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Roundup: US House Speaker Mike Johnson tours Chicago ICE facility as Democrats are denied access

Wednesday, Jun 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* US Reps. Raja Krishnamoorthi and Jonathan Jackson were denied a tour of the South Loop ICE office yesterday. Today, another group of Democratic US representatives was also denied entry


* The Tribune covered it

Illinois Reps. Danny K. Davis, Jesús “Chuy” Garcia, Delia C. Ramirez and Jonathan Jackson were denied entry into the U.S. Immigration and Enforcement processing center in Broadview after being told they needed to make a request first with ICE.

“There is no regulation that requires us to give prior announcement or to schedule an appointment,” Garcia told the masked agent who came out to greet them. “We are here by our authority (as members of Congress) and we seek a meeting and an inspection of this facility.”

“I respect your request, but these are the instructions that we have,” the agent responded.

* House Speaker Mike Johnson is in Chicago today and visited the same ICE facility the Democratic lawmakers were turned away from. Fox News

Reporter: Tell us first of all why you’re in Chicago on this mission?

Johnson: Well, we came here to make sure that these brave men and women that serve in ICE who are protecting our communities and upholding federal law, I want to make sure that they know that Republicans have their back. The president. Kristi Noem at Homeland Security, all the leadership, Tom Homan, we are all in this together and we want them to know that even though assaults on ICE officers have risen by 413 percent just in this recent period, Democrats are leading that. Republicans are on the opposite side. We are for the rule of law and for law enforcement, and we are doing everything we can to support them.

Reporter: Okay, we just heard from the governor. He calls it an ill-conceived mission. The mayor is very much against this. The governor also said, you’re going after the wrong individuals, and the wrong target. Is Chicago the next flash point after Los Angeles?

Johnson: Well, I tell you what, they’ve got a very difficult job here in this deep blue territory with a mayor who is on the wrong side of the law. And they’re doing everything they can. It’s a patriotic duty. They’re understaffed. They’re overwhelmed with the workload. They’re trying to go after the dangerous, criminal, illegal aliens that are in the country harming American citizens. The mayor of Chicago thinks that is an ill-conceived mission. What is he talking about? It’s madness. They have to do the job, and they need to do it better. We’re working on the one Big, Beautiful bill to allow them the resources that are desperately needed.

I mean, they are doing the job. The border is secured. We are locked down. We’re not allowing illegals into the country anymore, but the enforcement and removal of the dangerous people who got here is an essential task for our ICE agents and officers to take care of more facilities.

* But do people like Chicago resident Chao Zhou fit Johnson’s characterization of “dangerous”? Block Club Chicago

Chao Zhou was arrested after a hearing in his asylum case, said his roommate, Liam Kincaid. “He got taken for doing the right thing,” Kincaid said. […]

[Zhou] has lived in the United States since 2019, Kincaid said. He left Hong Kong after participating in pro-democracy protests that pushed for political independence in Hong Kong, a special administrative region of China.

Zhou, 31, attended the University of Washington on a student visa and earned his master’s degree in 2021. He’s had a political asylum case that he has worked on for the past few years. About a month ago, Zhou received a summons for a hearing in his case — leading to his arrest Thursday, Kincaid said. […]

If Zhou is sent back to China, “his safety’s not guaranteed,” [his roommate, Liam Kincaid] said. […]

Kincaid described Zhou as a very “low-key person” who spends a lot of his time working as a software developer. Zhou met his wife in the United States, but she now lives in Australia.

* Tribune

On Monday, three U.S. citizens were detained by ICE after allegedly assaulting an officer in Chicago, according to a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson.

In an interview Tuesday with the Tribune, Samuel Olson, ICE’s Chicago field office director, explained that “the last thing (the agents) want to do is to have to arrest somebody who’s assaulting them or impeding them from doing their jobs.” […]

On Monday around 9 a.m., about a dozen protesters stood outside immigration court at 55 E. Monroe St., according to Bianca Paiz, who was on her way to work. ICE agents entering the building, then started to take the three individuals into custody, Paiz recounted. The immigration agents wore masks and didn’t identify themselves, she said.

Paiz said the protesters did not resist arrest, and that the agents handcuffed them before forcing them into an unmarked vehicle. […]

ICE transported the protesters to a different federal building on West Ida B. Wells Drive in the Loop. Two of the individuals were released about three hours later, according to protesters.

