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New PPP poll has Stratton down by two; Another ‘poll’ shows Biss leading

Wednesday, Feb 25, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Democratic Lt. Governors Association paid for a new PPP poll. I do not have the full poll. Here’s the memo

A new PPP poll among Democratic primary voters in Illinois finds that Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton has made significant gains in the race for U.S. Senate. In our early February poll, she trailed Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi 23% to 34%. She now trails just 27% to 29% - a nine-point swing towards Stratton in the last three weeks.

Krishnamoorthi leads with 29%, followed by Stratton at 27% and Congresswoman Robin Kelly at 13%.

Other key findings from the survey include:

    ● Stratton leads among the 22% of the electorate who are Black voters, 39% to 13%.
    ● Stratton leads among the 56% of the electorate who are women, 32% to 28%.
    ● Stratton leads among the 30% of the electorate who are under age 46, 37% to 20%.

Stratton has become better known, improving her name recognition from 43% to 59%. Her favorability rating has improved from 32%-11% to 43%-15%, indicating that as voters get to know Stratton they like what they see. Over that same time, the favorability rating for Krishnamoorthi has gone from 51%-15% to 47%-24%.

In a hypothetical two-way race, Stratton leads Krishnamoorthi 37% to 32%.

Public Policy Polling surveyed: 546 likely Democratic primary voters from February 23-24, 2026. The margin of error is +/- 4.2%. 65% of the interviews for the survey were conducted by text message and 35% by telephone.

* Meanwhile, CAIR Action paid for a poll conducted by Community Pulse, Molitico. But the numbers are a bit old (February 15th - 20) and it’s a survey of registered voters who are considered by the pollster to be Democratic primary voters, modeled and weighted to the district. So, I dunno about this, but here you go anyway

More here if you want it. Again, I cannot vouch for the way they conducted this poll, but take it however you like.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - This just in…

Wednesday, Feb 25, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Shenanigans!

Wednesday, Feb 25, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Isabel and I have been covering these bizarre attacks for a while now. Tribune

“Some Washington politicians want to expand ICE (U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement) in our community,” a mailer paid for by state Rep. Jaime Andrade’s campaign reads. “Miguel Alvelo-Rivera is standing with them,” it says in English. “Miguel Alvelo-Rivera supports them,” it says in Spanish.

Andrade’s opponent, the Chicago Teachers Union-endorsed Alvelo-Rivera, is not in favor of expanding ICE. […]

Asked about the mailers, Andrade of Chicago provided a written document showing the mailers trace a chain that he says backs up his claims: Congresswoman Ramirez supports Alvelo-Rivera; Ramirez has received campaign contributions from two California Democrats, U.S. Rep. Robert Garcia and House Democratic Chair Pete Aguilar; and those California lawmakers voted in 2024 for a resolution that included funding increases for parts of ICE. Ramirez voted against the measure. […]

“He has engaged in a dangerous disinformation campaign that harms our movement,” Ramirez said of Andrade. “Chicago politics are often contentious. We are not naive to this reality, especially Chicago politics, but there is a clear line between politics and dangerous propaganda.

“He can’t really cite anything, because it’s all vicious lies,” Ramirez said, speaking after a press conference in which she called for Andrade to apologize. Alvelo-Rivera also said the mailers were “defamation and lies.”

Andrade is really stretching on that “connection.” I’ve seen other stuff like this, but perhaps not as blatant.

* The first mailer came from the Democratic Party of Illinois…

There are lots more.

* Rep. Andrade has a new ad on Meta



* Script

VO: Trump’s ICE agents are terrorizing our streets. And the insiders who funded Trump’s ICE raids are the same ones funding Miguel Alvelo-Rivera. We need fighters in Springfield, not Alvelo-Rivera. Say adios to Miguel Alvelo-Rivera.

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HB 3799 Raises Premiums And Destabilizes A Stable Insurance Market

Wednesday, Feb 25, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois’ competitive system protects consumers and keeps carriers investing here—let’s not break what works. Independent research shows slow, uncertain rate reviews push insurers out and costs up. HB 3799 was already defeated in Veto Session—keep it that way. Vote NO.

Protect affordability. Vote NO on HB 3799.

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It’s just a bill

Wednesday, Feb 25, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WGLT

State Rep. Sharon Chung has introduced a bill she hopes will start a conversation between state lawmakers and insurance companies about regulatory oversight.

Chung is a Democrat who represents parts of Bloomington-Normal where State Farm and Country Financial have their headquarters. She filed the bill in response to a bill Gov. JB Pritzker backed last year that would have placed Illinois homeowners insurers under more strict pricing controls. […]

Chung’s bill would allow the Illinois Department of Insurance to approve or stop a rate change by an insurance company. Illinois does not currently have authority to regulate insurance rates.

The bill clarifies the requirements insurance companies need to meet to get approval on a rate change and does not require any reimbursement if the rate is denied. […]

Chung said something is going to have to get passed this spring session, but Pritzker’s bill is a “non-starter.”

* Economic Security Illinois…

Springfield press conference around policies to put more cash in families’ pockets, including the announcement of new Newborn Equity Support Transfer (NEST) Program and discussion of how to remove federal barriers from Illinois Child Tax Credit.

WHEN: 2:15 PM, Today, Wednesday, February 25, 2026

WHERE: Illinois State Capitol Rotunda, Springfield

WHO:
Sarah Saheb, Economic Security Illinois Action
Senator Omar Aquino
Senator Graciela Guzman
Representative Kelly Cassidy
Representative Mary Beth Canty
Parent advocates
Partner organizations

DETAILS:
Economic Security Illinois Action will unveil the Newborn Equity Support Transfer (NEST) Program, a transformative proposal that provides direct prenatal and postpartum cash support to new mothers on Medicaid. The program would deliver $1,500 during the third trimester of pregnancy, followed by $500 per month for the first six months of a baby’s life.

