Sen. Feigenholtz deleted her comment and then issued this press release…

State Senator Sara Feigenholtz (D-Chicago) issued the following apology regarding her sharing of an offensive social media post:

“Earlier this week, I made a comment on an individual’s social media account that has hurt and offended members of our community.

“I made a mistake and, as a result, I shared a message I do not believe in. It was never my intention to reply to – let alone amplify – that individual’s inflammatory remarks.

“Everyone deserves to feel heard and respected, especially by their elected leaders. I apologize for the pain my action has caused, and I will work with my staff and colleagues to ensure this does not happen again.”

I followed up about her claim that she never intended to reply to the sentiments in that tweet. Sen. Feigenholtz said she made the comment based on a recent speech she’d just watched, not on the tweet itself.

Feigenholtz has close ties to the Jewish man who was shot this week on his way into a Chicago synagogue, so it’s been a really tough week. But, still.

* Sen. Feigenholtz has been a leader on pro-choice activism and LGBTQ+ rights, but she said she was completely unaware of these statements…


* From his Wikipedia profile

Yousef has compared Islam to Nazism, and said he has “zero respect for anyone who identifies as Muslim”.

* Sen. Feigenholtz’s apology was issued at 9:45 this morning. From the Sun-Times this afternoon

Muslim leaders on Friday called for the resignation of state Sen. Sara Feigenholtz over anti-Arab social media posts, including one in which she praises an Islamophobic poster as a “badass truth teller.”

The Muslim leaders, who included two state representatives, said the posts amounted to the same type of hate speech that led to the resignation Thursday of the Chicago Board of Education president, who was found to have written antisemitic posts on social media. […]

[Feigenholtz] claimed the comment this week was in response to the poster’s “address before the European Union Parliament where he spoke out against Hamas and their mission. I do not subscribe to or support any inflammatory remarks made on the post where my comment appeared,” she wrote in the statement.

That speech was, um, quite something.

As noted above, Rev. Mitchell Johnson made several antisemitic posts, as well as other disgusting remarks. That was no one-off comment situation.

The other post she was blasted for was a statement she shared on social media from the late Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir. Click here.

Your thoughts on this?

Take a deep breath before commenting.

…Adding… Dr. Dilara Sayeed, the President of the Muslim Civic Coalition…

We have consistently reached out to engage with Senator Feigenholtz. We met her for hours to help her better understand the Muslim-led businesses and mosques in her district of diverse racial backgrounds, and to connect her with some of the thousands of Muslim residents she represents.

There is no trust or confidence in her leadership as a state legislator when she then goes on to continue a pattern of promoting Islamophobes and posting hate speech that may endanger the lives of her constituents. This is the exact type of dangerous rhetoric that led to the hate and murder of Wadee, an innocent six year old Palestinian boy in our state.

This week, Senator Feigenholtz called on the CPS Board President to resign for anti-Semitic remarks. She should hold herself to the same standard and resign.

  15 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* University of Illinois Institute of Government and Public Affairs

The Illinois Flash Index for October increased slightly to 102.2 from its reading last month of 102. With GDP growth at 2.8 percent for the third quarter, the goal of a soft landing from the strong post-COVID economies remains relatively strong.

“The current situation seems better than the proverbial soft-landing with inflation returning to acceptable levels while not only avoiding a recession but continuing the expansion at a more moderate pace,” said Fred Giertz, Professor Emeritus, Institute of Government and Public Affairs, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

Illinois’ unemployment rate remained steady at 5.3 percent, but still well above the national rate of 4.1 percent. The state unemployment rate, still low by historical standards, indicates a slower recovery for Illinois than most other states. For the month, individual income tax and sales tax receipts in the state were down slightly in real terms compared to the same month last year while corporate tax receipts experienced a larger percentage decline for the normally slow month of October.

* IPM Newsroom

People in prison can vote in Vermont, Maine and Washington, D.C.

It’s a right that one incarcerated Illinois man would like to have.

“The incarcerated community is probably the largest group of people who have the most skin in the game, yet we’re not acknowledged as stakeholders,” Raúl Dorado said.

About 29,000 people are incarcerated with the Illinois Department of Corrections on felony convictions, according to data released in October. People in jails, which hold people awaiting trial or serving misdemeanor sentences, have the right to vote.

* Capitol News Illinois

The state’s Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program is accepting applications for all households beginning Friday, Nov. 1. The program offers financial assistance for utility bills to low-income families. Other discounts are also available, even if someone is not enrolled in LIHEAP.

Applications opened on Oct. 1 for adults age 60 and older, individuals with a disability, families with children under age 5, and households that are disconnected from their utilities or energy vendors, have a disconnect date within seven days or whose propane tanks are less than 25% full.

LIHEAP – accept applications on a first-come, first-served basis through the middle of August, although applications will close earlier if funds run out, so those interested in applying should do so sooner rather than later.

