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Republicans file no candidate against Treasurer Frerichs - ‘First time in at least 90 years’ that a statewide candidate runs unopposed

Monday, Nov 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Treasurer Michael Frerichs…

Illinois State Treasurer Michael Frerichs is unopposed in his 2026 re-election effort as no Republicans filed to run against him following Monday’s 5 p.m. deadline.

This marks the first time in at least 90 years that a major political party did not have any candidate file to run in a primary election for statewide office. It could be even longer — that’s as far back as easily accessible online election records go.

A former Republican state senator chalked up the lack of opponent to what Frerichs has accomplished for working families in Illinois and his approach toward politics.

“Mike is a very effective statewide elected official,” said former GOP State Sen. Dave Sullivan, who represented Park Ridge for seven years. “He prioritizes getting things done for everyday folks, and he’s not overly partisan.”

Former Illinois Republican Party Chairman Pat Brady echoed those sentiments.

“I’m not surprised. Treasurer Frerichs has done a good job,” Brady said. “He’s focused on his job, and that’s why no one wants to run against him.”

Mark Denzler, president and CEO of the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association, applauded Treasurer Frerichs’ work at streamlining the ICash missing money program to return more money.

“Over the last eight years, Treasurer Mike Frerichs has worked with the IMA to return more than $8 million in unclaimed property to manufacturers across Illinois,” Denzler said. We appreciate his partnership to ensure that manufacturers receive lost or forgotten assets, allowing them to focus on what they do best — making the products that power our economy and improve our lives.”

Tim Drea, president of the Illinois AFL-CIO, praised Treasurer Frerichs’ work on using state investments to create jobs.

“Mike’s innovative approach on infrastructure investment is putting people to work in Illinois,” Drea said. “That’s something both parties can agree is good for our state.”

During his time as treasurer, Frerichs has:

    *Set records for investment returns earned for the state, taking it from $49 million a year to $1.5 billion a year.

    *Shattered records for the amount of missing money returned to people

    *Expanded opportunities for working families to get ahead.

    *Started the Illinois Growth and Innovation fund to help tech companies stay in the state and create 20,000 jobs here.

    *Put in place the FIRST Fund to make investments in Illinois roads, bridges, and energy, support job creation for union and other skilled professionals, and earn money for Illinois taxpayers.

“I am proud to have delivered for Illinois taxpayers, driving record returns and putting more money back in their pockets through ICash,” Frerichs said. “We also took the state’s college savings program from worst to first to help families set their children up for a brighter future. And we created from scratch savings programs that help workers save for retirement and people with disabilities build financial wellness without risking much-needed federal benefits.”

A handful of Republicans filed to run for governor: Darren Bailey, James Mendrick, Ted Dabrowski, Max Solomon, Rick Heidner and Gregg Moore.

Three Republicans, Andy Williams, attorney JoAnne Guillemette and former Chicago Ald. Bob Fioretti, have all filed for attorney general.

Attorney Bryan Drew filed for comptroller.

And Diane Harris and Walter Adamczyk filed to challenge Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias.

  13 Comments      


Chuy Garcia’s chief of staff files petitions to run for his congressional seat (Updated)

Monday, Nov 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* No statement yet, but Patty Garcia has filed petitions to run for the 4th US House seat currently held by incumbent Rep. Chuy Garcia. Patty Garcia is Rep. Garcia’s chief of staff.

Also, 22nd Ward Chicago Ald. Michael Rodriguez has filed to run for state central committeeman, a position Rep. Garcia now holds.

Looks like the end of an era.

There’s some thought that one reason Rep. Garcia did it this way was to ensure that the district stayed in Latino hands after his retirement.

…Adding… The Sun-Times

Two sources confirmed Garcia’s plan to step down. Garcia is expected to pull his petitions.

  15 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated)

Monday, Nov 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

Frustration boiled over in a federal courtroom halfway through last week’s deposition of U.S. Border Patrol Commander-at-Large Gregory Bovino, where a government lawyer said he felt “sandbagged” and the lawyers questioning Bovino complained of a “substantial amount of obstruction.”

It all ended with U.S. District Judge Sara Ellis reminding a Justice Department lawyer that he should at least show respect for the office she holds, telling him “it’s not that I expect you to respect me as a person.” […]

Still, plaintiffs’ lawyers complained to Ellis that Bovino had “been instructed on dozens of occasions not to answer questions,” and that about 35 percent of the first 2 ½ hours of the five-hour deposition was consumed by lawyers arguing over the proper form of the questions.

Justice Department lawyer Sarmad Khojasteh called that characterization “grossly false.” But after watching the lawyers interact in her courtroom, Ellis said “I suspect more time has been spent on the record with lawyers talking than Mr. Bovino talking.”

The Tribune

As Ellis tried to explain that she agreed questions about how Border Patrol and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement targets certain people for immigration enforcement were “not relevant,” Khojasteh cut her off again, saying, “They have asked those questions today. I’m just letting you know,” according to the transcript. […]

Khojasteh also complained that he’d spent an entire day prepping Bovino on a particular set of issues, only to have plaintiffs’ attorneys confront him with a “grab bag of anything.”

“I mean, they asked today about communications with Stephen Miller,” Khojasteh told the judge. “They asked today about body cam from the Los Angeles (immigration operation)…I feel sand bagged right now.”

* NPR

The Trump administration says it will restart SNAP food benefits but it will pay out only half the amount people normally get.

The administration says it will use money from an Agriculture Department contingency fund. The $5 billion in that fund falls well short of the full cost of SNAP benefits — $8 billion — each month. In a court filing, officials said depleting that fund means “no funds will remain for new SNAP applicants certified in November, disaster assistance, or as a cushion against the potential catastrophic consequences of shutting down SNAP entirely.”

The decision comes after two federal judges ruled that freezing payments for the country’s biggest anti-hunger program is unlawful, even as the money ran out this weekend for the 42 million people who rely on SNAP to put food on the table. The government’s response is part of the case in Rhode Island. […]

The administration warns there could be lengthy delays before benefits get into the hands of low-income families who depend on SNAP to put food on the table.

…Adding… Crain’s

Lou Sandoval is out as CEO of the Illinois Chamber of Commerce after two years.

The chamber declined to comment further on Sandoval’s departure. Board Chairman Dan Wagner has been named interim CEO of the statewide business group.

Sandoval took over as CEO after Todd Maisch, who led the organization for nearly a decade, died in 2023 at age 57.

*** Statewide ***

* Shaw Local | Hunters Feeding Illinois program under threat, deepening supply shortages for local food pantries: While SNAP-Ed couldn’t pay for the deer processing itself, Extension staff raised money through local donations and grants to reimburse processors and help cover costs. SNAP-Ed funding pays for the staff who built those connections by coordinating between hunters, processors and pantries, handling logistics and organizing nutrition education at food distribution sites. Federal funds don’t go toward the meat but toward the people and planning that kept the program running smoothly. Without that funding, Hunters Feeding Illinois would be unable to operate, leaving local pantries like the Community Food Basket in Ottawa, uncertain of what to expect if the program isn’t reinstated.

* Inside Higher Ed | Illinois Launches Effort to Re-Enroll Some College, No Degree Cohort: Illinois has launched a statewide effort to re-enroll students who stopped out of college, in partnership with ReUp Education, a company focused on recruiting and supporting adult learners, according to a news release. ReUp has established a re-enrollment marketplace in Illinois that will connect stopped-out learners with 19 participating community colleges and universities and provide them with live coaching and other resources. The platform will be accessible to 200,000 Illinois residents who have earned some college credits but not completed a degree. Nationwide, about 43 million Americans fall into that category.

* STLPR | Some Midwest soybeans are headed to China again, but farmers still need other buyers: Soybeans yields are predicted to hit record highs in states like Missouri, Illinois, Iowa and Minnesota. Total production is also on track with previous years, according to data from the USDA. That abundance, along with the trade war, has driven soybean prices down. Soybean farmers in the southern portion of the Midwest, such as Indiana, Illinois and Missouri, will have better options for selling their harvests, economists say. Many are closer to crushing facilities and can also ship their soybeans along the Mississippi River to be exported across the Atlantic Ocean. However, producers to the north in the Dakotas and Minnesota, who have long relied on railroads to ship their soybean crops west and on to China, will be hit the hardest by the trade war.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press Release | Gun Violence Prevention Action Committee releases 2025 gun safety report card: As the 2026 legislative elections draw near, the Gun Safety Report Card is a useful tool to evaluate the commitment of state lawmakers on several laws that collectively work to create safer communities across Illinois by making it more difficult for dangerous individuals to obtain firearms, protecting children and at-risk individuals from accessing firearms in their homes, and expanding enforcement and accountability to ensure these laws are upheld. In this year’s Report Card, 60% of legislators earned an A while 30% failed.

* Evanston Roundtable | Springfield roundup: Parking minimums, immigration and more from veto session: Besides the revenues and reforms that captured most of the attention, the transit bill also incorporates the People Over Parking Act, which targets vehicle parking requirements for developments in local zoning codes. A previous version of the act was introduced earlier in the year, alongside other statewide zoning bills supported by an ad hoc housing advisory committee convened by Pritzker last year, though none of the others made it across the finish line during the veto session.

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | Measure Designed to Protect Chicago’s South, West Sides From Pollution Stalls: A measure designed to reduce the burden air, water and soil pollution imposes on South and West side neighborhoods remains stalled, six months after Mayor Brandon Johnson introduced the proposed ordinance and more than two years after the mayor promised to act. Even though the city’s annual departmental budget hearings were put on hold Monday to allow the Chicago City Council’s Zoning Committee to consider the measure named for Hazel Johnson, known as the mother of the environmental justice movement for her work in Altgeld Gardens, Ald. Bennett Lawson (44th Ward) announced he would not call a vote on the measure, long mired in legislative limbo.

* ABC Chicago | Manny’s Deli offering free meals to SNAP recipients affected by gov. shutdown: In Chicago, Manny’s Deli in the South Loop will give a free family meal to customers who show their SNAP Link card through this week. On Monday, the line wrapped around the restaurant as recepients waited for a free sandwhich. “I was having a lunch with a longtime customer and mentor and he gave me the idea to do this. It kind inspired me . We thought this was the best way to help Chicago at the time,” owner Dan Raskin said.

