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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Session update
Tuesday, Oct 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Oct 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The Hill…
* Crain’s…
* Attorney General Raoul…
The lawsuit is here. * Illinois Retail Merchants Association…
![]() Illinois families can’t afford a new delivery tax. Delivery services are a lifeline for millions of Illinois residents helping seniors, families, and those with limited mobility get the essentials they need, when they need them. Delivery isn’t a luxury — it’s a necessity. Learn how a delivery tax could affect your household and why we must STOP THIS TAX today. * WGN…
* The Civic Federation | GOMB Report Projects Pressure on Illinois’ Budget Amid Federal Policy Changes: After several years of relative fiscal stability, GOMB’s new projections show emerging fiscal gaps beginning in FY2026 and widening through FY2031, driven by federal tax code changes and restrictions/cuts to federal programs like Medicaid and food assistance. The report provides updated revenue and expenditure estimates for the current 2026 fiscal year, which began on July 1, 2025, and a five-year projection through FY2031. The projections are based on current assumptions, demonstrating what would happen if no policy actions were taken to adjust for revenue declines. * Press Release | Congressional Candidate Daniel Biss (IL-09) Urges State Lawmakers to Redistrict Illinois Congressional Map: “We are in a moment of true emergency, and the Democratic Party must use every tool at its disposal to fight back. Republican legislatures across the country are redrawing maps to lock in minority rule, and Illinois cannot afford to sit on the sidelines. “While I continue to support national reforms to end gerrymandering, we cannot unilaterally disarm while the other side rigs the game. I urge the Illinois General Assembly to pass an updated Congressional map, one that allows Democrats to compete in an additional district while protecting the Voting Rights Act and vital Black and Hispanic representation. The stakes are nothing less than control of Congress and the future of democracy itself.” * Illinois Answers Project | A Little-Known Legal Loophole Has Scrambled State Efforts to Save Transit Agencies From Financial Disaster: The state proposal targeted tax money collected for Cook and the collar counties for the Regional Transportation Authority. In many instances, that money wasn’t being spent on transportation at all — $83 million of the roughly $193 million in transportation taxes collected last year by the collar counties around Cook was spent on cops and courts. The tax is collected on all retail sales, excluding most food and medical costs. It is all perfectly legal, thanks to a loophole written into state law at the behest of DuPage County leaders in 2008. DuPage County last year collected nearly $70 million on behalf of the RTA and spent it on operations and infrastructure for the county sheriff’s office. * Crain’s | Springfield moves to reboot stalled energy bill amid rising power prices: The legislation — a follow-up to the 2021 Climate & Equitable Jobs Act — calls for 3 gigawatts of large-scale battery storage to reduce peak demand, which pushes up the price customers pay, and give state regulators more authority to plan for future energy needs. It also would give the Illinois Commerce Commission renewed authority to push power providers to generate more electricity while lifting the state’s decades-old ban on large-scale nuclear plants. * Crain’s | Johnson: Those opposed to head tax ’should do some real soul searching’: Mayor Brandon Johnson said today the business community is “awfully unreasonable” in opposing his attempt to revive the corporate head tax, but pledged to fight to keep it in his $16.6 billion 2026 budget proposal. “We have constantly asked working people to accept less. That’s not what my ask is in this moment. We’ve balanced budgets off the backs of working people; I’m going to defend working people in this city with everything that I have inside of me,” he said. * Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago school board to vote on pension reimbursement to the city: The Chicago school board will hold a special meeting Thursday to authorize a $175 million pension reimbursement to the city. The planned vote on an agreement to pay into a city pension fund that covers city workers and non-teaching Chicago Public Schools staff comes less than two weeks after Mayor Brandon Johnson proposed a record $552.4 million funding boost to the district. The intergovernmental agreement the school board will consider states that the pension payment will only take place if the district receives this money, which would require City Council approval. * Block Club | Vienna Beef Cafe, Factory Store Now Opening In Mid-2026 At Bucktown Headquarters: While there’s no shortage of Vienna Beef products to be found on street corners across Chicago, neighbors are going to have to wait a little longer for the company to re-launch a cafe and factory store at its Bucktown headquarters. In 2023, the locally-famous hot dog provider announced it was redeveloping its former factory at 2501 N. Damen Ave. to house corporate offices, a factory store, a restaurant and other retail tenants. * Sun-Times | Chicago no longer ‘America’s