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Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* We talked about this recording last month. Turn it up

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Some fiscal news

Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated)

Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tri States Public Radio

A bill that would have established a new funding formula for state universities in Illinois was not included in the $55.2 billion dollar state budget approved by lawmakers in late May.

State Sen. Mike Halpin, D-36, introduced Senate Bill 13, which would have applied the evidence-based funding model for K-12 public schools in Illinois to state universities. The bill never came to a vote, but Halpin said it would have “leveled the playing field” for public universities. […]

Halpin said he was able to get a smaller line item in the fiscal year 2026 state budget for capital improvements at WIU for things like building repairs, sidewalk fixes, and parking lot issues. […]

“We’re working with the university to try to gather more support to see if maybe in veto session we can get those things where they need to be, but it’s going to take a lot of effort,” Halpin said. “Unfortunately, there’s no other way, in my opinion, other than those additional resources, to really put the university on sound footing.”

Sen. Halpin voted against the FY26 budget and the revenue omnibus. Earlier this week, he told WVIK his vote was due to underfunding higher education in Illinois.

* Some familiar names in Illinois media are moving around. Tina Sfondeles is now the Sun-Times’ national political reporter

* Long-time Tribune reporter Ray Long has retired

* Amy Jacobson was let go

* WGN

Grundy County’s Board of Health recently shuttered its mental health services despite an increase in patients in recent years.

The decision to close the behavioral unit, located within the health department, came during a closed-door meeting on May 14. The decision was not made open to the public, but people with knowledge of the situation tell WGN News that’s when it occurred.

More than 1,600 children and adults received treatment last year through the unit, for everything from substance abuse help to elderly group therapy. The total number of patients increased by nearly 160% compared to 2023. […]

A longtime former counselor at the unit, who is remaining anonymous, said there were staffing shortages and that employees had quit amid conflicts with a new leadership team.

…Adding… Capitol News Illinois

Despite uncertainty over the economy and federal funding during the second half of fiscal year 2025, the year closed on June 30 with the state setting a new record for annual revenue.

Numbers compiled by the independent Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability show FY25 concluded with $54 billion in revenue, the most the state has ever received in a fiscal year. The state also brought in $717 million more in revenue than lawmakers originally budgeted for when they passed a $53.3 billion budget in May 2024.

All told, the final revenue numbers track closely with projections made in May by both COGFA and the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget that formed the basis of the FY26 budget. In other words, June revenues produced no surprises, and lawmakers aren’t sitting on any substantial surplus as the new fiscal year begins.

The record revenues also don’t alleviate any uncertainty for the current or future fiscal years as Congress considers drastic reductions to the social safety net and aid to states.

Strong personal income tax growth drove the revenue increase in FY25, largely thanks to a “true up” conducted by the Department of Revenue that reallocated business related income tax revenue into the personal income tax category. Personal income tax revenue was 10% higher than in FY24, but corporate income taxes declined by 9.5%.

Some other revenue sources also saw minimal growth. Sales tax revenue grew by less than 1%, though COGFA noted it increased by nearly 3% in the second half of FY25 after a weak start last summer as gas prices dropped and people cut back on large purchases amid growing economic uncertainty.

*** Statewide ***

* WSIL | ISP urges safety following four motorcycle-related deaths in the last week: The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) says that while motorcycles make up only about 3% of registered vehicles, they contribute to 12% of roadway deaths. Illinois Department of Transportation data shows that so far for 2025, Illinois has seen 44 motorcycle-related deaths.

* Crain’s | Five Illinois cases part of DOJ’s massive health care fraud ‘takedown’: Federal prosecutors unveiled a massive number of criminal indictments, including five in Illinois, alleging COVID-19 testing fraud and a range of other schemes totaling $14.6 billion in losses from fraudulent claims. The 2025 National Health Care Fraud Takedown resulted in criminal charges against 324 defendants, including 96 doctors, nurse practitioners, pharmacists and other licensed medical professionals, in 50 federal districts, the U.S. Department of Justice announced yesterday.

*** Downstate ***

* WICS | Sonya Massey’s family speaks out on her memory, days before death anniversary: Massey’s family said she was a hard working mother who ensured her kids were well taken care of. Sonya stuck to a simple routine of going to work, coming home to cook, clean and spend time with her kids. Sontae Massey said while the world remembers Sonya as the tiny woman speaking to the police in the final moments of her life, she’s so much more than that. “I miss her everyday,” Sontae said. “I miss the Sonya that, I would go over to mom’s house, and we would crack jokes, and she would make fun of me and she would share a laugh with me. I miss that Sonya.”

* UIS News | UIS Innocence Project secures exoneration of six men after 124 years of wrongful imprisonment: The Illinois Innocence Project, based at the University of Illinois Springfield, announced the full exoneration of six clients in Cook County today after they collectively served 124 years in prison for a murder they did not commit. Brothers Robert Cardona and Gregorio Cardona, Lowell Higgins-Bey, Harry Rodriguez, Michael McCastle and Fernando Gomez were all teenagers or young adults when they were wrongfully convicted in 1989. Their exoneration follows decades of advocacy and a 2022 post-conviction DNA test that excluded all six men and identified an unknown male as the likely perpetrator.

* Crain’s | Why rural Illinois hospitals are bracing for fallout from GOP-backed Medicaid cuts: A recent report by University of North Carolina health care researchers pegged hospitals in Illinois’ 12th Congressional District as being at risk, because either they’ve posted negative margins for three consecutive years or they are among the top 10% of the most Medicaid-dependent rural hospitals in the country. Other rural hospitals at risk of stopping services, converting or closing are in downstate Dixon, Danville and Hoopeston. Republican U.S. Rep. Mike Bost represents the 12th District at the southern tip of Illinois. Bost’s office did not return a request from Crain’s to explain why he voted for the bill, dubbed the “Big Beautiful Bill,” when it passed out of the U.S. House.