* Tribune | Operation Midway Blitz linked to dip in 911 calls, especially in Little Village: And nowhere is the decrease more pronounced than in Little Village, home to Chicago’s largest Mexican American population, where calls to 911 have fallen by more than 21% since the surge of federal immigration officers began, city data show. Neighborhood leaders acknowledge a sharp year-over-year decline in crime, but note that the wave of immigration enforcement has left many residents in fear of calling 911 for help during that stretch.

* Tribune | Chicago woman dragged out of her car after colliding with ICE demands accountability: Seconds after the crash, agents abruptly stopped their vehicle and exited with weapons in hand pointing at Figueroa, a U.S citizen. Agents then forcibly opened her door and pulled her out of the vehicle by her legs without identifying themselves, presenting a warrant or informing her that she was under arrest. As bystanders yelled, “You hit her! We have it on video!” agents ignored the crowd and forced Figueroa into a red minivan and drove away. Her car was left behind in the middle of the road, her coffee still in the cup holder, and her keys in plain view.

* Crain’s | Quantum park developers seek IEPA sign-off to begin work: The state’s EPA late last week disclosed the results of a site investigation and remediation plan from Related Midwest and CRG for the property at 8080 S. Lake Shore Drive. The Chicago developers, backed by $500 million in state funding, are poised to break ground on the 128-acre Illinois Quantum & Microelectronics Park on the south end of the land, the centerpiece of a broader 59-million-square-foot megadevelopment dubbed Quantum Shore Chicago.

* Sun-Times | CTA hopes this kind of rush hour — subway surfing — doesn’t take root here as it has in New York: Nine people partaking in the high-stakes thrill-seeking in that city’s subways since last year have been killed, and police have made roughly 300 arrests, authorities say. Nothing even close to that is happening in Chicago, but CTA records show train surfing is indeed occurring in Chicago, with 24 incidents logged since 2023 — though transit employees and others say the reckless behavior is surely occurring more than the records indicate.

* Block Club | Inside Diner Grill, The Tiny Eatery That’s Kept Stragglers Fed For 88 Years: Amid the growth of food delivery apps and the slow recovery of the restaurant industry, Diner Grill has weathered the changes with resilience, a bastion for the hungry and the drunk, the blue- and white-collar workers, the families and the loners, its iconic white and black neon sign blazing night and day.

* WBEZ | This year’s Millennium Park Christmas tree is a 67-foot-tall Norway spruce from Glenview: The folks at the city who are responsible for picking the tree said they were impressed, among other things, by the tree’s size. “We couldn’t pass up an opportunity like this,” said Neil Heitz, director of production at the Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events “This year’s tree is bigger than many of the trees that we had in the past. We’re thrilled to continue building on a Chicago tradition that brings so many people together.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Crain’s | Electrical equipment maker lays off 185 in shift from Illinois to Indiana: Panduit, a maker of electrical and computer networking equipment, is laying off 185 employees at a DeKalb warehouse by year-end. The company, which is based in Tinley Park, recently received tax incentives to build a new warehouse in northwest Indiana. “To modernize and align our distribution network for future growth, Panduit made the strategic decision to move operations from DeKalb to a new, state-of-the-art facility in Merrillville,” a spokeswoman said.

* Sun-Times | Suburban man hospitalized after allegedly being struck during ICE arrest: Ricardo Rodriguez, 53, was riding his bike to get groceries when federal agents stopped him, according to Rodriguez’s niece Stephanie Suaine. Videos circulating on social media show an agent placing Rodriguez in a chokehold and striking his head at least once before two more agents approach and appear to put Rodriguez in handcuffs. “My uncle got up and they punched him … they’re still choking him,” Stephanie Suaine said as she watched the video. “It makes me mad because he’s old already, they shouldn’t be treating old people like that.”

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Decatur restaurant, community paying it forward: free meals for those in need: What started as an idea for free lunches, has turned into more than 200 meals in just a few days. Bobbie Lane’s BBQ in Decatur is calling it the “pay it forward” wall. Customers can buy a meal, put the ticket on the wall, and then someone else can eat for free. The General Manager, Brandon Dulik, said that they chose to do this because of concerns about SNAP benefits running out and food insecurity rising.

* IPM News | Where to find food assistance in Central Illinois as SNAP funding runs out on Nov. 1: Illinois Extension has launched a tool called Find Food IL Community Food Map displaying food pantries and other resources across the state. The Eastern Illinois Foodbank partners with agencies to distribute food and groceries across 21 counties. The organization also operates a Foodmobile program offering scheduled drive-thru food pantries in various communities.

* Daily Herald | NIU welcomes Illinois Senate minority leader for ‘Rebuilding Democracy’ lecture: This event, conducted on Zoom, will feature a discussion between Curran, Dean Robert Brinkmann and College of Law Dean Cassandra Hill on various topics, such as the current state of democracy, states’ rights, ethical leadership in uncertain times, economic development, issues facing the state and taxpayers and a preview of the upcoming legislative session. A moderated question-and-answer session will follow.

* WCIA | Firefighters respond to second molten glass leak in Macon Co.: The Mt. Zion Fire Protection District said crews were called back just after 3 p.m. The fire protection district said the call was upgraded to a third-alarm since their firefighters were “exhausted” from battling the larger leak earlier, and because the crews didn’t know how large the leak was.

* NPR Illinois | Country star Lainey Wilson to play 2026 Illinois State Fair: “We couldn’t think of a more powerful way to kick off our 2026 Grandstand announcements than with Lainey Wilson,” said Illinois Department of Agriculture Director Jerry Costello II. “She’s a trailblazer in country music, and her show will be an unforgettable experience for our fairgoers.”

* Smile Politely | Smashing pumpkins in Urbana: Sorry, I don’t mean the band in case you were thinking that. I’m talking about the pumpkin smash event at the Landscape Recycling Center. The center has a food scrap pile and is inviting folks with old, post-Halloween pumpkins to come smash them up to make compost and grow new plants. Make sure you aren’t trying to dispose of pumpkins that have paint, coatings, or lights and such; they will not be accepted. But that mushy, squirrel-ravaged carved one that looks like it’s been on your porch since 1979? Don’t stick it in the trash, smash it!

*** National ***

* Lexinton Herald Leader| Martha Layne Collins, KY’s first woman governor & Toyota dealmaker, dies at 88: In an exit survey conducted at the 1983 polls, a strong majority of Kentucky voters said they had personally met Collins in the year leading up to the election. “It was like in the ‘80s,” Luallen recalled. “I remember the pollsters being shocked by that, but it was because she was everywhere. “Nobody could outwork her.”

* 404 Media | Flock Logins Exposed In Malware Infections, Senator Asks FTC to Investigate the Company: Lawmakers have called on the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to investigate Flock for allegedly violating federal law by not enforcing multi-factor authentication (MFA), according to a letter shared with 404 Media. The demand comes as a security researcher found Flock accounts for sale on a Russian cybercrime forum, and 404 Media found multiple instances of Flock-related credentials for government users in infostealer infections, potentially providing hackers or other third parties with access to at least parts of Flock’s surveillance network.

  10 Comments      


Caption contest!

Monday, Nov 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The governor’s Halloween costume

  18 Comments      


Trump on Chicago, Pritzker

Monday, Nov 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the full, unedited transcript of last night’s episode of 60 Minutes

NORAH O’DONNELL: Immigration. I mean, you campaigned on immigration. You largely won the election on a promise to close the border–

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Did great job, don’t you think?

NORAH O’DONNELL: –and you succeeded on that. Illegal crossings at the Southern border are at a 55-year low. Want to ask you about this. More recently, Americans have been watching videos of ICE tackling a young mother, tear gas being used in a Chicago residential neighborhood, and the smashing of car windows. Have some of these raids gone too far?

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: No. I think they haven’t gone far enough because we’ve been held back by the– by the judges, by the liberal judges that were put in by Biden and by Obama. We’ve been held–

NORAH O’DONNELL: You’re okay with those tactics?

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Yeah, because you have to get the people out. You know, you have to look at the people. Many of them are murderers. Many of them are people that were thrown outta their countries because they were, you know, criminals. Many of them are people from jails and prisons. Many of them are people from frankly mental institutions. I feel badly about that, but they’re released from insane asylums. You know why? Because they’re killers. […]

NORAH O’DONNELL: This past Tuesday, while speaking to American troops in Japan, you talked about U.S. cities that are having trouble with crime. And you said, “If we need more than the National Guard, we’ll send more than the National Guard.” What does that mean, send more than the National Guard?

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Well, if you had to send in the Army or if you had to send in the Marines, I’d do that in a heartbeat. You know, you have a thing called the Insurrection Act. You know that, right?

NORAH O’DONNELL: Uh-huh.

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Do you know that I could use that immediately and no judge can even challenge you on that. But I haven’t chosen to do it because I haven’t felt we need it. Do you know that we have a place called Chicago that, with a very bad governor. They threw him outta the family business. He became governor. Do you know that 4,000 people were murdered during his governorship. 4,000 people were murdered during his governorship, and yet he won’t let us bring in the National Guard. He won’t let us bring in– in Chicago–

NORAH O’DONNELL: But when you say, “Send in more than the National Guard,” what does that mean?

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Well, more would be Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines.

NORAH O’DONNELL: So you’re gonna send the military into American cities?

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Well, if I wanted to I could, if I want to use the Insurrection Act. Do you know how many presidents–

NORAH O’DONNELL: Will you– what would be the–

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: No, no.

NORAH O’DONNELL: What would– what would cause you to do that?

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Do you know how many presidents have used the Insurrection Act?

NORAH O’DONNELL: Tell me.

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Almost 50% of ‘em. Do you know that some of the presidents, recent ones, have used it 28 times? Twenty-eight times. The Insurrection Act has been used routinely by presidents. I haven’t chosen to use it, but if I– because I’ve done well without it. But if I needed it, I could do it. And if I needed it, that would mean I could bring in the Army, the Marines, I could bring in whoever I want. But I haven’t chosen to use it. I hope you give me credit for that. […]

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Well, let me just say, cashless bail is a disaster. It’s gotta be changed. Sanctuary cities really have to be changed. They’re sanctuary, you know what they’re sanctuary for? Criminals. Things– some basic things have to be changed. But one of the things I really have focused on is making Chicago great again.

Making– and we’re just getting started in Chicago. But what we did in D.C., where we took D.C. from being so bad to so beautiful, such good– the restaurants are booming. You can’t get into a restaurant. They were closing and now they’re all opening every– you can’t get a restaurant now.

You can’t get into a restaurant. But you c– if you wanna buy a restaurant or– or own a restaurant you almost can’t find it. I wanna make this happen all over the country. I want it to be like that in New York, in L.A., in Chicago. I wanna do it as much as you can.

