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A look at Rep. Ugaste’s Bears/property tax proposal

Monday, Jul 13, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release last week…

State Representative Dan Ugaste filed legislation today designed to help Illinois compete for transformative private investment while advancing meaningful property tax reforms that benefit homeowners and businesses across the state. The legislation has been filed as House Bill 5802 (HB 5802).

While the legislation was prompted by the ongoing discussion surrounding a new Chicago Bears stadium, Rep. Ugaste said the debate caused the public to begin discussion of a much larger issue: Illinois’ property tax system is broken, property taxes are too high, and they need to be fixed now.

“The Bears stadium discussion highlighted a problem that extends far beyond one project,” said Rep. Ugaste. “Illinois has some of the highest property taxes in America. Not only do those taxes make it harder to attract major investments, they also make life more expensive for every homeowner and make it difficult for our businesses to compete. This legislation addresses all these challenges.”

The proposal modifies the prior Megaprojects/Payment In Lieu of Taxes (PILOT) framework to strengthen taxpayer protections, improve government transparency and accountability, and provide property tax reform for the rest of the state.

The two statewide property tax reforms included that will benefit every Illinois property owner—not just communities hosting a megaproject are:

    • All property tax referendum questions would appear only on the November General Election ballot, ensuring the greatest possible voter participation.
    • The practice of “back-door” bond rollovers would end, meaning there would be no more rolling over of bonds once they are paid. The local taxpaying body would instead have to go back to the public with a referendum if they wanted to again bond for more funds.

“The Bears helped expose a flaw in our system, but this legislation is about much more than football,” Ugaste said. “Illinois should be able to compete for major employers, corporate headquarters, advanced manufacturing, entertainment venues, research campuses, and other transformational investments without asking taxpayers to write a blank check. At the same time, we should be giving taxpayers property tax reform to help lower taxes.”

“While we need to create more economic development, we need to help and protect taxpayers,” Ugaste said. “This legislation does both. It creates a responsible framework for attracting world-class investment while strengthening local control, improving transparency, and advancing property tax reforms that benefit families and businesses throughout Illinois.”

“The Bears may have started this conversation, but the reforms in this bill are just the start of more reforms needed so Illinois can compete for other investments and give taxpayers across the state the property tax relief they need to make life more affordable.”

The legislation now awaits consideration in the Illinois General Assembly.

Rep. Dan Ugaste serves Illinois House District 65, which includes parts of Kane and DuPage counties. For more information, contact Rep. Ugaste’s office at 630-797-5530 or visit his website at repugaste.com.

The enclosed fact sheet is here. Please consult that before asking questions in comments.

* I asked our resident school-related expert commenter “JS Mill,” to give me some thoughts…

1. Limiting property tax referendums to November general elections really handcuffs schools. These issues take years to pass and when you genuinely need revenue, this reduces the chances and puts a big strain on schools and could lead to seriously unsafe facilities. as it is, most referenda take multiple attempts to pass these days, raising taxes is never popular no matter how much it is needed. Referenda for building bonds usually do better than Education Fund referenda but that isn’t saying much. Every election the IASA/IASB publish a spreadsheet with referenda results and it also includes they type of referenda. The results are not pretty. Districts do know that we do better in the off year elections but sowhat? That is usually when pour efforts pay off because motivated interested and informed voters vote most often, at least when it comes to school referenda. It isn’t our fault people are lazy or too disinterested to get out and vote.

2. I really don’t get the bond rollover issue. You definitely cannot do that with just any bond, and not all bonds require referenda. Working cash bonds and Health/Life/Safety bonds do not. New buildings always require referendum, additions do not. If you really want property tax reform, fund all schools. We get 83% of our funding through local property tax and 1% sales tax in Lee County. If the state even funding 50% (currently about 12% for us) we would drastically reduce our levy, but we can do that since we are not a PTELL district. PTELL needs to go as well. PTELL districts won’t lower their levy because it is so hard to capture the rate again when you need it. Bring back the school construction grant. That went away in the early 2000’s (I am pretty sure some districts are still waiting for their money from 2007). Those grants were as much as 50% of costs. Or extend the 1% facility sales tax tpo the entire state like Iowa does.

In the end, districts like ours wonder why the state has any business meddling in this stuff since they are barely a factor in funding for districts like ours. All they do is regulate but they have nearly no skin in the ga,

Ugaste is actually a pretty decent legislator, but his proposals would make a hard task nearly impossible.