NEST is modeled after a highly successful Michigan program that led to dramatic reductions in preterm births, NICU admissions, and evictions, while generating savings for Medicaid and strengthening the local economy. Michigan recently expanded the program statewide in a bipartisan vote.

More on the NEST proposal from Capitol News Illinois

Identical bills have been filed in the House
by state Rep. Kelly Cassidy, D-Chicago, and the Senate by state Sen. Graciela Guzmán, D-Chicago. Lawmakers and advocates with the group Economic Security Illinois Action will hold a news conference in the Capitol today.

Under the program, dubbed the Newborn Equity Support Transfer, or NEST, eligible mothers would receive $1,500 during the third trimester of pregnancy and $500 per month for the first six months of the baby’s life. Proponents estimate that 40% of all new mothers in Illinois would be eligible.

The program is modeled after Rx Kids, a 2024 pilot program in Flint, Michigan, that proved so successful that it was expanded statewide in 2025. According to research from Michigan State University, Flint saw drops in preterm births (-18%), low birthweight births (-27%) and NICU admissions (-29%) in 2024 compared the previous year.

Advocates did not attach an appropriation request to the plan, but the statewide expansion in Michigan cost $270 million.

* Chalkbeat Chicago

Chicago Public Schools officials are voicing concern about a pair of bills targeting pension costs for employees, particularly one that would force the district to take on a controversial payment into a municipal retirement fund.

But the Chicago state lawmaker who introduced the proposals says the bills are simply “placeholders” meant to spur conversations between district, city, and state officials.

One of the bills authored by Sen. Robert Martwick, a Democrat, would compel the district to start paying into a city pension fund that covers Chicago Public Schools support staff as well as city employees. Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson has pressed CPS to foot these costs — an issue that contributed to the firing of the district’s former CEO and bitterly divided its partly elected school board.

Martwick’s other bill would shift all costs of paying into the district’s separate teacher pension fund from CPS to the state — a move he acknowledged is a long shot this year. District leaders have long decried that Illinois largely covers teacher pensions in all school districts except Chicago, where it pays for roughly a third of these costs.

* Rep. Aaron Ortiz…

Responding to his community’s concerns over mid-year charter school closures and crises, state Rep. Aarón Ortíz, D-Chicago, is fighting for legislation that would institute safeguards and deliver greater stability to safeguard charter school students and teachers.

“With everything the Trump Administration is trying to do to our state’s public education, we need to do all that we can to best protect students and teachers from chaotic, abrupt and mid-year charter school closures,” Ortíz said. “This legislation would ensure that operators properly execute their renewal responsibilities. I have been a lifelong advocate for our children’s future, and this bill is another step we can take to keep Illinois schoolkids on track to succeed.”

Ortíz is championing House Bill 5063 which makes several critical improvements to the Charter School Law of Illinois’ School Code, including:

    - Requiring charter school executors to execute renewal agreements within 90 days of receiving an approved renewal;
    - Requiring charter schools, in the case of closure, to maintain sufficient reserve funds to transition students, pay outstanding salaries and fulfill transition responsibilities;
    - Outlining other requirements for operators of charter schools and penalties for failure to maintain proper financial and operational plans; and
    - Allowing the state to intervene and save financially distressed charter schools should the need arise; among other provisions.

“Many in my community came to me with a simple ask: protect our students and teachers,” Ortíz said. “I am committed to doing just that with this bill. If a school is being funded, wholly or in part, with public, taxpayer dollars, accountability cannot just be a top priority, but a necessity.”

* ACT Now Illinois…

Lawmakers, educators and community leaders are calling for immediate passage of HB5362, HB5363, HB3081 and HB3082 to protect Full-Services Community Schools (FSCS) and afterschool programming, which serve thousands of students statewide. Each piece of legislation is critical to maintaining stable, long-term funding and preventing the collapse of programs that provide academic support, mental health services and career pathways for students.

“Passing these bills is more than protecting programs – it’s about protecting the futures of thousands of Illinois children,” said Susan Stanton, Executive Director of ACT Now Illinois. “Community Schools and afterschool programs are lifelines for our families, and they work. In just one year, our FSCS network has served nearly 19,000 students across 32 schools, improving attendance and family engagement by incredible margins. With legislative support, Illinois can ensure these gains are not lost and students will get the support they were promised.”

HB5362 and HB5363 respond to the abrupt termination of $18.5 million in federal FSCS grants, which led to hundreds of staff layoffs and the cancellation of programs that provide essential educational and social supports. […]

A new report highlights the measurable benefits of Illinois’ Community School model, showing that integrating academics with social, emotional and family-focused services improves student outcomes.

Early implementation data shows:

    - 2.12% decrease in chronic absenteeism – more than double the statewide reduction
    - 2.61-point increase in school climate scores – a measure of how safe and supported students feel at school – while the statewide average declined
    - 2.97% increase in parent engagement, compared to a statewide decrease […]

HB5362 would appropriate $20 million to the Illinois State Board of Education to fund a grant to ACT Now Illinois to support community schools statewide.

HB5363 would establish a permanent state grant structure – separate from federal appropriations – issued to ACT Now Illinois through its fiscal sponsor, Metropolitan Family Services, and disbursed to Illinois Community Schools.

After School Programs:

HB3081 would create a statewide Out-of-School Time (OST) Advisory Council
to strengthen coordination, access and long-term sustainability.

HB3082 would ensure full state funding for afterschool programming.