Households with incomes lower than double the federal poverty level are eligible for the program. That works out to $2,510 in a 30-day period for individuals, $3,407 for households with two members, $4,303 for households with three individuals and higher for larger households. Higher income thresholds are available at the state’s Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity website.

*** Madigan Trial ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Wiretaps show McClain arranging checks for Madigan loyalist fired after #MeToo allegations: In that moment of relative calm, retired Statehouse lobbyist Mike McClain – whose longstanding friendship with Madigan granted him unparalleled access to the reclusive speaker – made a series of calls to other Madigan loyalists in late August of that year. McClain asked each in that small group if they’d consider cutting monthly checks to Kevin Quinn, a political staffer Madigan had fired in February 2018 in response to allegations of harassment from Alaina Hampton, a 28-year-old campaign consultant.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | Some Chicagoans Face Long Lines, Nearly 3-Hour Waits At Early Voting Sites: “I arrived at 5 p.m. and wasn’t done until 7:30,” Lakeview resident Cassie Branderhorst said Wednesday. “I’ve voted early here in the past and was in and out. This is definitely the longest I’ve waited — by far.” It’s common to see lines, even for early voting, as Election Day nears and during presidential elections, which historically have the highest turnout, said Max Bever, Chicago Board of Election Commissioners spokesperson. Location also is a factor, and the lines have been consistently long at Merlo Library at all hours of the day, he said.

* Illinois Answers | Top CPS Official Promoted Invention to Reduce Lead in School Drinking Water — Even as His Name Was on The Patent: Among Chicago Public School employees, no one has been a bigger cheerleader for an invention designed to reduce dangerous amounts of lead in water from school drinking fountains than top administrator Robert Christlieb. […] Christlieb, who makes more than $170,000 a year at CPS, neglects to mention one key detail as he tells the story of the device’s creation. He’s more than just a fan of Noah. He’s listed as the co-inventor of the device he’s been promoting for years. Christlieb and Ramos share the U.S. patent for the Noah device, federal records show.

* WGN | Author and reporter Greg Pratt takes us inside the Lightfoot years with his new book: ‘The City is Up for Grabs’: Lori Lightfoot swept into the office of Chicago Mayor in a surprisingly decisive victory in 2019, the first African American gay mayor made history. In her four years as Mayor, she faced a global pandemic, battles with the police and teachers unions and a host of other challenges. How will history look back on the term of Mayor Lightfoot? Time will tell, but for now, reporter Gregory Pratt shares his reporting in “The City is up for Grabs: How Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot Led and Lost A City in Crisis.” Deeply sourced in City Hall and other political offices, the book presents a thorough description of the tumultuous four years, filled with challenges and successes as well.

* Crain’s | Chicago M&A activity picks up in third quarter, but election gives some pause: “What corporates and CEOs need to do deals is confidence,” Carole Streicher, deal advisory and strategy service group leader for KPMG, said in an interview. “Confidence in the economy and in their business, but also confidence in the political situation in the U.S. and the geopolitical situation overseas. When there is a lack of confidence, they are less likely to pull the trigger on a multibillion-dollar transaction.”

* Sun-Times | From hospital to Halloween haunts, 7-year-old shot in West Pullman just thrilled to be a Ninja Turtle: Zayden Garrett may have dressed as a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle for Halloween, but his speed in recovering from gunshot wounds more resembles Wolverine. Doctors and family members didn’t expect Zayden to be released from Comer Children’s Hospital by Halloween, let alone be able to go trick-or-treating after he was struck by gunfire at his West Pullman home in a shooting that also wounded his uncle a little over three weeks ago.

* Sun-Times | Day of the Dead has become lucrative for Chicago flower vendors thanks to traditional marigolds: Olivera, 38, said marigolds color her yearly Day of the Dead altar at home, too. Her husband, Carlos Miramontes, was the store’s original owner, but after he died of COVID-19 in 2020, the holiday took on a deeper meaning for her. Now his photograph sits among the bright flowers and images of departed loved ones.

* Block Club | Bird Advocates Horrified After Pigeon Hunting Company Traps Hundreds Of Birds In Logan Square, Niles: Volunteers from the Great Lakes Pigeon Rescue witnessed a group of men baiting, trapping and removing pigeons with nets into crates from two parking lots in suburban Niles and a parking garage Thursday morning near Logan and Elston avenues in Logan Square. Volunteers said baby pigeons have been left to starve to death in nests. They’re also worried the birds trapped are without food and water, which is illegal in Illinois, said Jodie Wiederkehr, executive director of the Chicago Alliance for Animals, who was notified about the roundups by members of the Great Lakes Pigeon Rescue.

* Tribune | A chapter has ended, but story not over for bookstore owner thought to have died: ‘People can think you’re dead all they want’: Word traveled fast that the owner of a nearly century-old bookstore had died. Social media posts were made. A news article written. Emails sent. When Rebecca George, the co-owner of a bookstore in Wicker Park, was told the owner of The Gallery Bookstore in Lakeview had died and left behind a store full of books, she mobilized Chicago’s book-loving community. After all, George estimated there were 20,000 or 30,000 books crammed inside the store, which had only ever had two owners and had been under the care of Bill Fiedler since 1989.