Deep breaths before commenting.

…Adding… The Insurrection Act has been invoked in response to 30 crises. From a subscriber: It was last invoked in 1992 in response to a request from the CA Gov. No president has unilaterally involved the insurrection act against a state’s wishes since Lyndon Johnson did so to provide protection for civil rights activists in Alabama marching from Selma to Montgomery in 1965.

  17 Comments      


Rep. Marty Moylan to drop out of reelection bid

Monday, Nov 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Rep. Marty Moylan (D-Des Plaines) told me he won’t seek a seventh term in the Illinois House and plans to endorse his chief of staff, Justin Cochran, who filed petitions today.

Moylan said the decision came as he’s been dealing with some health issues.

Moylan said he doesn’t have a timeline yet for withdrawing from the race but plans to “move on.”

“I’m going to do local stuff, but that’s about it — done with Springfield, retired,” Rep. Moylan said. He said he’ll “decide on a retirement date soon.”

Rep. Moylan, first elected in 2013, chairs the House Transportation: Rail Systems, Roads & Bridges Committee and has been heavily involved in transit reform talks. He pushed for the creation of the NITA Law Enforcement Task Force, which will be lead by the Cook County Sheriff.

* Cochran said he was honored for Moylan’s confidence and encouragement to run.

“Marty is a very serious legislator, and he cares a lot about his district, and he cares a lot about the residents,” Cochran said. “I remember when he hired me, he told me my biggest service [is] to make sure my residents get what they need and the help they need. So that has been my focus, and it’s been a very rewarding experience.”

  17 Comments      


When pressed, Welch refused to commit to progressive revenue ideas

Monday, Nov 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Fran Spielman repeatedly tried to pin down House Speaker Chris Welch on progressive revenue ideas for the spring legislative session. He batted them all away last Friday

Spielman: Mayor Brandon Johnson has been beating the drum for progressive revenue like a billionaires tax, a statewide digital advertising tax an increase in the corporate income tax rate, a service tax to help the city and the public schools. But once again, there was all talk and no action, even though the public schools claim the state owes them one and a half billion dollars. Nothing has happened on these progressive revenue fronts for the mayor of Chicago. Why has Brandon Johnson been so ineffective in Springfield?

Welch: Well, let me say this, I think the mayor has getting a better footing here in Springfield. There’s been a lot more presence than at the start of his administration. A number of Aldermen in Chicago were here this week along with the mayor’s IGA team. Two weeks ago, when we were here for the first week of veto session, the mayor’s folks from the CPS were here. They’re here doing the things that you would expect the city to be doing, and they weren’t looking for something to be done in veto session. They were setting the stage and the groundwork for things that could come possibly in the spring session. I think that was the right approach.

Spielman: What are the prospects, though, Speaker? What might get done in the spring? Is there any hope for it?

Welch: Can we enjoy what we just got done this week? we got some big things done this week. We’re all going to look forward to the spring. And there’s a lot of things that we gotta do for the city of Chicago and the state of Illinois. And as I said to the group of aldermen that were here this week, Chicago is the economic engine of this state. We have to look to try to help Chicago be successful. Because when Chicago’s successful, Illinois is successful.

Spielman: Which of these ideas stands a chance? Does the statewide digital advertising tax or the service tax? Or might you just expand the city’s Home Rule powers and let them do it if they’re willing to jump first?

Welch: [Chuckles] I’m not going to speculate. I don’t know what stands a chance today. I’m going to enjoy what we just got done this week in Springfield, because we helped a lot of people on some affordability issues, and we’re going to try to continue that progress when we return in the spring. And I’m hoping that there are some things that we can get done that will help the city of Chicago, but not just the city of Chicago, the entire state.

Spielman: Do you like any of these ideas, the service tax, that’s been talked about for literally years and years and years. Nothing has gotten done. Do you like the idea of a digital sales tax on advertising? What ideas of his do you like?

Welch: Well, there’s a lot of ideas that the mayor has that I like. There’s a lot of ideas the mayor has that I don’t like.

Spielman [interrupting]: Which ones don’t you like?

Welch: What can get 60 votes in the House and 30 votes in the Senate and the Governor to sign is what’s important here in Springfield, and those ideas are going to be put to that test in the coming months. And hopefully we can do something that’ll help both Chicago and the state of Illinois.

Spielman: Should he drop his proposed online sports betting tax, which conflicts with what you’re trying to do in the state, right? And also his taxes on hemp? Should he drop those ideas to avoid conflicting with the state?

Welch: Oh, listen, similar to how a governor comes before us and gives a budget address, and that addresses a bunch of proposals, the mayor gave a budget speech. It was full of proposals. Now that stuff has to go through the process. I can’t say what should or shouldn’t be in there, because the process hasn’t started. I don’t want to say what he should drop or keep at this stage. The mayor gave a budget speech, as he’s required to do, and now we should put that budget speech through the process.

Spielman: But the governor is not waiting. He has declared his total opposition to the head tax, $21 a month per employee. Do you support that?

Welch: Chris Welch does not support a head tax. I don’t think that’s good policy for the city of Chicago.

Spielman: Why not?

Welch: We’re doing a good job, you know, attracting businesses to our state, and we’re being very mindful of things that could possibly drive business away. And I do think a head tax, and I agree with the governor on that one, is probably not one of the best ideas. But the mayor has a lot of good ideas as well, and you have to consider them all. And let’s be clear about that. He’s the mayor of Chicago. He’s got a tough job to do, and it’s his job to put things out there for us to to consider.

“Chris Welch does not support a head tax” effectively ended that line of inquiry. It was news.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

  8 Comments      


RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois

Monday, Nov 3, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Chicago’s Pilsen neighborhood is home to Mestiza, a shop that delivers memories of culture, family pride, and traditions in the heart of Chicago’s Latino community. With a commitment to their Pilsen neighborhood and a passion for women-owned business, Mestiza owners Lorena and Sugieri provide a Mexican American shopping experience visitors are sure to remember.

Retail generates $7.3 billion in income and sales tax revenue each year in Illinois. These funds support public safety, infrastructure, education, and other important programs we all rely on every day. In fact, retail is the second largest revenue generator for the State of Illinois and the largest revenue generator for local governments.

Policies that support small businesses help communities thrive as retailers like Lorena and Sugieri are better equipped to meet local needs. We Are Retail and IRMA are showcasing the retailers who make Illinois work.

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The path to the transit bill

Monday, Nov 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Last May, several Illinois House Democrats complained bitterly that their mass transit negotiators were ignored and even shut-out by the Senate Democratic mass transit negotiators.

The House members had a point. The Senate passed a bill which was an almost purely Senate Democratic creation. They literally gave the House a “take it or leave it, but you have to decide right now” moment during the final minutes of the spring legislative session.

But when it came time for the House to draft a bill, it chose basically the same route as the Senate Democrats. Its end product unveiled last Tuesday was based on an internal survey of House Democratic members with no buy-in from Senate Democrats or the governor.

The Senate Democrats were furious. The House proposed taxes that had never been discussed before, including a tax on unrealized capital gains that has never been tried by any state in the country. The Senate didn’t believe a revenue estimate claim on an “amusements” tax, which would hit everything from online streaming services to concerts. And they weren’t enamored with the plan to significantly expand speed limit enforcement cameras.

Gov. JB Pritzker held a press conference the next day and declared several of the revenue ideas to be nonstarters. But that meant it was back to the drawing board after months of work with one day left in the scheduled fall veto session.

“We need a leader,” insisted one powerful insider Wednesday. The person has been advocating for a mass transit reform bill and was worried that the whole thing could fall apart.

By Thursday evening, that very same insider marveled at how he had watched as Pritzker and his staff took charge of the collapsed transit talks and steered them to a conclusion.

And the final deal was a whole lot less visibly painful to the average Illinoisan than has been feared during the last year or more.

About a third of the $1.5 billion plan will come from a quarter-point sales tax increase in counties served by the Regional Transportation Authority. It’ll cost those folks 25 cents on every $100 purchase.

The other two thirds comes with no new tax money.

Back in 2019, the legislature decided to wean the state’s General Fund off sales tax revenues from motor fuels. That money was gradually shifted away from the state budget and sent to the Road Fund. But the final annual phase-out has not happened. That money has instead been used for mass transit, partly because the Road Fund is so flush with unused cash. The road building unions objected, but they were persuaded to go along for just a little while longer.

The heart of the transit funding package is a decision to use all state motor fuel sales taxes to fund mass transit instead of sending that cash to the Road Fund. That brings in about $860 million. Another $200 million will come from a Senate Republican proposal to use annual interest on the massive Road Fund account to fund transit capital projects.

So, how did the governor convince the politically powerful road-building unions like Operating Engineers Local 150 to go along with diverting sales taxes and earned interest from their precious Road Fund to mass transit?

A toll increase. Local 150 had opposed an earlier plan to use increased tolls to fund mass transit because it wanted to increase tolls for tollway capital projects. Pushing a toll hike after the tolls were already increased would be difficult, to say the least.

So, the bill allows a toll increase of up to about $1 billion a year, with a 4% inflation cap. Passenger vehicle tolls haven’t been increased in 13 years, but they’ll go up by 45 cents and commercial vehicle tolls will rise by 30%.

But there’s a catch: 85% of the sales tax money would go to northeastern Illinois and 15% to Downstate. And 90% of the Road Fund interest would go to what’s now called the RTA region, and 10 percent would go to Downstate capital projects.

Sean Stott with the Illinois Laborers’ Union testified against the bill in the House Executive Committee, saying it would take money away from Downstate road and transit projects. The Republicans claimed the new formula would take $500 million from Downstate.

But Stott told legislators later: “While we remain opposed to this funding mechanism, we are not asking members to refrain from supporting it.”

Stott explained that a promise had been made in the Senate to find a way to “soften the blow” to Downstate road and transit projects during the spring session.

  30 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Nov 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: SNAP benefits remain on hold for 2M Illinoisans despite court rulings, agency says. Fox Chicago

    - Even though two judges ordered the Trump administration to distribute SNAP food aid benefits for November, the money remains on hold for nearly 2 million Illinoisans, the Illinois Department of Human Services said.
    - Even if the Trump administration is forced to distribute the money, it is uncertain how long it will take for residents to receive the money, IDHS said.
    - SNAP benefits from prior months can still be used this month, according to state officials.

