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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Wednesday, Jul 15, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Tribune…
* WICS | Illinois launches statewide circuit court survey: The Illinois Supreme Court and the Illinois Judicial Conference have launched a new statewide survey to gather feedback on the state’s circuit courts. Officials said it is the first statewide circuit court survey conducted since 2015. The results will be used to help inform future policy decisions and improve court services. The survey began Tuesday and will remain open through July 31. * University of Chicago | The Polsky Center Joins Statewide Effort to Attract NSF Quantum X-Labs Teams to Illinois: The Polsky Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation is joining the State of Illinois and quantum organizations across Chicago to provide funding, facilities, and venture-building support for teams pursuing quantum technologies through the U.S. National Science Foundation’s X-Labs initiative. Earlier this month, Governor JB Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity announced the Illinois X-Labs Fast Fund, a $3 million capital fund designed to encourage teams receiving NSF X-Labs Phase 0 awards to establish and grow their work in Illinois. * Press release | Illinois Ranks #2 in the Country for FAFSA Completions: The National College Attainment Network (NCAN) released their Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA®) Tracker for the Class of 2026, and Illinois is now ranked second in the nation and first in the Midwest for completion of the FAFSA — the highest position and the highest rate (71.4%) ever for an Illinois high school graduating class. “Illinois’ increase in FAFSA completion is a testament to the hard work of students, families and educators – and a clear demonstration that the state’s continued efforts to expand awareness, remove barriers, and connect students with financial aid are making a real difference,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Every completed FAFSA represents a world of opportunity opened and brings Illinois a step closer to making educational attainment a reality for every student in every corner of our state.” * Press release | Gov. Pritzker Signs Legislation Strengthening Support for Illinois Service Members and Veterans: Today, Governor JB Pritzker signed three bills into law that will fortify recruitment to the Illinois National Guard with newly incentivized peer-to-peer referral practices, as well as connect our state’s veterans to continued education pathways and life-saving breakthrough therapies for suicide prevention. SB 3737: Requires universities to promptly readmit students following academic military leave, effective January 1, 2027 (Sen. Porfirio/Rep. Stuart) SB 3818: Incentivizes Illinois National Guard recruitment with peer-to-peer referrals, effective January 1, 2027 (Sen. Porfirio/Rep. Swanson) SB 3926: Moves the Breakthrough Therapies for Veteran Suicide Prevention Program Advisory Council under the Department of Public Health, effective January 1, 2027 (Sen. Porfirio/Rep. Hirschauer) * Fox Chicago | Data center craze draws concerns from wary Illinoisans: Illinois is the third largest data center market in the country, but some people are concerned with the environmental and economic effects. FOX Chicago’s Liz Dueweke breaks down the numbers on data centers in Illinois and the Midwest and why people are protesting data center development. * Politico | Pritzker, Hochul diverge on data centers: Hochul is enacting a pause on permits for up to one year for the largest new data centers in New York while state officials there sort out how to regulate the fast-growing industry. The move followed action by New York lawmakers, who passed legislation that would implement a one-year pause on data center construction. Hochul didn’t sign or veto the bill. Illinois lawmakers never got that far. Pritzker hasn’t stopped data center construction, but he has shut off a key incentive. On July 1, his administration stopped processing new tax incentive agreements after state lawmakers left Springfield without passing the broader regulatory package he wanted. * Reuters | Pollution from Musk’s unpermitted xAI power project hits hardest in Black communities: Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence company xAI has installed 59 natural gas turbines for its Colossus 2 data center project in Tennessee without securing federal clean air permits, according to communications between regulators and xAI representatives. Potential emissions from the turbines are far beyond the threshold that would require a federal permit, and would be released near predominantly Black communities already estimated to be suffering disproportionately high rates of lung disease, according to a Reuters analysis based on government data and information in the correspondence with regulators. * Sun-Times | Big financing steps forward for The 78, Foundry Park