Discuss.

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What can be done about this?

Monday, Jul 13, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Rep. Luis Arroyo, D-Chicago, was arrested by the FBI on Oct. 28, 2019, for attempting to bribe a state senator. House Speaker Michael Madigan, who was under investigation himself, called on Arroyo to resign that same day.

The next day, Rep. Emanuel “Chris” Welch, D-Hillside, was one of three House Democrats who signed a petition to automatically trigger the creation of a Special Investigating Committee. Welch and the two others included the sworn federal criminal complaint against Arroyo as evidence.

Arroyo announced his resignation just hours before the first investigating committee hearing. He was later sentenced to almost five years.

On Feb. 25 of this year, now Illinois House Speaker Welch, without an announcement, kicked Rep. Harry Benton, D-Plainfield, out of the House Democratic caucus and stripped him of his committee assignments and House staff support.

In April, my colleague Isabel Miller asked Welch if Benton should resign, but he wouldn’t respond. On July 1, Welch announced that he’d received an inspector general’s report and demanded that Benton resign, which Benton did two days later.

And that brings us to Rep. Carol Ammons, D-Urbana, who was indicted last week by the feds on multiple charges, including paying her daughter more than $15,000 from her campaign fund disguised as a payment to what appears to be a nonexisting consultant, and then allegedly receiving kickbacks.

Ammons is also accused of killing an appropriation for the Urbana Neighborhood Connections Center and in its place arranging more than $650,000 in the fiscal year 2020 budget for Hood Vote for Neighborhood Transformation — and then her daughter was paid out of that appropriation. Gov. JB Pritzker’s administration figured out what was going on and told Ammons and the group that this was an impermissible conflict of interest. Ammons’ daughter left the payroll.

The next year, Ammons allegedly inserted a $612,000 grant to Bridgewater-Sullivan Community Life Center into the state budget. Ammons allegedly then assisted the group in drafting the contract to hire her daughter, and allegedly received kickbacks. That same daughter was also paid about $10,000 by the Urbana-Champaign Independent Media Center, which Ammons helped with budgetary member initiatives totaling $700,000 in fiscal year 2021 and fiscal year 2022.

The feds allege that, in total, Ammons and her daughter received benefits “in excess of $100,000.” The government allegedly has multiple text messages that implicate Ammons. She’s also accused of lying to the FBI when she said she had no knowledge of any conflict of interest with the Hood Vote group.

Welch told reporters last week that he wouldn’t call for Ammons’ resignation because she has the right to due process. I asked a day later how a still-secret legislative inspector general report would qualify as due process for Benton and a public federal grand jury indictment does not for Ammons. I was told by a Welch spokesperson that the speaker considers the federal indictment akin to Welch’s own referral to the legislative inspector general. And then the adjudication happened during the legislative inspector general’s investigation and report. Seems a bit of a stretch.

Welch told reporters he’d consider a special investigating committee to be “due process” if members demanded it.

The special investigation committee can ultimately lead to a House floor vote to expel Ammons.

However, Welch also told reporters, “I think the courts is the proper place for this. They have the tools available to them, and it’s the proper place.”

Welch had basically the same response when he chaired the special investigative committee looking into Madigan’s operation. But, unlike Ammons, Madigan had not yet been indicted.

Also, the House voted to expel Rep. Derrick Smith, D-Chicago, after his arrest and before his federal bribery trial. And Gov. Rod Blagojevich was impeached and removed from office before his federal trial. The argument doesn’t really hold water.
Trick bag

On Friday, Republicans filed paperwork to initiate the investigating committee. Welch appointed members to it that same day.

And that, finally, brings us to President Donald Trump. We’ve seen serious problems at the U.S. attorney’s office in Chicago the past several months, and in my opinion, believable allegations have been made of politically motivated prosecutions.

The Ammons indictment was filed by the Central District of Illinois. I’ve seen nothing yet, which indicates that office is having the same problems as the Northern District.

But an argument will likely be made that this is yet another politically motivated Trump-era indictment and people should wait, particularly after what happened to Sen. Emil Jones, III, D-Chicago. The splashy federal bribery case against him completely fell apart at trial. Lots of folks, from Pritzker on down, had demanded Jones resign when the indictment was issued.

It also didn’t help matters that, like with the Madigan probe, only House Republicans signed the petition to initiate action against Ammons. It can be portrayed as partisan.