* Sun-Times | Planted with love nearly 50 years ago, 54-foot blue spruce will be Chicago’s official Christmas tree: Jim Mulligan’s kids would hide behind the tree, which grew tall next to a historic home in Logan Square where they once lived. The new owners of the house aim to honor his memory by donating the massive tree to the city.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* WBEZ | State’s Attorney Kim Foxx is in the final months as Cook County’s top prosecutor: Next week, voters will choose Kim Foxx’s successor. Foxx announced months ago she would not be seeking re-election. She came into office in 2016 with a surge of so-called progressive prosecutors. Her tenure has been marked by almost constant criticism, but it also marked a historic shift in Cook County’s approach to crime and justice. WBEZ criminal justice editor Patrick Smith covered Foxx throughout her time in office and joins Morning Edition host Mary Dixon now.

* Daily Herald | War of words erupts between McHenry County’s top prosecutor and SAFE-T Act advocates: There’s no love lost between outgoing McHenry County State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally and an advocacy group that helped lead the effort to eliminate cash bail in Illinois. Kenneally last week released a blistering statement criticizing earlier reports praising the first year of the state’s Pretrial Fairness Act, a key element of the SAFE-T Act that made cash bail a thing of the past.

* Sun-Times | Elgin Community College building $85M manufacturing center to help meet demand for more skilled workers: The center, on the northeastern portion of its campus, will more than triple the amount of lab and instructional space for manufacturing and tech programs at the college. Classes at the center are expected to start in the 2026 fall semester.

* Sun-Times | Property owners suing Blue Island over ‘outrageous’ water bills: Two Blue Island property owners are suing the south suburb over late fees for unpaid water bills they say were illegally designed to bring in more money. One lawsuit was filed by a homeowner, the other by the owner of a condominium unit. Both say the south suburb’s practice of charging 10% compounding late fees a month on delinquent water bills isn’t legal in Illinois. They say state law allows municipalities to get “reasonable compensation” for water and sewer services and that “a usurious, 10% monthly compounding ‘late-fee’ penalty or interest charge” doesn’t meet that standard. In Chicago, a penalty of 1.25% is added to late payments on water bills, but the fees aren’t compounded.

* Daily Herald | Des Plaines set to buy downtown building for $1.9 million: The city council on Monday will decide whether to spend nearly $1.9 million for the nearly century-old building at 678 Lee St. and an adjoining parking lot. The properties are on the southwest corner of Lee Street and Ellinwood Avenue. Once known as the Des Plaines State Bank, the three-story, roughly 18,000-square-foot building was erected in 1927, city documents indicate. It has a white marble facade, large ground-floor windows, a mezzanine and other eye-catching architectural features.

* Oak Park Journal | Oak Park operating departments ask for more money : Oak Park’s operating departments, including police, public health, public works, fire, development services and neighborhood services, are asking for more money in fiscal year 2025. The first draft of the proposed 2025 budget, according to Interim Chief Financial Officer Donna Gayden, has expenditures and revenue each at about $87 million. That’s up about $4.8 million from 2024. That increase includes cost of living adjustments, one-time expenses and village board goals.

*** Downstate ***

* STLPR | Southwest Illinois voters to weigh split from Chicago county in secession vote: So far, the 26 counties that have passed these symbolic referendums have all been rural with a total population of less than 500,000. If the referendum passes in Madison County, it will be the first suburban county, home to nearly 265,000 people, to approve at least symbolically leaving the state of Illinois. Advocates think this could signal that the disapproval is not just reflective of an urban vs. rural divide.

* NPR Illinois | Illinois State Museum reopening Nov. 4: The Illinois State Museum will reopen in Springfield on Monday, Nov. 4. The campus was closed in early August for a plumbing construction project. The construction project is ongoing, so several exhibits will continue to be closed temporarily, including the Mary Ann MacLean Play Museum. Visit the museum’s website and Facebook page for updates. The project is expected to be completed by early March.

* SJ-R | Illinois football reveals special helmets for Military Appreciation Game vs Minnesota: The No. 24 Fighting Illini (6-2, 3-2 Big Ten) host Minnesota on Saturday, and their helmets will feature special designs to commemorate the 189 students and alumni that died in World War I. Each of their names are etched into the stripe on Illinois’ helmets for Saturday’s game, just like they are in the columns at Memorial Stadium. There are also 10 stars surrounding the Illinois logo on the helmet, which represents each of the 10 Illinois football players that died in battle, nine of which in World War II and one in the Vietnam War. There’s also an American flag and a Prisoner of War/Missing in Action flag on the back of the helmet.

