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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Nov 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Overdrive Online

The state of Illinois has paused issuance and renewal of non-domiciled CDLs for non-citizen drivers with temporary work authorization there, according to a Freedom of Information Act request for documents from the Secretary of State’s office, which handles Illinois licensing.

On September 26, the day that the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration issued its Interim Final Rule ordering all states to pause non-domiciled CDL issuance pending internal reviews, an email obtained by Overdrive was sent from Driver Services Director Kevin Deusterhaus, outlining a series of changes for all personnel across the state. […]

The state disabled its online license/ID duplicate application and promised personnel a new “download” of a programming change that would result in a more automated way to prevent issuance to non-domiciled applicants. […]

Among states that shared data with Overdrive ahead of the July report documenting a sharp rise in non-domiciled CDL issuance around the nation, Illinois showed the largest increase in the percentage of total CDLs issued, with more than 40% of all CDLs in the state this year through April noted as non-domiciled. […]

The Illinois Secretary of State media liaison did not respond to Overdrive requests for comment on what the state is finding about its own non-domiciled CDL program, likewise queries as to its efforts to stand up a revised program for applicants consistent with FMCSA’s new regulation. Under the terms of the new rule, some employment-based visa holders from outside the country remain eligible for non-domiciled CDLs, though the U.S. Department of State issued a pause on visas for truck drivers the month prior to FMCSA’s rule change.

* Capitol News Illinois

Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, did not submit petitions for the 7th Congressional District Democratic State Central committeeman post being vacated by [retiring Rep. Danny Davis]. His decision averts a showdown with House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch, D-Hillside, who is seeking the party post.

The Democratic State Central Committee is the governing body of the state’s Democratic Party. It consists of two people from each of the state’s congressional districts. Members of the committee elect the state party chair, for instance.

Harmon told Capitol News Illinois last week that he was “looking at the race” but was waiting to see “how the field shapes up” before deciding whether to file.

More from the The Sun-Times

“The Senate is combating grave dangers in our nation,” Harmon said through a spokesperson. “I’m comfortable that the slate of central committee candidates across the state can handle the politics and confident that [Illinois Democratic Party Chair] Lisa Hernandez will continue to lead a vibrant statewide Democratic Party.” […]

The other contest includes incumbent West Side Ald. Emma Mitts (37th); state Sen. Lakesia Collins, D-Chicago; City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin; and former Maywood liquor commissioner Mary “May” Larry. […]

Welch entered October with $101,000 in his committeeperson campaign fund, state election board records show.

Collins, with the backing of powerful labor groups, had more than $240,000 in her state campaign fund, while Mitts had more than $23,000. Conyears-Ervin had about $7,300 in a state fund but more than $225,000 in her federal campaign fund.

*** Statewide ***

* WGLT | Experts consider benefits and risks as Illinois restricts use of AI in therapy practices: Other than chatbots not being required to follow HIPAA compliance, a big risk for AI users is that they could be using AI chatbots as a replacement for real connection, which Lannin said could make someone feel more lonely in the long-term. Lannin said talking to a human versus an AI chatbot when needing connection can be compared to drinking orange juice versus Diet Coke when needing energy. Both drinks are sweet, but orange juice has better nutritional value.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Daily Herald | ‘Nothing underhanded’: Moylan defends move to end reelection bid, set up staffer as replacement: Democratic state Rep. Marty Moylan of Des Plaines said a recent series of significant health battles is behind his decision to end his campaign for an eighth term in Springfield in favor of his chief of staff, Justin Cochran. The former Des Plaines mayor and alderman said he considers himself in recovery mode but is weighing his ability to complete his current term representing the state House’s 55th District. “There was nothing underhanded,” Moylan said of his decision to pull out of the race after filing last week to run for reelection. “Anyone who wants to run can get their petitions together and run. I wanted to see the transit bill done and move on. I’ll be 75 in a month. It’s time to move on.”

* Tribune | State Sen. Willie Preston’s past Trump praise draws notice in Democratic fight for Illinois congressional seat: Just weeks before the 2020 presidential election, Preston posted a series of Facebook messages praising President Donald Trump and ridiculing Joe Biden and the Democratic Party. The posts, some laced with mild profanity, were written by Preston before he held public office as a Democrat in the state legislature. […] In another on the same day, in response to a question about who he would vote for, Preston answered, “Trump,” and attached a photo showing the Republican president’s name checked on a digital ballot. […] “No, no, no. No, no, no, no,” Preston said when asked whether he actually voted for Trump, given his 2020 Facebook post claiming he did. “That’s totally false.”

* Tribune | Transit reform measure shifts CTA control from Chicago mayor. Lawmaker says that’s an ‘asset.’: “I mean, I’m not a fascist. I don’t know what to tell you,” Johnson said when asked to react to losing majority control of the CTA board. “The most important thing is they have a system that’s funded. … I don’t sit around counting the status of how much power is concentrated in one seat.” As lawmakers worked to avert the transit “fiscal cliff” — a financial crisis that loomed next year as the CTA, Metra and Pace started running out of federal pandemic aid — a mantra of “no funding without reform” emerged in Springfield from lawmakers and advocates who felt they were long overdue to address perceived inefficiencies within the existing system.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | ‘I couldn’t even believe I was living that’: witnesses say immigration agents pointed guns, lobbed tear gas, drove ‘tank’ down city street: Over more than two hours of testimony so far, U.S. District Judge Sara Ellis heard from more than a half dozen witnesses who say immigration agents pointed guns at citizens, shot pepper spray balls at reporters, and threatened to arrest protesters who were doing nothing more than recording the agents’ activities on the street. One witness, 12th Ward Ald. Julia Ramirez, testified she went to the scene where an agent had shot a woman in Brighton Park on Oct. 4 and was stunned to see immigration agents rolling what looked like a tank down Kedzie Avenue. Perched on top of the armored vehicle, an agent was pointing a gun at the crowd, she said.