projects: Two of Chicago’s most pivotal but challenging undeveloped sites — Foundry Park on the North Side and the vacant South Loop parcel known as The 78 — moved forward in a big way Wednesday before the City Council adjourned for a summer recess. Mayor Brandon Johnson introduced a $201.6 million tax increment financing subsidy for JDL Development’s scaled back vision for North Side industrial land along the Chicago River that once was supposed to be home to the Lincoln Yards megaproject. And despite a slew of concerns from Council members, the full Council approved a $425 million TIF for The 78, a reference to Chicago’s unofficial 78th community area. The subsidy will bankroll public improvements needed for the South Loop development, anchored by a $750 million soccer stadium privately financed by Chicago Fire billionaire owner Joe Mansueto. * Block Club | Homeless Shelter Coming To Far Northwest Side: ‘This Is Overdue’: The shelter will be non-congregate, meaning resident will stay in double or single rooms, and there will be 40-70 beds. The shelter will serve single adults and will give priority to people 60 and older. LaPointe said her office has started to talk with potential shelter operators and plans on putting out a formal request for operators to be considered to manage the shelter. Julietta Mkrtychian, LaPointe’s chief of staff, said her team hopes to have a shelter operator chosen by late 2026 or early 2027. * Crain’s | Sprout Social to lay off 20% of its staff: The Chicago-based maker of software to monitor and manage social-media accounts said today it will lay off 260 workers. The company didn’t blame the cuts solely on AI but said the goal is “to streamline the company’s organizational structure and align its cost base with its strategic priorities, including its ongoing investments in AI-powered social intelligence.” * WTTW | Teen CPD Employee ‘Goose-Stepped’ Across High School Stage Wearing Nazi Uniform: Watchdog: “The uniform, march and salute created the impression that the individual was evoking Nazi Germany,” bringing discredit to the police department, according to the first quarterly report released by Inspector General David Glockner. Another member of CPD was fired after showing other employees of the police department photos of the teen dressed in the Nazi uniform while at work, creating “an offensive work environment,” according to the inspector general’s report. * Block Club | Edgewater Synagogue Redevelopment With Lakefront Access Gets Alderperson’s OK: Ald. Leni Manaa-Hoppenworth said she will support Emanuel Congregation’s revised plans after the developer also agreed to include more family-sized housing units, public bathrooms and donations for nearby park improvements. * Daily Herald | Hindu group sues Elgin to get OK to build temple: A Hindu congregation that wants to build a temple and townhouses in eastern Elgin is suing the city to get a 59-year-old court-ordered restriction on the land removed. Umiya Mataji Sanstha Chicago Midwest argues in a lawsuit filed Tuesday in federal court that a 1967 consent decree violates the federal Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, which forbids discrimination based on religion when it comes to land uses. The federal law was enacted in 2000. The lawsuit also argues the decree violates the congregation’s First Amendment religious freedom rights and Illinois law. * WJOL | Romeoville Mayor Noak Appointed To New Northern Illinois Transit Authority (NITA) Board: Romeoville Mayor Noak has been appointed to the Northern Illinois Transit Authority, a new regional transit board that will oversee and shape public transit policy in the greater Chicagoland region. The board is made up of 20 directors — appointed by state and regional stakeholders — and oversees the Chicago Transit Authority, Metra, and Pace. In addition, Mayor Noak will continue to serve on the Pace Suburban Bus Board of Directors as the positions are paired under the new governance structure. Mayor Noak has served on the Pace Board since 2022. * TWICS | Y-block project sees support from city, but questions remainEXT: IDNR representatives answered some key questions during Tuesday night’s meeting, though the timeline remains unclear for the project. What we do know is that IDNR promises the Y-block will still be able to welcome previous events back following the development. IDNR outlined their plan for city council members, from potential features to possibly classifying the block as a state park…but Russell Orrill, the deputy director, said the public won’t lose any access. * An unlikely alliance | David Timm, Republican candidate who lost March primary, throws support behind Democrat Marc Bell for sheriff: Democrat candidate Marc Bell, who dropped out of the Sangamon County sheriff’s race prior to the March primary and rejoined the race in April, is now being endorsed by David Timm, a former Republican candidate. Bell held a July 14 fundraiser in Springfield where the two men made a joint appearance and Timm