*** National ***

* AP | Creative ‘I Voted’ stickers branch out beyond the familiar flag design: Two years ago, a New York county’s stickers featuring a wild-eyed crab-like creature created by a 14-year-old boy became an online sensation. This year the smash hit — one of nine designs distributed in Michigan — depicts a werewolf shredding its shirt in front of an American flag. […] In Milton, New Hampshire, 10-year-old Grace was treated like a celebrity when she visited the polls for the presidential primary in January and town elections in March.

* ProPublica | A Pregnant Teenager Died After Trying to Get Care in Three Visits to Texas Emergency Rooms: It took three ER visits and 20 hours before a hospital admitted Nevaeh Crain, 18, as her condition worsened. Doctors insisted on two ultrasounds to confirm “fetal demise.” She’s one of at least two Texas women who died under the state’s abortion ban.

* NPR | With much at stake, labor unions knock on millions of doors in final campaign push: The American Federation of Teachers has sent hundreds of its members from New York to Pennsylvania and from Illinois to Wisconsin to canvass “labor doors.” The United Auto Workers has similarly deployed union members to fellow members’ homes and work sites, in addition to an aggressive phone, text and mail campaign.

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Energy Storage Can Minimize Price Spikes

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Each month, families and businesses pay a capacity charge through their energy bill. It’s essentially an insurance policy that pays energy resources (or “capacity”) to be available for when the grid needs them most. Grid operators project a possible shortage of capacity in the coming years, which means the charge for this insurance policy will rise next year for many Illinoisans.

Batteries, or energy storage, are currently the best solution to minimize this price spike—but building them at the pace we need will require legislation. The added benefit is the ability to store cheap electricity for use when demand peaks during the day—lowering energy bills and making the grid more reliable.

Learn more about legislation that builds urgently needed energy storage here.

Paid for by Counterspark.

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Today’s must-read

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* SIU News

John J. Bird was a well-known and highly respected leader in civil rights, politics and education more than 150 years ago in Illinois. A recently published book about Bird — who lived in both Cairo and Springfield — by Wayne T. Pitard looks to renew interest in a man who broke many racial barriers but whose statewide impact is overlooked. […]

An emeritus professor of religion and director emeritus of the Spurlock Museum of World Cultures at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign (UIUC), Pitard said he became “fascinated” with Bird in 2015 when he came across a brief paragraph on Bird while doing research for a museum exhibit honoring the university’s sesquicentennial. Bird was appointed in 1873 by then-Gov. John Beveridge to the board of trustees of Illinois Industrial University, which later became UIUC, who were otherwise all-white. Pitard became curious and delved further into Bird’s background, and when historians “seemed unaware of him,” he began searching for 19th century information from resources, including newspaper clippings and city directories.

“What I discovered is that there was much more to John Bird than his board appointment and that, although now forgotten, he had been one of the most significant Black civil rights leaders and politicians in post-Civil War Illinois,” Pitard said. “I found him so remarkable that I couldn’t stop looking into his life until I wound up with a book-length manuscript.”

Bird broke another racial barrier when he was invited to speak at the opening ceremonies of then-Southern Illinois Normal University in 1874, “the first time an African American had taken part in and addressed such a celebration,” Pitard said. Beveridge, along with the presidents of Northwestern University and Bloomington Normal School (now Illinois State) and Robert Allyn, the new SINU president, also spoke.

“Bird and Allyn came to be longtime colleagues. In 1889, Allyn wrote a letter to Gov. Joseph Fifer in support of Bird for a state position, in which he refers to Bird as ‘my friend,’” Pitard said. “This honorific occasion was tempered, however, by the fact that the local planning committee, which had made hotel and dining reservations for the other speakers, failed to do so for Bird, who had to walk 2 miles out of town to stay with a friend. This is an instance of the kinds of racist treatment that Bird, as a successful Black man, had to endure.” […]

Pitard said Bird, born in 1844 in Cincinnati, Ohio, to free parents “who educated him well and gave him a strong sense of duty” traveled to Cairo in 1864 “with the intention of aiding and organizing the large population of refugees from enslavement in the South who had settled there into a new, cohesive community,” Pitard said. “He immediately became the primary voice representing this community through the 1860s, ’70s and most of the ’80s. He fought tirelessly for their civil rights and was remarkably successful. He became a role model for activism in the late 19th century.”

Bird’s other accomplishments included:

    - Being elected police magistrate in Cairo in 1873, becoming the first Black elected judge in Illinois.
    - Leading the fight to create the first Black public school in Cairo.
    - Becoming the most prominent Black Republican in Southern Illinois and a leader in the Black convention movement in Illinois from the 1870s through the 1890s.
    - Becoming editor of three newspapers in the 1880s and 1890s, including The State Capital newspaper, which “played an important role in guiding political thought throughout the Midwest.”

* More from SJ-R

John J. Bird became the first African-American trustee of the University of Illinois more than a decade before the school even had any Black students.

