|
Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Wednesday, Jan 21, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Capitol News Illinois’ Brenden Moore…
* CBS Chicago…
* The man accused of sending threatening emails to Sen. Andrew Chesney has pleaded guilty. Press release…
Click here for Haggerty’s letter of apology and here for the State’s Attorney’s office press release. * Tribune | A photographer travels the Illinois high school basketball circuit: Vincent Johnson is 51 years old and still going to high school — or many high schools as he works as a successful freelance photographer, shooting for the Tribune and other publications the games that teenagers play. He takes photos of other things and events too, and lives in Bronzeville and has two sons: 16-year-old William, a student at Mount Carmel High School, and Alexander, at 12 still a couple of years away from his next academic stop. You can see their photos on the pages of their father’s spectacular book, “Illustrious: The Best High School Basketball Gyms in Illinois.” * Crain’s | United CEO Kirby warns American he won’t cede ground at O’Hare: United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby today said he’s prepared to add flights — and absorb the cost — to stop American Airlines from gaining ground at O’Hare International Airport, escalating a high-stakes battle for gates, market share and profits at Chicago’s largest airfield. On an earnings call today with analysts, Kirby said American lost roughly $500 million on its O’Hare operation last year while Chicago-based United made about $500 million, a gap he cited as evidence of United’s stronger position here. * Sun-Times | City Council passes ban on hemp THC products, with exceptions for beverages, ointments: The City Council voted Wednesday to outlaw a broad array of hemp-derived products months before a federal ban is set to take effect, kneecapping a lucrative industry that has buoyed many Chicago businesses — but sometimes put unregulated intoxicants within reach of minors. An exception allowing for hemp beverages, hemp-infused pet products and other CBD offerings led to an 32-16 vote that left the question of whether Mayor Brandon Johnson would veto the ban championed by 13th Ward Ald. Marty Quinn of the Southwest Side. * WTTW | City Paid $26.5M in Overtime to Ineligible Employees: Watchdog: Chicago paid $26.5 million to more than 1,000 employees for working extra hours between 2020 and 2024, even though they were not eligible for overtime pay, according to a report released Wednesday by the city’s watchdog. City officials have known for 12 years that ineligible employees were being paid overtime, but took no action to stop tens of millions of dollars from being misspent, Inspector General Deborah Witzburg told WTTW News. * Sun-Times | More than 58,000 Chicagoans were homeless in 2024, new report says: The coalition’s analysis found that 58,625 Chicagoans experienced homelessness in 2024, more than three times greater than the 18,836 reported by city officials for that year. The 2025 point-in-time count was 7,452 — a decrease resulting from fewer migrants seeking shelter than in 2024. The coalition will not have the 2025 tally until the end of this year due to a delay in data from the U.S. Census Bureau and other sources, Nelsen said. “Both the estimate from the [coalition] report and the estimate from the 2024 [point-in-time] data are helpful. They represent different things, and we use these data points in different ways in our planning,” a spokesperson for the city’s family and support services said in a statement. The spokesperson added that the “point-in-time” count uses definitions of homelessness set by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. * Tribune | ‘I’m really confused about this’: Jurors see agents’ interview of Chicago man accused of putting bounty on Bovino’s head: Over the course of the interview, the agents pressed Espinoza Martinez repeatedly on how he thought the messages looked. He said over and over he meant nothing by it, that they were nothing more than social media chatter, and that he had no intention of making any actual offer for Bovino’s killing. “I’m really confused about this,” Espinoza said at one point in the interview. “I have no gang affiliation…I’m not nowhere around there. I work for a living every day. I’m a union worker. I work concrete, so I don’t know.” * WTTW | Cost to Settle, Defend Lawsuits Accusing CPD Officers of Misconduct During 2020 Unrest Hits $12.8M: Analysis: In the latest case to be settled, the Chicago City Council voted 28-16 Wednesday to pay $875,000 to 21 people who each say they were brutalized by Chicago police officers during the 2020 protests. The plaintiffs will get an average of $41,667, Assistant Corporation Counsel Caroline Fronczak told the City Council’s Finance Committee on Jan. 14. It cost taxpayers nearly $680,000 to defend the lawsuit that claimed officers repeatedly used excessive force at protests that erupted across the city throughout the summer of 2020 — in the shadow of Trump Tower on May 30; in River North on May 31; in Uptown on June 1; in Grant Park on July 17; and on the Wacker Avenue bridge over the Chicago River on Aug. 15, records show. * WBEZ | The Obama Presidential Center will showcase a South Side food legacy, says chef-in-charge Cliff Rome: But Rome doesn’t feel the pressure to compete with the Smithsonian’s food program. He says the Obama Center isn’t in the business of selling food, but rather creating experiences for diners. “I think that we have a unique opportunity to tell a story and be the narrators of that story around not just the president and all his accomplishments, but