* WTTW | Chicago Police Department Overspent Its Budget By $501M Over 5 Years: Data: The only year that CPD did not overspend its budget was 2020, when with department operations upended by the COVID-19 pandemic, CPD ended the year nearly $128.5 million under budget, according to the city’s Annual Comprehensive Financial Reports from 2019 to 2024. Allowing CPD to spend unlimited sums of taxpayer money is a “crazy way to run a city,” said Justin Marlowe, a professor in the University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy, and the director of the Center for Municipal Finance.

* Block Club | Librarians, Aldermen Push Back Against Proposed Library Cuts: That comes on top of a proposed 50 percent reduction in the library’s collections budget, which is set to go from $10 million in 2025 to $5 million in 2026. Those funds are used every year to buy books and pay for subscriptions and other library assets. The proposed 2026 library budget would decline by about $2 million from last year, from $109.34 million in revised 2025 appropriations to $107.23 million, according to the financial analysis office.

* Tribune | Chicago Aviation official pocketed over $250,000 from sham O’Hare snow removal deal: feds: A top Chicago Department of Aviation official was federally indicted this week in an alleged sham contracting scheme for snow removal at O’Hare International Airport. Eric Sanders, 54, was charged with four counts of fraud and one count each of conspiracy to commit fraud and tax evasion, according to a copy of the complaint filed Monday in the U.S. Northern District of Illinois. He is accused of pocketing hundreds of thousands of dollars from a snow removal company from 2016 to 2023, with the help of his father, his girlfriend and her son.

* Block Club | Amid SNAP Cuts, Englewood Activist Launches ‘Tiny Kitchen Project’ To Feed Neighbors In Need: With the future of federal food assistance benefits still uncertain, rabbi and Mothers Against Senseless Killings founder Tamar Manasseh has launched the Tiny Kitchen Project to help keep schoolchildren and families fed in Englewood. Dozens of neighbors have signed on to help so far, Manasseh told Block Club. They’ll be cooking meals in their kitchens and bringing them to the MASK Peace Academy, 7500 S. Stewart Ave., where the meals will be distributed to over 100 children and families five days a week. The only ask, she said, is that recipients clean the food containers and bring them to use for the next day’s meal.

* Crain’s | GoHealth plans to cut nearly 500 more jobs: Online health-insurance broker GoHealth is laying off nearly 500 workers, the second mass layoff for the Chicago-based company in three years. The company’s plans to lay off 487 workers, were disclosed in a WARN filing with the state of Illinois and discussed by laid-off employees on LinkedIn. GoHealth said the layoffs involve employees at the company’s headquarters as well as remote workers around the country. “This decision was made due to Medicare Advantage market dynamics,” the company said in a statement.

* Sun-Times | ‘Queen of the Blues’ Koko Taylor’s prized possessions — including a Grammy — sold at Chicago flea market: How the possessions of a Grammy-winning icon ended up in a flea market on the South Side of Chicago and not in a protected archive at a university or museum was at first unclear to Louis and others. The saga began four months ago when Luis Gonzaga, a Chicago-based junk dealer, purchased, sight unseen, the contents of a storage locker in Orland Park via an online auction. In the storage industry, it is common practice for storage lockers to be liquidated following months of delinquency. Gonzaga, who has been purchasing storage lockers for six years, said he did not know about Taylor’s link to his winning bid until customers started asking him about the items.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Pope Leo XIV calls on Trump Administration to allow detainees in Broadview to receive communion: In answer to a direct question about the west suburban facility Tuesday, the Chicago-born Pope told the reporters that the spiritual rights of detainees need to be considered. “I would certainly invite the authorities to allow pastoral workers to attend to the needs of those people,” he said. “Many times they’ve been separated from their families for a good amount of time; no one knows what’s happening, but their own spiritual needs should be attended to.”

* Daily Herald | Two Prospect Heights police officers fired after complaint of noncriminal off-duty conduct: The fired officers are Sgt. Michael Smith and Officer Sofia Tirovolas. The police department hired Smith in 2012 and Tirovolas in 2022, according to information previously posted by the city. Prospect Heights officials said they were unable to provide further details about the complaint at this stage of the grievance process.

* Shaw Local | Joliet police lieutenant remains on leave, inspector general investigation ongoing: Lt. Jeremy Harrison has been on leave since July 29 and city officials won’t comment on the investigation because it is still ongoing as of Tuesday. City officials have not yet revealed the nature of the investigation that is being handled by Joliet Inspector General Stephen DiNolfo.

* Daily Southtown | Harvey 2023 collection rate means $24.15 million in unpaid taxes, Cook County treasurer’s report finds: The study, released Wednesday, revisits collection rates one year after bills were sent out, incorporating late payments. On the whole, that rate — a measure of property taxes actually paid compared to what was billed — has largely rebounded from when bills were first sent out, making up what was formerly a significant shortfall. However, the report said, collection rates for many south suburban communities remain “perilously low.” Of these, the most glaring is Harvey, which billed $57.9 million in taxes in 2023 and has collected only $33.75 million, a collection rate of 58.29%. That equates to $24.15 million in unpaid taxes. The only two municipalities with lower collection rates are Ford Heights at 39.08% and Robbins at 57.44%, both much smaller communities.