Ammons says she’s innocent. I doubt she’ll resign. So, Welch is in a bit of a trick bag.

Also, as a reminder, the Illinois constitution prohibits a member from being kicked out twice for the same offense. That’s why Rep. Derrick Smith (D-Chicago) was able to return to the Statehouse after he first given the boot and then was elected by the voters (an attempt to run an independent candidate failed).

So, the charges may have to be narrowed or people can hope that the feds file a superceding indictment.

* Anyway, I’m all ears on what your thoughts are on how this sort of thing can be prevented.

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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Monday, Jul 13, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

All In One Laundry Center and Services is a Springfield-based, full-service laundry company led by President and CEO Pamela Frazier. Services include coin laundry, wash-and-fold, dry cleaning, alterations, commercial laundry services, and pickup and delivery. Under Pamela’s leadership, All In One Laundry has grown to be recognized for its exceptional service and commitment to the community in Central Illinois.

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

We Are Retail and IRMA are dedicated to sharing the stories of retailers like Pamela in Springfield who serve their communities with dedication and pride. Please visit https://WeAreRetail.IRMA.org/.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Jul 13, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Immigration arrests near county courthouses still persist, despite state law. Tribune

    - The Court Access, Safety and Participation Act, which is being challenged by the Trump administration, followed an order issued by Cook County’s chief judge at the time, Tim Evans, similarly barring civil immigration enforcement around county courthouses.
    - Since the beginning of the year, immigration agents have been in or around county courthouses at least 50 times through June 9 — a rate of more than twice per week.
    - Critics say federal immigration enforcement near Illinois courthouses is disrupting state court operations and discouraging people from seeking justice, while the Department of Homeland Security argues the practice is a “common sense” enforcement strategy.

* Related stories…

* Gov. JB Pritzker has no public events scheduled today.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Illinois Dems trash former state public health chief who’s now seeking Senate bid: ‘Maine deserves better’: Before moving to Maine, Shah presided over a series of fatal Legionnaires disease outbreaks at the state of Illinois’ veterans’ home in Quincy that were linked to 14 resident deaths and the sickening of dozens of other staff and residents at the former facility. His oversight under Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner’s administration was condemned at the time for worsening the horrific and preventable public health crisis and causing a greater loss of life.

* Politico | Reading between the ad lines: Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias is launching an extensive television advertising campaign today as he seeks reelection — a move that also lands just two weeks before candidates can begin circulating petitions for Chicago’s February mayoral election. […] The new 30-second ad spots, titled “Accomplishments” and “Demand Better,” focus on Giannoulias’ record running the Secretary of State’s Office and what the campaign describes as government’s responsibility to deliver better service, protect people’s rights and earn the public’s trust.

*** Statehouse News ***

* NBC Chicago | State senator accused of holding up honorary street sign over ‘retaliation’: [Rep. Lisa Davis] and [political consultant Sabha Abour] said an IDOT official informed them that another lawmaker – State Sen. Willie Preston, D-Chicago – reached out to IDOT to block the renaming. “I was taken aback and surprised that Senator Preston would call them because IDOT only has those two responsibilities – make the sign and put it up,” Davis said.

* ABC Chicago | ‘Little Palestine Way’ sign installed on Bridgeview street after delay: IDOT had postponed the ceremony at the last minute. Some who helped organize the event blamed politics for the delay. So, community members decided to take matters into their own hands and went ahead with the renaming.

* Crain’s | Illinois sues to stop Trump from ending school mental health grants: Several states, including Illinois, are suing to stop the federal government from cutting mental health funding for schools, arguing a judge already ordered the Trump administration not to touch the congressionally approved programs. Illinois stands to lose millions of dollars in student mental health grant money if the education grants are discontinued at the end of July.

* Tribune | State-funded America 250 commemorations kept mellow as federal funding cuts still sting in Illinois: Gov. JB Pritzker’s office listed about $376,000 in costs for semiquincentennial-specific state programming, a relatively low price tag amid federal funding cuts and a striking contrast to the all-out, politically charged events in the nation’s capital. Illinois residents and visitors may see a lasting impression from the celebrations, however, as the bulk of those state dollars, about $300,000 from existing funding, went to grants for 22 public art projects throughout the state, including a mural of singer-songwriter and Maywood native John Prine going up on the exterior of Chicago’s Old Town School of Folk Music. The other biggest line item: the printing of Illinois “passports” encouraging visitors and residents to see historic and civic sites, for a cost of about $76,000 “from existing operating resources,” according to the governor’s office. The state’s overall spending plan for day-to-day operations during the budget year that began July 1 totals nearly $56 billion.