* Hmm…


AP: "ICE is not supposed to take custody of U.S.-born citizens. While the immigration agency can occasionally get involved in cases of naturalized citizens who committed offenses such as lying on immigration forms, it has no authority over people born in the U.S." www.pbs.org/newshour/pol…

[image or embed]

— Capitol Fax (@capitolfax.bsky.social) June 17, 2025 at 3:13 PM

* Also from that Tribune story

[Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Samuel Olson] emphasized that immigration detention is not punitive but meant to ensure court appearances, noting that detention space is limited and costly.

Except, as noted elsewhere, they’re detaining people at their court appearances.

* More…

    * NBC Chicago | National Guard members accompany mom to Chicago immigration appointment: Andres Reyes said his mother has a work permit, and has lived in the Chicago area for decades. “The main reason we came here is for our mother,” she said. “We fear that she might get taken into custody. There’s been reports of that. They get a text for an appointment, they come in and they end up getting detained,” he said.

    * WGN | Congressman Jesus ‘Chuy’ Garcia condemns ICE raids: “By in far, the people being apprehended are not the worst of the worst. That’s what is so troubling by what’s going on in the country,” Garcia said. “They’ve come after immigrants, higher education, law firms. The only question is, who will be next?”

    * CNN | DHS reverses course, allowing immigration raids to resume at farms, hotels, restaurants: ICE has been under tremendous pressure to meet White House-imposed quotas on immigration arrests. White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller told ICE officials last month that they needed to arrest at least 3,000 people a day. ICE has been averaging around 2,000 people a day. Trump has directed his ire at Democratic-led cities, calling on Sunday for ICE to “expand efforts” in “the Democrat Power Center.”

    * Fortune | How retail giant Home Depot is preparing employees for ICE raids: Earlier this month, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents arrested day laborers outside of a Home Depot in a predominantly Latino neighborhood in Los Angeles. A separate protest also sprung up outside of a Home Depot location in a different part of the city the next day. Although the retailer does not contract with day laborers directly, the area outside of store property has long been a place for people to congregate in the hopes of finding work. In response to these raids, Home Depot has issued new guidance to employees about what they should do if ICE shows up, Bloomberg first reported. Home Depot confirms to Fortune that store employees are required to report any ICE-involved incident as soon as it happens. Workers across the chain have been reminded to avoid interactions with agents for their own safety. And regional store leaders at locations impacted by raids in Los Angeles are allowing workers who feel disturbed by the raid to leave for the day with full pay, although that is not a corporate-wide policy.

    * WBEZ | Mayor Brandon Johnson warns Trump that Chicago has ‘to go as far as necessary’ to protect the Constitution: “Whatever is necessary. … We should all be committed to doing just that,” Johnson said in response to the remark at a City Hall news conference. “Whether it’s in the courts, whether it’s in the streets or with policy, we’re going to continue to defend and stand up for working people.” Johnson’s repeated, forceful rebuke of the president comes as his team continues to figure out how to fight back in the face of potential military presence.

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It’s just a bill

Wednesday, Jun 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Legal Reader

The American Tort Reform Association called on Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker to veto Senate Bill 328, warning the bill would create unprecedented liability for businesses across the country.

In a letter to Gov. Pritzker, ATRA said the bill would undermine the Pritzker administration’s “Open for Business” economic growth plan. The letter also points out the bill’s “extraordinarily broad” language, with its definition of “toxic” roping in everything from dangerous chemicals to lifesaving medications, food and baby formula.

“This is one of the single worst bills we have seen this year, nationwide,” said Tiger Joyce, president of ATRA. “If this bill becomes law, Illinois is likely to see a mass exodus of businesses leaving and a sharp decline in new business investments.”

S.B. 328 would change the law so that out-of-state businesses can be sued by out-of-state plaintiffs in Illinois courts for incidents with no connection to the state. […]

The bill mirrors a measure New York Gov. Kathy Hochul vetoed twice, citing its sweeping overreach and the risk of driving businesses out of the state.

* Rep. Dagmara Avelar…

State Rep. Dagmara “Dee” Avelar, D-Bolingbrook, passed a bicameral measure through the House and Senate chambers this spring that protects Illinoisans’ access to medication abortion and enhances a shield law to prevent federal interference.