*** Downstate ***

* Press release | Gov. Pritzker Celebrates Grand Opening of Affordable Housing in Madison County: Governor JB Pritzker and the Illinois Housing Development Authority (IHDA) today joined local officials, community members, and construction and labor representatives to celebrate the grand opening of the Community of Sunnybrook (Sunnybrook), a $20 million housing development offering 40 new rental homes for Madison County working families. Sunnybrook is an investment in accessibility—to housing, employment, and education—and part of a larger revitalization effort across Madison County.

* WSIU | New Carbondale police chief meets with community: Stacye Saunders was one of the community members present to meet with the new chief. She’s the Family Resource Center coordinator with Carbondale Middle School said she liked what she heard from the chief. Working with adolescents is a priority for her. She hopes to see more collaboration to support the youth in the community. And from what she’s heard, Chief Copeland has been clear about what he hopes to accomplish. Copeland says getting it’s a priority of his to get himself and his officers out of the cars and into the streets working with residents.

* Journal Courier | Mobile justice vans bringing free legal aid to west-central Illinois: Land of Lincoln Legal Aid offers free civil legal assistance to lower-income residents. That can include anything from clearing criminal records to defending against an eviction. For years it has served those in 65 counties in central and southern Illinois through its offices in Springfield, Quincy and Alton. Earlier this year, the non-profit started using two “mobile justice vans” to visits areas that might not have easy access to one of its offices.

* WPSD | Carbondale councilman flips the bird: ‘I wish I would have handled it differently’: “I wish I would have handled it differently,” Loos said. “I think it was something where being upset with the folks there was fully justified, but you’ve got to also be reasonable about the way you handle it when you get upset, and that was unreasonable.” He added that the gesture was fueled by the parting expletive from an audience member, which crossed beyond what had previously happened at meetings. “I’m used to being heckled,” Loos said. “I’m used to people being upset and walking out. What I’m not used to is someone looking me right in the eye and saying that.”

* WJBD | Marion County and City of Centralia work together on saving dog and puppies: Marion County and the City of Centralia were able to work together to help a mother dog and 12 puppies that were found abandoned on the north side of Foundation Park on Monday. […] Right now, Marion County has no animal control facility and Centralia no animal control officer. The two are currently talking about further cooperation.

*** National ***

* WIRED | FBI Warns of Criminals Posing as ICE, Urges Agents to ID Themselves: Criminals posing as US immigration officers have carried out robberies, kidnappings, and sexual assaults in several states, warns a law enforcement bulletin issued last month by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The bureau urges agencies to ensure officers clearly identify themselves and to cooperate when civilians ask to verify an officer’s identity—including by allowing calls to a local police precinct. “Ensure law enforcement personnel adequality [sic] identify themselves during operations and cooperate with individuals who request further verification,” it says.

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Pritzker says if Indiana redraws its congressional districts, Illinois may follow suit

Wednesday, Nov 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* With around three-quarters of the votes counted, California Proposition 50 is backed by about 64 percent of voters

Known as the “Election Rigging Response Act” this is a constitutional amendment that would allow the state to use a new legislature-drawn congressional map from 2026 through the 2030 elections instead of the one drawn by the California Citizens Redistricting Commission.

A Yes vote means the state would use the new maps starting in 2026 until the California Citizens Redistricting Commission draw new maps following the 2030 U.S. Census.

A No vote means that the current maps drawn by the Commission would continue to be used until 2030.

* Gov. Newsom last night…


* Gov. Pritzker was asked about Newsom’s challenge to Illinois at an unrelated event today…

Q: [Newsom] said, ‘I’m going to be reaching out to other states,’ and mentioned Illinois. Is there a chance for redistricting here?

Pritzker: Oh, he’s not the first one, as you may know. An awful lot of people want us to consider redistricting and I have to say we’re watching what Indiana does. You know, we’ve been looking at pairing with different states because if they’re… We don’t think that this is a good idea. Redistricting across the country, not a good idea.

But unfortunately, Donald Trump is trying to cheat. He thinks that redistricting mid-decade is okay. So he called up and told the governor of Texas that he ought to do it for him. And he went ahead and did it. That’s why California had to.

So we’re watching what Indiana does. We may have to react to that. It’s certainly something that people have considered here and the legislature has considered here.

But we’ll have to see what happens.

Interesting framing of “pairing” states. California responds to Texas. So, Illinois could respond to Indiana.

* Some background is here

Indiana lawmakers won’t meet to consider new congressional maps and tax code tweaks until the first two weeks of December, legislative leaders announced Monday — ending months of speculation.

They’ll reconvene from Dec. 1-12, rather than hold the special legislative session in November that Gov. Mike Braun called for last week.

Indiana’s current partisan congressional split is 7-2 Republican. They’re looking at making it at least 8-1. Some Illinois Democrats also want to try and squeeze one more district out of the state.

* But, after yesterday’s election results, self-preservation mode may kick in hard…

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Illinois companies at center of US Supreme Court tariff case

Wednesday, Nov 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s

Rick Woldenberg is a third-generation member of a family that started a laboratory-supply business in Chicago more than a century ago that unpredictably evolved into a successful pair of educational toy companies known to parents and teachers nationwide and beyond.

Those Vernon Hills-based companies, Learning Resources and hand2mind, market products such as Pretend & Play Calculator Cash Register, Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog, and Botley the Coding Robot.

The companies are getting a much bigger public profile as they and Woldenberg, the CEO of both family-owned concerns, are on the front line of legal challenges to President Donald Trump’s aggressive second-term tariff policies.