praised the idea of bipartisanship in Bell’s campaign. Timm, a former sheriff’s deputy who received about 46% of the roughly 17,000 ballots cast in the March primary, announced on social media the day before the fundraiser that he’s supporting the Democratic challenger in the November general election over his own party’s candidate, incumbent Sheriff Paula Crouch. * WCIA | Champaign Co. School Districts hoping to get teacher contracts done before the first bell: Both Prairieview-Ogden and Fisher teachers unions are in talks for a new contract. Both groups say they want more money — specifically a number that brings them onto a similar playing field with other schools in the area. “We have teachers that are making $10,000 differences in pay that have similar years of experience and education,” said P.V.O. Education Association Vice President Taylor Owens. * WQAD | Sweet corn season off to a strong start at Smeltzly’s Farm in Cordova: Sweet corn season is underway across the Quad Cities, and one Cordova family says favorable growing conditions have helped produce a strong crop. At Smeltzly’s Farm, freshly picked corn makes the trip from the field to a roadside stand within the same day. “The sweet corn this year, we’ve had plenty of moisture, plenty of heat, and luckily we do have it under irrigation in case we do have to run it,” Travis Smeltzly said. “It’s been a very good crop.” * WCIA | Mahomet Police Department appoints first-ever detective: The Mahomet Police Department has added a new role they’ve never had before: a detective. “As Mahomet is continuing to grow, the police department needs to grow with them,” said Chief of Police Dave Smysor. “It’s for bigger, more complex cases.” But, it’s not a new face for the department. Joel Jessup has been with Mahomet Police since 2023, working as a patrol officer. Now, he is their first detective. * AP | ICE should keep making traffic stops despite recent shootings, Trump says: Ending those stops, Trump wrote, would be “playing right into the criminal’s hands.” “We CANNOT give up one of ICE’s most important and effective Crime Fighting tools, THE TRAFFIC STOP!” Trump wrote Wednesday on his social media site. Hours after Trump made his views known, Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin issued his own statement saying people illegally in the country would be “arrested and deported wherever they are.” But Mullin didn’t say whether ICE officers will be allowed to carry out traffic stops.
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Benton finally drops out of House reelection bid
Wednesday, Jul 15, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * Subscribers were told about the unusual circumstances surrounding this withdrawal earlier today. They were also given a withdrawal update. I thought there might be some news stories by now, but this is it so far…
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Poll: Giannoulias generates most excitement in early mayor’s race
Wednesday, Jul 15, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Crain’s…
Percentage of respondents excited for each candidate among likely voters Percentage of respondents who don’t know enough about candidate among likely voters Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias also had the lowest “not excited” rating among the potential candidates tested, with just 14.5% of likely voters saying they were not excited about a possible Giannoulias candidacy. Comptroller Susana Mendoza followed at 16%, while 20% said the same about US Rep. Mike Quigley. * The Methodology…
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition
Wednesday, Jul 15, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Anti-union lawyers might have cost their clients a lot of money
Wednesday, Jul 15, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller
Patrick Hughes was the attorney in the Illinois Policy Institute’s attorney who handled the successful Janus v. AFSCME lawsuit, which gutted the rights of public employee unions. Amy Kessem is one of the plaintiffs. She’s the former 41st Ward Republican Committeeperson who has been affiliated with numerous far-right groups. The opinion is here. * The bottom line is that Kessem and other plaintiffs might now be on the hook for the teachers’ union legal fees, possibly including the costs of appeal…
Oops. * From the opinion…
Oops.
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Governor Pritzker, Fight For Us.
Wednesday, Jul 15, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Working families face rising costs and medical debt, while hospital systems continue to profit by exploiting the 340B program - making billions, while patients are paying the price. Leaders in Kentucky, Virginia and California recognize that a program meant to help vulnerable patients shouldn’t become a profit stream for billion-dollar hospital systems and their business partners. Governor JB Pritzker has the opportunity to lead the way. Illinois deserves better — veto 340B Profit-Grab (HB 2371).