* Related stories…

* Governor Pritzker will give remarks at the Chicago Quantum Summit at 9 am. At 11 am, the governor will attend the opening of a new facility at the Philip J. Rock Center and School. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* TPM | One Amicus Brief May Have Given Supreme Court an Out in Chicago National Guard Case: So far, Trump has attempted to argue that “regular forces” refers to local law enforcement and federal officers, who he claims are overwhelmed and endangered by the anti-ICE protests a few miles outside the city’s downtown. Not so, says Georgetown Law’s Marty Lederman. In an amicus brief that seems to have caught the Justices’ attention, Lederman gives a thorough accounting of the legislative history of the term “regular forces,” offering pages of evidence that it referred to the military. Under his theory, the National Guard was meant to be called in as a last resort if the active duty military couldn’t quell whatever domestic crisis they were deployed to handle.

* NOTUS | Super Rich? In Prison? Lobbyists Want to Help Score You a Trump Pardon.: Crossroads Strategies directed questions about Pramaggiore’s case to adviser Mark Herr, who told NOTUS: “Anne Pramaggiore was wrongly convicted and is appealing her case to the Seventh Circuit. At the same time, she is exploring all options in her pursuit of justice, including the possibility of a pardon.”

* Sun-Times | IDs are mismatched, illegible or still missing 3 weeks after judge’s order to immigration officers: Three weeks ago, a federal judge in Chicago ordered federal immigration officers who have been sweeping area streets to add individual IDs to their uniforms, an order she repeated Tuesday in court directly to the Trump administration’s top immigration enforcer here. But dozens of photographs of uniformed immigration agents shot by Chicago Sun-Times photojournalists in four separate locations since the court order show how the feds have fallen short. U.S. District Judge Sara Ellis on Oct. 9 ordered “visible identification” that is “prominently displayed.”

*** Statewide ***

* Daily Herald | Chronic absenteeism numbers dip for third year; state launches special task force to address problem: Chronic absenteeism — defined as students missing 10% or more of the school year due to excused or unexcused absences — marked a third consecutive year of improvement since its pandemic-driven peak at 29.8% in 2022, officials said. It fell to 25.4% in 2025, down 14.8% since 2022, according to the 2025 Illinois School Report Card data released Thursday. Though it remains higher than pre-pandemic levels, chronic absenteeism has continued to decline for the third consecutive year, State Superintendent of Education Tony Sanders said.

* Northwestern Now | Northwestern study finds a 65% increase in Illinois hospitals from 2016 to 2023: Men, Black patients and those living in areas with low socioeconomic status were disproportionally affected, the study found. The dramatic spike is largely attributed to a growing prevalence of diabetes and peripheral artery disease (PAD), two chronic conditions that often lead to lower extremity amputation, the study authors said.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Fox 2 Now | Services to be held for family of Ill. candidate Darren Bailey after helicopter crash: The services will take place at 9 a.m. at the Oil Belt Christian Service Camp in Flora, Illinois, located at 555 Park Road. Visitation for the family was held Sunday at the same location, and a private burial will follow the celebration of life service.

* More details


* Sun-Times | Gov. JB Pritzker tells President Donald Trump to ‘f— all the way off’ in viral video: Gov. JB Pritzker told President Donald Trump and his Republican allies to “f— all the way off” during a speech last month before Illinois’ largest teachers union. Video of Pritzker’s F-bomb started gaining traction on social media Sunday, two weeks after the Democratic governor and potential 2028 presidential contender got a standing ovation for his profane takedown of Trump administration education policies.

* Daily Southtown | Judge to consider sanctions against state Sen. Michael Hastings in lawsuit alleging smear campaign: Glotz’s attorney, Patrick Walsh, said the lawsuit was politically motivated and represents an effort by Hastings to harass Republican opponents. “As attorneys, and Hastings is an attorney, we have a duty to ensure that lawsuits are filed in good faith and that they have a good faith basis in law and fact,” Walsh said. “Not all political disputes should be litigated.” Walsh said he will present evidence that Hastings should face sanctions, including paying Glotz’s legal fees, at the next scheduled hearing in the case at the Markham courthouse at 11 a.m. Dec. 10.

* Tribune | Legislature sets stage for Illinois to become a ‘right-to-die’ state as bill narrowly passes: The bill will go to Gov. JB Pritzker, who will have to decide whether to sign it into law. If he does, the legislation would allow mentally competent, terminally ill adults the right to access life-ending prescription medication. The governor’s office did not return a request for comment about whether Pritzker backs the legislation. If signed by Pritzker, Illinois would join at least 10 other states, among them Oregon, California, Colorado and Hawaii, as well as Washington, D.C., in allowing medical aid in dying. The legislation received support from the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois and Compassion and Choices Action Network.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Bovino carries out Halloween arrests. ‘They showed up here to terrorize people,’ alder says: The agents swept through the Albany Park and Edison Park neighborhoods, and suburban Evanston, Skokie and Niles Friday morning and afternoon after Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said enforcement operations would continue on Halloween despite Gov. JB Pritzker asking they pause for the holiday.

* Tribune | Border Patrol’s strong-arm tactics are the new norm in Chicago as Trump moves to sideline ICE leadership: But more than a month after Bovino and the crew of camouflaged agents he calls the “green machine” arrived in Chicago to assist Trump’s immigration crackdown dubbed Operation Midway Blitz, the scene signaled a profound shift in how the federal government arrests undocumented immigrants far from the border. Instead of carefully targeted arrests long practiced by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, President Donald Trump’s administration has deployed roving groups of masked Border Patrol agents, who work within U.S. Customs and Border Protection. These agents have roamed throughout Chicago and its suburbs with the mission of arresting as many undocumented immigrants as possible, often while camera operators film for future government promotional videos.

* Sun-Times | Gov. Pritzker makes a Halloween stop in Chicago’s Little Village neighborhood: Gov. JB Pritzker made an appearance in Chicago’s Little Village neighborhood on Halloween Friday to hand out candy to costumed kids. In a bid to allay fears trick-or-treating children might have about ICE agents in their neighborhoods, Pritzker this week asked U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to stop immigration enforcement operations for a three-day stretch during the Halloween weekend.

* Sun-Times | Plainclothes agents make arrest in Southwest Side barbershop: Despite displaying “No ICE or face coverings” signs on their front door, five plainclothes officers walked into the business Thursday afternoon and asked people for identification. When witnesses saw a barber come out of the bathroom, agents threw him to the ground and carried him out of the shop and into a pickup truck.

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s budget pitch blames ‘Trump Deficit,’ but Chicago’s money woes found elsewhere: Instead, the $1.19 billion projected shortfall for 2026 has been telegraphed for years because of rising personnel and pension costs as well as pandemic-era federal grants from President Joe Biden’s administration expiring. While these pressures long predated Johnson, he has known about them since assuming office and has not meaningfully addressed the structural causes.

* Sun-Times | Mayor Johnson’s job approval up slightly, but his tax choices are unpopular, poll shows: Mayor Brandon Johnson’s 31% job approval rating — up from 26% last summer — follows months of mayoral attacks on budget cuts imposed or threatened by President Donald Trump and after Johnson’s opposition to weeks of immigration raids that have besieged Chicago neighborhoods.

* WBEZ | As SNAP benefits are cut off, Chicagoans line up at food pantries: Starting Saturday, nearly 2 million Illinois residents — 42 million across the country — are going without Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits as the government shutdown continues, though two federal judges separately ruled on Friday that the Trump administration must pay for November’s SNAP benefits using contingency funding. The administration has until Monday to decide whether it will partially or fully fund the food assistance program. Trump said he would provide the money but wanted more legal direction from the court, which will not happen until Monday.

* Sun-Times | Chicago firm that resolves ransomware attacks had rogue workers carrying out their own hacks, FBI says: ogue employees of a Chicago company that specializes in negotiating ransoms to mitigate cyber attacks were carrying out their own piracy in a plot to extort millions of dollars from a series of companies, prosecutors say. Kevin Tyler Martin, a ransomware threat negotiator for River North-based DigitalMint at the time of the alleged conspiracy, was among two men indicted in the scheme. A suspected accomplice who wasn’t indicted was also employed at DigitalMint, court records show. DigitalMint has denied any wrongdoing, fired both employees and cooperated with the investigation.

* Sun-Times | Dale Bowman, longtime Sun-Times outdoors columnist, escapes for new adventure: Years later, I learned why the Palmisano brothers (Henry, Tom and Steve) gave me the scoop on Deva Vranek catching the Illinois-record brown trout of 36 pounds, 11.5 ounces, straight off Chicago on June 22, 1997. They thought I wrote for ordinary anglers, the ultimate compliment, and they were in a pissing match with Husar over another story. Vranek’s record still stands.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | In highly unusual move, Lyons mayor takes $245k loan from campaign committee to pay personal tax liability: Chris Getty’s lawyer insists the arrangement is legal, and says it’s tied to his divorce that led to sizable federal and state tax debt. But an official with the state elections board says: “You can’t spend your campaign fund for personal expenses. I would see this as a personal expenditure.”

* Sun-Times | Cook County housing authority in turmoil amid firings, investigation, spending concerns: Last month, HUD removed the housing authority from its list of underperforming agencies. But troubles persist — even without the official moniker. The housing authority is undergoing a significant staff reorganization — one the board didn’t know about and the agency has denied. Documents obtained by the Sun-Times show payments amounting to thousands of dollars for restructuring work.

* Tribune | Cook County leaders get some but not all property tax relief legislation sought in Springfield: Despite doubts that any such legislation would pass by the time the legislature adjourned on Friday morning, several other property tax changes — including moving the due date for spring bills one month later — also crawled over the legislative finish line. It’s a key victory for Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle and Assessor Fritz Kaegi, coming a few weeks before property tax bills are set to land and as campaign season heats up. Both Preckwinkle and Kaegi are facing challengers in the March Democratic primary.

* Sun-Times | Religious leaders’ request to give communion to detainees at Broadview facility is denied again: In a statement to the Sun-Times, a DHS spokesperson said any request to tour its facilities must be approved by DHS Secretary Kristi Noem and that requests “should be made with sufficient time to prevent interference” with the president’s authority to oversee executive department functions. “A week is sufficient to ensure no intrusion on the president’s constitutional authority,” the DHS spokesperson said, not elaborating on why Saturday’s request was denied despite more than a week’s notice given. The spokesperson also noted increases in obstruction to immigration enforcement.