* WAND

State lawmakers could pass a bill this spring to allow local election authorities to opt into a voter center model rather than the traditional precinct model of voting. […]

Illinois voters choosing to vote early and in-person would already be familiar with the vote center model, as anyone is able to cast a ballot at the same building.

State lawmakers passed a proposal in 2020 requiring each county to have at least one vote center where all voters could vote on Election Day. House Bill 2770 would allow election authorities to have multiple voting centers open throughout early voting and election day.

“This bill is modeled on the system used by Colorado for vote centers,” said Kane County Clerk Brian Pollock. “So if an election authority chooses to go with the vote center model, the minimum number of vote centers is based on the number of registered voters in the county.”

* Sen. Mary Edly-Allen…

State Senator Mary Edly-Allen (D-Grayslake) is championing a new measure to help more students earn their associate degrees by making it easier to transfer credits back to community colleges at no cost.

Senate Bill 3720 would expand reverse credit transfer so eligible students can earn an associate degree automatically once they reach 60 combined credit hours. The bill also would ensure that students are not charged any fees related to the reverse transfer process. […]

Under the measure, community colleges would also be required to provide clear instructions for students seeking to complete their associate degree using transferred credits.

The initiative, developed in partnership with the Illinois Community College Board, builds on existing transfer policies by strengthening pathways not just from community colleges to universities, but also in the reverse direction, ensuring students can maximize the value of the credits they have already earned. […]

Senate Bill 3720 passed the Senate Higher Education Committee Wednesday and heads to the full Senate for further consideration.

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Evanston Roundtable’s PPP poll has Biss over Abughazaleh and Fine 24-17-16; Plus a congressional campaign roundup

Wednesday, Feb 25, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Evanston Roundtable

Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss leads the Democratic primary for Illinois’ 9th Congressional District seat with 24% support, holding single-digit leads over top opponents content creator Kat Abughazaleh at 17% and state Sen. Laura Fine (9th District) at 16%, as nearly a quarter of voters remain undecided, according to a new poll commissioned by the Evanston RoundTable.

Public Policy Polling, a professional polling firm affiliated with the Democratic Party, surveyed 501 likely Democratic primary voters across the district on Feb. 20 and 21, asking who they plan to vote for in the congressional primary along with other related questions. This is the first independent poll of the race released by a news organization rather than a political group, and the first of two polls of the 9th District race that the RoundTable plans to publish before Election Day on March 17.

The poll reached voters through text-to-web messages and automated landline calls using “interactive voice response,” or IVR. Responses were weighted to more accurately reflect the 9th District’s demographics.

As somebody said yesterday, local Evanston news media has really run circles around the big dogs this cycle. Click here and scroll down to read the full poll.

* Head-to-heads

>

* Biss has strong favorables compared to everyone else. Fine is just +1 after millions…

* “Threats to democracy” far and away the number one issue among voters, according to the poll…

* Let’s look at some crosstabs. Before I do, keep in mind that these responses will have a higher margin of error than the full poll. Also, the smaller demographics have very high MoE’s, so you have to look for the bigger spreads on answers for them. According to the poll, Biss leads among women and is tied with Abughazaleh on men, and women put significantly more emphasis on “Threats to democracy”


* 21 percent of respondents identified themselves as independents, so take those numbers for what you will. Just 2 percent said they were Republicans, so ignore those responses because there just aren’t enough to evaluate..


* Race/ethnicity...

* Age

* The crosstabs also show Sen. Fine losing her own 9th Senate district to Biss by three points, but those folks were 30 percent of the full sample

* OK, let’s move on. This is pretty darned despicable…

Several small businesses on Chicago’s Devon Ave. have condemned political attacks against them by supporters of an opponent of Congressional candidate Bushra Amiwala.

The restaurant owners regularly see many candidates and elected officials come through to their businesses.

“As people of faith and culture who are taught to open our doors and tables to all guests, we welcomed them in that spirit,” the business owners wrote in an open letter. “We welcome everyone who walks through our doors, despite not knowing them personally.”

Following Laura Fine’s recent visit to Devon Ave., supporters of Kat Abughazaleh’s campaign began calling for a boycott against many of the businesses. In doing so, Abughazaleh’s supporters publicly attacked some of the most long-standing, and beloved, small businesses in our district. […]

Amiwala affirmed her support to local small businesses on Devon Ave. and across the district. Read the business owners’ complete statement here.

* From Isabel

    * Politico IL | Some numbers: We got a list of ad buy spending by super PACS.

    * Sun-Times | Crowded primary for Krishnamoorthi’s suburban House seat underscores Democrats’ generational divide: “People of the district want someone who would stand up to Donald Trump,” said Junaid Ahmed, who’s making a comeback bid of his own after being soundly defeated by Krishnamoorthi in a 2022 primary challenge. Ahmed, a South Barrington tech entrepreneur who organized protests against the use of the McHenry County Jail as a federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center under the Biden administration, closed 2025 with more than $835,000 in his campaign fund. “People have seen me standing shoulder-to-shoulder with them,” said Ahmed, who’s endorsed by progressive Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders. “That’s what differentiates me.”

    * Laura Washington | Will Black voters care about AIPAC’s role in Chicago congressional races?: Will Black voters care about AIPAC’s role in these races? The issue of Israel support, I suspect, won’t resonate in districts that are grappling with far more salient concerns, such as the dire need for economic development, adequate health care and affordable housing, for starters. Yet hundreds of thousands of dollars in dark money can buy a powerful perch in Congress, regardless of those concerns, and add a deep fracture to the historic Black-Jewish alliance.