That excerpt doesn’t do the story justice. It’s very comprehensive. Go read the rest.

* Bloomberg

Nowhere to be found [in the lawsuit] are the companies paying the biggest sums. Although the US Chamber of Commerce opposes the tariffs, major importers like General Motors Co. and Walmart Inc. are keeping their names off the case.

“I was shocked that those with much more power and money did not step up,” said Victor Schwartz, president of V.O.S. Selections Inc., a New York-based wine importer helping press the other small-business suit.

Woldenberg says he’s happy to play a leading role amid his estimated $20-30 million tariff bill this year – far above last year’s $2.3 million. He says the companies have raised their prices “middle single digits” to recoup some of the cost. He says he sued after other companies that were considering pressing a case dropped out.

Woldenberg says he expects to incur millions of dollars in legal bills even after accepting contributions from unnamed outsiders. He says he won’t take help from non-Americans or anyone with political affiliations. “I am not a front for anyone else,” he said.

* Bloomberg’s report about the US Supreme Court hearing

Chief Justice John Roberts said the tariffs were an “imposition of taxes on Americans and that has always been the core power of Congress.” Trump-appointed Justices Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett also asked skeptical questions, though all three also probed arguments pressed by tariff opponents.

A decision against Trump could force more than $100 billion in refunds, remove a major burden on the US importers that are paying the tariffs, and blunt an all-purpose cudgel the president has wielded against trading partners. More broadly, it would be by far the Supreme Court’s most significant pushback against Trump’s assertions of powers that go well beyond those claimed by his White House predecessors. […]

A ruling could come as quickly as the end of the year, given the ultra-expedited schedule the Supreme Court has set so far.

The case involves Trump’s April 2 “Liberation Day” tariffs, which impose taxes of 10-50% on most US imports depending on the originating country. Trump says those duties are warranted to address the longstanding national trade deficit. The high court clash also covers separate tariffs Trump said he imposed on Canada, Mexico and China to address fentanyl trafficking.

* ABC News

The Constitution gives Congress the exclusive authority to levy taxes on citizens and duties on imports, with a few limited exceptions adopted over the years to give the president some discretion during times of national crisis.

The key question in the Trump case is whether the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act gives a president unfettered ability to set tariffs for any country, at any level, for as long as needed, whenever an emergency is declared at the president’s sole discretion.

Trump is the first president to try use the IEEPA to set tariffs without Congress, and the justices pushed Solicitor General John Sauer to justify the sweeping authority.

Sauer argued the tariffs are “regulatory” in nature, and that any revenue raised is incidental. That, despite Trump often boasting the billions of dollars he says the administration has raked in as a result of the levies. […]

“The vehicle is the imposition of taxes on Americans. That has always been the core power of Congress,” Chief Justice John Roberts, considered a key vote in the case, said at one point.

Lots more in SCOTUSblog’s live coverage.

  4 Comments      


Pritzker talks about yesterday’s elections as he breaks ground on new public/private grocery store partnership

Wednesday, Nov 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release

Today, Governor JB Pritzker joined the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) and leaders from across the Metro East region to break ground on a new grocery store in Venice as part of the Illinois Grocery Initiative—marking an important milestone in expanding access to fresh, affordable food for local residents. Today’s groundbreaking represents a critical joint effort to revitalize the city, which was made possible through a $2.4 million state grant and private funding. […]

The initiative consists of two key grant programs—the New Stores in Food Deserts Program and the Equipment Upgrades Grant Program. To date, DCEO has awarded a total of $18.1 million statewide, which includes $16.5 million for new grocery stores and $1.6 million for equipment upgrades.

In addition to state grant support, Venice’s new grocery store benefited from a $3.5 million investment from Dr. Ed Hightower. Hightower, a retired Edwardsville public school superintendent and former NCAA Basketball referee, has generated significant momentum behind his vision of a reinvigorated Venice.

The state program’s basic outline

• Providing support for existing grocery stores by offering grant funding for energy-efficient equipment upgrades
• Awarding grants to establish new grocery stores in food deserts, including funding for building and renovation efforts, equipment, and first-year operational expenses
• Offering technical assistance to prospective applicants and grantees, such as business planning, marketing, financing, supply chain management, and workforce development assistance
• Expanding tax incentive eligibility to grocers, including exemption from taxes on utilities and building materials

* Pressed on this direct government intervention in the private sector, Pritzker said

I don’t disagree with you that sometimes government doesn’t do it as well as the private sector. But I also believe that government has to do some things to help the private sector be successful.

For example the private sector doesn’t build your roads. The private sector isn’t building the facilities that help us deliver well for people who really need it, right, the most vulnerable in our society. The private sector doesn’t do that. And the public sector can do something important, which is, again, reduce risk so that people can be successful in the private sector. So that’s my belief. And I’m a you know, I’m a capitalist. I’m somebody who was in business before I became governor. I’m not a believer that government should do everything. But there are some things government has to do and if it’s our responsibility in government, we have to deliver it.

* Also from the press conference

Q: I know you said that your plan here in Venice is different in structure than the one that [New York City mayor-elect] Zohran Mamdani has proposed. But surely you must see some similarities in government support of trying to feed hungry people. So I wonder, what do you think the election says about the direction of the Democratic Party?

Pritzker: Look, let’s be clear, all of the elections last night, Democrats swept. And there is one principle reason that they won. Maybe I should say two, but the biggest one is they talked about affordability, and didn’t just talk about it. They actually acted upon it, proposed things and are getting things done. And I really am proud of that fact. I think that is what the Democratic Party is all about, delivering for the people. And here in Illinois, we’ve been doing that. I’ve been doing that for the last seven years.