“With federal reproductive protections under constant attack, safeguarding abortion medication in Illinois is essential to preserve women’s personal freedoms and ensure people can make decisions about their bodies without interference,” said Avelar.

Avelar’s House Bill 3637 would further strengthen Illinois’ Shield Law by reinforcing the Illinois Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act to safeguard access to medication abortion. The shield law protects healthcare professionals providing lawful healthcare in Illinois, and was strengthened in 2024 to prevent the state from sharing information on lawful procedures done in Illinois.

House Bill 3637 takes these protections further by ultimately “future-proofing” Illinois law — preempting federal overreach of a medication if already approved by the World Health Organization, ensuring residents have access to medically necessary and life-saving reproductive health medications.

“This bill locks in women’s reproductive protections, mitigates federal overreach, and maintains that a woman has absolute autonomy over her life and health,” said Avelar.

Avelar’s measure passed out of both chambers this legislative session and now awaits the governor’s signature, expected later this summer.

* More on Rep. Avelar’s bill from WGLT

Republican state Rep. Bill Hauter of Morton, who is also an emergency room doctor, said the bill is setting a dangerous precedent.

“It’s a foreign, unelected, unaccountable organization that’s mostly controlled by China,” Hauter said. “Illinois legislators said they’d rather have the WHO do it because they want to make sure that their abortion drug is available in Illinois.”

Avelar said the WHO is a trusted agency at a time when she’s not sure the FDA can be trusted.

“The federal government has decided to not be part of the WHO only during the Trump administration,” Avelar said. “But prior to that, whether it was Democratic or Republican, we have been part of the WHO, so this is an organization that is trusted, not just in the United States but throughout the world.”

* 25News Now

Instead of spending hours on applications and essays, Illinois high school graduates could be college-bound just by having good grades.

The General Assembly passed HB3522, which would create the Public University Direct Admission Program Act.

According to the bill awaiting Gov. JB Pritzker’s signature, high school seniors in good academic standing will be automatically admitted to nine public universities. Those include:

    - Illinois State University
    - University of Illinois at Springfield
    - Southern Illinois University
    - Chicago State University
    - Eastern Illinois University
    - Governors State University
    - Northeastern Illinois University
    - Northern Illinois University
    - Western Illinois University […]

According to the bill, college administrators must identify grade point average requirements and share them with the Illinois Student Assistance Commission by March 1, 2026.

The commission will then collect data from school districts to determine which students meet those standards and report back to the Board of Higher Education. The commission and Board of Higher Ed will repeat that process each year.

* WNIJ

AI is already in classrooms across Illinois, whether teachers like it or not. It’s one reason why Illinois State Representative Laura Faver Dias introduced a proposal establishing a State Instructional Technology Advisory Board to give schools guidance on how to use Artificial Intelligence.

Faver Dias is a former teacher. She says cell phones have been an issue in schools for years and the state’s just getting around to crafting policy, so it’s crucial they don’t wait that long with AI.

“They’re able to act nimbly and quickly to pull together experts, including classroom teachers in terms of practice, and then that first guidance will be issued July 1, 2026,” said Faver Dias.

“How do you understand bias? How do you understand privacy and security? How do you understand the idea of hallucinations or quality of output? And then on top of that, be a good prompt engineer,” she said.

* Illinois State Ambulance Association…

In a major victory for Illinois patients and first responders, legislation addressing inadequate insurance payments for medically necessary ground ambulance service is now headed to Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s desk. The bill passed both the House and Senate unanimously.

The bill, sponsored by Sen. Ram Villivalam, D-Chicago, and Rep. Marty Moylan, D-Des Plaines, protects consumers from the financial stress of being responsible for the cost of ground ambulance services when insurance providers refuse to pay the full cost of those services. […]

The legislation (House Bill 2785):

    - Requires insurance coverage for all emergency and urgent ground ambulance services (ordered within 12 hours).
    - Caps patient costs at the lower of an ER visit copay or 10% of the recognized amount for ground ambulance services provided to prevent excessive out-of-pocket expenses.
    - Bans balance billing when ground ambulance service providers accept a defined, fair payment amount.
    - Mandates insurer payment equal to the lesser of: (1) negotiated rate, (2) 85% of billed charges, or (3) average gross charge amount for a previous one-year period.
    - Protects ground ambulance service providers from arbitrary insurer rates and helps Illinois’ first responders, municipalities and fire protection districts recoup fair reimbursement for 911 transports from commercial insurance providers, which reduces the burden on taxpayer dollars currently subsidizing these lifesaving services.
    - Protects patient access to emergency ground ambulance services and urgent ground ambulance service throughout Illinois through consistent and fair rate-setting and payment by health insurance issuers.