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, Jul 15, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: AI bumps power cost 60% as Chicago’s grid fails to hit supply goal. Bloomberg…
- PJM Interconnection LLC, which serves 13 states stretching from the East Coast to Chicago, said Tuesday that its auction to procure power for the year starting June 2028 tied a $16.4 billion record set in late 2025. Data centers accounted for roughly $6.3 billion of that total, said Joseph Bowring, president of Monitoring Analytics, the grid’s independent market monitor. - The auction fell 6.8 gigawatts short of what PJM will need to guarantee system reliability during demand spikes. The shortfall is equivalent to almost seven traditional nuclear reactors. * Related stories… * Gov. JB Pritzker has no public events scheduled today. * Tribune | Illinois raises limits on wrongful conviction payouts under new law Gov. JB Pritzker has signed: Illinois has had the most exonerations of any state for six of the past seven years, according to the National Registry of Exonerations. But until now, compensation for exonerees through the state court of claims was limited to an inflation-adjusted cap of about $300,000. The change marks “a major stride in criminal legal reform and accountability to those who are wrongfully convicted and imprisoned,” Pritzker said in a video statement. It eliminates the overall $300,000 limit and raises the cap to $50,000 per year of wrongful incarceration, including time in jail or juvenile detention before a wrongful conviction, and $25,000 per year for those wrongfully placed on parole, probation or the sex offender registry. * Block Club | Ex-Loretto Exec Gets Deal That Could Keep Her Out Of Jail: Bergdahl and prosecutors have agreed on a deferred prosecution agreement — a type of agreement where, if Bergdahl follows the terms outlined in it, the government will dismiss charges against her in about a year. Prosecutors did not detail the conditions Bergdahl must meet during Tuesday’s court hearing. * WGLT | Bloomington sets date at BCPA for public forum on data centers: Bloomington is in the midst of a six-month moratorium on proposals for data centers. It started in late May, following similar action by Town of Normal. Bloomington is planning to take several months to develop regulations and plans for facilities that use 5 megawatts or more of energy. * WSJ | Data-Center Builders Are Racing to Offload Stakes Worth Billions: America’s data-center developers are ready to cash in on the AI boom. Data-center builders and operators across the U.S. are working with bankers to sell majority equity stakes worth tens of billions of dollars in their companies this summer, according to people familiar with the efforts. * The Center Square | Illinois state diversity leader resigns amid criticism: The head of the embattled Illinois diversity commission has moved to a different state job after a series of investigative stories by The Center Square exposed failures at the agency and prompted bipartisan criticism. Alexandria Wilson held the job at the Commission on Equity and Inclusion for about three years and oversaw a switch to a new computer system that upended its mission to increase access to government contracts for businesses that are owned by racial minorities, women and people with disabilities. * Reuters | Illinois Senator: Bears ‘50-50′ to stay in state: State Sen. Sue Rezin said Tuesday that she considers the Bears’ stadium search a close race between staying in Illinois and moving across the state line. Her assessment came about five weeks after the team’s board approved a proposed development in Hammond, Ind. “I would give it a 50-50 chance to have the Bears stay in Illinois,” Rezin said during a legislative update. * WTVO | Collin Corbett certified for Illinois gubernatorial ballot as legal challenge is dropped: The challenge, filed by Republican nominee Bailey’s campaign, contested Corbett’s petition to appear on the ballot. The complaint was officially dropped on Tuesday, clearing the way for Corbett to run. Independent candidates for governor are a rarity in Illinois. In the last 86 years, only three have qualified for the ballot. * WGN | Jesse White: Tumbling Team overcomes tragedy while competing on ‘America’s Got Talent’: Jesse White, founder of the Jesse White Tumbling Team, joins Lisa Dent to talk about his current team’s advancement on America’s Got Talent. Their advancement coincided with the death of longtime tumbling team member Jeff Williams, who was killed in a car crash the same day. Jesse takes a moment to spotlight Jeff and his contributions to the team. Despite emotions being high, both Jesse and the team maintain a positive attitude regarding the competition and hope to continue providing entertainment and doing good for others. * WBEZ | Mayor Johnson’s controversial plan to crack down on ICE agents now faces City Council scrutiny: Police were directed to form new procedures within 30 days to implement the mayor’s order. But nearly five months after that deadline, it’s unclear what the decree has accomplished or what more needs to