I also think it says something about Donald Trump, about the fact that Donald Trump has raised prices on everything when he promised to lower prices. And that Donald Trump is sweeping up black and brown people just because of how they look, and testing ‘Are you a US citizen? Are you here legally?’ just because they’re a different color than Donald Trump is.

So my view, we’ve got to do everything we can to push back on a president who’s doing those kinds of things. And I think the people of the United States, people in all the states that were holding votes last night, showed up and pushed back.

You shouldn’t read too much into off-year elections like yesterday’s. The electoral makeup is different in those elections than in presidential years and even midterms. But, even saying all that, yesterday was a sound thumping in just about every demographic. No getting around it.

And the results may very well change the national news media coverage dynamic. Those folks pay special attention to where they choose to live. And many of them live in or near New York, New Jersey, Virginia and California.

  9 Comments      


Catching up with the federal candidates

Wednesday, Nov 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Daily Herald

The final day of petition filing Monday punctuated the start of what will be a raucous contest for U.S. Sen Dick Durbin’s seat, with 22 hopefuls. The 80-year-old Springfield Democrat is bowing out when his term ends in 2027.

Democratic front-runners are U.S. Reps. Robin Kelly of Lynwood and Raja Krishnamoorthi of Schaumburg, and Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton of Chicago.

Springfield attorney Don Tracy, a Republican, joined the fray on Friday. Tracy is well-known in GOP circles after several years serving as state party chair. […]

Other Republicans in the hunt include: university instructor Cary Capparelli of Chicago; CaSándra Claiborne of Chicago; retired IT professional Casey Chlebek of Lake Forest; Jeannie Evans of Chicago; John Goodman, a veteran from Des Plaines; occupational therapist Pamela Denise Long of Edwardsville; and Chicago author Jimmy Lee Tillman II.

Additional Democrats aiming for the senate include: former congressional aide and Chicagoan Steve Botsford; attorney Sean Brown of Orland Park; nonprofit executive Awisi Bustos of Springfield; Chicagoan Jonathan Dean, a lawyer; veteran Adam Delgado of Chicago; engineer Bryan Maxwell of Urbana; Chicago teacher Robert Palmer; Chicago teacher Kevin Ryan; Jump Shepherd of North Riverside, an electrician; Chicagoan Christopher Swann, a manager at Feed America; and Dolton pastor Anthony Williams.

* Evanston RoundTable

In the 9th District race to succeed [ U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky], 17 candidates filed to appear on the Democratic Party’s ballot, equaling the historically large field that ran in the 2022 primary to succeed former U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush (D-1st District), which ended with now-incumbent Rep. Jonathan Jackson winning with just 28% of the vote. A dozen of those candidates were in line early on Monday, Oct. 27 at the Illinois State Board of Elections in Springfield to file at the petition period’s opening, including:

    - Kat Abughazaleh, researcher, content creator and former journalist
    - Bushra Amiwala, Skokie School District 73.5 board member
    - Phil Andrew, former FBI agent
    - Daniel Biss, Evanston mayor
    - Patricia Brown, Evanston resident who has not otherwise publicly campaigned
    - Jeff Cohen, economist
    - Laura Fine, state senator for the 9th District
    - Justin Ford, environmental public health professional
    - Bruce Leon, Democratic committeeman for Chicago’s 50th Ward
    - Sam Polan, Army veteran
    - Nick Pyati, former federal prosecutor
    - Mike Simmons, state senator for the 7th District

Following the early birds, Evanston resident Bethany Johnson and civil rights attorney Howard Rosenblum filed last week, and the last three filed in the window’s final hour on Monday: State Rep. Hoan Huynh (13th District), and new candidates Mark Arnold Fredrickson of Chicago and Natalie Angelo, neither of whom have publicly campaigned up to this point. […]

One previously active Democratic candidate, labor organizer Jill Manrique, does not appear to have filed before the window closed, meaning she will not be on the ballot in March. She did not respond to a request for comment from the RoundTable.

* Daniel Biss for Congress…

Last night, Evanston Mayor and Congressional candidate (IL-09) Daniel Biss joined the Rachel Maddow Show on MSNBC to discuss how people in Evanston and across the Chicagoland area have pushed back against ICE, CBP, and the Trump administration. Maddow commended Biss and the city of Evanston for the work of its elected leaders and community members, dubbing the city’s efforts the “Evanston Handbook” for how cities across the country can resist Trump’s attacks on immigrants and peaceful protestors.

* The Daily Northwestern

Kat Abughazaleh, a candidate for the Illinois 9th Congressional District, spoke about her campaign at a Tuesday event hosted by Northwestern’s political science department at the Segal Visitors Center. […]

“Part of why I’m running is I got sick of Democratic leadership not taking disinformation in the far right seriously,” Abughazaleh said. “We told them about January 6th before it happened, about COVID misinformation, where the DEI, (critical race theory), anti-trans panic would lead, and it fell on deaf ears.” […]

Despite having only moved to the 9th District earlier this year, Abughazaleh highlighted that her campaign office in Rogers Park is also functioning as a mutual aid center and is distributing ICE warning whistles to Evanston residents. […]

Abughazaleh said her campaign has made an effort to reach out to young people, including by forming a Youth Advisory Council and recruiting campus fellows at NU.