rattiest city’: “In true Hollywood fashion, Los Angeles has taken center stage,” Orkin said in a statement. “With year-round warm weather, a booming culinary scene and dense neighborhoods that offer ample access to food and shelter, the City of Angels checks every box for rodent survival. From bustling commercial corridors to hidden alleyways, Los Angeles’ signature blend of glam and grit creates a perfect storm for rodent activity.” * South Side Weekly | Cook County Board Reapproves Contract with ICE-Linked Data Firm as Raids Sweep Chicago: Appriss manages the state’s Victim Information and Notification Everyday (VINE) system, which alerts crime victims and family members when an accused person’s jail or court status changes. The service is considered essential for public safety and compliance with victims’ rights laws, but a clause in the contract referencing “Risk Solutions” permits data to be shared or sold to third parties. Advocates argue the county could continue offering the same service without relying on Appriss, whose parent company, LexisNexis Risk Solutions, collects and sells personal data. * Lake County News-Sun | Feds arrest at least 12 over weekend in Lake County: ‘The pattern is to … kidnap someone before anyone comes outside’: Dulce Ortiz, executive director of the Mano Family Resource Center and a Waukegan Township trustee, said different forms of “community resistance” are being used to deal with Border Patrol and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents in the Waukegan area. Ortiz said when the Border Patrol or ICE agents take people into custody, neighbors tend not to run outside to protest — as sometimes happens in Chicago — out of “fear they will be kidnapped themselves.” “By the time our rapid response teams get there, ICE is gone,” Ortiz said. “When (community members) identify an ICE vehicle, they start beeping and honking. A line of 10 cars followed them down Sheridan Road into North Chicago. They left. This is community resistance.” * Evanston Now | City to respond to, document ICE sightings: The City of Evanston said Monday that Evanston police officers will now respond to reports of federal immigration agents in Evanston, writing in a statement that officers will “attempt to meet with the agent in charge” to obtain information about the agents’ activities and identification. In a brief statement at the beginning of Monday’s City Council meeting, Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss said that the city will respond to reports of “masked, anonymous individuals, representing themselves as federal agents,” calling it an issue of public safety. * CBS Chicago | Evanston, Illinois parents push back on District 65 plans to close schools to balance budget: District officials have said they’re facing big financial challenges, and need to cut $10 million to $15 million to balance the budget after several years of deficits. They also need millions for building maintenance and repairs. The district pointed to declining enrollment, saying elementary schools are below capacity. * Aurora Beacon-News | New residential mental health facility for youth could be coming to Aurora: The Aurora City Council on Tuesday is set to consider items that would allow the LYDIA Home Association, a Christian nonprofit that has been serving children in the Chicago area for over 100 years, to open a 40-bed residential treatment facility for youth ages 12 to 21 years old who have mental health and behavioral challenges, so have difficulty living in a family setting. * Daily Southtown | Company intends to buy shuttered mobile home in Blue Island, but zoning still not residential: Attorneys previously agreed in a July meeting the property was unrealistic to save, because infrastructure issues and building code violations would require significant investment. Despite these barriers, Canaan Van Williams, managing partner at Proactive Sustainable Bonds, said his investment group finalized a contract of terms to buy the property by the second week of December following negotiations with the mobile home property owners, Forest View Mobile Home Park Inc., which is managed by Mer-Car Corporation. * IPM News | Good gourd! These Midwesterners are raising giant pumpkins that weigh as much as a car: But the backyard garden behind his suburban Chicago home is where The Pumpkin House really earns its name. Towering over a blanket of vines are several massive orange gourds, as big as a small car. “I grow the ones that are under a pound all the way up to hopefully a couple thousand pounds,” he said. Adkins is a member of a thriving global community of giant pumpkin growers. * Naperville Sun | What started with a claw machine is now a Halloween arcade run out of a Naperville garage: For four years, Mueller has been running a Halloween-themed arcade out of his home at 2129 Countryside Circle in Naperville. What started as a birthday gift for his eldest daughter’s 7th birthday has turned into a yearly operation known as the Game Over Haunted Arcade. “It’s just impressive that they do this and they do this all for free and they just open it up,” said neighbor Patrick Cunningham, who takes his kids to the arcade. * WTVO | ‘Neighborhood dispute’ leads to arrest of Winnebago County prosecutor: Assistant State’s Attorney Keith Doherty, 57, was charged with the crime of Battery on Friday, October 24th, Boone County court