Bird’s tombstone in Oak Ridge Cemetery doesn’t mention that distinction, but its text does include an unusual note: the stone was “erected by the 47th General Assembly of Illinois.” And newspaper stories show that two lawmakers from Springfield – Reps. Thomas Lyon and James Morris (both white) – were among the half-dozen speakers at Bird’s memorial service.

None of the stories or other records say why Bird was accorded such recognition. His term on the university may have been part of the reason, but the brief accounts of the grave dedication don’t mention it. The articles describe Bird only as “a colored janitor at the state house.”

What also went unsaid was that Bird had been prominent in African-American organizations statewide for more than four decades, a role he parlayed with political activism to try to push Illinois Republicans to support Black civil rights.

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Illinois launches ‘Help Stop Hate’ program in response to rising hate crimes

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WBEZ

The state of Illinois announced a new program aimed at stemming hate crimes and other forms of bias as reports surge across the state and country.

Help Stop Hate will allow victims and witnesses to anonymously report hate crimes, bias and harassment to the state through an online portal and hotline. […]

The program, which has been running since April, isn’t affiliated with law enforcement, but people who report incidents can choose to be connected with police departments. Depending on the nature of the report, callers can also be connected to resources like nonprofit organizations, mental health support, the Illinois attorney general’s office or shelters for people who feel unsafe at home.

Help Stop Hate was partly funded by a $1.1 million grant from the U.S. Department of Justice over three years. It is also built into the state budget, said Jim Bennett, director of the Illinois Department of Human Rights.

* Capitol News Illinois

According to the Council on American-Islamic Relations’ Chicago branch, there has been a 196% increase in anti-Muslim hate crimes in Chicago since the Hamas attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. The Anti-Defamation League reports a 379% increase in antisemitic incidents since 2019 in Illinois. […]

The Illinois Department of Human Rights and the state’s Commission on Discrimination and Hate Crimes oversee the program. It allows people who have experienced hate crimes to go to IlStopHate.org or call 877-458-HATE and talk about the incident. They will be directed to a specialized resource based on the nature of the crime.

They can, for example, speak to professionals from their own communities, acquire help dealing with trauma or connect with resources that can provide additional safety measures. The victim can also report the crime to state or local police, who will investigate further. […]

Jim Bennett, IDHR director, said a statewide study on hate crimes will be conducted in 2025.

* More…

Thoughts?

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Roundup: Madigan corruption trial delves into 2018 sexual harassment allegations

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WTTW

After a Michael Madigan ally was fired amid sexual harassment allegations, the former Illinois House speaker’s longtime confidant Michael McClain allegedly sought to collect and conceal payments for that ally under the guise he’d be doing actual work.

Jurors in Michael Madigan’s corruption trial on Thursday heard recorded phone conversations in which McClain detailed his plans to collect money for former Madigan staffer Kevin Quinn through job contracts to make it appear he was being paid for real work “in case the IRS checked us out.” […]

Hours before [Madigan staffer Alaina Hampto] went public with her story, Madigan fired Quinn. Jurors were told about “misconduct” allegations against Quinn, but the specific details were not presented in court following a pretrial ruling by U.S. District Judge John Blakey.

Hampton is set to testify next week, but prosecutors presented evidence Thursday allegedly showing McClain arranged for multiple people to make consulting payments to Quinn because he was unable to find a job after being fired.

* Courthouse News

Both Wednesday and Thursday were short trial days, and Madigan’s defense team only managed to get in one hour of cross-examination before Blakey dismissed jurors at 2 p.m. Thursday for Halloween. In the time he had, Madigan’s attorney Dan Collins attempted to deflate the prosecution’s narrative over how much influence Madigan and his cabinet wielded.

He pointed out that when FEJA came up for a House floor vote in late 2016, multiple Democrats voted ‘no’ on it. He also noted that House Republicans would sub their own representatives off committees, and that it was far from a rare occurrence.

“There was nothing unusual about it, is that fair?” Collins asked Cousineau.

“That’s fair,” he answered.

* Tribune

Publicly, Madigan said there was no place on his team for such behavior. Behind the scenes, however, an effort to kick Quinn some money in his time of need was allegedly being organized by Madigan’s closest confidant, Michael McClain. [..]

But with the heat on, even Madigan couldn’t openly help Quinn until after his re-election as speaker was secure, McClain told Cousineau. The plan, as McClain put it on the Aug. 28, 2018, call, was to quietly recruit a few trusted people to pay Quinn for little to no work, with contracts and paperwork in place to assuage the IRS if they ever came around. […]

Cousineau asked if Quinn would have to register as a lobbyist.

“Oh, no, no, no, this is totally a consultant,” McClain said, and then referred to Madigan by his frequent pseudonym. “And as far as I’m concerned, except for the people signing on, no one else even knows about it except for our friend.”

* Sun-Times

Neither Madigan nor McClain are accused of sexual harassment. But prosecutors say the Kevin Quinn episode is evidence of Madigan’s criminal enterprise, designed in part to enrich and “reward” his allies.