* KSDK | Her body was found in an Illinois farmer’s field; 35 years later she has been identified: A woman who was killed and had her body left in a farmer’s field in rural Troy, Illinois has been positively identified 35 years later through advanced technologies, Madison County Sheriff Jeff Connor announced Tuesday. While detectives have some answers, police still need help finding the killer. Wendy Nadine Michel, who would be 65 years old today, disappeared sometime in the summer of 1990 and her body was found by a farmer in a field near Lebanon Road and Troy O’Fallon Road on July 20, 1990. Investigators believe the body had been there for about a week.

* WGLT | Some massage therapists feel heard as Bloomington modifies regulations, but concerns linger: For the first time, the City of Bloomington is regulating an industry that it says has been a source for sex trafficking and other illicit behavior. A number of massage therapists in the city pushed back, claiming they were being unfairly held in suspicion. They also took exception to proposed annual fees and language referring to dress code, individual therapists’ personal information and physical characteristics. The city dropped the fees and some personal info requirements when it approved the new regulations June 23. That muted some of the criticism, though message therapists say the stigma remains regarding public perceptions of what they do.

* Rockford Register Star | Rockford terminates officer who had twice been accused of battering suspects: Months after he was acquitted by a jury of misdemeanor battery charges, a Rockford Police Department officer accused of smashing a handcuffed man’s head into a window has been fired. Officer Frank Fabiani was terminated after an internal police department review of the May 14, 2022, incident, according to a June 24 termination letter written by Rockford Police Chief Carla Redd. In the letter, Redd writes that Fabiani violated department general orders and rules of conduct after handcuffing Alize Jones, a suspect in a domestic violence investigation.

* WGEM | New pavilion raised at Adams County Fairground: round 25 volunteers with the help from workers at Maas Construction helped raise the new Heritage Farms Pavilion at the Adams County Fairgrounds Tuesday. This is a legacy project for the Adams County Bicentennial Commission. The new pavilion will be a tribute to the 86 farms in Adams County that have been owned continuously by the same family for at least 150 years.

* WSIL | Anne West Library Adds Inclusive Workstations Thanks to Local College and Rotary Club Partnership: Thanks to a unique partnership between the Carterville Rotary Club and John A. Logan College, the library now features, a wheelchair-accessible workstation, and a first-of-its-kind desk with an attached playpen, designed to help parents work or study while keeping their toddlers safe and close. Mary Stoner, Director at the Anne West Lindsey District Library, says “In our children’s area, we wanted to provide a kind of workstation area for mom or dad so they can check their email or do a little work, but keep their little one in a safe space.”

* WIFR | A look into Transform Rockford since its inception in 2013: Back in 2013, Transform Rockford came together after the city was ranked as one of the most miserable cities in the United States. Following the rankings, the goal was simple: help the Forest City become a top 25 community by 2025. “What Transform did was, I think, change the mindset of the community. It showed the community what’s possible,” said Wally Haas, the current executive director of Transform Rockford.

*** Chicago ***

* Chicago Reader | Jobs, block clubs, investment: How Chicagoans are interrupting violence at its roots: Breakthrough, INVC, Chicago CRED (Create Real Economic Destiny), and other violence interruption organizers include workforce development, behavioral health counseling, and job placement to enhance their direct outreach to people involved in violent altercations. That outreach attempts to prevent retaliatory shootings, set up nonaggression agreements among gangs, and pull people off the street. By combining these approaches with workforce development, they hope to break cycles of violence, one person at a time, for good.

* Crain’s | CBRE lures office leasing team from its new Chicago landlord: CBRE has bolstered its bench of office leasing agents in Chicago, luring the team that recently signed the real estate services giant as a tenant at an office tower along the Chicago River. The brokerage announced it has hired Greg Tait, Maggie Brophy and Jamion Hartley to join its local office from Newport Beach, Calif.-based real estate firm Irvine. The move comes after CBRE leased about 55,000 square feet at Irvine’s 60-story skyscraper at 300 N. LaSalle St., where it is relocating its Chicago office from 321 N. Clark St.

* Sun-Times | Social venture Mona helps microlender Kiva distribute $200,000 in loans to Chicago entrepreneurs: Social venture Mona and the University of Chicago’s Polsky Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation have helped 23 Chicago-area entrepreneurs get $200,000 worth of zero-interest loans from Kiva, a global microloan platform. Mona and the Polsky Center collaborated with Kiva, which has distributed the loans to mostly South Side businesses in the past year. The loans of up to $15,000 also have no fees. Applications are still open on Mona’s website. Borrowers include healthy snack brand Ms. P’s Gluten Free; Ecodunia, maker of bags and accessories from Kenya; and Ilava, which makes clothing in Tanzania.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* NBC Chicago | Recent Northwestern grad hopes to save parents from deportation: Bryan Carcamo graduated from the school with honors earlier this year, but his parents were not there to see him walk across the state due to fears related to their immigration status. “I made it to Northwestern, and it would have meant the world to me to have my parents among the crowds of families,” he said. His parents have been living, working, and raising a family in Compton, California for 20 years without legal status. The worry is that they will soon be detained and deported, which has led Carcamo to advocate on behalf of his parents and other undocumented immigrants.

* Daily Southtown | Another attempt to stop 143rd Street widening fails at Will County committee meeting: A Will County committee voted 4-2 Tuesday to advance the five-year transportation improvement plan for full County Board approval after some board members tried unsuccessfully to remove a controversial road project in Homer Glen for the second time in a month. The County Board last month voted against removing the 143rd Street road widening project from the transportation plan, which offers a snapshot of the county’s future projects in its 258-mile road system. The board then opted to send the plan back to its Public Works and Transportation Committee for a closer look.