The effective date of the legislation, once signed into law, is Jan. 1, 2027, giving all stakeholders time to prepare for implementation.

* School Transportation News

Senate Bill 191, passed by the Illinois General Assembly last month, requires all new school buses manufactured after July 1, 2031, be equipped with three-point seat belts. The bill does not require school bus drivers or aides to ensure students wear the occupant restraint systems or to provide training on their usage.

The legislation now sits on Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s desk. Under Illinois law, he has 60 calendar days to act. If no action is taken within that time frame, the bill automatically becomes law. This process is outlined in the Illinois Constitution and ensures that a passed bill cannot be blocked through executive inaction—a notable contrast to the federal system.

It is doubtful Pritzker veto the bill and force a three-fifths vote in both chambers to override. It passed unanimously in the House and secure three-times more yes votes than no votes in the Senate.

That is due in part to pushing back the original compliance date three years from Jan. 1, 2028.

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Why Are Tax-Exempt Hospitals Getting Rich?

Wednesday, Jun 18, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Across Illinois, big hospital systems and PBMs are abusing the 340B drug discount program – making massive profits while patients drown in medical bills. One whistleblower called it “laundering money.”

Here’s how the scam works: big hospitals buy discounted 340B drugs, bill patients full price, then split the difference with for-profit pharmacies and PBMs.

340B was meant to help Illinois communities in need. But there are no rules requiring hospitals and PBMs to pass savings on to patients. No transparency. No oversight. Just higher costs for working families, small businesses, and taxpayers.

Meanwhile, tax-exempt hospitals cash in – and PBMs get a cut too.

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Open thread

Wednesday, Jun 18, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sister Sledge

Here’s what we call our Golden Rule
Have faith in you and the things you do

What’s up?

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Jun 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: House Dems’ transit point man says special session is possible. Crain’s

    - “I’d be open to [a special session],” said Rep. Kam Buckner, D-Chicago, one of the legislative leaders in the Illinois House of Representatives. “We’ve got to first come to an agreement. . . .There is nothing right now that we can pass in summer session because we haven’t worked out those hanging chads.”
    - Voting structure is still a sticking point on the proposed 20-member board to which the governor, mayor of Chicago and Cook County board president would each make five appointments. The remaining five members would be selected by the county board presidents of DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry and Will counties.
    - Once governance issues are decided, the conversation will turn to revenue. Buckner says he wants legislators to consider a tollway surcharge that was shot down in the Senate bill, in part by organized labor and suburban legislators.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Crain’s | Illinois faces $22.2B in health care spending cuts under GOP budget bill: Illinois would see a decrease in health care spending of $22.2 billion over 10 years under the budget reconciliation measure, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, passed by the U.S. House and now before the Senate, according to an analysis by the Urban Institute and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. In addition to the impact to people on Medicaid and Affordable Care Act policies, the blow to hospital and other provider revenue will be drastic, the analysis predicts.

* Daily Herald | Illinois lawmakers identified in notes kept by Minnesota assassination suspect: Two Illinois members of Congress, including U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi of Schaumburg, and a state senator were among those named in records kept by the man accused of gunning down the Minnesota House speaker. “I have been informed that my name was included in the notes of the Minnesota suspect accused of assassinating an elected official, murdering her husband, and targeting others,” Krishnamoorthi said Tuesday. “This brutal attack was devastating and terrifying on many levels.”

*** Statewide ***

* Shaw Local | IHSA approves new state tournament schedule for basketball: The IHSA on Tuesday announced that the boys and girls basketball state tournaments will change their format, reverting to a similar schedule used when the single-weekend format was introduced in 2022 until 2024.