Defense attorneys made a last-ditch effort Thursday to block it from the trial. Madigan attorney Todd Pugh called it a “purely personal situation” — unlike other allegations that people were paid by ComEd and AT&T Illinois to influence Madigan.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Amarjeet Bhachu countered that it’s “dead bang” within the racketeering allegations in Madigan’s indictment. “No question about it,” he said.

Blakey agreed, finding defense claims to the contrary “not supported by the record.”

* More…

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Open thread

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Chicago’s new school board president resigns a week after taking office. Chalkbeat Chicago

    - Rev. Mitchell Ikenna Johnson, resigned Thursday after his past antisemitic and misogynistic comments online resurfaced.
    - The mayor said in a statement Thursday afternoon that he asked for Johnson’s resignation and that he resigned effective immediately.
    - The mayor said that his office would “identify a qualified individual” — he did not provide a timeline — and that the school board would meet as scheduled.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Eye on Illinois | Flag contest provides chance to experience different voting system: No one asked me, but this would be a wonderful opportunity to give Illinoisans more practical experience with ranked-choice voting. We should be further along with this process, but the Ranked Choice and Voting Systems Task Force has yet to formalize its report, which had been due March 1. The idea is spreading slowly in Illinois and throughout the country, but the flag process is a perfect, nonpartisan vehicle for showcasing the concept.

* Tribune | Governors of five states, including Illinois, call for ‘swift action’ on rising electric bills: The governors of Illinois and four other states have signed a letter calling on PJM Interconnection — a company that operates part of the electric grid — to take “swift action” to address record-setting prices for electricity used in times of very high demand. The letter comes after a recent PJM auction for such electricity resulted in a bill of $14.7 billion for consumers in 2025-26, compared with $2.2 billion the year before. That could mean a monthly electric bill increase of roughly $7.50 to $10 a month in northern Illinois, according to a preliminary estimate by the Citizens Utility Board, a nonprofit consumer watchdog.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WTTW | Illinois’ Landmark Law Limiting Credit Card Fees Put to Legal Test: Illinois banks are “freaking out,” their attorney told the chief judge of Chicago’s federal courts Wednesday. Lawyer Charlotte Taylor used the colloquial phrase several times during a more than two-hour court hearing that was otherwise so focused on complex intricacies of banking case law that U.S. District Court Chief Judge Virigina Kendall joked she’ll have to return to law school to make a decision.

* AG Kwame Raoul | Reproductive rights are on the line this election, and Illinois must keep up the fight: When Roe v. Wade was overturned in 2022 in the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision, I immediately flew to Washington, D.C., to strategize with Vice President Kamala Harris and a group of Democratic state attorneys general. We discussed the tools we could wield against Republicans’ cruel attacks on reproductive freedom. Herself a former state attorney general, Harris was forward-thinking in bringing us together to plan the post-Dobbs fight against these harmful state policies. Since then, I am proud to have championed and defended multiple protections for Illinois patients and providers.

*** Statewide ***

* Crain’s | As open enrollment begins, a transformative shift takes place behind the scenes in Illinois: The state of Illinois is in the midst of a transformative project to establish a state-based health insurance exchange marketplace that it says could help fill coverage gaps and lower plan costs for residents throughout the state. The two-year transition, operated by the Illinois Department of Insurance, won’t change much about the enrollment process this season, which runs Nov. 1 through Jan. 15. Customers will still select and enroll in health plans through the federal government’s website, HealthCare.gov.

* WTVO | Illinois public universities achieve highest enrollment since 2016: The Illinois Board of Higher Education (IBHE) reported fall enrollment for Illinois public universities was at its highest in eight years. Enrollment increased by 1.6% this fall, which comes out to 185,590 students that enrolled in total at Illinois public universities. The board highlighted that Black and Latino students have been a major reason for the increase overall.

* Tribune | Illinois volunteers try to tip presidential race in swing states Wisconsin and Michigan: The Cape Cods and other modest homes in the Nash Park neighborhood of Wisconsin’s biggest Democratic city were decked out with skeletons and pumpkins in anticipation of trick-or-treaters, but the knock at the door came from 70-year-old Loretta Jackson of Evanston. The retired state employee and Navy veteran arrived on a recent Saturday afternoon, having traveled with nearly 500 others Illinois Democrats across the state line — past the Mars Cheese Castle — to push voters in this key swing state to cast their ballot for Vice President Kamala Harris.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s CPD budget plan cuts constitutional policing, other reform offices: ‘It’s a gutting’: Mayor Brandon Johnson’s 2025 budget plan for Chicago police slashes several offices that are critical to the ongoing federal consent decree, sparking alarm from policing experts who say now is not the time to take the foot off the gas with reform. Johnson’s $17.3 billion spending plan for the city carves out $2.1 billion for the Chicago Police Department, a $58.7 million increase from this year’s allocation. However, it also includes 456 vacant positions being cut — 98 of them sworn and 358 civilian — saving more than $50 million in salary and other costs.