* NBC Chicago | New policy will dispatch police supervisors to federal agent activity in Evanston: The city introduced the policy, believed to be the first of its kind in the Chicago area, this week. The mayor said police supervisors will now respond to federal activity if they receive 911 calls from residents and attempt to gather any information for investigative purposes, including interviewing witnesses and collecting cellphone videos. The information would be documented in an incident report, according to the mayor.

* CNN | ‘Bunch of liars’: Mayor of Evanston, IL slams DHS’ account of violent arrest: A Chicago suburb is outraged by federal agents repeatedly striking a man in the head during an arrest. Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss tells CNN’s Fredricka Whitfield that DHS’s account of the incident is false, insisting “the only violence was coming from ICE and their fellow agents.”

* Aurora Beacon-News | Batavia mulls ordinance banning federal immigration actions on city property: Joining a flurry of other municipalities, Batavia’s City Council is considering drafting an ordinance that would ban federal immigration enforcement on city-owned property, as a federal immigration crackdown continues in Chicago and its surrounding suburbs. The issue was discussed at the Batavia City Council’s Committee of the Whole meeting last Tuesday, at which dozens of residents addressed the council, the vast majority speaking in support of such an ordinance.

* Daily Herald | Wheeling board could ban ICE operations on village property: The potential ban comes after Wheeling officials said federal immigration agents approached a village fire station Saturday asking to use its parking lot. A citizen group arrived at the scene and began blowing whistles, Village President Patrick Horcher said. “That was enough to chase away the (U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement) guys,” Horcher said Sunday.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora’s proposed 2026 budget includes none of previously-discussed Paramount funding: At the time, those officials said that the city’s previously-communicated financial support of $7 million could be reduced by up to 65%. They warned that, if city funding for the organization did come in far under the $7 million mark, it would mean additional cuts. But Aurora’s recently-proposed 2026 budget, which includes significant funding and staffing cuts for city departments, doesn’t just have a reduction in that previously-discussed funding for the Paramount. City and theater officials say it includes none of those funds at all.

* Naperville Sun | Naperville to collect $1.8M in new revenue in 2026 after utility tax billing error caught: Naperville Finance Director Ray Munch said the problem was discovered this summer as city staff was preparing the tentative 2026 budget. In looking more closely into city finances for ways to close a potential $4 million shortfall, it was noticed that revenue from the city’s electric use tax wasn’t adding up. A software issue caused about 3,000 commercial customers to be billed at the wrong rate from out of the city’s total of 60,000 electric customers.

* Daily Southtown | Tinley Park police close training facility, partner with Orland Park on new location: The Tinley Park Police Department’s training facility in the 17300 block of 69th Avenue is closing due to maintenance issues, officials said, and the village is looking to build a new gun range near the village police station. But in the meantime, officers will train at a $10 million dollar facility in Orland Park.

* Daily Herald | Despite objections, Lake County zoning board OKs solar farm near Antioch: Opponents argue the solar farm represents an industrial use in a rural area zoned for housing. They say it would create potential risks to well and lake water, dominate site lines and pose other concerns. Antioch Mayor Scott Gartner said he isn’t opposed to solar facilities but the site is “completely wrong” for a solar farm. The village is investigating whether a land swap is possible, he said.

* Daily Herald | As more suburban schools switch to artificial turf, injury debate carries on: One study, from Current Orthopaedic Practice in 2021, states that data collected from 26 high schools indicated athletes were 58% more likely to sustain injuries on artificial turf. But other studies have shown no significant difference, or even a higher frequency of injuries on grass.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Macon Co. one step closer to having one mile horse race track, casino: A new horse racing track could be coming to Macon County. After a bill passed the state senate on Thursday, people are weighing the pros and cons of bringing a casino and a harness racing-track to Decatur. They’re calling it a “racino.” It would go near Rt. 36 and Wyckles Road, diagonal to the Decatur Conference Center and Hotel.

* BND | ‘Bring their daddy home.’ Rally demands local father’s release from ICE custody: Many residents in the small town of Staunton were shocked to learn that a local father and Mexican restaurant owner was taken into custody by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in late October shortly after dropping his two daughters off at elementary school. Ismael Ayuzo Sandoval, 41, of Staunton, is being held at the Ste. Genevieve County Detention Center. “We couldn’t imagine the fact that his daughters were going to go home that day and not be with him,” said Chelsa Pruden, a Staunton activist whose daughter goes to the same elementary school.

* WQAD | Moline-Chicago passenger rail funding approved; QC leaders react: Funding to bring passenger rail service from Moline to Chicago has officially been secured, local and state leaders celebrated Friday during a press conference in downtown Moline. “Today is a day for celebrating because we have secured funding for our train,” Moline Mayor Sangeetha Rayapati said The funding approval in Illinois’ state transit bill marks one of the final legislative hurdles in a project years in the making. Officials said the next steps include entering into agreements with Iowa Interstate Railroad, construction planning and securing federal approvals.

* WGEM | Quincy Regional Airport celebrates first flight to O’Hare with new airline: The first Contour Airlines flight from Quincy Regional Airport to the Windy City departed early that morning. The cabin was filled with a cast of city officials, but the star of the show ended up being the plane itself. Contour jets can reach Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport in as little as 38 minutes.

* Crain’s | Appeals court reinstates Galena’s approval of Sonoma-style resort: A three-judge panel in the Fourth District Appellate Court of Illinois ruled yesterday that a lower court judge erred when he ruled in August 2024 that Galena had to throw out any ordinances it passed to make the Parker possible. The 2024 decision found that Galena officials violated the rights of Wendy Clark, who lives next to the Parker site, by not allowing her to cross-examine presenters at city meetings about the project. Clark “had an unlimited opportunity to pose questions,” Justice Raylene Grischow wrote in the state appellate court’s decision, and at times passed when her chance to speak came.

*** National ***

* TPM | Trump Admin Slowrolls Census Effort To Accurately Count Non-White Americans: Under the directive, federal departments and agencies were initially supposed to have their action plans for policy’s implementation done by last month; they will now have until March 2026, according to the OMB website. All federal race and ethnicity data collections were initially supposed to be “consistent with the updated standards” by March 2029, but that deadline has been pushed to September 2029, well after the 2030 Census process is set to begin.

* The Intercept | ICE Plans Cash Rewards for Private Bounty Hunters to Locate and Track Immigrants: According to the document, which solicits information from interested contractors for a potentially forthcoming contract opportunity, companies hired by ICE will be given bundles of information on 10,000 immigrants at a time to locate, with further assignments provided in “increments of 10,000 up to 1,000,000.”

* The Atlantic | The Slow Death of Special Education: The Trump administration has taken the government shutdown as an opportunity to end federal oversight of the education services offered to more than 8 million children with disabilities in America. Last month, the Department of Education attempted to fire nearly every staff member left at the Office of Special Education Programs—an action now stuck in litigation. The department had already canceled millions of dollars in grants to provide teacher training and parental support for students with disabilities, and it is now “exploring additional partnerships” to move special-education services elsewhere in the government. Ostensibly, these cuts and administrative changes are part of a broader effort to empower states. But whatever the motive, the result is clear: The government has abandoned its commitment to an equitable education for all children.

  13 Comments      


Good morning!

Monday, Nov 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* We are witnessing perhaps the most prolific singer-songwriter of all time

where’s the manhunt for our reason

* Did you rest up over the weekend?

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Monday, Nov 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Monday, Nov 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Nov 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Monday, Nov 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news on the website formally known as Twitter. Our Bluesky feed…

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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Oct 31, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Blaze Foley will play us out

Smokin’ cigarettes in the last seat
Tryin’ to hide my sorrow from the people I meet
And get along with it all

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Oct 31, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Fran Spielman interviewed House Speaker Chris Welch today

Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch on Friday defended the revenue choices state lawmakers made to deliver a $1.5 billion mass transit bailout that he believes will serve as a long-term fix for Chicago area transit agencies. […]

Welch said the toll hike was the price that needed to be paid for labor support.

“It was important to them, if they were going to agree to give up almost a billion dollars a year from the road fund, that they can point to something that will help keep working people working and keep roads getting repaired,” the speaker said. “I believe it’s a very minimal fee: 45 cents on passenger vehicles per toll to help keep our toll roads some of the best in the country and still some of the lowest fees in the country.” […]

The mayor came up empty again, but Welch believes Johnson is “getting a better footing here in Springfield” with “a lot more presence” than he had at the start of his administration.

* Two federal judges have ruled the Trump administration must tap into emergency funds to partially cover food stamp benefits. NYT

In his ruling from the bench in the SNAP benefits lawsuit, Judge John J. McConnell, of the U.S. District Court for the District of Rhode Island, told the Agriculture Department that it “must distribute the contingency money timely or as soon as possible for the Nov. 1 payments to be made.”

His order came mere minutes after another federal court in Massachusetts handed an early victory to about two dozen states, which similarly had sued to force the release of food stamp funding. In that case, Judge Indira Talwani, of the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts, gave the administration until Monday to explain how it would fund benefits.

*** Statewide ***

* Sun-Times | ICE has powerful facial recognition app Illinois cops are barred from using — with little apparent oversight: The Trump administration has contracts with Clearview AI, a firm banned from doing business with Illinois police agencies. “This is what dystopian nightmares are made of, this kind of continual expansion of surveillance without any real oversight or restrictions,” says Jeramie Scott of the Electronic Privacy Information Center.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Shaw Local | State senate OKs bill to transfer Joliet prison land to Will County forest preserve district: Ventura, D-Joliet, is the sponsor of Senate Bill 1698, which was approved by the Senate on Wednesday. “This transfer will bring much-needed oversight and cleanup to land that has been neglected for too long,” Ventura said in the lease. “Management by the forest preserve will not only enforce proper use of the land, but will also expand access and accountability to the local community.”

* Shaw Local | DeKalb Park District’s proposed 2025 property tax levy would see residents owe about $120 more on bill: A tax levy is a tool that determines how much money a governing body will collect in property taxes each year. Other measures that contribute to the funding formula include the equalized assessed valuation of the taxing body and the tax rate. The levy amount makes for an estimated 20% increase for the district over the prior year’s aggregate extension of roughly $6.5 million, park board documents show. Under the Property Tax Extension Limitation Law, the district is limited to a 5% increase, or the consumer price index, or the rate of inflation, whichever is less, plus new construction.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Massive oily asphalt spill in Chicago canal leaves environmental threat months later: The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has overseen the removal of almost two tons of oil-based asphalt that the agency says spilled from Petroleum Fuel and Terminal Co., a Forest View business operating along the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal. While the company has been ordered by the EPA to modify its safety practices to avoid future spills into the water, the agency hasn’t issued any penalty or even a notice of violation almost nine months after the problem was detected. The business is responsible for the cleanup, however. Officials with St. Louis-based Apex Oil Co., which owns Petroleum Fuel and Terminal, did not respond to repeated requests for an interview.