* NBC Chicago | Are fireflies going extinct? What to know about ‘lightning bugs’ in Illinois: Species reported several North American firefly species could be at risk of extinction, though data remains challenging as research is relatively new. “There is an urgent need to study firefly populations more closely to fully understand their plight and ensure conservation efforts are effective,” the Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation, a nonprofit organization working on conservation efforts, wrote on its website. In Illinois, researchers warned of indications populations are declining.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Center Square | IL taxpayers provide millions for upcoming NASCAR, golf events: The $55.2 billion Illinois budget signed by Gov. J.B. Pritzker on Monday includes $5 million to Chicago for costs associated with operating expenses for NASCAR races July 5 and 6. […] [Sen. Don DeWitte] noted that lawmakers also appropriated $1 million for 2026 Presidents Cup golf at Medinah Country Club and suggested that there were much more significant priorities for the state.

* Capitol News Illinois | Inside Illinois’ efforts to court the emerging quantum technology industry: The Japan External Trade Organization — an economic development organization affiliated with the government of Japan — sponsored a two-day “delegation” of business representatives to Chicago. At an early meeting of the delegation, representatives of the state and economic development agencies pitched the region — and Illinois’ state backing — as unique in the world. “This is not a state government that is following trends but really setting the trends,” Intersect Illinois Chief Quantum Officer Preeti Chalsani told the delegation. “When I go to conferences, I hear about other states and countries who are thinking of doing something like Illinois. That really makes me proud.”

* Capitol City Now | How did a new state budget help SkillsUSA Illinois?: Eric Hill with SkillsUSA Illinois talks with Joey McLaughlin on the WTAX Morning NewsWatch about the organization and the Illinois State budget the Governor signed and what it means for SkillsUSA.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Mayor Brandon Johnson warns Trump that Chicago has ‘to go as far necessary’ to protect the Constitution: Mayor Brandon Johnson declared Tuesday that Chicagoans “have to go as far as necessary” to “protect our Constitution” as the Trump administration sets its sight on the city as a target for militarized immigration enforcement.

* Tribune | ICE field director defends agents after ramped-up enforcement, arrests of US citizens at Chicago immigration court protest: On Monday, three U.S. citizens were detained by ICE after allegedly assaulting an officer in Chicago, according to a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson. In an interview Tuesday with the Tribune, Samuel Olson, ICE’s Chicago field office director, explained that “the last thing (the agents) want to do is to have to arrest somebody who’s assaulting them or impeding them from doing their jobs.” ICE released all three protesters Monday afternoon. Asked whether the protesters were charged, Olson said the arrests of the protesters are under investigation by the U.S. attorney’s office for the Northern District of Illinois.

* Block Club | Ex-Loretto Hospital Exec Stole $300 Million Through COVID Testing Scams: Prosecutors: Former Loretto COO and CFO Anosh Ahmed is among a group of four who now face charges related to the scheme, prosecutors said. Block Club has reported extensively on Ahmed’s troubling conduct at Loretto Hospital, from letting well-connected people access COVID-19 vaccines early — and even bragging he vaccinated Eric Trump — to contracting with companies owned by his business partner, best friend and neighbor, Sameer Suhail.

* NBC Chicago | Chicago hospital suffers ‘catastrophic loss’ of air conditioning before heat wave: Officials at Weiss Memorial Hospital, located in the 4600 block of North Marine Drive, say that the loss has led to a massive transfer of patients to other hospitals and caused ambulances to be bypassed from its emergency department. According to officials, mechanics are working to fix the system. Repairs could take days, and then even beyond that it will take even longer for the air conditioning system to properly cool the facility.

* Chalkbeat Chicago | ‘No regrets, and I’d do it again’: Pedro Martinez reflects on more than 3 years leading Chicago schools: Martinez is an alum of CPS’s Benito Juarez High School and served as the district’s chief financial officer from 2003 to 2009. He served as a deputy superintendent and superintendent in two districts in Nevada, including Clark County, which includes Las Vegas. Martinez was superintendent of the San Antonio Independent School District for six years before being hired by former Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administration in 2021. He starts as the education commissioner of Massachusetts later this summer.

* Press Release | Mayor Johnson Announces $4.11M Investment into Community Wealth-Building: The Department of Planning and Development is allocating grants of up to $500,000 for Community Investment Vehicles and Worker Cooperatives in an effort to increase wealth in low and moderate-income neighborhoods.