    * Oak Park Journal | Defiant Ford responds to misleading crypto PAC attack ads: Ford, the video intones, “was indicted on 17 counts.” Waiting a moment for effect, they repeat, “17 counts” over a graphic of “17 counts” handwritten on a piece of cardboard. “The verdict? Ford convicted of tax fraud.” But Ford was not charged with tax fraud in the 17-count indictment. That single charge was in a superseding indictment. […] “I am not a felon,” Ford said. “I am a state legislator, I am a real estate broker, I am licensed to be a teacher.” Had he been convicted of any felony, he said he would not be able to be any of those things. 

    * Fox Chicago | US House 9th Dist. primary debate: Multiple candidates for the Democratic nomination in the 9th Congressional District in Illinois will participate in Fox Chicago’s debate on Wednesday night. Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss, State Sen. Laura Fine, Kat Abughazaleh, State Sen. Mike Simmons, Phil Andrew, and Bushra Amiwala are slated to appear.

    * Evanston RoundTable | Biss leads by single digits over Abughazaleh, Fine in congressional primary: Biss’ campaign manager George Lundgren wrote to the RoundTable that the mayor’s lead “reflects what we’re hearing from voters every day” and argued that Biss is “in the best position to win undecided voters” over the rest of the campaign. “With three weeks to go until Election Day, we’ll keep fighting to expand our grassroots-powered movement and ensure right-wing special interests don’t buy this seat.” Abughazaleh spokesperson Ramiro Sarmiento argued in a separate statement that she and her campaign still “have the momentum” after entering the race as an underdog last March.

    * Phil Andrew | Phil Andrew, Candidate for Congress, on How Crisis Shaped His Approach to Public Service: I, Phil Andrew, am running for Congress because I know, firsthand, the cost of violence and the power of prevention. Gun violence is more than a statistic. It’s a moment that can destroy a life, a family, a community. And I know this because on a sunny May morning in 1988, that moment found me. I was just 20 years old, a student athlete home for the summer, when Laurie Dann, a shooter who had just attacked a nearby elementary school and killed an 8-year-old boy, fled into my family’s home. She took my parents and me hostage at gunpoint. I negotiated my parents’ safe release, but when I moved to disarm her, she shot me in the chest at point-blank range. The bullet pierced both my lungs and grazed my heart.

    * Sun-Times | Crowded field of 15 Democrats jockey to succeed U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky: Voters in one of the most Democratic districts in the state will see 16 names on the March 17 ballot. Bruce Leon’s name will be on there too, although he dropped out of the race and endorsed another candidate: former FBI agent Phil Andrew. Leon, a pro-Israel Democrat, blamed “tremendous political pressure from Washington, D.C., interests” — referring to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee — for dropping out. AIPAC is indeed playing a role in the race — with Fine accepting donations associated with the pro-Israel lobbying group. AIPAC hasn’t endorsed Fine, but an AIPAC-affiliated super PAC is running ads to support her bid.

    * Loyola Phoenix | Congressional Catch-Up: Daniel Biss: Biss said the Democratic party has poorly communicated in a broadcast television way suited to older audiences. To attract young voters, Biss said his campaign focuses on communication online. He said he doesn’t want to communicate “at” people online, but rather listen, organize and lift up the voices of others. He said having an agenda which responds to the realities faced by young voters is critical.

    * Press release | Queer Union Vet Keturah Johnson Endorses Mike Simmons for Congress: State Senator Mike Simmons’ campaign for Congress in Illinois’ 9th District has been endorsed by Keturah Johnson in her personal capacity. Johnson is a combat veteran, flight attendant, and International Vice President of the Association of Flight Attendants (AFA-CWA). As the first queer woman of color and veteran to be elected to this role, her voice is a uniquely powerful one that advocates for workers’ rights, trans rights, and dignity for our veterans. “It’s simple: we need leaders who show up for workers. That’s who Mike is, and who he’ll be in Congress: I am proud to stand with him on the picket line and in this race.” said Johnson.

    * Press release | Want to Run as an Independent to Replace Congressman Chuy García? You’ll Need 10,816 Signatures vs. the 697 His Anointed Successor Needed: In the state’s 4th Congressional District, Chicago City Council Alderman, 25th Ward Democratic Committeeman, and Democratic Socialist Byron Sigcho-Lopez is running as an Independent to replace current Congressman Jesús “Chuy” García, who made a deal with his chief of staff to hide his retirement until the last minute possible so she could run unopposed in the Democratic primary. “True democracy means people get a choice in our elections – not a backroom deal, a handpicked successor, and a political system that shuts them out of the decisions that shape their lives,” Sigcho-Lopez said. “We need someone in Congress who takes our fight from the streets to the halls of government so we can finally stop Trump’s destruction of our civil rights, hold the Epstein class accountable, and give working families relief by ending tax breaks for corporations and billionaires on both sides of the aisle.”

    * Press release | Independent Candidate Mayra Macías Kicks Off Petition Drive to Put Her Name On November Ballot: Mayra Macías, independent candidate for Illinois’s 4th Congressional District, will host an event on Saturday, February 28, for the official petition launch to put her name on the election ballot in November. Despite being a lifelong Democrat, Macías launched her congressional campaign in December as an independent candidate after outgoing-Congressman Chuy García cleared the way for his Chief of Staff, Patty García, to be the only Democrat on the ballot. While those in power have tried to decide who should represent the district in Congress instead of allowing Chicagoans to choose for themselves, Macías aims to push back by providing voters with a choice.

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Keep Insurance Affordable

Wednesday, Feb 25, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The Illinois General Assembly is considering legislation (HB 3799, SA 2 &3) that could make homeowners insurance unaffordable for many Illinoisans.

The proposal would destabilize a healthy, competitive market, creating a regulatory framework that is more extreme than what exists in any other state. This will increase premiums and reduce competition.