be done to enforce it. Those questions will be the topic of a City Council hearing this week as enforcement intensifies in the Chicago area, with advocates reporting at least 17 arrests last week by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. * Crain’s | Midway’s private-aviation facilities are getting a $100M+ makeover: The City Council will vote today on plans to extend the contracts of two companies who operate hangars, fueling and other facilities for non-commercial aircraft at Midway for 20 years. As part of the new deal with with the city, Signature Flight Support and Atlantic Aviation will invest more than $100 million in new hangars, office space and customs facilities. * Block Club | Plan For Loop’s 2nd Weed Dispensary Could Go Up In Smoke: The recent ruling blocked Bloc Dispensary from opening a shop in the South Loop at 400 S. Wells St. after a nearby dispensary sued, arguing that the location, only 470 feet away, violated state law, Crain’s reported. State law generally prohibits a cannabis dispensary from opening within 1,500 feet of another dispensary. The restriction is intended to prevent cannabis businesses from clustering too closely together and saturating the market. The law includes limited exceptions for some social equity licenses, allowing them to open near dispensaries that are not operating under social equity licenses. * CBS Chicago | Immigration rights groups say ICE halting most vehicle stops “a very good first baby step”: Immigrant rights advocates in Chicago said U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s move to halt most vehicle stops nationwide is “a very good first baby step,” but believe much more needs to be done to obtain real change in the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown. Except in cases of serious criminal targets, ICE agents nationwide will temporarily stop pulling people over, multiple law enforcement sources told CBS News. * CBS Chicago | Air Quality Alert issued for Chicago area due to high ozone pollution during hot, stagnant weather: The National Weather Service has issued the alert for McHenry, Lake, Kane, DuPage, Kendall, Grundy, Cook and Will counties in Illinois and for Lake, Porter, Newton and Jasper counties in Indiana through midnight. The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency has also put an Air Pollution Action Day into effect, which is declared when widespread ozone or particulate levels are expected to be at or above the level deemed unhealthy for sensitive groups for multiple days. * Daily Herald | Driver gain or wallet pain? Tollway hits the road to sell rate hike, capital plan at statewide hearings: Multiple speakers belonged to labor unions or were affiliated with construction and engineering firms. “Since the last toll adjustment in 2012, the cost of building and maintaining highways has increased between 75 and 85% — far outpacing general inflation,” Illinois Road and Transportation Builders Association President Michael Sturino noted Monday. * Paulick Report | ITHA: Hawthorne Sold To ‘Non-Racing Entity’: The announcement comes just over two weeks after Hawthorne, which has been operating under Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection since February, disclosed it had received a $90 million “stalking-horse bid” for the 108-acre property from an unidentified buyer widely expected to redevelop the site rather than continue horse racing. The identity of the stalking horse bidder has not been made publicly available: court documents indicate the bidder is a Delaware-registered limited liability corporation, whose identity is shielded by Delaware laws. The documents for the stalking-horse bid indicated that the prospective purchaser had no plans to operate a racetrack or pursue Hawthorne’s long-delayed racino project. * Shaw Local | AID funding loss leaves gap in Kane County mental health service; agency blames technical glitch: The Association for Individual Development announced it closed its 24/7 Living Room crisis respite program in Aurora on June 30 after losing a $1.4 million state grant due to a technical funding glitch. “The Living Room is for anybody in mental health crisis to have some place to go that doesn’t rise to the level of the need for hospitalization,” AID President and CEO Lore Baker said. The Living Room provided 1,200 visits for people experiencing mental health crises since opening in January 2024. Baker said AID is asking people to call the governor’s office at 312-814-2121 on Tuesday, July 14 to urge its application to be considered for the grant funding. * Daily Southtown | Thornton Reservoir down to 73% capacity as drainage continues: * Fox Chicago | DuPage County rat infestation isn’t over, and neighbors say they’re facing backlash: Residents first contacted FOX Chicago in May, saying rats from a neighboring property were spreading into their yards and homes and claiming the county wasn’t responding quickly enough. Now, several neighbors allege county code enforcement targeted them with citations after they spoke out. DuPage County officials strongly deny those claims. * Journal Courier | Tensions flare