* ABC Chicago | Blue Island shutting down embattled mobile home park, residents don’t know what’s next: Thursday is the deadline the city of Blue Island has given to the owners of Forest View Mobile Home Park to come up with a plan to shut the property down. Officials have said the city has spent two years trying to get management to clean up its act. Its residents are now caught in the middle, unsure where they will go. The park is currently made up of empty lots, broken up streets and abandoned and stripped-down trailers. It’s a community in dire need of maintenance. But, for residents, it’s home.

* Tribune | Downers Grove teacher accused of sexual abuse loses bid to ease pretrial release restriction: A DuPage County judge Wednesday denied a request from a former Downers Grove high school teacher to reduce the distance she must keep from the student she is accused of sexually abusing. Christina Formella, 30, faces 55 counts of criminal sexual assault, aggravated criminal sexual abuse, indecent solicitation of a child and grooming. Prosecutors say she had sexual relations with the student more than 50 times, including at least 45 times at Downers Grove South High School where she once worked as a special education teacher and coach.

* Daily Southtown | Dolton buying Pope Leo XIV’s childhood home in village, price uncertain: The Village Board at a special meeting Tuesday voted unanimously to move forward on buying the house at 212 East 141st Place, and said there are plans to buy an adjacent home. Mayor Jason House told reporters after the meeting he hoped the village could close on the purchase in a couple of weeks, but that the final purchase price is still up in the air. House said the chance to buy the home is a “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity” and a “historic movement moving forward” for Dolton.

* NBC Chicago | Giant pothole on I-294 in suburbs leaves 30 cars stranded; lanes reopen: More than two dozen cars were stranded with flat tires on Interstate 294 Monday morning and lanes were closed for hours due to a large pothole in the middle of the road, Illinois State Police said. The pothole — approximately eight feet by three feet — was on the Tri-State Tollway in the northbound lanes at mile marker 19.75, ISP said, near the Mile Long Bridge in Cook County. Two left lanes on the tollway were closed for maintenance for several hours.

* Daily Herald | Moderate drought conditions exist for much of northern Illinois: Precipitation over the past 30 days across northern Illinois has been below normal, recording only 3 to 4 inches of rainfall, according to Illinois State Climatologist. From April 1 through June 29, the entire northern half of the state registered less than 10 inches of precipitation, according to the Illinois State Climatologist.

* Shaw Local | Buy a drive-thru pork chop, chicken or walleye dinner, help Kane County Farm Bureau Foundation: The Kane County Farm Bureau Foundation is raising funds for college scholarships by hosting Fay’s Drive-Thru BBQ pork chop, chicken and grilled walleye dinners from 3 to 7 p.m. Thursday, July 3, at its headquarters, 2N710 Randall Road, St. Charles.

*** National ***

* AP | Wisconsin Supreme Court’s liberal majority strikes down 176-year-old abortion ban: The justices concluded that “the legislature impliedly repealed” the ban “by enacting comprehensive legislation about virtually every aspect of abortion including where, when, and how healthcare providers may lawfully perform abortions,” Justice Rebecca Dallet wrote for the majority. “That comprehensive legislation so thoroughly covers the entire subject of abortion that it was clearly meant as a substitute for the 19th century near-total ban on abortion.”

* Inside Climate | NIH Scientists Link Air Pollution and Lung Cancer Mutations in Non-Smokers: In their study, published in the journal Nature, Landi and colleagues from the National Institutes of Health’s NCI and the University of California San Diego analyzed the lung tumors of 871 nonsmokers from 28 locations across four continents. They found that the tumors of patients in highly polluted areas had many more genetic mutations than those in areas with cleaner air, and exhibited a diversity of mutations, including patterns typically found in smokers.

* NYT | Pardoned Jan. 6 Rioter Who Threatened Police Joins Justice Dept.: A former F.B.I. agent who was charged with encouraging the mob that stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, to kill police officers has been named as an adviser to the Justice Department task force that President Trump established to seek retribution against his political enemies. The former agent, Jared L. Wise, is serving as a counselor to Ed Martin, the director of the so-called Weaponization Working Group, according to people familiar with the group’s activities.

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RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois

Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Retail generates $7.3 billion in income and sales tax revenue each year in Illinois. These funds support public safety, infrastructure, education, and other important programs we all rely on every day. In fact, retail is the second largest revenue generator for the State of Illinois and the largest revenue generator for local governments.

Retailers like Steve in Metro East enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA showcase the retailers who make Illinois work.

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Groups warn about plan that doesn’t appear to be in the works

Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release

A new report issued by the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association (IMA), Chemical Industry Council of Illinois (CICI), International Union of Operating Engineers (IUOE) Local 150, and the Illinois Pipe Trades Association (IPTA) warns a government-mandated push toward full electrification in Illinois could impose more than $1 trillion in costs by 2050, driving up energy bills for businesses and consumers by more than 2,000 percent, threatening energy reliability and the state’s economic stability.

The study, Analysis of Potential Pathways to a Clean Energy Future in Illinois, finds alternative decarbonization pathways that continue to utilize the natural gas system can reduce emissions significantly at a fraction of the cost to Illinoisans. Affordable, reliable energy is critical to our state’s manufacturing sector, which depends on large amounts of energy to produce the goods consumers rely on every day, including life-saving medicines, nutritious food and other products that keep our economy running. Additionally, full electrification would threaten the jobs of thousands of skilled laborers, who are vital to maintaining the state’s diverse energy sector.