Our robust insurance market has kept homeowners’ rates middle-of-the-pack nationally, even though Illinois has more hail damage claims than any other state except Texas.

To protect affordability and consumer choice, lawmakers should VOTE NO.

For more information, visit www.KeepInsuranceAffordable.org

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Dabrowski pledges to issue emergency order with the goal of killing SAFE-T Act, TRUST Act and ‘unite everybody who wants to take on the legislature’

Wednesday, Feb 25, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Three of the Republican gubernatorial candidates debated on Fox 32 last night. At the 39:39 mark

Q: You will likely be working with majority Democrats who don’t want to get rid of these sanctuary protections. How do you bring some of them over to your side?

Ted Dabrowski: Well, listen, I think on day one we stop what’s going on here. We need an emergency order. We got the direction of how to do it from Governor Pritzker. He had an emergency order. Emergency Order for three and a half years during COVID.

We’re going to do the same thing for crime and for illegal immigrant crimes. We’re going to work. We’re going to work to get rid of the SAFE-T Act. We’re going to work to get rid of the sanctuary state, and we’re going to for safety. We get all 102, sorry, should say 100 state’s attorneys from all the counties. Get them all together. We’re going to attack the CDL issue, where we’re handing out the licenses to, we have huge problems. Let’s unite everybody who wants to take on the legislature, and we do it because..

Q: That’s executive action.

Dabrowski: Executive action. We’re going to do it. We’re going to fight like crazy, because the people deserve it in Illinois.

The governor’s emergency orders were upheld by the courts time and time again because of longstanding state public health laws and solid judicial precedent. I don’t think there are provisions in statute or in the Constitution to declare the sort of emergencies described by Dabrowski above.

* Meanwhile, DuPage County Sheriff James Mendrick snapped at Dabrowski for interrupting him. Click here.

* Rick Heidner brought up Wirepoints’ shaky finances during the debate

My business, I was up 19 percent just in January from a year ago, one of my businesses. All right, you know, Ted wants to talk about business. I looked up his Wirepoints, and you know, he’s is 74% down in business since 2020 and 57%, his expenses are higher.

More on that here.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

* We already talked about how Heidner basically admitted he contributed $25,000 to Mayor Brandon Johnson’s campaign fund to get access to the mayor about some business matters. He also gave money to Speaker Madigan and Kim Foxx. Paris Schutz pressed him on it. His response

Well, I’m a businessman in Illinois. I’ve been a businessman in Illinois for almost 50 years. And, you know, I work with both sides of the aisle. I always have, you know, you talk about Brandon Johnson, you know, I gave $100,000 to Paul Vallas, and you know, Paul didn’t win. And then someone reached out to me, a very good friend, and said, ‘Rick, you know, I’m trying to help him retire his debt. Would you be interested?’ It was a difficult decision for me to make, but my good friend asked me if I would help. So I did. And, you know, I went to a function where he was at and and I did have things that I wanted to talk to him about Chicago. I’ve got about 30 buildings in Chicago. I obviously would like to bring gaming to Chicago, which now, obviously it’s finally come in. Worked on that for 12 years. But, you know, I’ve always worked with both sides. I’ll always be able to work with both sides.

I’m very well respected by the Democrats and very well respected by the Republicans. And I think it’s a huge asset, you know, by other people here who think that if you ever work with a Democrat, well, good luck being the governor and not working with Democrats. So, you know, they have the majority, and I’m going to have an open door policy, and they can’t wait to come in and talk to me, to be honest with you, and there was, I’ve talked to many of them since I’ve gone to run, and they’ve actually called me and thanked me for running.

Ted

Dabrowski: Let me be clear, a Republican candidate, a conservative Republican candidate, can’t be giving money to Brandon Johnson and Kim Foxx, right? These are people who hate police. They’re decarcerationist. You can’t imagine somebody giving to them. So that’s that’s a big deal.

And then the gaming industry is also very tough industry too, right? It preys on the on the working class. You don’t see gaming halls in in Glencoe and Winnetka, you see them in a lot of poor places. So we have to really talk about the gaming industry.

Heidner: Well, let’s talk about it. It’s legal. Okay? I got in it, I was in the amusement business since 1970…

Dabrowski: It’s legal, but maybe we should have a referendum on it, though. Maybe we should take it to the people, because it’s it’s a tough issue.

Heidner: Then go ahead and do that, and you can lose another billion dollars a year for this state.

* Heidner also told a story about what happened after he was accused of having mob ties (which were never proved) and his racino project was yanked by the state….

If you want to talk about gangsters sometimes, we could talk about what bankers can do to you. I mean, look what just happened to President Trump. Just didn’t one of the banks just come out and say, ‘Yeah, we did this to you because of politics?’ I mean, I know what happened to me when I was attacked, falsely attacked. Completely vindicated. My banks canceled my loans. My bank canceled my loan for for Gold Rush. $140 million loan. Called it. I went from 3% to 13 and a half percent, 13 and a quarter percent. My credit cards got canceled. You know, I had Eric Trump at my house for a fundraiser, and, you know, I told him the whole story, and had my family in the library, and we spent 35-40 minutes there. And when we were done with the whole function, before he left, he looked at me and he said, ‘Rick, sue everybody. Sue everybody.’

* I’m pretty sure that Darren Bailey won that debate by not showing up. How do I know? Check out this (partially redacted) since-deleted tweet from the pointy wires founder last night

Flop sweat.

  35 Comments      


Rate the new Karina Villa ad

Wednesday, Feb 25, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* You know the drill. Press release…

State Senator Karina Villa launches a new campaign ad that will air on television and digital platforms today. Senator Villa is the only candidate in the State Comptroller Race that continues to show voters that she is not bought by MAGA millionaires or billionaires, nor corrupt crypto interests. Senator Villa is the only candidate who stood up to Trump and his ICE regime, and will fight to make billionaires pay their fair share.