as Morgan commissioner accuses board of sidestepping agenda rules: The Open Meetings Act is legislation that requires business of a government body only to be discussed during formal, regular meetings as a point of public transparency. After Monday’s meeting, Woods sent an email to Morgan County State’s Attorney Gray Noll about issues with the agenda. “Over the past several months, I have repeatedly requested that chairman Wankel place specific items on the agenda for public discussion,” Woods said. “Those requests have not been accommodated. I have also requested that meeting materials be distributed electronically in advance of meetings so commissioners have adequate time to review information before being asked to vote. Those requests have likewise not been honored. I remain concerned that substantive discussions and direction to staff are occurring outside of properly noticed public meetings.” * WSIL | Mounds Community Begins Cleanup After Floodwaters Recede: While the American Red Cross has visited the neighborhood, several residents say they do not qualify for assistance because floodwaters inside their homes did not reach the required threshold. Thomas says local community members came out to help him.[…] The Housing Authority of Pulaski County held a meeting at 2:00pm on Monday for residents to share concerns and discuss what resources are still needed. Mounds fire officials estimate about 25 people were rescued from flooded homes, including residents at the apartment complex. * WCIA | Rantoul will vote on cannabis coming to the village, how board trustees are voted in during November election: Neither ordinance creates any immediate change, according to the board. Instead, it approves placing these referendums on the ballot in November, allowing residents to vote in favor — or against — either of these changes coming to the village. […] Now, however, voters will be asked in the November 3, 2026 election if the village should elect trustees on a village-wide basis instead. * WCIA | Champaign County Forest Preserves looking to expand Homer Lake property: The conservation organization says they’re in talks to buy nearly 34 acres of land across from the entrance. Officials say the new land would allow them to add to the area — while maintaining the three tenants they’re built around. “Those are conservation. We would restore the land to be a native prairie. Education will help people to understand more about the land and the residents like the wildlife that use it. And recreation by putting a trail in there. I know that trails are always things that people want more of in our community, and quite frankly, most of our forest preserves are pretty built out in terms of trails.” said Executive Director Laurie Pearson. * WGLT | ISU Solar Car Team will speed alongside the competition in newest solar car: “It gets a little boring in there sometimes, I’m not going to lie, if there’s not a lot of things going on around you, then you just kind of zone out,” said Mac Brody, president of the team. “There’s no music in there, and there’s no air conditioning… but it’s a lot of communicating with the pit crew.” As the car makes its journey, starting in Minnesota down to Texas and partially along historic Route 66, it is escorted by lead and trail vehicles to alert motorists. Along the 1,500-mile journey, competitors do not forget it’s still a race. * Milwaukee Journal Sentinel | Wisconsin election officials refer 2 complaints against Elon Musk: The motion approved by the commission states that it “finds probable cause” Musk violated the state’s election bribery statute “by making a social media post that offered one million dollars to individuals who voted in the 2025 Wisconsin Supreme Court Election in order to induce them to vote in that election.” * Reuters | Inside RFK Jr.’s push to dismantle decades of U.S. vaccine policy: Early this year, Kennedy went to his director of the NIH, Jay Bhattacharya, with a costly proposal, according to two officials familiar with the request: The research agency should spend $5 billion studying the link between vaccines and autism. That would have dedicated more than a tenth of the NIH’s annual budget to investigating a hypothesis already refuted by scientists worldwide. * Reuters | Trump cuts to clean energy linked to $83 billion in delayed or canceled projects: The analysis found that 223 manufacturing and clean energy projects representing $82.9 billion in investment and 111,765 jobs have stalled or been cancelled during President Donald Trump’s second presidency.
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Good morning!
Wednesday, Jul 15, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * Florencia Andrada and Julio Fabiani cover the Stones… And please excuse me while I hide away Call me lazy bones What’s up?
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Wednesday, Jul 15, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Wednesday, Jul 15, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Wednesday, Jul 15, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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