The study models several potential energy futures for Illinois, including a 100% electrification scenario that would result in nearly $540 billion in new electric infrastructure investments and an additional $638 billion in incentives – paid by natural gas consumers – to subsidize full electrification. Under this scenario, energy costs for homes and businesses would rise by approximately 14% annually for the next 25 years. […]

The report emphasizes that a government-mandated electrification policy would require costly subsidies to convince or coerce participation, particularly from customers who cannot afford the high upfront costs of electric retrofits. By contrast, alternative scenarios that incorporate moderate electrification, hybrid heating systems, energy efficiency and renewable natural gas (RNG) would cost significantly less—between $340 billion and $391 billion, or roughly one-third the cost of the full electrification. These more affordable pathways still achieve up to 60% emissions reductions while preserving customer choice and ensuring energy reliability.

Click here for the full report, but just keep in mind that nobody has so far proposed a full electrification plan. And the governor’s spokesperson told me “that’s never been our approach.”

* I collected some responses. From the Illinois Environmental Council…

Let’s be clear - electricity rates are increasing because of skyrocketing demand from energy-intensive data centers and because Regional Transmission Organizations have been disastrously slow to connect cost-effective clean energy to the electric grid. Electrification efforts, including the use of efficient heat pumps, can help solve for high electric rates while protecting Illinoisans from cancer-causing, climate-warming methane gas. Illinois can’t afford not to electrify - our pocketbooks, our health, and our climate will suffer if we don’t. The ICC’s Future of Gas proceedings, which are the key venue to discuss Illinois’ managed transition away from methane gas, are well underway here in Illinois, and we expect in-state experts with the best interests of Illinoisans in mind to create a plan to move away from methane gas to bring much-needed health and savings benefits to Illinois families.

* From the governor’s spokesperson Alex Gough…

The Climate Equity and Jobs Act (CEJA) is focused on delivering clean energy to Illinoisans that is affordable and reliable. The administration will always seek to collaborate with our partners in the business community and organized labor to make that a reality.

However, this study misrepresents the goals outlined in CEJA and the cost of clean energy in Illinois. Gas utilities also said in 2009 that the pipeline replacement program would cost $2.2 billion, but costs and bills have skyrocketed since then. A recent study by the Citizens Utility Board estimated the program will cost more than $16 billion.

This report inflates the cost of alternatives and underestimates the costs of natural gas. Meanwhile, the Illinois Commerce Commission’s (ICC) Future of Gas proceeding is a transparent, public process to identify the best way towards cleaner and more affordable heating. That is the kind of process we ought to be guided by for the best path forward in our state.

* I followed up with Monique Garcia, who wrote the initial press release…

Conversations about electrification, including full electrification, have been raised during the state’s Future of Gas proceedings. This report models several scenarios, including full electrification.

The modeling provided in this report is intended to be useful for policymakers as they explore various clean energy pathways both during the Future of Gas proceedings and the current Resource Adequacy Planning survey that started a few weeks ago. The study presents potential cost and emissions reductions from a few potential decarbonization pathways, including 100 percent Clean Energy by 2050; caps on average total delivered natural gas rates statewide; and a model decarbonization portfolio proposed by several gas utilities in New York.

Many groups, ranging from the business community and organized labor to environmental organizations and government entities, have called for further discussion and information related to the cost, workforce impact, and reliability of moving away from natural gas – this study provides some data and information under various scenarios.

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SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth

Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

For more information, click here.

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Campaign news: Big Raja money; Benton over-shares; Rashid’s large cash pile; Jeffries to speak at IDCCA brunch

Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* US Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi adds $3.1 million to his already bulging Senate war chest. Press release…

Today, the Raja for Illinois campaign announced that it raised over $3.1 million in the second quarter of 2025, outraising its closest competitor by three times. The campaign ended the quarter with over $21 million cash on hand.

The successful Q2 fundraising haul adds to an “eye-popping” $3 million raise in the first quarter, bringing the cycle-to-date total to over $6 million from over 35,000 donations.

News of another quarter with over $3 million raised comes just weeks after the campaign released a new poll showing Raja leading the field by thirteen points.

“Our campaign is driven by tens of thousands of supporters who know that Illinois needs a fighter like Raja Krishnamoorthi in the U.S. Senate. A product of public housing and food stamps, Raja knows what it’s like to be an underdog — that’s why he will never back down when Donald Trump hurts Illinois families who are working hard to get by,” said Raja for Illinois campaign manager Brexton Isaacs. “With growing momentum and a solid foundation of support, this campaign is built to win.”

Click here for a little more on that poll.

* Sun-Times

The deadline for filing second-quarter reports with the Federal Election Commission is July 15, but campaigns typically tease some of their fundraising hauls, especially if they are bringing in a large amount.

Krishnamoorthi’s total trumps several other U.S. Senate candidates who have already reported their second quarter totals, including State Sen. Mallory McMorrow, who is running for the Senate in Michigan and raised $2.1 million and Jordan Wood, a Maine Democrat running to try to unseat Republican incumbent Sen. Susan Collins, who brought in $1.35 million.

In a May interview with the Sun-Times, Krishnamoorthi laughed when he was asked whether he feels annoyed or proud of the repetitive mentions of his fundraising abilities.

“I think it’s a sideshow. I think that I’m most proud of the tent. The fact that tens of thousands of people have entrusted me with their hard-earned money because they believe in my office. They believe in my mission,” Krishnamoorthi said.

* We told subscribers about this next topic earlier today. The Illinois GOP is pouncing on a Facebook comment from Rep. Harry Benton, who took a swipe at Gov. JB Pritzker’s LG pick.…

Yesterday, JB Pritzker introduced Illinois families to Christian Mitchell – a former do-nothing, corrupt State Representative. Mitchell’s rubber-stamp approval for higher taxes, corruption, both as a state representative and confidant of convicted felon Mike Madigan, are further proof that the Democrat Machine continues full-steam ahead while putting big-donors and special interests first. But don’t just take it from us; take it from Democrat State Representative Harry Benton in a now-deleted Facebook post:

Bottom Line: The ILGOP agrees with Democrat State Representative Harry Benton that Christian Mitchell is “the worst pick.”