* Block Club | As ICE Targets Home Depot Stores, Advocates Say Company Is Failing To Protect Day Laborers: The company’s stores have historically been a place where day laborers, including many immigrants, have gathered outside to look for work from contract companies — but those workers have now been repeatedly targeted by federal agents. Organizers have said Home Depot isn’t doing enough to deter ICE and Border Patrol and to protect day laborers. “As a larger-scale corporation, you would hope that they would want to protect the life of their company: people who patronize it, people who work there and even folks who use their materials to be able to work,” Miller said.

* Crain’s | Former Mayor Daley creates merchant bank with son and longtime associate: The new venture, called Great Lakes Global Partners, combines Daley’s Tur Partners, which focused on advising distressed companies, and Great Lakes Global Holdings, an investment firm led by Adam Hitchcock. “GLGP focuses on the kinds of complex transactions traditional financial institutions cannot pursue on their own — opportunities that demand an understanding of government and finance,” Daley told Crain’s in an email. “It is the right platform for this moment, and I am proud to be part of it.”

* WBEZ | Harrison Ford recognized for environmental advocacy at Field Museum ceremony: Framed by dinosaur fossils and elephant taxidermy, Harrison Ford recalled his childhood in suburban Chicago, spending his weekends at the Lincoln Park Zoo and wandering outdoors during his free time. It was on one of those adventures in his neighborhood that he came face-to-face with a red fox, and that encounter led to a revelation, the actor and environmental activist said during a Field Museum conversation Wednesday evening.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Asleep at the wheel? Driver cited after self-driving Tesla rear-ends police SUV: Fresso, the report states, later admitted he had fallen asleep with his vehicle in self-driving mode and woke up too late to avoid the collision. Two South Barrington officers and the truck’s driver were taken by ambulance to Ascension St. Alexius Medical Center in Hoffman Estates for treatment of nonlife-threatening injuries. They were later released.

* Daily Herald | Schaumburg gives apartment buildings more flexibility on switching between heating and A/C: While the benchmark dates remain, trustees’ unanimous vote allows landlords the ability to decide for themselves when to switch systems within 30 days of those dates. The complaints mainly have been about heat. The change means air conditioning could return as early as May 1 and linger as late as Oct. 15 each year.

*** Downstate ***

* WICS | Prosecution team in Sean Grayson’s trial breaks silence, urges judge to give max sentence: “At the sentencing hearing, we will be asking for the maximum sentence of second-degree murder,” State’s Attorney, John Milhiser, told NewsChannel 20. A jury found Grayson guilty of second -degree murder yesterday. He shot and killed Sonya Massey inside her home last July.

* Capitol News Illinois | ‘They are literally targeting people.’ ICE comes to southwest Illinois: When Jose Jeronimo Guardian showed up at a Spanish language traffic court this week, he didn’t expect to be detained and face expulsion from a country he’d lived in for more than two decades. Guardian, 48, was scheduled to appear Monday in a courtroom where a county-provided translator would aid communication with about a dozen Spanish-speaking defendants who face charges from traffic infractions like his — two charges of driving under the influence of alcohol — to serious felony charges.

* WSIL | RHI breaks ground on expanded clinic in Metropolis, IL: Rural Health, Inc. (RHI) has started construction on a new clinic in Metropolis with a groundbreaking event on Thursday. The facility will be located at 1521 East 5th Street. The new building will be just under 11,000 square feet, offering services like Family Medicine, Behavioral Health, General Dentistry, and an in-house pharmacy. This expansion is due to RHI outgrowing its current location at 1003 East 5th Street.

* WGLT | ‘Oh, hi Mark’: Actor Greg Sestero presents ‘The Room’ and ‘Big Shark’ at Normal Theater: Fans of the cult classic independent film The Room have the chance to say, “Oh, hi Mark” to Mark, played by actor Greg Sestero, at Normal Theater on Nov. 8. Sestero recalled that he started his creative projects around the age of 12 after seeing the movie Home Alone. “I just sat down and started writing a screenplay about Kevin McCallister getting lost in Disney World, getting on the wrong plane and meeting his long-lost best friend, who now lived at Disney World,” Sestero said.

* WCIA | U of I professors go viral after catching students using AI: When they started getting apology emails, they noticed nearly 100 emails all starting with “I sincerely apologize.” That’s when they knew students were using AI to write apology emails. […] “The first person was very apologetic,” Flanagan said to her students. “They said, ‘Dear Professor Flanagan, I want to sincerely apologize.’ And I was like, thank you, they’re owning up to it. They’re apologizing. and then I got a second one, and a third. And then everybody started ‘sincerely apologizing’ and suddenly it became a little less sincere.”

*** National ***

* AP | Young adults turn to Quakers’ silent worship to offset — and cope with — a noisy world: It has been called the “Westminster Abbey of Quakerism.” Yet for years, attendance at Arch Street was so low, and its historic 300-seat West Room felt so empty, that the few people present began to meet in a smaller room. But recent years have produced an unprecedented surge in the number of attendees at Sunday worship — from about 25 before the coronavirus pandemic to up to 100 today. “One of the things that I’m very excited about is the number of people that we have coming to meeting, and the fact that the majority of them are young,” says Hazele Goodridge, Arch Street’s clerk.

* 404 Media | You Can’t Refuse To Be Scanned by ICE’s Facial Recognition App, DHS Document Says: Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) does not let people decline to be scanned by its new facial recognition app, which the agency uses to verify a person’s identity and their immigration status, according to an internal Department of Homeland Security (DHS) document obtained by 404 Media. The document also says any face photos taken by the app, called Mobile Fortify, will be stored for 15 years, including those of U.S. citizens.

  11 Comments      


Statehouse to Bears: Which part of the word ‘No’ do you not understand?

Friday, Oct 31, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Bloomberg

The Chicago Bears will now have to wait until the new year for a chance to get enough support to build their $3 billion suburban stadium.

The football team, which has been trying to move to a new stadium for about four years, is leaving the Illinois fall legislative session empty-handed. Without the funds and support it needs from the state, the dream of a new home is delayed until at least the first half of 2026, when lawmakers will be back in session.

The setback underscores how the Bears’ high-stakes effort to move out of Soldier Field — the National Football League’s oldest stadium, which opened in 1924 — has stumbled at nearly every turn. It also leaves one of the league’s founding franchises and the third-largest media market stuck with an outdated stadium and fans longing for a new football coliseum.

* Their offer of pocket change for pork projects didn’t move the needle at all this week. Sun-Times

Representatives for the Chicago Bears were poised to leave Springfield Thursday yet again without any help from state lawmakers in their drive for a new stadium in Arlington Heights.

Not even a proposed $25 million payment from the team to benefit the city of Chicago was enough to get them past midfield as the clock wound down on the Illinois General Assembly’s fall veto session. […]

Sources close to the team’s lobbying effort said the $25 million — which would be given to the state for lawmakers to parcel out for projects in Chicago — wasn’t intended to meet Gov. JB Pritzker’s suggestion that the team should find a way to pay off the $534 million in public debt that’s still outstanding from Soldier Field’s 2003 renovation.

In the letter, the team asserted it “has paid its contractual share toward the 2003 stadium renovations and has no obligation to repay” the state bonds that are backed by a 2% hotel tax.

  20 Comments      


Bill allowing terminally ill patients to obtain medication to end their lives will head to the governor

Friday, Oct 31, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sponsor of Senate Bill 1950

Senator Linda Holmes’ two-year pursuit to allow terminally ill adults in Illinois to choose to end their suffering on their own terms was passed by the Illinois State Senate Friday.

Senate Bill 1950 would allow a qualified patient with a terminal disease to request a physician to prescribe aid-in-dying medication, allowing the patient to end their own life in a peaceful manner, if and when, they choose.

“I lost both of my parents to terminal cancers, and can’t forget the helpless feeling of being unable to relieve their suffering,” said Holmes (D-Aurora). “This measure is about allowing qualified, terminally ill patients an option to consider ending their pain and distress.”

The bill would include multiple specific measures to ensure a patient is eligible for the program, and protect them from potential coercion by anyone who may attempt to take advantage of the patient. It would let adults who are 18 or older – whose terminal illness diagnosis gives them six months or less to live – to receive prescribed medicine to end their lives.

Patients would be assessed by physicians and mental health professionals to ensure they are of sound mind, and only the patient can request this aid – not a surrogate, proxy or via an advance health directive. Under Senate Bill 1950, no physician, health care provider or pharmacist would be required to participate in the law.

Senate Bill 1950 passed the Senate and heads to the governor’s desk for final approval.

* GOP Rep. Bill Hauter…

In the early hours of the morning, while most families were sleeping, the Senate passed a bill legalizing physician-assisted suicide, prioritizing this controversial measure over the need to address critical issues such as lowering taxes, fixing pensions, and providing relief for skyrocketing electric rates, according to State Representative Bill Hauter, MD, (R-Morton).

“This is just another example of a corrupt and cowardly process that advances legislation of this consequence without warning in the dead of night without any input from stakeholders that have fought so hard to protect the miracle of life. As a State Representative and physician dedicated to preserving life and alleviating suffering, I stand firmly against the legalization of physician-assisted suicide,” Hauter said. “The very foundation of medicine rests upon the principle of ‘do no harm.’ This legislation inherently violates our sacred oath and forever alters the patient-physician relationship. We should be a society that values life instead of one that celebrates death.”

Hauter noted that Canada has seen a troubling expansion of assisted suicide, with recent reports indicating that it has become increasingly accessible, leading to concerns about the potential for abuse and the erosion of the sanctity of life. In 2023 alone, Canada reported more than 10,000 medically assisted deaths, raising alarms about the moral implications and the value placed on human life. Hauter said this should serve as a warning sign for Illinois.

“As physicians, our role is to heal, to comfort, relieve suffering, and advocate for our patients,” Hauter asserted. “Allowing patients to choose death goes against everything the medical community represents. This is why the Illinois State Medical Society opposes this dangerous legislation. Our focus should be on building a healthcare system that truly supports patients facing the end of life. We are not just heading toward the cliff; we are sliding down it.”