* Tribune | Activists call for more funding for migrant and homelessness services in Chicago’s 2025 budget: Johnson proposed Wednesday a $17.3 billion budget for next year, which includes the largest property tax hike in nearly a decade to help close a more than $980 million budget shortfall. The proposal seeks to cut a $150 million allocation for migrant services, as the city downsizes its bed availability and shifts to one system for all homeless Chicagoans. Veronica Castro, the deputy director of the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, believes that “insufficient investments” for programs that support homeless individuals in the budget, coupled with shutting dedicated migrant shelters, will lead to an increase in street homelessness in the city that is “unacceptable.”

* Sun-Times | Hate crime, terrorism charges filed in shooting of Orthodox Jewish man heading to West Ridge synagogue: New evidence indicates the 22-year-old suspect, Sidi Mohamed Abdallahi, “planned the shooting and specifically targeted people of Jewish faith” when he attacked the 39-year-old victim in the 2600 block of West Farwell Avenue Saturday morning, Chicago Police Supt. Larry Snelling told reporters at a news conference.

* Press Release | Amtrak Receives Federal Grants to Improve Chicago Service and Support Partner Projects across the Midwest: Amtrak and Midwestern partners have been awarded up to $300 million to improve passenger rail service with grants from the Federal Railroad Administration’s Consolidated Rail Infrastructure and Safety Improvements (CRISI) competitive grant program. These grants will directly support Amtrak priorities, including the Chicago Hub Improvement Program (CHIP) – an Amtrak-led Midwest megaproject aimed at improving passenger rail service into Chicago – and advance our goal to double Amtrak ridership nationwide by 2040,” said Amtrak CEO Stephen Gardner.

* Crain’s | Here’s how True Value went bankrupt: The Chicago-based home improvement company with almost 170 years of history filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in mid-October. It is seeking to sell its business to Do It Best, a hardware rival that offered to pay $153 million in cash for its floundering competitor. True Value has warned that if that deal falls through and it fails to find another buyer, it could lay off 900 employees.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Multiple candidates file in what Homer supervisor says may be ‘dirtiest election Homer Glen has ever seen’: A crowded field of 17 candidates filed petitions this week to run for three open Homer Glen trustee positions, forcing a primary election in February. […] Two slates of candidates for Homer Township offices have filed for the Feb. 25 Republican primary in which the incumbents led by township Supervisor Steve Balich and his Will County Freedom Caucus are challenged by the Homer Township Reset slate led by Homer Glen Trustee Susanna Steilen. While Balich said the race could be clean, he is warning it could be a “nasty” election season, citing a false rumor that he had been arrested.

* Daily Herald | Kane County auditor candidates seek transparency on spending: Republican Gretchen Butler of St. Charles is challenging incumbent Democrat Penny Wegman for the four-year term on Tuesday. Butler wrote in a Daily Herald questionnaire, “By promoting transparency and public comprehension, I aim to foster trust and ensure that all citizens are well-informed about the county’s finances.” Wegman said she will continue to improve the transparency of the office, which posts audit reports and other documents on its website.

* Daily Herald | ‘Somebody dropped the ball’: McHenry County sales tax for mental health falls short: Before McHenry County voters approved a quarter-cent sales tax increase to fund mental health services in a March referendum, officials estimated it would bring in about $1 million a month for the McHenry County Mental Health Board. But when the first month of receipts came in earlier this month from the tax increase that took effect in July, the amount was just above $800,000. County leaders now acknowledge they erred in projecting how much the sales tax would generate because they included revenue from car sales — but the tax doesn’t apply to car sales, per state law.

* Daily Herald | Petitions circulating for mental health board referendum in Palatine Township: Mental health advocates are collecting signatures in an effort to place a referendum for a 708 mental health board in Palatine Township on the April ballot. The initiative follows successful attempts in Schaumburg, Wheeling and Vernon townships. “We’re trying to really get a whole wave of them across the whole Northwest suburbs,” said Hugh Brady, a board member of the National Alliance on Mental Illness Northwest Suburbs Chicago.

* Shaw Local | Stars of HBO’s ‘Somebody Somewhere’ say Lockport setting big part of show’s success: A select group of Lockport residents got to be the first people to see the newest episode of HBO’s “Somebody Somewhere” at a special screening Wednesday to celebrate the show’s final season in the town where it was filmed.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | Once called symbol of racism, gates still supported by diverse Signal Hill neighborhood: A “60 Minutes” correspondent traveled to Belleville in 1993 to film an episode on alleged racism, and one of his backdrops was a steel gate across a road leading from Illinois 157 to Signal Hill. More than 30 years later, a Belleville man is upset that the gate on Kingston Drive and another one on nearby Bluff Hill Road are still in place. He believes they were designed to keep people from predominantly Black East St. Louis out of the neighborhood.