how the community helped put him in the Oval Office, right? And not just Chicago communities but communities across the country,” Rome said. * Crain’s | Takeda inks big expansion at former Motorola Mobility campus: Takeda Pharmaceuticals is beefing up its footprint in the revamped former Motorola Mobility campus in Libertyville, notching a win for the Chicago developer that bought the property just more than a year ago. The drug giant has added nearly 80,000 square feet at the Innovation Park Lake County property at 1910 Innovation Way in the northern suburb, according to Chicago-based R2, which owns the 1 million-square-foot complex. The new space adds to the traditional office space Takeda has leased at Innovation Park since late 2024 and brings its total at the property to 105,673 square feet. * Evanston RoundTable | Starbucks on Dempster reopens Tuesday without unionized workers: The Starbucks at 1901 Dempster St. reopened early Tuesday morning over the objections of unionized staff who remain on strike. The store, which currently is operating shorter hours, is staffed by new workers, managers from other stores and a few employees who previously worked at the location and decided to cross the picket line, according to James Maeder, a striking worker who had worked at the location as a shift supervisor. * Daily Herald | Schaumburg mayor delivers State of the Village address during 70th anniversary year: Sandwiched between two pivotal years, Schaumburg Mayor Tom Dailly delivered his annual State of the Village address before the local business community Wednesday at the start of the village’s 70th anniversary. Apart from seeing the completion of a new village hall and the March opening of the much anticipated Andretti Indoor Karting & Games, 2026 is bringing many other anniversaries as well. * Press Release | Metra to operate reduced schedules on Friday, Jan. 23, due to severe cold: The severe weather schedules for each Metra line have been posted on Metra’s website, metra.com. Customers who plan to travel on Friday are advised to review them. In general, the level of service on most lines will be similar to the service offered on Saturdays or Sundays. The schedules are designed to provide adequate service for the predicted ridership. The schedules will also reduce the number of moves through railroad switch points, thereby minimizing opportunities for service disruptions. * WGLT | Normal council hears details of proposed $233M budget, and another pitch from firefighter: During a work session held before the regular council meeting, finance director Andrew Huhn presented highlights of the proposed $233.5 million budget for next year that calls for a 10% increase over last year’s figure. The budget projects a 2% increase in state sales tax from the previous fiscal year, and anticipates the same change for local sales tax. State and local taxes are projected to make up 42% of revenue in the town’s general fund. * WCIA | Decatur City Council postpones vote on revitalization program: Decatur City Council switched the neighborhood revitalization program from a voting item at Tuesday night’s meeting to a discussion item, according to one council member. Councilman David Horn said the plan would have used millions of federal grant dollars to make improvements to three specific areas of town, with the hopes of making them safer. But, he said members of the community and city council want to include other areas as well, putting the vote on hold. * WGLT | McLean County leaders expect big crowds this year for Route 66 centennial:“What we expect is that hundreds and thousands, potentially millions, are expected to travel Route 66 this year, and it’s our hope that as many as possible will stop in McLean County,” said Melissa Chrisman, who leads VisitBN, the Bloomington-Normal Area Visitors and Convention Bureau. “It’s an opportunity 100 years in the making,” she said Tuesday at a Route 66 centennial news conference at the McLean County Museum of History, home to the Cruisin’ with Lincoln on 66 Visitors Center. * NYT | Trump Administration Drops Appeal in School D.E.I. Lawsuit: The effort was a threat by the administration to withhold billions of dollars in education funding from states and schools that refused to sign a document attesting that they did not have diversity and equity programs. Education groups sued in federal court and won a favorable ruling in August, which the government then appealed. But on Wednesday, the administration withdrew its appeal. The federal judge in Maryland who heard the case, Stephanie Gallagher, ruled against the Trump administration on multiple grounds. She found that the administration had not followed proper procedure in attempting to withhold the funding, and that the underlying policy threatened educators’ free speech in the classroom. * AP | Meteorologists blame a stretched polar vortex, moisture, lack of sea ice for dangerous winter blast:Meteorologists said the eastern two-thirds of the nation is threatened with a winter storm that could rival the damage of a major hurricane and has some origins in an Arctic that is warming from climate change. They warn that the frigid weather is likely to stick around through the rest of January and into early February, meaning the snow and ice that accumulates will take a long time to melt. Forecasts have the storm, expected to hit starting Friday, stretching from New Mexico to New England and across the Deep South. About 230 million people face temperatures of 20 degrees (-7 degrees Celsius) or colder and around 150 million are likely to be hit by snow and ice, with many Americans getting both, according to the National Weather Service.