* Muddy River News | IL House Deputy Majority Leader Elizabeth “Lisa” Hernandez, bringing Democratic presence to the “red sea”: Now in her second term in her party’s leadership role, Hernandez said a community’s “redness” or Republican majority has never stopped a Democrat before. “I have really committed myself to making a Democratic presence across the state,” Hernandez told Muddy River News before making her formal remarks at the dinner. “I really try to provide the resources necessary to elect Democrats from the local to the federal level. And I think we’ve been doing pretty good.”

* WGN | Gov. JB Pritzker signs new Illinois energy laws: House Bill 4456 makes energy bills more affordable, expanding the discount program for low-income electricity and gas customers. Eligibility for the federally-funded Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) has increased to 300 percent at or below the poverty level.
that makes it tougher to qualify. It used to be 200 percent. House Bill 5524 ensures utility charge transparency. The bill helps residents understand added charges and fees on energy bills. It requires the state to publish a report detailing all the charges, which laws or agencies mandate them and the programs or services they support.

*** Data Center News ***

* CNN | Scientists have found an alarming environmental impact of vast data centers: They focused on more than 6,000 data centers located away from highly dense urban areas, as surface temperatures around these were less likely to have been affected by other factors, such as manufacturing or the heating of homes. The researchers also filtered out seasonal impacts, global warming trends and other influences. They found surface temperatures increased by an average of 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit after a data center started operations. In extreme cases, nearby temperatures increase by up to 16.4 degrees Fahrenheit.

* The Hill | Data centers become flash point in gubernatorial races : “Could you invent an easier political target if you tried?” said Sam Silverman, founder of the Silverman Strategy Group, which focuses on the intersection of technology and politics. “Absent gigantic changes in strategy, this only gets worse.” “I’m generally a techo-optimist, and I’d advise anyone actively campaigning as pro-data center in their community that it’s electoral malpractice,” Silverman, who most recently worked for Rep. Pat Ryan (D-N.Y.), told The Hill Friday.

* Wisconsin Public Radio | Groups sue Wisconsin DNR over environmental review of Port Washington data centers: Both Sierra Club and MEA had urged the DNR to conduct a full EIS for the project. The agency conducted an environmental analysis summary of the project instead. They say the DNR violated Wisconsin’s Environmental Policy Act by failing to prepare an EIS because the data center is a major development that would significantly affect the human environment. In April, Port Washington residents and environmental advocates had urged state environmental regulators to deny permits for the data center campus, which includes four data centers that span 672 acres. The first phase of the project would use 1.3 gigawatts of energy or enough to power 640,000 homes, but it could require up to 3.5 gigawatts of electricity in the future.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Chicago school board bars candidates from taking CPS vendors’ campaign contributions: “As we enter into unprecedented waters for the board and campaigning, I thought it important that we inoculate the board from the optics of pay to play,” Board President Sean Harden said during discussion of the resolution at a June meeting. The board approved the measure Wednesday in a 16-1 vote. Each candidate would be responsible for confirming that campaign contributions aren’t coming from active CPS vendors or any organizations that have applied for district contracts, according to the resolution. The district relies on vendors for various goods and services, from landscaping to academic tools, whose contracts are approved by the board.

* WBEZ | ‘Where do they go?’ What West Side patients face after their hospital closes: Longtime orthopedic surgeon Dr. Victor Romano stopped taking his elective cases to West Suburban around the time Manoj Prasad took over in 2022. Romano worried if something happened to his patients in the middle of the night, there wouldn’t be doctors in the intensive care unit to take care of them. Federal inspectors were concerned about this, too, when they found patients at the hospital could be at risk of serious harm or death. A company repossessed a robot he used for knee replacements, Romano says. He opted to perform surgeries at other hospitals that kept their operating rooms cool. At West Suburban, temperatures in the ORs climbed into the 80s, he says.