records show. According to Belvidere Police, officers were called to the 400 block of Pocahers Circle around 10 p.m. for a “neighborhood dispute.” Officers spoke to the parties involved and placed Doherty into custody, police said. Doherty appeared in court Monday morning and was released pre-trial. He is due back in court on November 25th. * 25News Now | Peoria County schools face uncertainty amid federal government shutdown: Special education, after-school initiatives, and school nutrition programs could all see funding cuts. The regional superintendent for Peoria County schools, Dr. George McKenna, highlighted the long-term uncertainty as the primary concern, noting that districts have not yet reduced programs. * Press Release | Governor Pritzker Announces Rockford Brake Manufacturing to Reopen Idled Factory: Governor JB Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) today announced an Economic Development for a Growing Economy (EDGE) for Startups agreement for Rockford Brake Manufacturing’s $6.6 million investment to reestablish the company and reopen a historic Rockford factory. Four former employees of Gunite Corporation have created a new business, which will save Rockford’s longest-standing factory since parent company Accuride closed Gunite’s doors in February 2025 after announcing Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Bolstered by State incentives, the former Gunite employees are purchasing the idled factory and are relaunching operations as Rockford Brake Manufacturing. * WCIA | UIS unveils new resource for students struggling with mental health: A new bench — donated by Josh’s Benches for Awareness — serves as a resource for students who might struggle with their mental health. It was unveiled on Monday and is inscribed with the suicide prevention hotline. School officials said it’s meant to serve as a visible reminder to students that support is available. * WSIL | Perry County Justice Center guided tours to take place this week: “Today, the PCJJC is a fully functioning justice center with two operational law enforcement agencies, courts, prosecutor’s office and a jail,” Sauer said. “Unfortunately, it is no longer logistically possible to host a community open house in what is now a secured operational facility.”The community can still view public portions of the Justice Center during regular hours, and films by Cole Steinbecker of AeroLens Productions are available for public viewing. * NYT | Trump Says He Is Prepared to Send ‘More Than the National Guard’ Into U.S. Cities: But throughout his nearly hourlong speech, his usual ramblings about the physical appearances of audience members and steam-powered catapults were laced with dark warnings about how he might choose to deploy military forces. “We have cities that are troubled, we can’t have cities that are troubled,” Mr. Trump said. “And we’re sending in our National Guard, and if we need more than the National Guard, we’ll send more than the National Guard, because we’re going to have safe cities.” * AP | Judge extends order barring the Trump administration from firing federal workers during the shutdown: U.S. District Judge Susan Illston granted a preliminary injunction that bars the firings while a lawsuit challenging them plays out. She had previously issued a temporary restraining order against the job cuts that was set to expire Wednesday. Illston, who was nominated by Democratic President Bill Clinton, has said she believes the evidence will ultimately show the mass firings were illegal and in excess of authority.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Session, campaign and social stuff
Tuesday, Oct 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Speaker Welch pushes back on DCCC, says he has not seen a remap proposal, ‘And we will not be passing any map this week’
Tuesday, Oct 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
* From House Speaker Chris Welch’s spokesperson…
Leader Jeffries said yesterday that a new map didn’t need to be passed this week, but petition filing season ends on November 3rd, which is just six days away. As I told subscribers this morning, it’s like the congressional Democrats are using the Chicago Bears’ Statehouse playbook.
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Coverage roundup: Judge orders Border Patrol chief to report to her every weekday about immigration operations, wear a body camera
Tuesday, Oct 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The Associated Press…
* The Tribune…
* CBS Chicago…
* WTTW…
* WGN…
* Sun-Times…
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Trying to connect dots that don’t connect
Tuesday, Oct 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Ted Dabrowski press release…
Mr. Clayton was a Coles County Board member. * Edwin Pacheco-Meza is the alleged drunk driver. As noted above, he is alleged to have been operating the vehicle without a valid driver’s license. So reviewing licenses wouldn’t have prevented this, as Dabrowski claims. Also, Illinois can’t review Indiana’s license records. Why do I mention Indiana? Well, according to the state police, Pacheco-Meza resides in Indianapolis. His passenger also lives in Indiana. According to WCIA TV, Pacheco-Meza has been detained since Friday. * There is plenty of material to use against Pritzker. But trying to hold him accountable for a Hoosier’s horrific behavior ain’t one of them.