* From the Illinois Republican Party’s Facebook page

Benton told me he only met Mitchell once. “I don’t really feel like getting in the middle of a fight, but, you know, the one time I met him, he was dismissive, didn’t, didn’t care.” Mitchell told Rich he didn’t remember meeting Benton.

* Rep. Abdelnasser Rashid announces big cash stash…

The campaign of State Representative Abdelnasser Rashid today announced it will report more than $500,000 cash on hand in its upcoming quarterly filing.

“This is a clear sign that people are standing with Abdelnasser because they believe in his leadership and his courage to fight for justice,” said Campaign Chairman Clem Balanoff. “This level of support ensures we’ll have the resources to define any race on our terms and powerfully communicate Abdelnasser’s record and vision to voters.”

The fundraising total from more than 2,500 unique donors over the last year positions the campaign with the resources necessary for a strong election cycle. Full financial details will be available in the upcoming disclosure report.

Rep. Rashid told Rich this week that, despite some rumors floating around, he’s running for reelection.

* Illinois Democratic County Chairs’ Association…

Today the Illinois Democratic County Chairs’ Association (IDCCA) announced that House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries of the 8th Congressional District of New York will headline the annual IDCCA County Chairs Brunch, the premier Illinois Democratic event where its elected officials, leaders, activists and more gather to celebrate the past year’s accomplishments and prepare for the upcoming campaign season. IDCCA President Mark Guethle released the following statement.

“Illinoisans face unprecedented harm from Donald Trump and Elon Musk and I cannot think of a better national leader right now to talk to our party about how to meet this moment than Leader and soon to be Speaker of the House Hakeem Jeffries. We are truly honored Leader Jeffries will fire up Illinois Democrats on how the House of Representatives will fight back against the lawlessness, cruelty, and corruption of the Trump administration. This year’s Brunch will be an event no Democrat can miss as we discuss our path to win back the House of Representatives.” […]

This year’s Brunch will take place on Wednesday, August 13th at the Bank of Springfield Center in Springfield. More information can be found online at idccabrunch.org.

* Related…

    * QC Times | Illinois U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi kicks off statewide listening tour with Moline stop: U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi held a meet and greet at The Atlas Collective in Moline on Tuesday to kick off a statewide tour as he campaigns to succeed retiring U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin. With Moline Mayor Sangeetha Rayapati and former U.S. Rep. Phil Hare standing with him, Krishnamoorthi said his purpose in life is to make sure access to “the American Dream is there for everybody.”

    * Crain’s | Stratton raises $1M in U.S. Senate bid: The campaign didn’t release an exact amount or details on donors, which should be available in filings later this month. The race to succeed U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin in 2026 is already crowded. Stratton faces off against fellow Democratic U.S. Reps. Raja Krishnamoorthi, a prodigious fundraiser who has amassed a war chest of more than $19 million, and Robin Kelly, who had about $2 million on hand at the end of the first quarter, according to Federal Election Commission reports.

    * CBS Chicago | State Rep. Hoan Huynh running to succeed Jan Schakowsky in Congress for Illinois’ 9th District: Huynh is currently the Illinois General Assembly as the representative for the state’s 13th district, which covers parts of Uptown, Andersonville and Lincoln Square. He filed paperwork to run for Congress late Tuesday night. He released a campaign video Wednesday morning, becoming the eleventh candidate to enter the race for the Democratic nomination. He joins other popular elected officials in the area, including Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss and State Senator Laura Fine.

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Rep. Hoan Huynh jumps into packed race for Schakowsky’s seat (Updated)

Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers were told yesterday. Evanston Now

The race to succeed Rep. Jan Schakowsky of Evanston in Congress just got more crowded.

State Rep. Hoan Huynh of Andersonville filed campaign papers Tuesday night, entering the Democratic primary campaign to represent Illinois’ 9th Congressional District, becoming the 11th Democrat to do so.

While his campaign did not officially confirm his candidacy as of late Tuesday, Huynh submitted a statement of organization and statement of candidacy on Tuesday with the Federal Election Commission. […]

Other names in the race include Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss, State Sen. Laura Fine of Glenview and social media influencer Kat Abughazaleh of Chicago, along with a half dozen other candidates who’ve announced their own campaigns more recently.

* Sun-Times

Huynh said he’s proud to represent both the refugee and immigrant community — and he wants constituents from the very diverse district to understand “government should work for everyone, not just for those at the top.”

Born in Vietnam to Vietnamese and Chinese parents, Huynh’s family received refugee asylum from the U.S. in the early 1990s after his father fought alongside U.S. military forces during the Vietnam War. The Yale University graduate also received a fellowship from Harvard University before beginning a career in education and public policy research at Yale. Huynh, 35, is serving his second term in the Illinois House representing the 13th District. […]

Schakowsky announced she wouldn’t be seeking reelection in May. She is currently serving her 14th term. It’s unclear whether she’ll endorse someone in the race to succeed her, but Huynh said he’ll be seeking her approval.

“We’re looking forward to running a very tough, hard and very well-fought race,” Huynh said. “And we look forward to earning her endorsement. It will be an honor to earn her endorsement, as well.”

* Rep. Huynh’s launch video


Thoughts?

…Adding… From Rep. Huynh’s campaign website


Ope.