|
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY: Raoul; Ford; Huynh; Croke
Wednesday, Jan 21, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
|
Catching up with the federal candidates (Updated)
Wednesday, Jan 21, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Last week, the Illinois Future PAC rolled out a pro–Juliana Stratton intro ad, but it had to be tweaked after Raja Krishnamoorthi’s campaign pointed out it didn’t contain the proper disclaimer. The PAC added a disclaimer to the ad, but Raja’s campaign filed an FEC complaint today, claiming the original ad is still running. From the complaint…
A spokesperson for the Illinois Future PAC said the revised ads were sent to the TV stations last week. Official comment…
…Adding… Raja for Illinois spokesperson…
* Speaking of the Senate, here’s Politico…
* Republican Don Tracy press release…
* Moving on to the 9th Congressional District, Democrat Kat Abughazaleh caught some heat for missing a candidate forum last night. Evanston Now’s Matthew Eadie…
She may want to give her campaign manager a key to her apartment. Just saying.
* Meanwhile, the Illinois Nurses Association has endorsed Abughazaleh…
* Bushra Amiwala, who is also running in the 9th CD, says her campaign has raised more than $1 million…
* Phil Andrew is out with his campaign’s first TV ad…
* Sen. Mike Simmons announced some endorsements this morning…
* The Daily Northwestern published an interesting piece about the Republican candidates in the 9th CD…
* On to other races. Politico…
* More…
* Former Evanston Mayor Stephen Hagerty | Head or heart? A voter’s dilemma in Illinois’ 9th District race: In a ranked-choice system, voters could resolve this tension by ranking preferences: voting first with their heart, then with their head. But absent that structure, voters are left to reconcile those instincts internally. The result is not apathy, but anxiety; a sense that every choice carries unintended consequences. * STLPR | Progressive Democrat Blaha aims to primary Budzinski in Illinois’ 13th: “I can’t win with name recognition,” the Urbana resident said on the latest episode of Politically Speaking. “I’m never going to beat her with money, so I need to beat her by educating people on what we both stand for, what she’s voted for, and then, hopefully, they’ll pick me.” […] “I’m not just running against Nikki,” Blaha said. “I’m running against the Democratic Party.”
|
|
It’s just a bill
Wednesday, Jan 21, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Sen. Laura Fine’s 9th District congressional campaign…
* The Coalition for Small Business Lending Transparency…
* WAND…
* Rep. Kimberly DuBuclet…
* HB4483 from Rep. Mike Coffey…
* The Tribune…
|
|
Investing In Illinois
Wednesday, Jan 21, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Illinois American Water is more than just a utility. We’re your neighbor, committed to the long-term health and vitality of the communities we serve. Our employees live and work locally, investing their expertise right where it matters most, to modernize water systems and strengthen water quality, reliability, and public health for the long term. Environmental stewardship is also central to who we are. Illinois American Water is committed to protecting the environment and using our most precious resource wisely. Across our footprint, our state-of-the-art treatment facilities and team of water quality experts help ensure we go beyond compliance, holding ourselves to standards that not only fulfill expectations but set new benchmarks for our industry. Community partnership and clean water go hand in hand. We’re dedicated to safeguarding both the resources and the places our customers call home, today and for generations to come. Our community is one worth investing in, and we are proud to spend every day working to help ensure the water we deliver is of the highest quality. Learn more about us.