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Big Pharma Sees Profits, Not Patients: Support 340B Legislation To Stop Drugmakers From Skirting The Rules And Hurting Patients in Need
Tuesday, Oct 28, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Every year is a banner year for pharmaceutical companies because every year they rake in billions of dollars in profits. At the same time, Big Pharma spends more on stock buybacks, dividends, and executive compensation than research and development. The numbers are eye-popping: over $112 billion in profits for 10 large drugmakers when 25% of Americans are unable to afford needed prescriptions. These drugmakers, many based overseas, charge Americans more for lifesaving medications than anyone else in the world. For example, the blood thinner Eliquis sold for $1,300 a year in the U.S. in 2013 compared with $1,000 in Japan. By 2024, Eliquis cost only $900 a year in Japan but $7,100 in the U.S. Overcharging Americans is part of Big Pharma’s business model centered on protecting their profits no matter who’s harmed in the process. In recent years, part of their strategy has been to flat-out flout the requirements of the federal 340B drug pricing program. They’re limiting access to the savings that hospitals pass onto patients in reduced prescription costs and lifesaving services. The hospitals participating in 340B care for large numbers of uninsured and low-income patients and include safety net hospitals and critical access hospitals. Vote YES on HB 2371 SA 2 to prevent Big Pharma from harming patients across Illinois. Learn more.
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Congressional Black Caucus PAC urges new Illinois congressional map
Tuesday, Oct 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Press release…
Discuss.
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It’s Time To Bring Safer Rides To Illinois
Tuesday, Oct 28, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Waymo is ready to bring safe, reliable, autonomous rides to Illinois – but we need your help! Waymo is designed to follow all traffic laws and obey speed limits, and the data shows Waymo’s autonomous vehicles are involved in five times fewer injury-causing collisions compared to humans (as of 6/2025, see waymo.com/safety). Let’s bring safer rides to Illinois. ![]() Waymo’s autonomous vehicles can improve access to transportation for Illinois residents with travel-limiting disabilities like vision impairment, to reach medical care, groceries, and social activities. Waymo’s all-electric autonomous vehicles also provide a more sustainable way for people to get around, preventing 315+ tons of carbon emissions with every 250K trips provided through our ride-hailing service.
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Catching up with the federal candidates
Tuesday, Oct 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Robin Kelly for US Senate…
Click here for the full list. * More endorsements via Politico…
* Tribune…
A little more from Evanston Now…
* The Daily Herald…
* More…
* Captiol News Illinois | Crowded Dem primaries, GOP field for governor take shape as candidates file for office: Democratic voters around Illinois will see several competitive primaries on their ballots this year, including for U.S. Senate. So far, Krishnamoorthi, Kelly and Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton are largely focused on their opposition to Trump. Voters “want stability, they want civility, they want their government working for them and right now Donald Trump’s government is not working,” Krishnamoorthi told reporters. * Evanston Roundtable | Midterm season opens with 13 Dems fi ling for congressional primary: On the Republican side, meanwhile, neither Mark Su nor Rocío Cleveland filed their paperwork, but new candidate John Elleson of Arlington Heights effectively announced his run by way of filing early in the day. Elleson was the Republican nominee for the seat in 2018 and lost to Schakowsky. He intended to run again in 2022 until he was disqualified from the primary ballot. * The Triibe | Millions will be impacted by pause in food stamps and other forthcoming changes to SNAP program: State Rep. La Shawn Ford is calling for an end to what he’s calling “the Republican shutdown.” He spoke alongside Congressman Danny Davis and other representatives outside Bethel Family Ministries on Oct. 23. “I mean, you see lines of people in need of food assistance, and we know that come November 1, if the shutdown is not over, they’re going to lose assistance with SNAP benefits and people are going to lose health care,” Ford told The TRiiBE. “There’s nothing we could do. Local government and state government can’t do anything. We rely on the federal government to send money to the state and to local governments in order to operate. And so that’s why state and local governments would be impacted by this shutdown as well.”