* Related…

    * Evanston Roundtable | Two more Chicago Dems file to run for Schakowsky’s seat: And on Monday afternoon, [Bruce Leon] filed the same paperwork to declare his candidacy and create a “Bruce Leon for Congress” committee. He serves as the Democratic Committeeman of Chicago’s 50th Ward, which borders Evanston to the southwest, and last year ran unsuccessfully for a Chicago School Board seat in the Second District, finishing second in a four-way race with 20.2% behind winner Ebony DeBerry’s 43.4%. The domain bruceleon.com was similarly registered on May 29 and updated on June 18, and the site currently displays a “private site” message on the landing page. A campaign consultant listed in Leon’s filings did not immediately respond to an email request for comment sent early Wednesday morning.

  30 Comments      


Roundup: Pritzker taps Christian Mitchell for LG

Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

Gov. JB Pritzker announced Tuesday that former Deputy Gov. Christian Mitchell will be his running mate for the 2026 campaign. […]

Mitchell, 38, will replace Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton on the ticket as she seeks the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate.

Mitchell comes in with hefty experience in state government and public policy. A resident of Chicago’s Hyde Park neighborhood, Mitchell served three terms in the Illinois House beginning in 2013 and was executive director of the Democratic Party of Illinois in 2018 before joining the governor’s office in 2019.

Mitchell left Pritzker’s administration in early 2023 to become vice president for civic engagement at the University of Chicago where he oversees government relations. Mitchell was appointed by Pritzker last year to an unpaid seat on the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority board, which oversees Navy Pier and McCormick Place. He is also a first lieutenant in the Illinois Air National Guard.

* Tribune

“I’m really most excited to keep moving Illinois forward. You’re seeing in Washington quite a bit of chaos,” Mitchell said in an interview Tuesday morning. “The progress we’ve made in Illinois is more important than ever, and is more important to protect now than ever.”

Politically, Mitchell brings to the Pritzker ticket a compelling personal story of being raised by a single mom, with his grandfather, a military veteran, serving to instill strong values of public service, friends and associates said.

At age 38, Mitchell represents a nod to a younger generation for the future of the state’s Democratic Party by the 60-year-old governor. And by selecting Mitchell, a Black man, Pritzker will maintain racial diversity at the top of the ticket even as Stratton, a Black woman, steps aside.

Aviva Bowen, a consultant at Chicago-based The Strategy Group, where Mitchell was a senior vice president from 2014 to 2017, said Mitchell “brings both a great personal story, but also some pretty significant executive experience, which makes the choice a good one, both politically and practically — and you don’t always get both of those things.”

* Sun-Times

Besides being first in the line of succession to the governor’s office, lieutenant governors don’t have specific responsibilities assigned by the Illinois constitution beyond those “that may be delegated to him by the Governor.”

But the role potentially takes on an added importance this time around if Pritzker ascends to the White House. The governor has sidestepped questions about committing to serving another full four-year term if he’s reelected.

“I think he’d make a terrific president, but I also think he’s running for reelection as governor,” Mitchell said. “I do think it is very exciting for the people of Illinois that we’re talking about an Illinois governor running for president, and not running from prison.”

* More…

    * NBC Chicago | Who is Christian Mitchell? What to know about Pritzker’s running mate: Mitchell is currently the vice president for civic engagement at the University of Chicago, but previously served as deputy governor during Pritzker’s administration, up until 2023. As deputy governor, Mitchell oversaw the Illinois Department of Military Affairs. He worked on efforts like the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, the Rebuild Illinois capital plan and cannabis legalization. He also oversaw the state’s medical supply chain during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    * Pantagraph | Pritzker names former state lawmaker as running mate: In this sense, it is the most low-profile statewide office in Illinois. One former lieutenant governor even resigned the office out of sheer boredom and lack of responsibility. However, some have been called upon to ascend to the top job, most recently Pat Quinn upon the impeachment and removal of Gov. Rod Blagojevich in 2009. […] In Mitchell, Pritzker tapped someone with both political and policy chops. As a state legislator, Mitchell fended off multiple Chicago Teachers Union-packed primary challenges. In 2018, he was named interim executive director of the Democratic Party of Illinois.

    * ABC Chicago | Gov. JB Pritzker to hit campaign trail with new running mate Christian Mitchell Wednesday: Christian Mitchell, Governor JB Pritzker’s pick to be the state’s next lieutenant governor, will be hitting the campaign trail Wednesday morning alongside the governor. The two will be stopping by a South Side staple, Peach’s Restaurant in Bronzeville Wednesday morning.

    * Daily Herald | Pritzker picks former deputy, state Rep. Christian Mitchell as running mate: If Pritzker plunges into an all-absorbing presidential campaign, Mitchell would be a loyal, competent second-in-command, political scientist Kent Redfield said. “If you wanted somebody that knows Pritzker, knows the legislative and executive (branches), and could manage the governor’s office if the governor was running for president, it certainly would make sense,” added Redfield, University of Illinois at Springfield professor emeritus.

    * Capitol City Now | A conversation with a candidate for Lieutenant Governor: He’s gone from the public sector, to the private sector, back to the public sector. Christian Mitchell is a candidate for Lieutenant Governor, running alongside incumbent Gov. JB Pritzker. WTAX’s Dave Dahl talked to Mitchell for the WTAX Morning Newswatch.

    * WGN | Gov. Pritzker announces Christian Mitchell as pick for Lieutenant Governor: To run for lieutenant governor, Mitchell said he’ll leave the University of Chicago where he oversees government relations. From 2013 to 2019, Mitchell represented parts of the South Side in the state legislature distinguishing himself as a policy wonk. He later served as deputy governor, playing a key role in the Pritzker administration’s response to COVID-19. “He tasked me and others in the office to be in charge of effectively our medical supply chain and to make sure that we had all of the PPE, the gloves, the masks, the ventilators we needed to make sure that our frontline health care heroes could keep doing their work,” Mitchell explained.