* Proponents…

Early this morning, the Illinois Senate approved and sent to the Governor’s desk Senate Bill 1950, also known as Deb’s Law, a measure that allows mentally capable, terminally ill adults with a prognosis of six months or less to live the option of obtaining a prescription medication that they can decide to take so that they can die peacefully and end their suffering. If Governor JB Pritzker approves the measure, Illinois will join 11 other states and the District of Columbia as jurisdictions that permit medical aid in dying – the first state in the Midwest to approve the practice.

In response to the vote in the Senate, Compassion & Choices and the ACLU of Illinois, who led the effort for passage of this measure, issued the following statement. It can be attributed to Callie Riley, Regional Advocacy Director for the Compassion & Choices Action Network and Khadine Bennett, Advocacy and Intergovernmental Affairs Director at the ACLU of Illinois:

“We are grateful this morning to the thousands of people across Illinois who have participated in the effort to move Deb’s Law to Governor Pritzker’s desk. Each of these people has been moved by a common commitment to ensuring that everyone in Illinois has the ability to access all options at the end of life. We also are grateful to all the legislators – especially our sponsors, State Senator Linda Holmes and State Representative Robyn Gabel – who supported the legislation after conversations with constituents and advocates leading up to the vote. We encourage the Governor to sign the measure into law at his earliest opportunity.

“Our hearts are with the families and individuals who have courageously shared their stories in the effort to advance this legislation. Their honesty and openness will make life better for Illinoisans once the law is implemented. Finally, we are thankful today for Deb Robertson, who, while facing her own cancer journey, has given freely of her time – and her name – to move this proposal forward. We are heartened that this measure will carry her name moving forward so that future residents of the Land of Lincoln may understand her determination and concern for others. Thank you, Deb.”

* Catholic Conference of Illinois…

With the passage of legislation to legalize assisted suicide in Illinois, the Illinois General Assembly has put our state on a slippery path that jeopardizes the well-being of the poor and marginalized, especially those in the disability community and have foreseeable tragic consequences. With all the assaults on human dignity and the growing number of vulnerable people we see every day, sadly the leaders and members of the General Assembly who voted for this offer us suicide as its response.

The bill now goes to the Governor, and we ask him not only to veto this bill in totality, but also to address humanely the reasons why some view assisted suicide as their only option and to heed the impact of similar legislation on other states and nations.

Many lawmakers chose to ignore the real advances in palliative medical care as an alternative to assisted suicide. Rather than signing this bill, we ask the Governor to expand and improve on palliative care programs that offer expert assessment and management of pain and other symptoms. These programs support caregivers and help ensure patient care is coordinated with other services. And they represent a compassionate and morally acceptable alternative to assisted suicide.

Today, we face real and immediate threats to human life and dignity, many from the very institutions created to protect them. The government shut down, a growing number of private and government sector layoffs, the terrorizing and deportation of our neighbors, and the loss of food and medical assistance for the poor and vulnerable are immediate problems that need attention, not enacting assisted suicide.

Let us also consider the impact on impressionable young people of legalizing suicide in any form. According to a 2022 United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study, suicide is the second-leading cause of death for U.S. teens and young adults 10-34. It is the second-leading cause of death for those 10-14. And, according to the National Institutes of Health, suicide contagion is a real risk to these young people after exposure to suicide. Add to that the ready availability of firearms in the U.S. and this is a tragedy we do not need to compound.

It defies common sense for our state to enact a 9-8-8 suicide hotline, increase funding for suicide prevention programs and then pass a law that, based on the experience of other jurisdictions, results in more suicide.

Join us as we continue to pray for all those who are sick and at the end of life, their caregivers and for all who feel life is no long worth living and need our support.

Discuss.

  14 Comments      


Advocates sue over “black box” ICE facility in Broadview, claim detainees denied counsel, basic care

Friday, Oct 31, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WTTW

Detainees at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement processing center in suburban Broadview have been blocked from speaking with legal counsel and subjected to “inhumane” conditions during their incarceration, a new lawsuit alleges.

The suit, brought on behalf of Broadview detainees Pablo Moreno Gonzalez and Felipe Agustin Zamacona by the MacArthur Justice Center and the ACLU of Illinois, claims ICE officials have “cut off detainees from the outside world” by preventing them from making confidential phone calls to their lawyer or a prospective lawyer.

“By blocking access to detainees inside Broadview, Defendants have created a black box in which to disappear people from the U.S. justice and immigration systems,” the lawsuit states.

* From the complaint

Broadview is meant to be a “holding” facility, a way station where people are briefly held for processing before being moved to a longer-term detention facility. Historically, people were held for a few hours in the holding cells that occupy a portion of the first floor. But in the wake of Midway Blitz, Defendants are now warehousing people at Broadview for days on end. The consequences have been dire, and wholly predictable.

Plaintiffs and the putative class members are immigration detainees who have been arrested by officers operating under Defendants’ command. They are being confined at Broadview inside overcrowded holding cells containing dozens of people at a time. People are forced to attempt to sleep for days or sometimes weeks on plastic chairs or on the filthy concrete floor. They are denied sufficient food and water. They cannot shower, they are denied soap, hygiene items, and menstrual products, and they have no way to clean themselves. They are often denied a change of clothes. The temperatures are extreme and uncomfortable.

* Block Club Chicago

“DHS personnel have denied access to counsel, legislators, and journalists so that the harsh and deteriorating conditions at the facility can be shielded from public view,” Kevin Lee, legal director for the ACLU of Illinois, said in a statement.

“These conditions are unconstitutional and threaten to coerce people into sacrificing their rights without the benefit of legal advice and a full airing of their legal defenses.”

“They treated us like animals, or worse than animals, because no one treats their pets like that,” one woman said in the lawsuit.

* The Tribune

Meanwhile, the complaint says, officers are coercing people to sign documents that relinquish their rights, as officials try to deport them without going before an immigration judge.

“Defendants are transferring people to distant detention facilities—or sending them out of the country outright—before their attorneys can locate them and intervene,” according to the complaint.

* More…

    * Sun-Times | Broadview ICE facility a ‘black box’ where immigrants denied access to lawyers, medicine: lawsuit: DHS officials have previously told Chicago Sun-Times and WBEZ that the facility is operated “in strict accordance with its National Detention Standards. But as a processing center, Broadview has no beds or cafeteria, and yet, the most recently available records show that federal authorities have jailed immigrants there for more than three, four or even five days. That’s according to records through the end of July, weeks before Trump escalated his mass deportation “blitz” on Chicago, flooding the city and suburbs with federal immigration officers.

  9 Comments      


Soybean deal with China won’t erase trade war damage, Illinois Ag Director says

Friday, Oct 31, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The AP yesterday

American farmers welcomed China’s promise to buy some of their soybeans, but they cautioned this won’t solve all their problems as they continue to deal with soaring prices for fertilizer, tractors, repair parts and seeds.

The Chinese promise to buy at least 25 million metric tons of soybeans annually for next three years will bring their purchases back in line with where they were before President Donald Trump launched his trade war with China in the spring. But the 12 million metric tons that China plans to buy between now and January is only about half the typical annual volume.

Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said China also agreed to remove all its retaliatory tariffs on American ag products, which should open the door for sales of other crops and beef. Plus, China promised to resume buying U.S. sorghum, which is another crop largely used for animal feed that depends on that market. More than half the sorghum and soybean crops are exported every year with much of that going to China. […]

Trump had promised to offer farmers a significant aid package this fall to help them survive the trade war with China, but it’s been put on hold because of the ongoing government shutdown. Rollins said that aid package is still in the works, but she promised the administration is ready to “step in the gap” and address any sort of harm the trade war has caused farmers.

“We’ll see what the market does and we will be ready to continue to step in if in fact, we believe it’s necessary,” Rollins said.

* I reached out to Illinois Department of Agriculture Director Jerry Costello, who’s been critical of the trade war, to get his take. From Costello…

Today US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent reported that the agreement reached will have China purchasing 12 million metric tons of soybeans by January with 25 million tons purchased annually the next three years at minimum. That might be more reassuring if China had followed through on the purchases they were supposed to make under the 2020 trade deal, which the United States Trade Representative Office is currently investigating.

To put in perspective how the first Trump administration tariffs worked, below are the numbers directly from the USDA. The Trump 1 tariffs were instituted in 2017 and drastically impacted 2018 sales.




[From Isabel: 2023 should be million not billion!]

Currently, the Trump 2 tariffs (taxes) have caused input prices to skyrocket.

    - Tariffs on nitrogen are up 10%.
    - Tariffs on herbicides, insecticides, and pesticides are up 20%.
    - Tariffs on ag equipment are up 13%.
    - Tariffs on new tractors are up 16%.

All of this in roughly 9 months.

If you drive down the interstate and see white bags by grain bins, that’s temporary storage - which cost farmers even more money. This is visible evidence that commodity prices are too low to be sustainable. Prices on commodities have been way below costs with Illinois inputs averaging $11.60 - $11.65/bushel for soybeans and $4.50 - $4.65/bushel for corn.

Many farm equipment dealers are down 70% to 80% from year over year sales, and John Deere has laid off or dissolved thousands of jobs, even closing a plant in large part due to the economic chaos caused by the Trump administration.

Farms have been lost, lives ruined, and prior to this chaos, farmers were already 3.5 times more likely to commit suicide than other occupations. The bank won’t cash promised agreements. We are almost at the end of harvest. Bills are due.

It also takes 30 to 40 days for a cargo ship to reach China after departing from the Gulf of Mexico.

Let’s not forget that feeder cattle prices are down close to 15% in less than a week after the President announced quadrupling beef purchases from Argentina. This drove down prices for domestic beef producers after the President also announced investing tens of billions of US tax dollars into Argentina. Cattle production was the one bright profitable spot for a diversified farm.

This is no different than an arsonist setting fire to your house and then returning with your hose to connect to your water expecting a “thank you” for extinguishing the flames. You’re still left with damages and cleanup you never should’ve endured in the first place.

The facts are that experts are already warning that “Commercial purchases would also require China to roll back tariffs on US soybeans imposed earlier this year, a move that is widely expected by the market but which Beijing did not make explicit,” and that “China has switched to taking more Brazilian soybeans and recently purchased record volumes from Argentina, part of its strategy to diversify supply.”

So anyone who wants to be part of this masochistic victory lap, which at its very best only aspires to pre-(second)trade war sales levels, be my guest. As we all know, Albert Einstein is famous for saying, “The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.”

Thoughts?