* Lake County News-Sun

U.S. Rep. Brad Schneider, D-Highland Park, and U.S. Rep. Mike Quigley, D-Chicago, both have multiple primary opponents, and 17 Democrats are competing for the nomination to succeed retiring U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky, D-Evanston. […]

Seeking his seventh term in Washington, Schneider will face John Minarcik of Zion, Thomas Rudd of Lake Forest and Morgan Coghill of Mundelein in the Democratic primary. The winner will compete against the unopposed Republican candidate, Carl Lambrecht of Highland Park.

Quigley is dealing with a five-way primary against Matthew Conroy, Anthony Michael Tamez, Ellan A. Corley and Johnny Antonio Bishop, all of Chicago. The winner will compete against the victor of a three-way GOP primary between Tommy Hanson, Kimball Ladien and Barry Wicker. […]

U.S. Rep. Bill Foster, D-Naperville, is unopposed in the 11th Congressional District’s Democratic primary. He will face the GOP primary winner between Michael Pierce of Naperville, Jeff Walter of Elborn, Tedora Brown of Palos Park and Charlie Kim of Aurora.

* WMBD

Both of central Illinois’ Congressmen will have primary challengers in March. […]

Incumbent Republican Darin LaHood of Dunlap will be challenged for the party’s nomination in the 16th District by John Kitover of Rockford. Paul Nolley of Roscoe was the only Democrat who filed to run in the race.

17th District incumbent Democrat Eric Sorensen of Moline is being challenged by Montez Soliz of Rockford in the primary. Dillan Vancil of Gladstone and Julie Bickelhaupt of Mount Carroll are the two Republicans who filed to run in the 17th District.

* PJ Star

Last month, LaHood’s campaign announced that he had $6.5 million on hand for his reelection campaign, far out-raising the other two candidates running in the 16th District. LaHood has raised $2.1 million in 2025.

Nolley has raised $43,466 for his campaign this year, according to the Federal Election Commission. The FEC has no data available on Kitover’s campaign.

The largest donations to LaHood’s campaign, LaHood for Congress, have come from the political action committee Team LaHood.

* Politico

In IL-07: State Rep. La Shawn Ford has been endorsed by Illinois Senate Majority Leader Kimberly Lightford and Senate Assistant Majority Leader and 20th Ward Democratic Committeeperson Mattie Hunter.

* More…

    * Press Release | California Congressman David Min Endorses Illinois State Representative Hoan Huynh for Congress: U.S. Representative David Min (CA-47) today announced his endorsement of Illinois State Representative Hoan Huynh for Congress in Illinois’ 9th District, praising Huynh’s record of results for working families and his commitment to integrity and opportunity in public service. “Hoan Huynh represents the best of the American story,” said Rep. David Min. “He came to this country as a refugee, became a proud American citizen, and has dedicated his life to serving others. Hoan delivers for working families with integrity, compassion, and results. He’s part of a new generation of leadership rooted in service and solutions, and I’m proud to endorse him because we need his voice and values in Congress.”

  15 Comments      


Your moment of zen

Wednesday, Nov 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* It’s been a busy stretch, but fall is rolling in and Oscar’s happy. Hard to ask for more than that

* More Oscar…

  13 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Nov 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Relief could come soon for ICE detainees facing ‘cruel’ conditions in Broadview, judge says. Block Club Chicago

    - U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman wrapped up a hearing Tuesday by ordering everyone back in the courtroom 4:15 p.m. Wednesday so he could issue a restraining order providing some immediate “relief” to those still held at Broadview.
    - “We don’t want people to be treated the way I have heard them being treated,” Gettleman said. “Sleeping shoulder-to-shoulder, filthy toilets overflowing, surrounded by human waste, it’s just unacceptable.”
    - Gettleman is overseeing a class-action lawsuit filed on behalf of former detainees who claimed the dire conditions inside — from a lack of water and medication, little food, overflowing toilets and extreme overcrowding — are part of a concerted effort by federal agents to pressure people to sign voluntary deportation papers.

* Related stories…

* Gov. Pritzker will speak on the Illinois Grocery Initiative at 10 am in Venice, attend the Alton Sunnybrook Affordable Housing grand opening at noon, and highlight infrastructure investments at 3 pm in Carbondale. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* ABC Chicago | Dolton food pantry sees surge in visitors, could run out of groceries Wednesday: Shelves are already empty. If it continues at this pace, the food pantry says, they may not have anything by Wednesday. […] “My Link card was canceled, so don’t have any food and we didn’t prepare for it correctly, but it’s kind of scary,” said Chicago resident Kimberly Krenz. The food pantry’s founder, Dr. Nicole Scott, says she is worried that she will not be able to help everyone.

* Center Square | Illinois tax amnesty program closes Nov. 17, brings in $82.5 million: The Illinois Department of Revenue is confident it will meet, if not exceed, its goal of bringing in $240 million in delinquent payments over the next two weeks during the 2025 tax amnesty program. IDOR Director David Harris said the program legislators approved for the current fiscal year continues until Nov. 17. Tax liability that’s eligible for the program is that which was due to Illinois from periods ending June 30, 2018, to July 1, 2024.

*** Statewide ***

* Statescoop | New Illinois pilot program offers free phone calls at prisons: Starting Monday, each prisoner received 775 free domestic phone call minutes per month, roughly $6.20 in calling time credited to phone accounts, as part of the department’s broader push to expand affordable communication. The pilot, called Voices of Connection, costs roughly $150,000 per month from the IDOC’s general operating budget. Using tablets from ICSolutions, a company that provides telecommunication and technology services to correctional facilities, inmates can make calls directly through a dialer app when connected to Wi-Fi. The tablets are not designed to be used for messaging or accessing entertainment content.