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Open thread

Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* A California-based Mexican music band featuring a black Sousaphone and a crazy-great slapping bass player with 19 million views in two weeks. The menacing vibe is thorough and real. You gotta love it

Paris, France is my sky
Let’s stop with the fairytales

I watched that video about 15 times last night. Don’t miss it.

Optional discussion topic: July 4th plans?

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Pritzker signs health care legislation. Capitol News Illinois

    - Gov. JB Pritzker signed a pair of health care-related bills Tuesday that he said would put more controls on the pricing of pharmaceutical drugs sold through insurance plans while expanding insurance coverage for certain kinds of hospital costs.

    - House Bill 1697, known as the Prescription Drug Affordability Act, will impose new restrictions on practices of pharmacy benefit managers, or PBMs, a powerful but little-understood segment of the pharmaceutical industry.

    - Under the legislation, PBMs will be prohibited from steering consumers toward large pharmacies in which they have a financial interest. They will also be prohibited from engaging in “spread pricing” – the practice of charging health plans a higher price for a drug than the PBM pays a pharmacy for dispensing the drug.

* Related stories…

* The Governor is on the campaign trail today with a stop at Peach’s Restaurant in Bronzeville at 11:45 am.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WNIJ | Illinois State Climatologist discusses the future of local weather forecasting: This week Illinois State Climatologist Dr. Trent Ford has been highlighting some possibilities of what federal funding cuts to weather services may look like. Today, Ford shares the effects those cuts could have for local weather forecasters. On top of government funding, local weather forecasters also face uncertainty from their local stations, such as the possibility of weather hubs, as opposed to the current model of forecasters and meteorologists delivering their predictions and information from their local affiliates.

* Press release | AG Raoul wins court order blocking Trump administration’s dismantling of HHS: Attorney General Kwame Raoul today secured a preliminary junction halting Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s attempt to dismantle the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), ensuring continued access to critical public health and social service programs. On May 5, Attorney General Raoul and a coalition of state attorneys general filed a lawsuit to stop the administration’s sweeping and unlawful restructuring directive, which left HHS unable to carry out many of its most vital functions. Today, Judge Melissa R. Dubose of the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island blocked the administration’s mass layoffs at several key HHS agencies while the case proceeds.

*** Statewide ***

* Shaw Local | Wisconsin pot purchases boosting market on our side of Cheddar Curtain: Marijuana Moment said Evers’ February budget request projected the Badger State could realize $58.1 million in pot revenue in fiscal 2027 through 15% wholesale and 10% retail taxes. That’s a far cry from a 2023 Wisconsin Department of Revenue study showing a legalization plan could generate almost $170 million per year. All those numbers make sense in light of a 2022 report wherein Wisconsin officials estimated their residents spent more than $121 million on marijuana here, pumping $36 million into our public coffers.

* IPM News | Illinois immigrant advocate responds to birthright citizenship ruling and increased immigration enforcement around the state: ”People whose rights are going to be violated by executive action are going to need to file their own lawsuits or join class action lawsuits that may get filed, and the ability of courts to issue emergency orders in those lawsuits is now very limited. Unfortunately, the executive order could now go into effect while that litigation is moving through the court system. That, unfortunately, is going to mean that countless children — countless families — are essentially going to be stateless.”

* Tribune | Go big and stay home! Why Illinois loves its roadside monsters: “Illinois is like a wonderland of large things,” said Rolando Pujol, whose dizzying new book, “The Great American Retro Road Trip: A Celebration of Roadside Americana,” is an obsessive taxonomy of the vintage fiberglass megafauna (and more) amongst us. “My Illinois to-see list numbers in the hundreds. But incongruous, anomalous, larger-than-life objects are American DNA, part of our collective self-identity. We develop attachment to large things. They become signposts in our lives.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Sun-Times | AG Kwame Raoul joins suit against Trump administration over immigrant Medicaid data: The suit, announced Tuesday, seeks to stop federal immigration officials from securing more health documentation or using already obtained Medicaid records of millions nationwide to target enrollees for immigration enforcement. The attorneys general said the data transfer was not only illegal, but could have a chilling effect on noncitizens and their citizen loved ones enrolling into state healthcare programs they otherwise qualify for due to fear of deportation.

* WBEZ | A state lawmaker wants to bring an overdose prevention site pilot program to Illinois: A bill that could help bring pilot programs for overdose prevention sites to Illinois didn’t pass during the recent legislative session. WBEZ’s Isabela Nieto breaks down what happened and why it matters.

* WGLT | Illinois becomes first state to include music therapy in Medicaid as federal cuts loom in ‘Big Beautiful Bill’: Effective July 1, Illinois is the first state to allow music therapists to bill Medicaid for services—something Julie Englesdorfer said is a game-changer. Englesdorfer graduated from Illinois State University’s music therapy program and has remained in the area, founding Harmonium Music Therapy in Bloomington. But making ends meet in what she calls a “niche” field has been difficult. Englesdorfer’s inability to bill insurance has long created an accessibility barrier, with the average session costing around $120/hour.

*** Chicago ***

* WBEZ | CPS is reducing assistants assigned to some special ed classes, worrying educators and parents: Theresa Nuestro’s sons are among the thousands of Chicago Public School students who depend on special education classroom assistants to keep them safe and focused in classes. […] They worry CPS is trying to find savings on the backs of their children, as has happened in the past. “SECAs are the front-line responders when my son’s blood sugar levels drop to dangerously low levels,” said Nuestro, whose sons are both on the autism spectrum. One has a severe peanut allergy and the other is diabetic. “It is the SECA who communicates when my son is struggling to self-regulate. … These moments are daily life for many autistic students and without adequate SECA support, our children struggle to learn.”