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What Illinois Can Learn From Texas On Battery Energy Storage
Tuesday, Oct 28, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] As Illinois confronts skyrocketing electric bills, legislators are on the hunt for solutions that provide relief as quickly as possible. Battery energy storage is our best and most cost-effective solution. But last session— without evidence —opponents attempted to claim that battery energy storage wouldn’t work. Try telling that to Texas, where the rapid deployment of battery storage has already prevented blackouts and saved consumers billions. Called “Ground Zero for the US Battery Boom” by Bloomberg, Texas added enough storage in 2023 to power 3 million homes and drop grid emergency risk during peak hours from 16% to less than 1%. The result? Storage saved consumers an estimated $750 million in 2024. Texas has proven that storage is the quickest, cheapest, most reliable way to get consumers relief from skyrocketing, demand-induced price spikes. Storage is a nimble way to address growing populations, power-hungry data centers, and meet other electrification-related power needs. These are benefits Texas saw from storage even as the state reduced its gas generation capacity by 166 MW last year. Illinois lawmakers should follow Texas’s lead and pass the Clean and Reliable Grid Act this fall to deploy 6GW of energy storage by 2035. Click here for more information.
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ISP backs off after criticism for violating protesters’ rights
Tuesday, Oct 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * National Lawyers Guild Chicago…
The ISP and the governor were both taking online heat over the way the Broadview protests were being handled. * From the governor’s office…
* ISP…
The ISP then followed up with this…
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Illinois’ Largest Medicaid Provider Exposes Big Pharma Disinformation Campaign: Here’s The Truth About UChicago Medicine And 340B Drug Discounts
Tuesday, Oct 28, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] For nearly 100 years, UChicago Medicine has delivered compassionate care to patients. Today, the integrated academic and community health system employs over 13,000 Illinoisans between its South Side and Harvey hospitals. Its physicians and nurses handle over 220,000 emergency room visits and 30,000 surgeries a year. They also care for many low-income and uninsured patients. As the state’s largest provider of Medicaid-insured care, University of Chicago Medical Center relies on the federal 340B program to provide critical care on the South Side, where residents face high rates of chronic disease and health disparities. UChicago Medicine redirects drug discount savings toward essential services and programs, including an expanded adult emergency department, new adult trauma center, and new state-of-the-art Center for Care and Discovery. Allowing drugmaker restrictions on 340B would put at risk many essential UChicago Medicine programs—its Level 1 trauma centers, neonatal ICU, the South Side’s only burn unit and more. UChicago Medicine is committed to serving Chicago’s South Side and Harvey, where 25% of residents live in poverty. In its 2024 fiscal year, the nonprofit system invested $715 million in community benefits and services for patients. As federal Medicaid cuts threaten the South Side’s healthcare ecosystem, 340B remains more important than ever to ensure access to high-quality care for communities in need. Vote YES on HB 2371 SA 2 to protect 340B. Learn more.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Oct 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Crowded Dem primaries, GOP field for governor take shape as candidates file for office. Capitol News Illinois…
- Three Republican gubernatorial candidates filed their petitions as they compete for the right to take on Pritzker, who filed for reelection. Darren Bailey hasn’t made a decision on staying in the race, running mate Del Mar told reporters. - Democratic voters around Illinois will see several competitive primaries on their ballots this year, including for U.S. Senate. So far, Krishnamoorthi, Kelly and Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton are largely focused on their opposition to Trump. * Related stories… Sponsored by Ameren Illinois
* Governor Pritzker will be in Peoria at 1 pm today to highlight a $400 million investment in Peoria County infrastructure. Click here to watch. * WICS | Governor Pritzker urges federal action as SNAP benefits pause leaves families in distress: Governor JB Pritzker says families will have to turn to local food pantries for help. “We’re going to support our food pantries across the state as best we can. We can’t replace the dollars that the federal government puts up, and we’re talking about $350 to $400 million a week, and so they need to do the right thing,” Governor JB Pritzker. The Illinois Department of Human Services echoed that the state doesn’t have the budget to cover these benefits if federal funding doesn’t arrive. * Tribune | Illinois residents to see 78% average cost increase for Affordable Care Act exchange plans if subsidies expire: Illinois residents who have health insurance through the exchange will begin receiving letters this week from the Illinois Department of Insurance outlining how their costs may increase next year, said Morgan Winters, director of Get Covered Illinois, the state’s new marketplace for