* Crain’s | West Loop TIF funds to back infrastructure around Chicago Fire FC stadium: Chicago officials plan to redirect $287 million of West Loop property tax revenue for infrastructure surrounding Chicago Fire FC’s new stadium at the 78, a shift poised to help jumpstart the South Loop megaproject and reduce risk for developer Related Midwest. The proposal — set for consideration today by the City Council Finance Committee — would restructure a controversial tax-increment financing subsidy for the long-vacant 62-acre site along the Chicago River south of Roosevelt Road.

* Crain’s | FAA extends flight limits at O’Hare: “FAA finds that significant delay and operational disruption would occur at O’Hare if the order were to expire as originally scheduled.” The flight caps, which were scheduled to expire Oct. 24, will be extended to Oct. 30, 2027. The FAA imposed limits on flights this summer after the airport’s two largest carriers, United and American airlines, ramped up their schedules in a battle for market share and gates.

* CBS Chicago | Man charged with trespassing at Gov. JB Pritzker’s Chicago home on 4th of July, police report shows: According to the police report, 46-year-old Dwayne Milton was seen on camera allegedly jumping over a fence and walking in the backyard of Pritzker’s house. He was quickly arrested and he admitted to officers he had an outstanding warrant in Cook County for shoplifting. There is no indication he had a weapon or even knew it was the governor’s house.

* Tribune | 3 takeaways from Chicago White Sox’s MLB draft haul, including a ‘dream come true’ for Nazareth’s Landon Thome: “I was always able to keep it together as a player,” the Hall of Famer Jim Thome said. “This is tough. This is so special. What a day, just to watch your son go through that, his name be called, it’s a dream come true, right? “You watch them as kids. They grow up, they love the game. And then as they love the game, they go through this process of just wanting to play. And then when you are in that moment yesterday, you don’t really know if that will ever happen. When it does, it’s so special. It’s hard to explain, but what a great moment.”

* Tribune | Chicago’s second heat wave of the season to bring poor air quality Monday, more 90s starting Tuesday: As a heat dome builds in the Plains and “dangerous” record highs become a possibility for parts of the country, the Chicago area is forecast to experience at least three days of 90-degree weather this week, Tuesday through Thursday. The area will get little overnight relief as temperatures remain in the mid to upper 70s. No rain, mostly sunny skies and light winds will contribute to the uncomfortably warm weather.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Judge denies appeal in La Grange pipeline standoff with McCook quarry operators: If the ruling stands, it will pave the way for the village to go ahead with the planned $37 million 50th Street stormwater project. “This clears another hurdle,” village manager Jack Knight said. “We have been pursuing the project through the appeal process, so with that out of the way, there’ll be one less obstacle for us.” The pipeline in question partly runs through property owned by Heidelberg Materials. The 54-inch pipeline had, for the better part of a century, taken excess stormwater from the village directly to the McCook Ditch. Quarry operators severed the pipeline in 1992 during mining operations, which left the rainwater draining into the quarry. The water then had to be pumped into McCook Ditch.

* Tribune | Aurora aldermen disagree on regulating PACs in Mayor John Laesch’s proposed ethics package: The Aurora City Council spent over two hours workshopping Mayor John Laesch’s long-discussed campaign finance ethics reform package last week, with some aldermen at odds with the mayor over regulating political action committees. Council members also debated the definition of doing business with the city and other requirements on disclosures that some aldermen said they felt treated them as “criminals” for running for office. Despite some disagreement, the council overall reached a consensus over several language changes in the ethics proposal, such as eliminating disclosure requirements for loans and services.

* Shaw Local | Cornerstone Services in Joliet to host grand opening on new behavioral health center: This new behavioral health center features an expansion of services still offered at the Black Road facility, according to Matthew Lanoue, director of development at Cornerstone Services. “The program has grown so much,” Lanoue said. “The staff is still there. It just had no space.” Cornerstone Services’ behavioral health program provides “high-quality mental health services available in Will and Kankakee counties,” according to the Cornerstone Services website. […] State Sen. Rachel Ventura, D-Joliet, who helped obtain funding for the building’s renovation, will be present for the celebration - and tours will follow the ribbon-cutting, Lanoue said.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Town of Normal resident and officials question conduct of council member Kathleen Lorenz: A resident of the Town of Normal has accused council member Kathleen Lorenz of yelling and swearing at town workers about town leadership during an incident last month in Uptown. Documents acquired by WGLT under the Freedom of Information Act also indicate two later interactions with the engineering technicians. One was an apology session supervised by a town staff member. Another, following that mediation, was in a town parking deck during which Lorenz accosted the workers and renewed the conversation. Town administration has raised the issue of retaliation by Lorenz in response to the third interaction.