* KHQA | Illinois becomes last of tri-states to implement new emergency reporting system: Lee Buxton, the Fire Service Outreach Coordinator for the Illinois Office of the State Fire Marshal said this was a needed switch because reports in the old system are all consistently at least 30 days old. The new data collection system will have near real-time updates—helping fire departments analyze the risks in their community, such as tracking trends of places where emergencies and fires often happen, to better serve those areas and even take proactive steps to make those areas safer.

* Center Square | Illinois biz leader: Diversity computer snafu so bad it ‘has to be intentional’: An Illinois computer problem that has led to the diversity decertifications of numerous businesses owned by minorities and women in the past 15 months is financially disastrous and unacceptable, according to the leader of the Illinois State Black Chamber of Commerce. “The fact of the matter is: I don’t think you can make that mistake,” Larry Ivory, the president of the group, told The Center Square. “This has to be intentional.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* WAND | Illinois Senate passes bill banning rent junk fees, House ends session without voting on plan: The plan passed out of the Senate on a 39-16 vote with one senator voting present. However, the House left Springfield without voting on the plan early Friday morning. House Democrats could try to pass House Bill 3564 when they return to the Capitol in January.

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois bill ‘decouples’ state, federal taxes, raising revenue and angering businesses: Many states like Illinois tie sizable portions of the tax code to the federal government’s policies. That means HR1 would also reduce the amount of revenue the state receives unless Illinois takes the action Pritzker’s budget office recommended in its report last month that state lawmakers pass a bill to “decouple” parts of the state’s corporate tax code from the federal tax code to address this year’s deficit and allow the state to receive taxes it otherwise would not have received because of HR1.

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois treasurer faces no GOP challenger as 2026 primary ballots take shape: No Republican filed to run for state treasurer by the close of the weeklong filing period for the March 17 primary election, marking, according to Frerichs’ campaign, the first time in at least 90 years a major party has failed to field a candidate for a statewide office. It reflects the enfeebled position of the Illinois GOP, which has not won a statewide election in more than a decade and has been relegated to superminority status in the state legislature and on the Illinois Supreme Court. The party also holds just three of 17 congressional seats.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Planning commissioner defends Johnson’s record $1B TIF sweep: The annual sweep of tax-increment financing districts redirects all funding not set aside for specific projects back to the city and other Cook County taxing districts. Johnson easily set a record last year with a $570 million surplus and is proposing nearly doubling it this year. The move has frustrated some on the Council who felt blindsided by the size of the outlay and feared it put pet projects in jeopardy.

* CBS Chicago | Protests expected as Border Patrol Cmdr. Bovino returns to federal court: U.S. District Judge Sara Ellis, who is overseeing the case, set a 7 p.m. deadline Tuesday for the U.S. Justice Department to list any evidence it wants to keep under seal, and to provide a two-word reason for each. Plaintiffs want the public to see Bovino’s deposition and body camera video, arguing they show how federal agents handled immigration enforcement in Chicago neighborhoods.

* Crain’s | City sets aside $50 million for Greyhound station: Chicago is setting aside $50 million for a proposed Greyhound station, but details are sparse and the local alderman is frustrated he wasn’t brought up to speed. Ald. Bill Conway, 34th, disclosed the potential spending during a budget hearing with the Department of Planning and Development, but no further details were provided on whether the funding would purchase and rehab the existing Harrison Street terminal, build a new station, or what the total costs are expected to be.

* Block Club | Gale Street Inn Being Revived By New Owners After Abrupt Closure — And The Ribs Will Be Back: The 62-year-old Jefferson Park restaurant is reopening under new ownership after abruptly closing in June. Jefferson Park resident Paulo Villabona bought The Gale Street Inn, 4914 N. Milwaukee Ave., on Saturday. He plans on reopening in early December. Villabona said he wants the restaurant to be “a community center that’s open to everyone where you can come in and listen to music, break bread and eat good food.”

* Tribune | CPS Board votes to absorb ChiArts, close small South Shore charter: Under the passed proposal, ChiArts will be converted into a district-run magnet school, after its independent board announced last month that it would not seek a renewal application due to financial issues. The board also included an amendment pledging to preserve the Humboldt Park school’s arts conservatory model “to the greatest extent practicable.” Currently, the ChiArts students spend three hours per day training on visual or performing arts — a program that would cost the district an extra $600,000 to maintain.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Armed ICE agents sped down Northbrook street, grabbed man as schoolkids watched: He also spoke with two people who said they knew the detainee and who arrived around 8:30 a.m. to pick up the Acura. Pace was unable to confirm the identity of the man taken by the masked agents, though a deputy told him the Acura was registered to a Palatine address. “As a resident, I’m of course extremely unhappy to have armed, unidentified, masked men speeding around the neighborhood and doing aggressive boxing-in maneuvers, especially at precisely the time when children are going to school,” Pace wrote in a text message.

* WGN | Ordinance to limit immigration enforcement in Aurora fails to pass: The city of Aurora took steps Tuesday evening to curb where federal agents can carry out immigration enforcement, although the ordinance itself did not pass. “Without question, everyone is frustrated at the municipal level, trying to protect their communities against a federal rampage,” Aurora Mayor John Laesch said.[…] Although the ordinance did not pass at Tuesday night’s meeting, it will head back to the Rules, Administration and Procedures Committee and will be presented again at the next city council meeting.