“It is time for billionaires to pay their fair share” said Karina Villa, “Budgets are moral documents, we cannot balance the budget by slashing services on people’s backs. We should be safeguarding vital services where the federal government is coming up short.”

* The ad jabs Rep. Margaret Croke and Holly Kim, but doesn’t mention Rep. Stephanie Kifowit

* Script

This is Karina Villa. She’s running for Illinois State Comptroller.

When Trump sent ICE to Chicago, Karina was on the front lines chasing them out.

“Take off your masks!”

These are her opponents.

Margaret Croke, backed by extreme MAGA millionaires and billionaires.

Her other opponent? She’s bankrolled by corrupt crypto interests.

With Trump’s threatening cuts, who do you trust to protect working people?

Karina Villa will stand up to Trump and make billionaires pay their fair share.

Karina Villa for Illinois State Comptroller.

Rate it and explain why.

  26 Comments      


States Are Winning Against Big Pharma In Court: 340B Laws Can Stand – Support HB 2371

Wednesday, Feb 25, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

In 2024, Minnesota joined the wave of states passing laws to protect the federal 340B program, after drugmakers unilaterally decided to restrict provider participation in the long-running drug discount program. Minnesota lawmakers voted YES to prohibiting drugmakers from restricting, prohibiting, or interfering with the delivery of covered outpatient drugs to pharmacies under contracts with 340B-covered entities. Those covered entities are the hospitals and Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) serving predominantly low-income communities where many residents lack health insurance.

Illinois legislation to protect 340B, House Bill 2371, is modeled after states like Minnesota and about 20 others. HB 2371 similarly prohibits drugmaker interference with 340B hospitals and FQHCs, and it includes NEW transparency requirements.

State courts have twice upheld Minnesota’s 340B law in the face of challenges from Big Pharma, with the latest ruling on Feb. 17, eight days after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit upheld a lower court decision sustaining Louisiana’s 340B law.

Illinois hospitals and FQHCs are united behind 340B because they see firsthand how it benefits people struggling to make ends meet, as prices from groceries to housing have climbed in recent years. Healthcare providers are committed to their mission of enhancing individual and community health. 340B has helped hospitals and FQHCs serve communities. With providers facing federal Medicaid funding cuts and increased costs, 340B is needed now more than ever.

Stand with patients, hospitals and FQHCs: Support Illinois’ 340B bill. Learn more.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Feb 25, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Accountability Commission hears shocking testimony about ICE. Capitol News Illinois

    - The commission used the meeting to focus on four key domains: health, mental health and social well-being; education and youth stability; public safety and economic vitality; and household stability.
    - The meeting heard nearly four hours of testimony from experts, advocates and private citizens who testified about the short and long-term consequences of federal immigration enforcement.
    - Health care providers and educators testified that immigrant communities began to avoid hospitals, doctors’ offices and schools out of fear of immigration enforcement activities targeting those institutions.

************** Advertisement **************

Sponsored by PhRMA:

340B hospitals charge big medicine markups. Illinois pays the price.

340B medicine markups are big business for hospitals. Under the federal 340B program, nonprofit hospitals can buy medicines for pennies, then charge huge markups – even on life-saving medicines. Big hospital systems pocket the program profits – passing the bill to Illinois patients, employers and taxpayers who are hit with higher medicine costs. The program’s lack of oversight has led to 340B becoming a profit engine for hospitals, PBMs, private equity firms and big chain pharmacies. It’s time for Congress to hold hospitals accountable and fix 340B. Read more.

************************************************

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Capitol City Now | Mautino ready for retirement: Mautino was surprised at how much he didn’t know. “When I came over after being the chairman of the (Legislative) Audit Commission for twelve years, I thought, I know everything about this job, and realized that I had a learning curve. It required me to listen to the experts in the office and learn from them. I thought I knew everything, but in the course of the last ten years, they have taught me well and continue to teach me to this day.” Succeeding Mautino as the state’s inside watchdog will be Chris Meister, who has been leading the Illinois Finance Authority. Meister’s nomination is pending approval in the General Assembly.

* Tribune | Illinois Democrats are trying desperately to tie their opponents to ICE, including in one key state House race: “Some Washington politicians want to expand ICE (U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement) in our community,” a mailer paid for by state Rep. Jaime Andrade’s campaign reads. “Miguel Alvelo-Rivera is standing with them,” it says in English. “Miguel Alvelo-Rivera supports them,” it says in Spanish. […] And the accusation in the mailer hinges in large part on Alvelo-Rivera’s ties to U.S. Rep. Delia Ramirez, one of the most outspoken critics of ICE in Congress, who has called for the agency’s abolition and voted against legislation that increased immigration enforcement funding. Ramirez is the only member of Congress publicly backing Alvelo-Rivera.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Daily Herald | Bears bill passes Indiana House; Pritzker says competing legislation in Springfield is ‘in a good place’: “Lots of conversation and agreement on everything really, as far as I can tell, with regard to a bill that provides what (the Bears) call tax certainty,” Pritzker said during an event Tuesday morning on Chicago’s South Side. “They proposed a few changes over the last couple of weeks,” he added. “There’s been really broad agreement about those. And the leaders of Arlington Heights and the surrounding communities all seem to be on board as well.

* Windy City Times | Comptroller candidate Holly Kim brings LGBTQ+ allyship to statewide race: While serving as a village trustee, she followed the Illinois marriage equality debate and supported Republican State Rep. Ed Sullivan, Jr. after he cast one of the votes that helped pass the legislation. Kim pulled a Republican primary ballot to support Sullivan’s reelection bid amid backlash he faced locally—a decision she’s been criticized for in the Illinois comptroller’s race, but one she said she’d make again.