* Related…

    * Reuters | China to buy 12 million metric tons of US soybeans this season, Bessent says: U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Thursday that China has agreed to buy 12 million metric tons of American soybeans during the current season through January, down from 22.5 million tons in the prior season after a months-long tariff battle halted all purchases of the current U.S. harvest. China also committed to buying 25 million tons annually for the next three years as part of a larger trade agreement with Beijing, Bessent said, following a meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping in South Korea.

    * WJRT | Mixed reactions from Michigan farmers on new soybean deal: “The idea that there has been a significant gain here is woefully misstated,” Thompson said. Thompson, whose organization represents more than 500 farmers across Michigan, expressed being ‘cautiously optimistic’ but emphasized the importance of follow-through. “I think that it’s well known that statements are made and then sometimes the follow through isn’t as strong as we would like,” Thompson said.

    * Des Moines Register | China pledge of soybean purchases ‘great news’ for Iowa farmers, state ag secretary says: “This is great news for Iowa farmers and our ag economy,” Iowa Agriculture Secretary Mike Naig said in a statement. “Expanded soybean purchases by China will make a meaningful impact at a time when many farmers are feeling the pain of a tough farm economy. The announcement “addresses many of the concerns around market access to China following months of stalled purchases and uncertainty,” said Tom Adam, an east-central Iowa farmer and president of the Iowa Soybean Association.

    * KWCH | 5th-generation Kansas farmer shares thoughts on soybean deal with China: “Until we can get some agreement signed and get some teeth into it, I don’t really know that we have anything solid that we can plan on,” Winter said. With all the recent changes between China and the U.S., many farmers are wondering if soybeans are still a safe crop to plant next year. “It really makes a person stop and think and scratch their head a little bit about, ‘Do I really want to pant these crops?’” Winter said. “However, I revert back to, ‘All these crops are part of my crop mix, they’re part of my program.”

  18 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Oct 31, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Lawmakers approve $1.5B transit funding package without statewide tax increases. Capitol News Illinois

    - A new transit funding bill passed Thursday night raises $1.5 billion for public transportation agencies, mostly in the Chicago area.
    - The plan goes to the governor’s desk without any of the controversial statewide taxes on package deliveries, streaming or event tickets that were part of previous bills. The House two days earlier had introduced a measure that taxed entertainment and billionaires’ investments.
    - The bulk of the funding, $860 million, would come through redirecting sales tax revenue charged on motor fuel purchases to public transportation operations. Another estimated $200 million would come from interest growing in the Road Fund.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Crain’s | Senate OKs energy bill that includes billions for battery storage and nixes nuke ban: The Illinois House passed the legislation yesterday. It now heads to Gov. JB Pritzker, who called it “an important step that will help lower utility bills and make our electrical grid stronger.”“This legislation takes two routes toward affordability,” the governor said in a statement. “First, it will accelerate clean-energy projects with new grid-scale batteries and other clean-energy technology to increase the available electricity supply. Second, it will require utility companies to help their consumers to lower their utility bills and access energy efficient resources.”

* Tribune | Illinois lawmakers pass bill to tackle constitutional violations in immigration raids, ban courthouse arrests: The legislation came in response to what one of the bill’s sponsors, Democratic state Sen. Celina Villanueva of Chicago, described as “the reality of the pain and the cruelty and the inhumanity that’s being inflicted on my community, on my district, on the communities in this state — that are also American — for the simple fact of looking the way that I do.” “I’m going to fight back,” she said on the Senate floor late Thursday, shortly before the bill passed 40-18. The Illinois House passed the legislation 75-32 a little more than an hour later.

*** Statewide ***

* Daily Herald | ‘Progress, not just achievement’: State emphasizes growth over proficiency in new Illinois Report Card data: When looking at student learning, proficiency and growth, each tell an important part of the story, officials say. Proficiency shows what a student knows and can do at a single point in time. It’s a snapshot of performance measured against the state’s learning standards. Growth shows how much a student has learned in comparison with peers who started at the same level.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WCIA | Illinois Sen. passes Clean Slate Act to seal criminal records for crimes not considered serious: “The Clean Slate Act is about creating pathways to opportunity for people who have earned a second chance,” State Senator Elgie R. Sims, Jr. (D-Chicago) said in a release. “By automating the sealing process for eligible records, we’re removing unnecessary bureaucratic obstacles that keep people from finding employment, securing housing, and fully reintegrating into their communities. At the same time, we’ve been deliberate in maintaining strong public safety protections and ensuring law enforcement has the access they need.”

*** Chicago ***

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago school board approves controversial $175 million pension payment to the city: The Chicago school board voted Thursday to make a pension reimbursement to the city after 18 months of controversy and leadership turmoil stemming from the payment. But there is one catch. The board voted unanimously to authorize the $175 million payment to the city to support a municipal pension fund that covers city workers and some non-teaching district staff — but only if the entire $552.4 million tax surplus boost for Chicago Public Schools that Mayor Brandon Johnson has proposed comes through.

* Tribune | Thousands Of City Buildings Are Overdue For Fire Code Inspections, Watchdog Report Says: The report found that only 17 percent of buildings are up to date on fire code inspections. Fire Department leaders say the Fire Prevention Bureau is understaffed and under-resourced due to city budget cuts.

* Sun-Times | Chicago Sun-Times demands DHS remove social posts using its photos without permission: A letter sent to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem Thursday says the government used three Sun-Times photos without permission to promote its immigration enforcement campaign. The newspaper threatened to file an intellectual property right infringement lawsuit if the posts aren’t taken down.

* Block Club Chicago | Pilsen’s Massive Ofrenda Returns For Día De Los Muertos: This year, Hernandez’s ofrenda, 1340 W. 19th St., features about 400 photos of people that were shared by Pilsen neighbors. To the side, Hernandez built a smaller altar dedicated to about 40 pets, including cats and dogs, who also deserve to be honored because “they are family,” she said.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* The Record | ICE activity confirmed in Wilmette. Number of arrests remains unclear: Resident Chad Boomgaarden told The Record that he spoke with at least one border patrol agent around 1:30 p.m. on Wednesday in an alley between Park and Prairie avenues near his home. Boomgaarden, who shared photos supporting the encounter, said he inquired about federal jurisdiction on and near private property, among other topics. He was walking his dog and was not pleased to see men in “face masks, camo, tactical gear and long rifle weapons” just feet from his backyard.

* Daily Herald | DuPage County Board members balk at clerk’s request for more funding: The two-term clerk, who is up for re-election next year, obliged and showed up at a finance committee meeting this week. Her message, however, was not welcomed by board members “We simply cannot finish fiscal year 2025 on the funds allocated, which were considerably less than our request last year,” DuPage County Clerk Jean Kaczmarek told board members Tuesday. “We absolutely will not be able to fund 2026 on the proposed amount budgeted for our office.”

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora again pushes back purchase of police equipment: One of Lawrence’s concerns was that the device would be used to surveil residents’ cell phones, in particular by seeing whose cell phones are within a certain area, without needing a warrant. But Aurora Police Det. Darrell Moore told The Beacon-News that the device, called a “drive test scanner,” is not able to do that.

* Daily Herald | Cook County to hold hearing on improving rush-hour congestion on Quentin Road in Palatine: Cook County Department of Transportation and Highways met with residents this week to explain why a combination of factors led to their preferred solution being the addition of just a turn lane and a traffic signal. What the residents of the two Dunhaven Woods subdivisions want — and the village has also endorsed four times since 1996 — is a continuation of Quentin Road’s four-lane configuration that exists north and south of them as well as a turn lane.

*** Downstate ***

* WMBD | On the Record: Special education cuts haven’t affected Central Illinois, yet: Those layoffs, the continued government shutdown, and further budget cuts to the Department of Education, have made Peoria County and McLean County regional superintendents anxious. “The concern is that special ed funding in particular for students is a large portion of a lot of our district’s budgets,” Peoria County Regional Superintendent George McKenna said.

* WSIL | Fulton County Transit expands services to Calvert City residents: “The expansion of Fulton County Transit Authority into Calvert City ensures that our residents have access to essential services and the freedom to travel where they need to go,” said Calvert City Mayor Gene Colburn. FCTA offers same-day “Demand Response” trips within Region 1, available Monday through Friday. Medical trips can be scheduled in advance to cities like Louisville and Nashville.

* WGLT | Demand softens but prices remain high across Bloomington-Normal housing market: It cost around $213,859 on average to buy an existing home in 2021. Now, it’s $287,107. That’s a 34% increase in just five years. “What we are seeing is, with fewer houses available, a lot of buyers right now are getting discouraged and exiting the market,” said Dawn Peters, a Realtor with Keller Williams. “And so the demand is softening a little bit while the supply still remains low. Prices are still holding because of that.”

*** National ***

* NYT | Big Tech’s A.I. Spending Is Accelerating (Again): Last week, the Bank of England wrote that while the building of data centers, which provide computing power for A.I., had so far largely come from the cash produced by the biggest companies, it would increasingly involve more debt. If A.I. underwhelms — or the systems ultimately require far less computing — there could be growing risk. “This is a fast-evolving topic, and the future is highly uncertain,” the bank wrote.

* Reuters | Daylight saving time bill stalls again in US Senate: he U.S. Senate briefly took up a long-stalled effort on Tuesday to make daylight saving time permanent and end the twice-yearly practice of switching clocks, but again failed to reach consensus. […] Cotton said that the bill’s proponents are pushing Congress to repeat a prior mistake that would create absurdly late winter sunrises and force children to go to school in darkness in much of the country.

  31 Comments      


When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds

Friday, Oct 31, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Retailers take risks. Eric Williams, founder of Hyde Park’s The Silver Room, wants politicians and policymakers to know most retailers open their stores out of passion and to fill a creative need, not to become wealthy. Located on Chicago’s South Side, the Silver Room is part clothing boutique, part music venue, part community hub, and part artists’ studio. The Silver Room is as diverse as the community it serves.

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

Policies that support small businesses help communities thrive as retailers like Eric are better equipped to meet local needs. We Are Retail and IRMA are showcasing the retailers who make Illinois work.

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Good morning!

Friday, Oct 31, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* It’s 6:40 am as I write this. We’ve been up all night covering the veto session. I’m gonna try to get a few hours’ sleep. Isabel, who’s young and can handle it, is in charge for the rest of the morning

I can’t stop my brain

* How are you this fine morning?

  12 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition (Updated)

Friday, Oct 31, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Friday, Oct 31, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Oct 31, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Friday, Oct 31, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news on the website formally known as Twitter. Our Bluesky feed…

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