|
|
Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, Jan 21, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Gov. JB Pritzker, Attorney General Kwame Raoul look back on first year of Trump 2.0. Tribune…
- In a tight budget climate in Illinois, especially amid uncertainty about how much federal money the Trump administration will deprive the state, Raoul has pushed for his office to receive more state funding as it files more lawsuits and challenges Trump’s measures. - Raoul said he’s hopeful the U.S. Supreme Court, despite its 6-3 conservative majority, will issue more favorable rulings for his office as it did in late December when the high court refused to allow Trump to deploy Illinois National Guard troops to Chicago-area streets. But Raoul has also noted that his office’s efforts prompted the Trump administration to back off or second-guess its moves. * Related stories… * The Detroit News | Construction of Asian carp barrier in Illinois hits another snag: The Democratic senators from both states wrote to the White House budget director and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, urging them to end the pause, review, and release the federal funds that Congress already approved to allow the project to proceed. They expressed concern that continued delay could soon affect the next round of contract awards and cause the long-delayed project’s cost to spike after more than a decade of study, engineering work and planning. “The federal investment currently is on hold without justification, and additional contracts for the project cannot be awarded due to the funding pause,” the senators wrote. * Capitol News Illinois | Illinois lawmakers’ 2026 theme: affordability: “We’re going to focus on things that help folks in their household budget,” Welch told Capitol News Illinois. “We’re going to focus on things that help create good jobs, wage growth and opportunity. We’re going to help our small businesses continue to grow and succeed.” “Affordability” will be the word of the year, and Welch said members of his House Democratic caucus will be making decisions about their priorities through that lens. * Tribune | Daily Herald, longtime suburban Chicago newspaper, notifies state of potential sale: In a Jan. 6 letter to the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, Paddock Publications said it was notifying the state and its employees 120 days before the potential sale, a requirement of a new law to support the dwindling number of local news outlets across Illinois. Executives at Paddock Publications did not respond to a request for comment, and the name of the prospective buyer was not disclosed in the filing. * Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker’s office inks new deal with outside lawyer to advise in Chicago Bears stadium talks: Gov. JB Pritzker’s office signed a new $25,000 contract late last month with an outside attorney to continue advising the administration in negotiations with the Chicago Bears through the end of June as the NFL franchise seeks to pressure Springfield to act this spring on a proposal that would aid plans for a new stadium in Arlington Heights. The Pritzker administration’s top lawyer signed the agreement with Steve Argeris, a partner with New York-based law firm Weil, Gotshal & Manges, on Dec. 22, five days after the Tribune first reported Bears executives were widening the scope of their stadium-site search to include northwest Indiana. The team’s announcement in a letter to season ticket holders came a few weeks after Bears brass met with Pritzker and top aides in the governor’s Chicago office. * Tribune | Republican hopeful Ted Dabrowski defends TV ad likening Gov. JB Pritzker to communist Poland, Ecuador turmoil: “So the big difference between me and him — right off the bat — is I’m from Cook County, my running mate’s from Cook County, we’re professionals. I think we know how to, what’s the right word, operate and work with people in Cook County and the suburbs,” Dabrowski said of himself and running mate Carrie Mendoza of Glencoe. “I don’t think Darren understood how to handle or understands how to handle up here. He’s a farmer, and I respect farmers. I value the heck out of farmers, but I don’t think he knew how to operate here.” * ABC Chicago | Trump’s record set to be major talking point in Illinois gubernatorial race: “So, during this Republican primary, Darren and I are going to be spending a little bit of time in southern Illinois. But the second this primary is over, we’re going to be spending 100% of our time up north in the collar areas,” Del Mar said. * WSIU | Darren Bailey/Aaron Del Mar launch ‘Take Back Illinois’ Bus Tour: The 5-day tour will make its way to southern Illinois on Thursday, January 22 with stops at Culver’s in Mt. Vernon from 4-5:30 p.m. and then Kiki’s Coffee House and Cafe in Anna 7- 8:30 p.m. * ABC Chicago | Chicago City Council to consider teen curfew, hemp ban, CPD settlements in 1st