* WAND | Illinoisans have recycled 60,000 gallons of paint in first 2 months of stewardship program: PaintCare leaders told reporters in Springfield Tuesday that the program is also helping bring more customers into retail stores at a time when many people are choosing to buy products online. The American Coatings Association estimates the new Illinois program will manage nearly 1 million gallons of leftover paint in its first year. “The remarkable turnout and enthusiastic support from local leaders today confirmed what we already knew — Illinois was more than ready for this program,” said American Coatings Association CEO Michael Johnson. “The collection numbers speak for themselves and serve as a strong indicator that the program is working, scaling effectively and meeting a significant need in communities statewide.”

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Chicago on the hook for paying back millions in late fees collected for parking, city sticker violations: judge: After years of litigation, Circuit Court Judge William B. Sullivan ordered the city to pay drivers back for the overcharges in an order Feb. 19. The city said it’s considering an appeal. The lawsuit, originally filed in 2018, alleged Chicago had violated Illinois law by charging drivers more than $250 for certain violations, typically by adding on late penalties that sometimes doubled the price of the original ticket.

* Sun-Times | Loyola University starts demolition on Rogers Park flatiron building: The university purchased the site in 2024 for $3 million, according to the student newspaper Loyola Phoenix. It was issued a demolition permit on Jan. 5, according to city records. A spokesperson for Loyola wouldn’t confirm the building’s purchase price, and pointed to a Feb. 11 newsletter that included a statement by Associate Vice President Jennifer Clark. Clark acknowledged the demolition permit “has raised questions” about the site’s future. She wrote the location is part of a future Chicago Transit Authority project, “meaning Loyola will not be the sole decision-maker regarding its long-term use. But, we are committed to stewarding the site responsibly and thoughtfully.”

* Block Club | Double Door Owners Abandon Plan To Reopen In Uptown: Co-owner Sean Mulroney is moving on from the years-long plan to reopen the iconic Wicker Park music venue on Wilson Avenue. In the meantime, he’s partnering with Gallery Cabaret owner Mike Strandberg at the legendary Bucktown dive bar.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Cook County tech company says it will not talk to Treasurer Maria Pappas due to ‘abuse’: In a nine-page letter emailed to Pappas and shared with the county board and President Toni Preckwinkle on Monday, H. Lynn Moore, Jr., the president and CEO of Tyler Technologies, described “just a sampling of the abuse you have hurled at Tyler’s personnel.” […] In letters back and forth over the last year, Tyler officials said Pappas has focused more on criticism than finding solutions to get the project done. Moore described Pappas’ actions in the latest letter as “sabotage” and said she’d never taken accountability for missteps within her office.

* WBEZ | Cook County contractor: Pappas abused, bullied executives in profane ‘tirades’: On Tuesday, Pappas offered no apologies, saying she was angered that tens of thousands of taxpayers across the county are owed refunds that have been delayed. “Of course, I went crazy, because if you were Maria Pappas and you had $189 million worth of checks that you could not get out, you would be upset too,” she said in an interview with WBEZ. “The whole world knows that Maria Pappas is an attack dog.

* Legal Newsline | Foxx to face questions about murder conviction review ‘investigations’: On Feb. 20, federal Magistrate Judge Young B. Kim granted a motion by lawyers representing the city of Chicago and a controversial former police detective requiring Foxx to sit for a deposition. The decision comes as part of the lawsuits filed against the city by Madeline Mendoza and Marilyn Mulero, as they seek potentially millions of dollars from the city over their alleged wrongful murder convictions. Both of the women’s lawsuits were enabled after they secured so-called “certificates of innocence” from a Cook County court, largely because the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office, then under Foxx’s leadership, conspicuously chose not to object to the women’s move to vacate their convictions and end their imprisonment.

* Shaw Local | ‘Are we going to sell our souls’ former alderman asks Yorkville City Council while denouncing data centers: As city officials have sought to bring multiple data centers to Yorkville , several residents opposed to the warehouses “literally in (their) backyards” have been asking why Yorkville. The quick answer is the city’s proximity to the ComEd transmission station line along the Eldamain Corridor makes the area attractive to those developers.

* Shaw Local | Joliet City Council member Moreno say he has settled almost $22,000 in election fines for $800: Joliet City Council member Juan Moreno said he has settled almost $22,000 in fines with an $800 settlement with the state election board. A settlement would solve one problem for Moreno, who still faces a challenge to his legitimacy to hold office from the Will County State’s Attorney’s Office.

* Daily Herald | Schaumburg, Motorola settle lawsuit over number of on-site office workers after pandemic: Schaumburg and Motorola Solutions settled a lawsuit over the village’s withholding of public financial assistance due to a dispute about the expected level of the company’s on-site employees after the COVID-19 pandemic. The original lawsuit and its resolution were similar to those between Zurich North America and Schaumburg on the same redeveloping area once fully occupied by a Motorola corporate campus, Assistant Village Attorney Howard Jablecki said. The settlement resulted in Schaumburg immediately paying Motorola Solutions just under $6.1 million in withheld reimbursement funds from the area’s tax increment financing district. Meanwhile, the maximum amount the company can receive over the life of the district was lowered from $27 million to $23.5 million.