* CBS Chicago | Chicago police officer arrested in Florida for shoving security guard, using racial slur at resort: Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd said Dwayne Ocasio was with a group of people seen standing around a golf cart in the middle of the road at the Westgate River Ranch Resort, when a security guard asked them to move the golf cart. “You know what this guy did? He cussed the security guard, used a racial slur – that’s right - and then pushed the security guard,” Judd said in a video posted on the sheriff’s Facebook page.

* Sun-Times | Chicago area prepares for Juneteenth celebrations: ‘We do matter, our stories matter’: Juneteenth is a day to celebrate freedom, but it also serves as a reminder of the ongoing fight for justice and equality. Juneteenth is a federal holiday commemorating June 19, 1865, — the day when the last enslaved African Americans, living in Galveston, Texas, learned they had been freed — two years after the Emancipation Proclamation was issued. Juneteenth was declared a federal holiday in 2021.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Cook County preparing for $211M budget deficit for 2026: County Board President Toni Preckwinkle, who has been able to boast budgets free of taxes, fees or layoffs for the last several years, told reporters at a Tuesday briefing that the 2026 projection is the most “problematic,” and cautioned that “this is our best guess.” The county is expecting a general fund shortfall of $102.6 million, thanks mostly to higher wages and fringe benefits when its current contracts with union employees expire. Its health fund, meanwhile, is projecting a $108.8 million deficit thanks to a significant drop in patient revenues.

* Daily Herald | Arlington Heights shuts off access to license-plate camera data: Recklaus confirmed there were instances where — as part of an overall state of Illinois search — Arlington Heights’ data was included and may have been reviewed, according to the state audit. But he said there’s no indication that the information led to arrests or further inquiries. Recklaus’ report during a village board meeting Monday night came after Trustee Carina Santa Maria inquired if Arlington Heights’ data may have been accessed or exposed. She called upon the board and staff to review, and if necessary strengthen, village policies and ordinances to safeguard against unauthorized use.

* Daily Southtown | State kicks in another $18 million for Tinley Park-Park District land cleanup, district says that will be enough: The state has provided another $18 million to the Tinley Park-Park District to clean hazardous materials and demolish buildings on former state-owned land the district wants to use for recreational purposes. Park officials announced the additional funding Tuesday, which comes on top of $15 million previously earmarked by the state, and said they expect no additional funds will be needed to finish the job.

* Daily Herald | Gurnee hiking local sales tax to replace lost grocery tax revenue — and then some: The expiring 1% state grocery tax will not be reinstated with a local version in Gurnee, but village officials instead will increase their local sales tax to spread the cost to visitors. In fact, because Gurnee’s non-grocery retail base is so expansive, the decision is expected to generate more than double the revenue of the grocery tax and save the average local household $85 per year. “This shifts the burden to visitors in our community,” Village Administrator Patrick Muetz told village trustees Monday, before a vote to impose an additional 0.5% home rule sales tax.

* AP | Suburban toy company challenges Trump’s tariffs before Supreme Court in long shot bid for quick decision: Vernon Hills-based Learning Resources Inc. filed an appeal asking the Supreme Court to take up the case soon rather than let it continue to play out in lower courts. The company argues the Republican president illegally imposed tariffs under an emergency powers law rather than getting approval from Congress. While the company won an early victory in a lower court, the order is on hold as an appeals court considers a similar ruling putting a broader block on Trump’s tariffs. The appeals court has allowed Trump to continue collecting tariffs under the emergency powers law ahead of arguments set for late July.

* Shaw Local | Kane County judge’s $100K+ libel lawsuit against Geneva blogger stalls for lack of service: Where is Geneva blogger Jeffrey Ward? Apparently, he has not been home when a process server tried and failed six times in February and March to serve him a summons and notice of a $100,000-plus libel lawsuit filed by Kane County Judge Michael Noland, according to court records.

* Evanston Round Table | Evanston’s Bethany Johnson joins crowded race for Illinois’ 9th District seat: Johnson is a progressive Democrat and longtime south Evanston resident, and she said on her website that she’ll advocate to stop using Illinois to “fund red states,” promote LGBTQ+ rights and redirect money from the military to schools and hospitals. She enters a crowded Democratic primary field for the seat held by Jan Schakowsky (D-Evanston), which includes Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss, state Sen. Laura Fine (9th District), content creator Kat Abughazaleh, Skokie’s Bushra Amiwala and Chicago’s Miracle Jenkins, among others.