* BND | Judge warns East St. Louis leader of possible jail time for withholding records:
Shonte Mueller, a former housing authority board member, and her husband Nicholas Mueller, a former East St. Louis assistant police chief, filed the lawsuit in 2024 in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Illinois. The warning to City Manager Robert Betts comes after Judge David W. Dugan already entered a default judgment against him and the city of East St. Louis on all claims against them in April. It was a sanction for their “flagrant bad faith” in the discovery process, Dugan wrote.

* Illinois Times | Developers pitch solar farm to Divernon residents: A Dallas-based company hopes to build a 1,100-acre solar project between Divernon Township and Pawnee Township by 2029. Leeward Renewable Energy held an open house Wednesday at the Divernon American Legion, where community members and representatives of the company met to talk about the solar farm’s location, construction, environmental impact and employment potential. Henkle Branch Solar is the limited liability company created to oversee the project, which the company says will generate up to 100 megawatts of solar power. The site is anticipated to operate for 30 or more years, during which time it is expected to generate an average of $400,000 in property tax payments, according to Kristen Rosenberger, the public affairs regional manager at Leeward. Henkle Branch Solar is also offering $25,000 in “neighbor benefit grants” to homeowners and renters located within 1,000 feet of the project boundary.

* WTTW | Logan Prison Is Moving 140 Miles North. Here’s What Employees, Incarcerated Women Have to Say: Logan’s move elicits mixed emotions among both the women incarcerated inside of it and its employees. Correctional officers worry about job security, while some incarcerated women are concerned about moving away from their downstate families and others don’t want another prison built at all. Meanwhile, some residents in Lincoln think the prison’s move is a death knell for their town.

* WGLT | Housing experts react to what federal housing legislation means for Central Illinois: “Housing supply is one of the biggest issues, impacts that buyers, sellers, renters, employers and communities are actually having…” said Camill Tedrick, incoming president of the Mid-Illinois Realtors Association [MIRA], the multiple listing service agency in Central and Southern Illinois. “People still want to buy homes. First time homebuyers still want the opportunity to build wealth through home ownership, but many are really facing the challenges with affordability.” Tedrick said she was disappointed to learn President Trump canceled the signing of the bill. Although he reaffirmed Friday that he would not sign the bill, it is set to become law tonight after a 10-day waiting period expires.

* WAND | Where to find cooling centers in central Illinois: During regular business hours, public buildings such as libraries and municipal buildings are generally available for people to cool down in. The state of Illinois has an interactive map with cooling centers available in your area.

*** National ***

* WaPo | Conflicting court orders over citizenship data stir more midterm confusion: The recent decisions from a pair of judges — one appointed by Trump, one by President Joe Biden — injected more uncertainty into this fall’s elections. They centered on state access to an enhanced version of a federal database stocked with citizenship information. […]
On Wednesday, Sooknanan stood by her previous ruling, writing in a new opinion that Wetherell had “erred in significant ways.” The divide between the courts left DHS officials with two sets of orders pointing in opposite directions, at least for the states covered by the settlement — Florida, Indiana, Iowa and Ohio.

* NPR | Campaign text messages could soon get more effective — and annoying: AI-powered platforms are training bots to sound like political candidates in text messages, holding personalized conversations with thousands of potential voters simultaneously. The bots are also gathering data, learning what each voter wants from their representatives and using that information to shape future campaign messaging. Aaron Sheeks, the CEO of Akillion, an AI platform that lets people run their own Large Language Models or bots, said many of his current clients are running for political office.

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Good morning!

Monday, Jul 13, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’d like to give a big shout-out and lots of huge hugs to two friends of mine who lost their moms this month: Adam Vaught and Mark Denzler. There are no words for losses like this

I get a little bit weary
A little bittersweet
I start choking a little
On old memories
And I miss my friends from long, long ago
It’s been too long to call
It’s been too long to know

I miss my mom

* Hannah Meisel sent me this and it’s been a great help to me, so I’ll share it with you…

I hope so. I really hope so.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Monday, Jul 13, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

Monday, Jul 13, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Jul 13, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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PREVIOUS POSTS »
* A look at Rep. Ugaste's Bears/property tax proposal
* What can be done about this?
* Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* Good morning!
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Yesterday's stories

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