* Aurora Beacon-News | St. Charles accepting applications from residents for grants of up to $20,000 for urgent home repairs: The city’s Urgent Need Home Rehab Grant Program was launched in partnership with Habitat for Humanity of Northern Fox Valley, and is meant to help income-qualified homeowners in St. Charles with urgent home repairs, according to a recent press release from the city. The program was approved by the St. Charles City Council in December, the press release noted, and provides grants of up to $20,000 for urgent repair needs, such as work on roofs, windows and mechanical systems. The program is being funded by the St. Charles Housing Trust Fund and is administered in partnership with Habitat for Humanity of Northern Fox Valley, according to the city.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Ransomware cyberattack hits City of Bloomington payment vendor: vendor for the City of Bloomington suffered a ransomware cyberattack early this month. That criminal action disrupted about 1,500 credit and debit card payments to the city, it said in a statement. BridgePay Network Solutions has been down nationwide since Feb. 5, but the city said the company “has received an Attestation of Compliance from its security auditor and is preparing for an orderly restoration of services.

* BND | Former Fairview Heights officer challenges Watson for St. Clair County sheriff: Ellis said he applied for a job with the Belleville Police Department at one point, but he wasn’t hired, and that later led to inquiries by state and federal investigators. The BND had published a series of stories revealing the existence of a secret Belleville police patrol whose job was to stop, question and ticket Black drivers coming into town. It also was discovered that the city hadn’t hired any Black employees in its 175-year history. Fallout from the series led to a federal lawsuit and an agreement by the city to hire more Black employees and send its police officers to racial-sensitivity training to avoid further litigation. Ellis said investigators showed him a copy of his application, on which someone had written the word “black” in the upper right-hand corner. The city offered him a job in 1997.

* WCIA | Livingston Co. public transit program expands to Ford Co.: WCIA’s partners at the Ford County Chronicle reported that Futures Connections is now offering “door-to-door” transportation services in Ford County. Service will be on weekdays between 7 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. with no set routes. Rides must be scheduled at least 24 to 48 hours in advance for non-medical related trips and 72 hours in advance for medical trips. Roundtrip rides are available for “per-day” fees of $2 for in-county rides and $5 for out-of-county rides.

* WCIA | Champaign County Board endorses ‘RIFL Act’: The Champaign County Board endorsed a state bill that would mean tighter regulations for gun manufacturers in Illinois. The RIFL Act — or Responsibility in Firearms Legislation — would require gun manufacturers to pay into a program to keep their license. The amount a specific company pays would equal the public health costs caused by their guns in violent crimes. The money collected by the program would go to a fund to pay for medical bills of victims.

* WGLT | Normal Police investigating second Chiddix teacher after alleged inappropriate conduct with a student: WGLT confirmed DCFS issued a report earlier this year which found credible evidence that sexual exploitation and sexual molestation had occurred. The report does not confirm whether physical contact took place. DCFS does not prove allegations beyond a reasonable doubt. A spokesperson for Unit 5 confirmed Knapp is currently on paid leave. The district did not answer questions about the previous paid leave or the DCFS investigation.

* WCIA | U of I plot hiding in plain sight is celebrated for 150 years of research: It’s the longest running agricultural experiment in North America and this year, the university is celebrating the Morrow Plots’ impact on farming in the area. Adam Davis, the head of the soils sciences department, said research techniques may have changed, but its purpose of finding higher yields has remained. “They established these plots to ask questions,” he said. “How could we maintain soil productivity over the long term.”

*** National ***

* The Guardian | Fears of polio resurgence as US vaccine adviser questions need for childhood shots: With preventable infectious diseases surging and a top US vaccines adviser saying all vaccine recommendations may be reconsidered, experts are bracing for more polio cases while survivors say the medical system is not ready for polio. “We don’t have a healthcare infrastructure to take care of a polio outbreak,” said Grace Rossow, an operating-room communications coordinator in Illinois, who has long-term health issues following a case of polio as an infant.

* NYT | Yondr Pouches, a Solution to School Phone Bans, Are No Match for Teens: That morning, his school had distributed Yondr pouches, fabric smartphone pockets that schools around the country are using to enforce bell-to-bell cellphone bans. Some four hours later at Van Nuys, students had figured out that whacking the pouches against tables and railings at a particular angle would cause them to spring open, freeing the smartphones trapped inside. Soon, Joel’s classmates had figured out that a strong magnet available on Amazon could unlock the pouches, too, he said. “A lot of kids picked rocks up off the ground, flat rectangular rocks, and just slipped them in,” said Joel, 18, a senior. “You can’t tell if it’s a phone or not.”

* AP | Supreme Court rules the Postal Service can’t be sued, even when mail is intentionally not delivered: By a 5-4 vote, the justices ruled against a Texas landlord, Lebene Konan, who alleges her mail was intentionally withheld for two years. Konan, who is Black, claims racial prejudice played a role in postal employees’ actions. Justice Clarence Thomas, writing for a majority of five conservative justices, said the federal law that generally shields the Postal Service from lawsuits over missing, lost and undelivered mail includes “the intentional nondelivery of mail.”

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Good morning!

Wednesday, Feb 25, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* You just can’t find much better than Sister Rosetta Tharpe

The angels got the key and you can’t get in

This is an open thread.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Feb 25, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

Wednesday, Feb 25, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Feb 25, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Feb 25, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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PREVIOUS POSTS »
* New PPP poll has Stratton down by two; Another 'poll' shows Biss leading
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - This just in...
* Shenanigans!
* HB 3799 Raises Premiums And Destabilizes A Stable Insurance Market
* It’s just a bill
* Evanston Roundtable's PPP poll has Biss over Abughazaleh and Fine 24-17-16; Plus a congressional campaign roundup
* Keep Insurance Affordable
* Dabrowski pledges to issue emergency order with the goal of killing SAFE-T Act, TRUST Act and 'unite everybody who wants to take on the legislature'
* Rate the new Karina Villa ad
* States Are Winning Against Big Pharma In Court: 340B Laws Can Stand – Support HB 2371
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* Good morning!
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
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