meeting of year: “Rule 41 Notice” was filed by 13th Ward Alderman Marty Quinn. He’s calling for a vote to prohibit the sale of any hemp-derived cannabis products on any location required to be licensed by the city. The council will also overview court settlements on Wednesday, which total about $22.8 million. $22 million could go to the family of Angel Eduardo Alvarez Montesinos, who claim police recklessly broke department rules as they pursued a fleeing car that fatally struck the 25-year-old in North Lawndale in 2023. * Sun-Times | Lurie Children’s Hospital pauses gender-affirming meds for new patients under 18 after feds threaten probe: n a statement to WBEZ on Tuesday afternoon, Lurie Children’s Hospital said it won’t give any prescriptions to patients younger than 18 who would be new to gender-affirming care at its hospital, including if they had previously been prescribed the care at another hospital. Lurie has one of the oldest gender-affirming programs in the country. “Actions by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, including their announcement on January 15th of a referral for an investigation of Lurie Children’s, have resulted in this decision,” hospital spokesperson Julianne Bardele wrote. “This threatens our ability to care for all of our patients. … We remain committed to our patients and families and their ability to access expert medical care.” * Tribune | Jury selected in trial of Chicago man accused of promoting gang bounty on Greg Bovino: The jury of six men and six women, plus two alternates, was sworn in about 3:30 p.m. to hear the case against Juan Martinez Espinoza, then promptly excused until opening statements Wednesday morning. The trial is expected to end by Friday. Few details on each of the jurors were discussed in open court. One is a man who said he works as a contracted truck driver. Another man takes care of an elderly family member. One juror, a woman, said she once served on a jury in California. Another male juror told the judge he’d just landed a second interview for a new job. * ABC Chicago | Heating issues force Near North Side senior living residents to use ovens, portable heaters: As frigid air moves into the Chicago area, some senior residents at Evergreen Tower say they have had to use portable heaters and their own ovens to stay warm since, they say, many of the units have heating issues. “The more we complain, the more we get, ‘We’re working on it.’ And that’s the honest to God truth,” said Evergreen Tower resident Patricia Jordan. * WTTW | Chicago Park District Is Giving Residents a Say in How to Spend $500K: People can submit park improvement ideas via an online portal through March 31. Look for submission forms at in-person park events as well. Realistic projects that could be funded through this process include fieldhouse security cameras, a nature play space, and ADA-accessible drinking fountains, benches and bleachers. * WBEZ | Chicago to host monthlong UNESCO International Jazz celebration, including Herbie Hancock, Dianne Reeves and Ernest Dawkins: The global event will kick off April 1 with weeks of educational programming, master classes and special performances to the city. The month will culminate in the All-Star Global Concert on April 30 at Chicago’s Lyric Opera House. It will feature more than 40 international artists, including Hancock, Elling, Dianne Reeves, Ernest Dawkins, Dee Dee Bridgewater and Terence Blanchard. * NYT | Mets bolster outfield defense by acquiring Luis Robert Jr. from White Sox: According to league sources, the Mets agreed to acquire center fielder Luis Robert Jr. from the Chicago White Sox late Tuesday night in exchange for infielder Luisangel Acuña and right-handed pitcher Truman Pauley. Robert is the fifth center fielder Stearns has acquired in two-plus years leading the Mets. * WGN | Naperville City Council rejects plan for data center after months of debate: City councilors rejected the proposal in a 6-1 vote, with two abstentions, late Tuesday night. […] Ahead of the vote, more than 5,000 people signed a petition urging the Naperville City Council to reject the proposed data center near a residential neighborhood. * Evanston Now | D65 sets Kingsley closure vote for Thursday: The Evanston Skokie School District 65 board has scheduled a special meeting Thursday evening at which it’s scheduled to take a final vote on whether to close Kingsley Elementary School in June. The board has also scheduled three 90-minute public hearings this week on the Kingsley closure proposal — at 6 p.m. Wednesday and 9:30 a.m. and 7:15 p.m. Thursday. * Daily Southtown | Case dropped against Harvey Park Board member who alleged politically motivated arrest: Brown-Oneal was arrested Dec. 29 following an allegation of domestic violence. Brown-Oneal told the Daily Southtown she was not the aggressor and said she suspected her arrest was an act of political retaliation. Brown-Oneal is one of two board members at the Harvey