Affordable Care Act plans. About 91% of Illinois residents with exchange plans get the enhanced premium tax credits, which lower the monthly costs of their health insurance, said Ann Gillespie, director of the Illinois Department of Insurance. * WMBD | Justice P. Scott Neville Jr. sworn in as Illinois chief justice: Justice P. Scott Neville, Jr. assumed the office of Chief Justice of the Illinois Supreme Court on Sunday, Oct. 26. Justice Neville is the second black man and 123rd Chief Justice in the state’s History. He follows the Late Justice Charles Freeman, who served from 1997 to 1999. * Capitol News Illinois | State rep., comptroller candidate’s ICE disclosures draw threats from DOJ: osts online sharing the screenshot claimed that the Department of Homeland Security had referred the case to the DOJ for review, citing DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin in a post on X. “Heinous. We will prosecute those who dox ICE law enforcement to the fullest extent of the law — State Rep Croke is no exception,” says the quote attributed to McLaughlin. DHS confirmed the statement was made by McLaughlin. Anthony Coley, who heads DOJ’s Office of Public Affairs, says the Department is tracking cases such as this and issued a warning to public officials involved. “The Department is actively tracking these targeted assaults against our law enforcement and will hold offenders accountable to the fullest extent of the law,” Coley said. “Any official encouraging reckless behavior should think twice before inciting further violence and putting federal agents in harm’s way.” * Sun-Times | U.S. House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries brings his redistricting push to Illinois: U.S. Reps. Jonathan Jackson, Danny Davis, Lauren Underwood and Robin Kelly stood with Jeffries in support of the idea after an hourlong meeting that also included Chicago Democrats who lead the General Assembly’s Black Caucus: state Sens. Lakesia Collins and Willie Preston, and state Rep. Kimberly du Buclet. […] “If that map dilutes Black votes, I’m not only a no, I’m going to lobby other Black, Latino and my white colleagues to vote no,” Preston said. “This is an unprecedented time in America, but we do not have to go along just to get along here, particularly at a time when we see Black power and Black representation decreasing in Illinois.” * Capitol News Illinois’ Brenden Moore…
* Daily Herald | Gubernatorial candidates file amid Bailey tragedy; Trump and Pritzker offer condolences: Pritzker “gave me his sincere condolences and wanted me to pass those on to Darren and (wife) Cindy,” said Del Mar, Cook County’s GOP chair. Bailey has temporarily suspended his campaign. On Saturday, President Donald Trump called Bailey and they “had a very long talk,” Del Mar said. “He gave Darren, obviously, his condolences and support, but more surprisingly, he encouraged Darren to continue the race and to continue to fight,” he added. * Center Square | Illinois agency buys incompatible computer system meant to ’streamline’ diversity efforts: The number of businesses owned by racial minorities and women that are certified by Illinois plummeted in the past year, partly due to a new computer system the state bought for as much as $750,000 and was designed to help boost the number, an investigation by The Center Square found. […] But the new computer system the commission started using last year cannot automatically download certification data from other government entities – such as the city of Chicago – to build the certified businesses list. Commission staff blamed that inability, in part, for the falling numbers. * WAND | Clean energy advocates, manufacturers argue over massive energy plan: “We really believe that this is the only bill that gives Illinois electricity customers a fighting chance to do something about sky high rates,” said Jeff Danielson, SVP of Advocacy for the Clean Grid Alliance. However, Illinois manufacturers argue the legislation will raise rates and hurt companies. The Illinois Manufacturers’ Association said clean energy advocates keep promising to lower energy prices but their laws fail to do so. * Kirk W. Dillard | The real consequences of not funding transit in Illinois: The problem isn’t one of mismanagement. It’s chronic underfunding. Illinois ranks last among peer states in state support for public transit, covering just 17% of costs while most states fund 40% to 50%. Since 2014, Springfield has cut more than $400 million in transit resources even as the state budget has ballooned by $20 billion. * AP | Chicago’s children are getting caught in the chaos of immigration crackdowns: Parents, teachers and caregivers have been grappling ever since with how to explain to children what they’d seen: how much to tell them so they know enough to stay safe, but not too much to rob them of their childhood. A toddler shouldn’t know what a tear gas canister is, Kucich said. “I don’t know how to explain this to my kids.” * NBC Chicago | Could ICE have ‘lost’ 3,000 immigrant arrestees in Chicago?: As of Monday, immigration agents and border patrol officers working in Chicago have locked up more than 3,000 allegedly undocumented immigrants, authorities say, noting the individuals were here illegally and many were wanted for serious crimes. Even as arrests continue, the question is: Where are the 3,000 people? Attorneys and human rights investigators tracking them are asking where they are and, in many cases, who they are. The whereabouts of many detainees locked