* Daily Herald | Arlington Heights weighs ICE ban on municipal sites: The proposed prohibition on the use of village-owned sites would mirror measures enacted by local governments in recent days and weeks, including Wheeling on Monday night, and Chicago, Evanston, Cook County and Lake County before that. Village officials said they’re aware of at least three operations by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and related agencies that have taken place within village limits — one of which involved Drug Enforcement Administration agents making an arrest then transferring the individual to ICE custody in a village parking lot.

* Daily Herald | ‘How are you protecting us?’: Palatine residents share concerns about ICE with council: Several called for solutions, including resident Tom Soule, an attorney, supported banning federal agents from village-owned property and sharing information with immigration officials as well. Resident Andrew Namowicz suggested an independent investigation of the Oct. 27 actions of a Palatine police officer who responded to a 911 call for a disturbance, only to find three ICE agents trying to detain a man while a crowd heckled them. Police said the officer intervened to protect the public and save the detainee from serious injury.

* Naperville Sun | Food pantries in Naperville area seeing big surge in need with SNAP shutdown: “Many of the people calling in are moms with children who are worried about how to feed their families,” said Jackie Alvarez, client services coordinator with Loaves & Fishes Community Services. One mother of four called Loaves & Fishes on Saturday morning in tears, worried about how she would feed her family without SNAP, Alvarez said. The woman rode her bike to the Loaves & Fishes’ pantry in Naperville so she could register as a new client and get the food and diapers she needed.

* Daily Southtown | Blue Island advocate, south suburban pantries help SNAP recipients find food: Despite all the compounding anxieties in the community, Gonzalez said residents have responded by coming together in a massive community resource network that includes more than 10 businesses. The network will start bringing food, hygiene products and essential household items to Blue Island and Chicago Heights residents this Saturday. Residents can request items to be dropped off at their residence or sign up to volunteer either through an online form or texting two different numbers, both listed on community flyers.

* Daily Southtown | Five candidates file for Will County sheriff; primaries likely in four county board districts: Five candidates filed to run for Will County sheriff in 2026, in a race to replace retiring longtime Sheriff Mike Kelley, while all but one incumbent serving on the Will County Board filed for reelection before Monday’s deadline. The primary election is March 17 and will determine who will be on the November ballot.

* Crain’s | Highland Park gives initial blessing for townhomes on long-empty Solo Cup site: The council voted unanimously Oct. 30 to approve preliminary plans from Chicago developer Habitat to redevelop the 28 acres where Solo Cup closed its factory in 2008. Although final approval won’t come until engineering and other details are submitted to the council, it’s a significant step toward filling a site that has remained a blank spot for years in the high-demand housing market in Highland Park.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | ‘Federal agents have been active inside and outside the city’s limits’: Urbana Mayor addresses federal immigration enforcement: “We are going to do our part to protect our community and again we are earning and continuing to build the trust from the folks that call Urbana home,” Williams said. WCIA 3 reached out to other cities to see if they have had confirmed ICE activity. Danville, Arcola, Decatur, Rantoul and Springfield all say they have not.

* WCIA | Danville approves partnership between DACC, police; 515K tech purchase: The first forms a partnership between the Danville Area Community College and the police department. As part of the agreement, the department will participate in college events and help students with their career paths. Students, on the other hand, will get the chance to shadow officers in the field and train at the department’s facilities.

* WCIA | Village of Rantoul offering new critical alert system: The new mass notification system is a direct line to getting alerts about power outages, water service interruptions and other disruptions. Those who register will also receive real-time updates on repair progress and estimated restoration times.

*** National ***

* NPR | Air traffic controllers warn of ‘tipping point’ as U.S. government shutdown drags on: The Federal Aviation Administration was forced to delay flights across the U.S. because of staffing shortages at dozens of air traffic control facilities, making for one of the most difficult days to fly since the government shutdown began five weeks ago. “What you’re seeing is a lot of people who are truly having to call in sick to go earn money elsewhere,” said one air traffic controller who works at a facility in the Midwest that handles high-altitude traffic. “I think you’re also seeing people who are just calling in sick because they’re fed up and they’re like, ‘well, I’m going to spend the holiday weekend with my kids for once.’”

* NYT | Almost Half of U.S. Imports Now Have Steep Tariffs: The legality of the bulk of the new tariffs is now in jeopardy, as the Supreme Court on Wednesday begins hearing a case that challenges Mr. Trump’s use of an emergency powers law to impose the levies. If the court rules against the president, it will nullify a major tool in Mr. Trump’s trade agenda. He has used the law under question, the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA, to impose tariffs on an estimated 29 percent of all U.S. imports, the Times analysis found. So far this year, these emergency tariffs have hit more than $300 billion in imported goods.

* Politico | Judge rules Trump administration can’t tie transportation funding to immigration: The Trump administration cannot withhold billions of dollars in transportation funding to states that refuse to cooperate with immigration enforcement, a federal judge in Rhode Island ruled Tuesday. Chief U.S. District Judge John McConnell wrote in his ruling that the U.S. Department of Transportation and Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy “blatantly overstepped” their authority in attempting to link funding used to maintain roads, bridges and highways to immigration demands.

  5 Comments      


Good morning!

Wednesday, Nov 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Snocaps

You dream about the past
It was nothing, it was nothing

* Tell us something we don’t know.

  8 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Nov 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, Nov 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Nov 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Nov 5, 2025 - 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 »
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Pritzker says if Indiana redraws its congressional districts, Illinois may follow suit
* Illinois companies at center of US Supreme Court tariff case
* Pritzker talks about yesterday's elections as he breaks ground on new public/private grocery store partnership
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* Good morning!
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today's edition
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