* Daily Herald | New options: Developer presents revised plans for former Haeger Potteries site in East Dundee: Brinshore Development LLC returned to trustees on Monday with three options offering a mix of apartment and townhouse mixed-income rentals. The Evanston-based developer initially proposed 136 units for the 7 Maiden Lane redevelopment project. On Tuesday, the company presented three more options. One plan offered 119 units, another 104 units, and a third would add 89 units.

* Urban Milwaukee | Gov. Evers says expansion in Wisconsin will create more than 700 jobs: An industrial robotics manufacturer is moving its North American headquarters from Illinois to Wisconsin as part of a consolidation that’s expected to create more than 700 new jobs. Gov. Tony Evers announced Friday that Yaskawa America Inc. plans to invest $180 million to consolidate its Illinois and Wisconsin facilities into one campus in Franklin. The plan includes moving the company’s headquarters from Waukegan, Illinois, to Franklin.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Group sues to remove Ten Commandments monument from southern Illinois courthouse lawn: The lawsuit, filed Monday in Illinois’ 2nd Judicial Circuit Court, targets Jefferson County, the Jefferson County Board of Commissioners and several Jefferson County board members. It also references county sheriff Jeff Bullard, not explicitly as a defendant, but as an individual who allegedly had a role in moving the monument from its original location inside the courthouse to the lawn outside.

* WGLT | Normal council bans new short-term rentals in single-family neighborhoods: Owners of already-existing rentals will transition into long-term rentals. Over the course of a five-year grace period, property owners can earn a return on investment while converting these properties into ones more suitable for single-family neighborhoods. An extension to this debt repayment plan would be offered if the property owner proves a specific hardship, according to the ordinance.

* BND | As Nippon deal closes, Granite City steelworkers union anticipates answers soon: The neighboring company to Granite City’s steel mill that floated purchasing both blast furnaces back in 2022 still plans to forge ahead with its plans that union officials say would leave only a few hundred permanent jobs. With President Donald Trump approving the deal between U.S. Steel and the Japanese firm Nippon late last week, a representative for SunCoke Energy Inc. confirmed the Chicago-area company wants to repurpose the metro-east blast furnaces into granulators that would melt iron to fuel other electric furnaces — and shut down steelmaking.

* WCIA | From the Farm: Catching up with the National FFA President: WCIA’s Stu Ellis caught up with Thad Bergschneider, a Morgan County native and University of Illinois student, at the FFA convention. He’s now six months into his tenure as National FFA President.

*** National ***

* The Atlantic | How Ivermectin Became Right-Wing Aspirin: Remember ivermectin? The animal-deworming medication was used so avidly as an off-label COVID treatment during the pandemic that some feed stores ended up going out of stock. (must show a pic of you and your horse, a sign at one demanded of would-be customers in 2021.) If you haven’t heard about it since, then you’ve existed blissfully outside the gyre of misinformation and conspiracies that have come to define the MAGA world’s outlook on medicine. In the past few years, ivermectin’s popularity has only grown, and the drug has become a go-to treatment for almost any ailment whatsoever. Once a suspect COVID cure, now a right-wing aspirin.

* AP | U.S. judge says government can’t limit passport sex markers for many transgender, nonbinary people: Tuesday’s ruling from U.S. District Judge Julia Kobick means that transgender or nonbinary people who are without a passport or need to apply for a new one can request a male, female or “X” identification marker rather than being limited to the marker that matches the gender assigned at birth.

* Reason | Indiana becomes first state to approve interstate tolling to rebuild highways: After years of underfunding its highways, Indiana Gov. Mike Braun recently signed House Bill 1461, which authorizes the state to toll its existing Interstates. This law makes Indiana the first state in the nation to authorize tolling for its existing Interstate system. Widespread use of tolling to rebuild and expand highways can reshape transportation funding in a way that adjusts for changes in vehicle technology.

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

Wednesday, Jun 18, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, Jun 18, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Jun 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Jun 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Roundup: US House Speaker Mike Johnson tours Chicago ICE facility as Democrats are denied access
* It’s just a bill
* Why Are Tax-Exempt Hospitals Getting Rich?
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
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