up during Operation Midway Blitz remain unknown, according to organizations that have been trying to protect rights and lives. * Crain’s | Chicago business leaders mobilize to kill Johnson’s head tax: Chicago’s business community is mobilizing to strip the proposed corporate head tax out of Mayor Brandon Johnson’s $16.6 billion 2026 budget in a fight that will place moderate members of the City Council in a vice-grip as they choose between eliminating the tax and the politically painful alternatives. Representatives from Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce and trade associations representing downtown landlords, manufacturers, retailers, as well as corporate leaders and their hired lobbyists, met last week to strategize over how to best deliver the message to the City Council that the business community will not negotiate on the head tax. * Tribune | Aldermen to lobby lawmakers on behalf of Mayor Brandon Johnson for ‘progressive revenue’: The proposals entail raising the corporate tax rate by 0.92%, imposing a new levy on digital ads and hiking the Personal Property Replacement Tax rate on corporations, according to a “Progressive Revenue Agenda” memo obtained by the Tribune. Sources said the day of lobbying, organized by Johnson’s head lobbyist in the statehouse, former Ald. John Arena, will include meetings with Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch and Senate President Don Harmon as the legislative body begins the second and final week of its fall veto session. Arena’s agenda does not include a meeting with Gov. JB Pritzker. * Sun-Times | CPS lunchroom workers say wages are so low they can barely feed their own families: According to the union, lunchroom workers are the lowest-paid workers for CPS, with a vast majority making $18.42 or less an hour, with entry level workers paid minimum wage. The average salary of a lunchroom worker is $31,000. They work about 35 hours per week during the school year. […] In a survey conducted last month by the union, nearly half of lunchroom workers said they struggle to afford basic necessities, with 67% having trouble paying for food in the last three months. * Sun-Times | Lawyer sues Broadview mayor, police over designated protest hours outside ICE processing facility: It argues limiting protests to select zones and within the hours of 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., doesn’t provide a reasonable alternative for people to protest who work “traditional employment hours” from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The suit also points to the lack of guidelines from Thompson in determining rules for protests, giving her “unfettered discretion to rescind the time restrictions whenever she personally ‘deem[s] the restriction no longer necessary.’” * Daily Herald | Palatine police defend officer who assisted federal agents: “Given the subject’s noncompliance, the agitated crowd, and the potential risk of injury, the officer made a split-second decision to assist in stabilizing the situation,” police said. “The officer provided verbal instructions in Spanish to the subject and grasped the subject’s right arm, which was already being handcuffed, while agents secured the left arm helping to bring the incident to a safe and peaceful resolution.” Despite the officer’s intervention, police issued a statement Monday saying the department “remains committed to complying with all state laws.” * WGN | Federal arrest operation in Addison sparks fear and criticism from local residents: A Department of Homeland Security operation in west suburban Addison is drawing criticism from community members who say several arrests made Sunday morning were unwarranted. Witnesses say federal agents broke multiple windows on an SUV in the parking lot of a popular grocery store in the 300 block of West Lake Street, taking several people into custody. […] Sources familiar with the investigation say the vehicle’s driver is a legal resident who was later released from custody. * Tribune | Cook County candidates pack the hallway to get on the ballot: Standing a few feet away from each other were Democratic opponents for County Board president, incumbent Toni Preckwinkle and downtown Ald. Brendan Reilly. Also in close proximity were Assessor Fritz Kaegi and Lyons Township Assessor Pat Hynes, who’s running against him. The two races are likely the closest-watched countywide and some of the most expensive. The line up is a Cook County pre-election tradition, that doubles as a show of electoral strength. Being the first name listed on the ballot among candidates for an office is said to be worth a few extra votes. To be eligible to gain that pole position requires getting to the building before the 9 a.m. official start of filing. * Daily Herald | Primary races emerge for DuPage county clerk, sheriff: Two-term incumbent Jean Kaczmarek will face a primary challenge as she seeks a third term as DuPage County clerk. Paula Deacon Garcia, a Democratic county board member, and Kaczmarek filed petitions Monday to run in the March primary. It is believed to be the first time in nearly 30 years that any candidate for county clerk would face a primary challenge, Kaczmarek said. * Daily Herald | Lake County primary races expected to be few and far between, but there are wrinkles: There will be some notable departures. Republican Linda Pedersen, who has represented District 1 in the Antioch area since 2008, is not seeking reelection. Newcomer John Muellner of Lindenhurst, who Pedersen referred