Park District suing other members for allegedly preventing her from conducting her duties. Prosecutors said the case would be dismissed because the accuser did not wish to proceed and the state did not otherwise have sufficient evidence to prosecute the case. * Daily Herald | Palatine pausing Street Fest this summer: Palatine officials announced this week the annual Street Fest will not be held this summer, due to upcoming improvements in the downtown. In its place, though, will be two summer food truck events. Village Manager Reid Ottesen told the village council Monday the village could have had a condensed version similar to the village’s Oktoberfest, held just three weeks later. * Capitol News Illinois | Case of Legionnaires’ disease confirmed at state-operated developmental center: In a joint statement from IDPH and the Illinois Department of Human Services released late Tuesday, the agencies confirmed a single case at Shapiro Center — home to adults with intellectual or developmental disabilities. “Immediate control measures were taken to restrict use of potential sources of exposure, and testing those sources is underway,” the agencies said in a statement. “Those test results are still pending. IDPH and IDHS continue to work with facility staff to ensure all appropriate safety measures are implemented, including monitoring staff and residents for symptoms of Legionnaire’s disease, and prompt testing as needed.” * WGLT | McLean County has plan for more timely audits, bill paying: “One of the things that we did highlight was the breakdown last year in communication between the auditor’s office and our external vendors. We’re making an effort to keep that conversation going, keep that communication live so that we don’t have any hiccups this year,” said Johnston. The county is hiring a records management coordinator and has just finished implementation of a piece of the Record Management System [RMS] software. Johnston said the coordinator is important in efforts to navigate a “massive amount of information” and make the system as efficient as possible. * STLPR | Arch group has identified land for national park expansion in Illinois: East St. Louis has already acquired roughly 50 acres of developable land along the riverfront to the north and south of the park, according to St. Clair County property records. East St. Louis has also secured grant funding from the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency to clean up the land, said City Manager Robert Betts. “We believe that this is the engine that could really be the catalyst to drive economic development in the East St. Louis downtown corridor as a whole,” Betts said. “So, we’re excited about the possibilities of what lies ahead.” * AP | IRS head announces a shake-up on the eve of the 2026 tax season: In a letter addressed to the agency’s 74,000 employees and viewed by The Associated Press, Chief Executive Officer Frank Bisignano announced new priorities and a reorganization of IRS executive leadership. Notably, Gary Shapley, the whistleblower who testified publicly about investigations into Hunter Biden’s taxes and served just two days as IRS Commissioner last year, was named deputy chief of the Criminal Investigation division. Guy Ficco, the head of Criminal Investigation, is set to retire and will be replaced by Jarod Koopman, who will also serve as chief tax compliance officer alongside Bisignano. Joseph Ziegler, another Hunter Biden whistleblower, was named chief of internal consulting, the letter said. * NYT | DOGE Employees Shared Social Security Data, Court Filing Shows: Employees with the Department of Government Efficiency who were detailed to the Social Security Administration last March shared sensitive data through a nonsecure third party server, in violation of agency security policies, the Justice Department disclosed in a court filing. The Social Security Administration does not know what data was shared on the server or whether it still exists there, the Justice Department said in a Jan. 16 formal correction to statements that Social Security Administration officials made to a federal court in Maryland last spring. * 404 Media | Feds Create Drone No Fly Zone That Would Stop People Filming ICE:
|
|
Good morning!
Wednesday, Jan 21, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * Lucinda’s latest… She holds him tight and softly smiles This is an open thread.
|
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Wednesday, Jan 21, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
|
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Wednesday, Jan 21, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller
|
|
Selected press releases (Live updates)
Wednesday, Jan 21, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller
|
|
Live coverage
Wednesday, Jan 21, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news on the website formally known as Twitter. Our Bluesky feed…
|
| PREVIOUS POSTS » |