* SJ-R | CWLP proposes 4-year contract to lock in coal prices but not everyone is on board: CWLP was proposed the contract by Foresight Coal Sales LLC, for the purchase of coal in a four-year contract for $85.6 million from Foresight’s Hillsboro mine, more commonly known as Deer Run. The contract would set the price of coal at $40 per ton until 2027, when the price would increase to $44.50 per ton and $46.75 per ton in 2028; however, the contract would not include the cost of hauling the coal over fifty miles from Hillsboro to Springfield.

* WSIL | First Franklin County marijuana dispensary opens soon: Ash and Ivy will be the first cannabis dispensary in Franklin County. Store owner Holly Eldridge says it was a long journey getting to the point where they could have their Ribbon Cutting. “We started with an infuser license, which pivoted us to open up the beautiful space that people know as the Luna Lounge. With that, the community grew and three years later we had the opportunity to receive a dispensary license and we are very lucky and excited,” Eldridge said.

* Press Release | Illinois Commitment expands eligibility for tuition-free college to more Illinois families: In order to make an education at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign more affordable to low- and middle-income families, the threshold to be eligible for Illinois Commitment — a financial aid program that provides free tuition and fees for in-state students — has been increased from $67,100 to $75,000. The increase puts Illinois near the top of the Big Ten in terms of the income limit.

* WMBD | PPS Superintendent responds to poor Illinois Report Card elementary school grades: Most of the elementary schools in Peoria did not get the best grades in this year’s Illinois Report Card, but we’re now learning how some of them have actually improved since last year. Superintendent Dr. Sharon Kherat said comparing Peoria Public Schools to other communities like McLean County Unit 5 is like ‘comparing apples to oranges’. At Unit 5, most of the schools received “exemplary” or “commendable”, the top scores on the Illinois Report Card.

* PJ Star | Alleged members of violent Peoria street gang could face long prison sentences: Three members of what investigators have described as a violent street gang operating in Peoria were told Thursday that they are facing possible life sentences in prison for their alleged involvement in violent crimes. Messiah Carpenter, 20; Keon Patterson, 20; and Korion Hopkins, 18, were arraigned in Peoria County Court on charges under the racketeer influenced and corrupt organization act that allege their involvement in a Peoria street gang called “The Snakes” led to a violent crime spree that investigators believe could be tied to three homicides and 12 shootings.

*** National ***

* AP | Takeaways from The Associated Press investigation into sexual abuse of incarcerated women: As part of a sweeping two-year investigation into prison labor, The Associated Press found that correctional staff nationwide have been accused of using inmate work assignments to sexually abuse incarcerated women, luring them to isolated spots, out of view of security cameras. Many cases follow a similar pattern: Accusers are retaliated against, while the accused face little or no punishment.

* WaPo | Georgia official warns of likely Russian interference in presidential election: Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said that a video purporting to show Haitians claiming that they illegally voted for Kamala Harris is fake. In a post Thursday on the social media site X, Raffensperger said that the video is likely a production of Russian troll farms designed to interfere in the U.S. election. “As Americans we can’t let our enemies use lies to divide us and undermine faith in our institutions — or each other,” he wrote.

* The Atlantic | Throw Out Your Black Plastic Spatula: In 2018, Turner published one of the earliest papers positing that black plastic products were likely regularly being made from recycled electronic waste. The clue was the plastic’s concerning levels of flame retardants. In some cases, the mix of chemicals matched the profile of those commonly found in computer and television housing, many of which are treated with flame retardants to prevent them from catching fire.

* The Atlantic | What Orwell Didn’t Anticipate: 1984 ends not with a bang, but with a grammar lesson. Readers of George Orwell’s novel—still reeling, likely, from the brutal dystopia they’ve spent the previous 300-odd pages living in—are subjected to a lengthy explanation of Newspeak, the novel’s uncanny form of English. The appendix explains the language that has been created to curtail independent thought: the culled vocabulary; the sterilized syntax; the regime’s hope that, before long, all the vestiges of Oldspeak—English in its familiar form, the English of Shakespeare and Milton and many of Orwell’s readers—will be translated into the new vernacular. The old language, and all it carried with it, will die away.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Hexaware: Your Globally Local IT Services Partner
* SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
* When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds
* SB 328 Puts Illinois’s Economy At Risk
* SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
* Hexaware: Your Globally Local IT Services Partner
* SB 328 Puts Illinois’s Economy At Risk
* When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds
* Reader comments closed for the next week
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign updates
* Three-quarters of OEIG investigations into Paycheck Protection Program abuses resulted in misconduct findings
* SB 328 Puts Illinois’s Economy At Risk
* Sen. Dale Fowler honors term limit pledge, won’t seek reelection; Rep. Paul Jacobs launches bid for 59th Senate seat
* Hexaware: Your Globally Local IT Services Partner
* Pritzker to meet with Texas Dems as Trump urges GOP remaps (Updated)
* SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today's edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Yesterday's stories

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