to as a “next generation leader” in his candidacy announcement, was among the first five to file Monday morning. Antioch village Trustee Jose S. Martinez filed Monday as a Democrat. * ABC Chicago | Harvey residents pack chamber as city council meets for 1st time since mass furloughs: The mayor says there is no specific timeline for when state help might arrive, but that his administration is doing everything and possibly to bring back those furloughed workers. He told people he’s looking for “brighter minds to come in and help us figure this out.” * Tribune | Oak Park uncorked: The Chicago suburb’s best wine destinations: If there’s one place that inevitably comes up when wine lovers talk about Oak Park, it’s Anfora. The Italian-focused bottle shop and wine bar, opened in 2020 by veteran sommelier Adrian Weisell, has quickly become a neighborhood anchor. Born and raised in Italy to American parents, Weisell grew up surrounded by vineyards outside Rome. “I grew up around wine; it was just part of life,” he says. * WAND | Massey Commission passes 26 ‘calls to action’ in final meeting: The 708 Mental Health Board was approved by county voters, but two recommendations made it even farther. Senate Bill 1953 was passed into law as the Sonya Massey Law, and Senate Bill 1954 will put the ability to recall on the ballot in the 2026 general election, but it is currently locked in the House Rules Committee. * WICS | Massey Commission concludes with 27 calls to action for community reform: Sontae Massey, Sonya’s cousin, addressed the crowd, highlighting the ongoing need for action. “We need to keep this going, we’ve got at least five to ten years more work to do,” adding, “There is so much more work that needs to be done, and this is the team to do it.” Although this was the commission’s final formal meeting, Co-Chair Joann Johnson urged the public to continue the work, saying they’re returning the work to the people. * WAND | New Google energy plant expected to attract other businesses to Decatur: A new natural gas plant to be built in Decatur could result in other businesses coming into the city. The project using ADM carbon capture will be a joint venture between ADM, Broadwing Energy and Google. It will be constructed on ADM property in Decatur. “It’s the first domino to fall for Decatur and it will be very impactful,” Broadwing President Jonathan Wiens told WAND News. * WCIA | Special use permit approved for solar farm in Mahomet: The board met on Thursday, Oct. 23 to discuss Summit Ridge Energy’s proposed plan for Mahomet. The 36-acre solar farm would run from the Spring Lake subdivision and along Spring Lake Drive. Summit Ridge said it would generate 4.99 MWAC — enough to power about 1,500 homes. * WGLT | Bloomington council gets final commission recommendations on gun violence: Recommendations in the data-heavy, 29-page final report from the advisory board include expanded collaboration among community groups, gathering youth perspectives, supporting suicide prevention efforts, strengthening programs targeting domestic violence, and more investments in school programs and mental health treatment. * NPR | Weight loss drugs are bringing down the country’s obesity rate, a survey shows: The obesity rate dropped to 37% of U.S. adults this year, down from a high of 39.9% three years ago, according to the survey. The survey found that the number of Americans taking drugs like semaglutide (which include the brands Ozempic and Wegovy) or tirzepatide (under the brands Zepbound and Mounjaro) for weight loss more than doubled over the past year and a half. That’s 12.4% of respondents taking the drugs compared with 5.8% in February 2024, when Gallup first measured it. GLP-1 agonists, as the new treatments are known, were first approved for obesity treatment in the U.S. market in 2021. * NYT | Government Shutdown Imperils SNAP and Other Antipoverty Programs: For 42 million people who rely on SNAP, or the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, also known as food stamps, it means the loss of grocery assistance when food banks are already stretched thin. For the 6.7 million women and children who participate in the Women, Infants and Children nutrition program, or WIC, there is uncertainty about whether the Trump administration will find stopgap funds to keep the program going after this week. * AP | Amazon cuts 14,000 corporate jobs as spending on artificial intelligence accelerates: Amazon has about 350,000 corporate employees and a total workforce of approximately 1.56 million. The cuts announced Tuesday amount to about a 4% reduction in its corporate workforce. […] The cuts announced Tuesday suggests Amazon is still trying to get the size of its workforce right and it may not be over. It was the biggest culling at Amazon since 2023, when the company cut 27,000 jobs. Those cuts came in waves, with 9,000 jobs trimmed in March of that year, and another 18,000 employees two months later. Amazon has not said if more job cuts are on the way.
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Good morning!
Tuesday, Oct 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * This is my mom’s favorite Grateful Dead song… Ripple in still water How are things by you?
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Tuesday, Oct 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Tuesday, Oct 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Oct 28, 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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