* The Guardian | Six Chicago men exonerated in 1987 stabbing death of government official: A Chicago judge threw out the convictions on Tuesday of six men who served a combined 124 years in prison for the 1987 stabbing death of a local government official. Attorneys for the men successfully petitioned a Cook county court to overturn the convictions based on new DNA evidence as well as allegations of misconduct by a now retired Chicago police detective linked to at least 51 other wrongful convictions.

* Block Club | How Trump’s ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ Will Impact Local Food Pantries: ‘People Are Going To Suffer’: In January, Martin was laid off from his job as a nonprofit case manager. He’s actively looking for work, but for now, he relies on the food pantry at 4256 N. Ridgeway Ave. and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits for food. He could soon face additional hardship. Under significant cuts to SNAP being considered in Congress, as part of President Donald Trump’s “big beautiful bill,” people ages 55-64 would be subject to a work requirement to receive SNAP benefits — an expansion of existing work requirements that could affect more than 200,000 people living in Illinois.

* Crain’s | CommonSpirit commits $6M to mental health efforts in Chicago: Grants — totaling $6,369,123 — will be awarded to the Catholic Healthcare Foundation of Northern Illinois, which will receive $5,469,123, and Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Chicago, which will receive $900,000, the system said in a press release. Catholic Healthcare Foundation will use the funds to expand behavioral health services available to youth and families on Chicago’s Southwest Side, it said.

* WTTW | CTA Launches Next Round of Rider Feedback Pop-Ups Following ‘Strong Turnout’: The events are designed for CTA leaders and staff to have open, informal conversations with riders about service, safety, improvements and rider priorities, according to the transit agency. The feedback will be used by the agency to help plan for the next CTA budget and prioritize future investments, according to the agency. The next round of events will be held at eight transit system locations and are scheduled to start in mid-July and run through the end of the month. Events will be held from 4-6 p.m.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Crain’s | Cook County opens first modular homes in $12 million affordable housing push: Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle will open the first two of 120 planned modular-built houses today, a little more than a year after the county board approved spending $12 million, or $100,000 per unit, to build the homes as new affordable housing options. […] The pair of houses is the start of an initial dozen in this neighborhood, each built in Inherent’s factory 3.5 miles away in North Lawndale and delivered by truck as two pieces—first floor and second floor—to the lot.

* Daily Herald | Ascension closure of delivery services sparks protest: Protesters gathered outside Ascension Alexian Brothers Hospital in Elk Grove Village Tuesday, opposing Ascension’s decision to discontinue baby deliveries at the hospital. It would involve closing the Women and Infant Services department, which offers labor, delivery and postpartum care, a special care nursery and lactation services. Ascension plans to consolidate these services at Ascension Saint Alexius Women and Children’s Hospital in Hoffman Estates.

* Daily Herald | New Arlington Heights streaming tax could cost residents $61 a year: Village officials are considering an extra charge on streaming services to help fund staffing for a fifth fire department ambulance that is hitting the streets this year, amid increased call volumes. Meanwhile, some village trustees this week pushed back on whether to retain a 1% grocery tax the state will stop collecting at the end of the year.

* Daily Herald | Fermilab leader during search for top quark dies: John Peoples was asked in the mid-1990s about the value of doing pure scientific research — that which has no predetermined benefit. […] Peoples was the director of Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory at the time, charged with overseeing spending hundreds of millions of dollars researching particle physics. It was just after the Batavia-based laboratory was receiving worldwide acclaim for its role in discovering the top quark. He died June 25, at age 92, according to an announcement from Fermilab.

* Daily Southtown | South Holland to levy nonresident fee for Friday fireworks display: People who don’t live in South Holland will be charged a $10 fee if they want to see the village’s fireworks display Friday night. South Holland residents will be admitted for free after showing proof of residency, such as a driver’s license or utility bill.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | ‘We have to stay in the game’: Illinois State opts in to direct payments to student-athletes: July 1 marks the first day colleges and universities can make direct payments to athletes through Name, Image and Likeness [NIL] deals. The decision stems from a settlement with the NCAA involving student compensation, previously from NIL deals being permitted for student-athletes. ISU Athletics Director Jeri Beggs said ISU needs to move its NIL in-house to remain competitive. “Right now if you can’t offer a decent NIL package to a men’s basketball player or women’s basketball player, they won’t come here. In order to be competitive, we have to stay in the game,” Beggs said.

* BND | Shiloh sued tax collector for millions from its TIFs. Here’s how it was settled: For years, Shiloh argued in circuit and appellate courts that the county tax collector shorted the village a year’s worth of revenue from two of its tax increment financing districts. […] A TIF district is limited to 23 years. The village and county disagreed over when payments from the two TIF districts Shiloh created in 1998 should end. The county stopped sending Shiloh the TIF revenue in calendar year 2021. But Shiloh thought it should have continued into tax year 2021 — money the village levied in 2021 and the county collected from taxpayers in 2022.

* Rock River Current | West announces nearly $13M in state funding for local initiatives, including upgrades to Fairgrounds Park in Rockford: The money was all secured as part of the $55.1 billion budget that Gov. JB Pritzker signed on June 16. West’s announcement includes new initiatives, such as upgrades to Fairgrounds Park, and continuations of past funding, such as the restaurant relief grants that are designed to correct a spike in unemployment taxes caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

* WCIA | Coles Co. Board approves wind project: The Coles County Board voted to approve the Coles Wind Project Tuesday night. It narrowly passed with six members of the board voting to approve it and five voting against the project.

* BND | Fireworks and festivities: Where to celebrate Fourth of July around the metro-east: The Alton Fireworks Spectacular will be held from 5 to 10 p.m. Thursday, July 3 with the fireworks beginning at dusk, around 9 to 9:30 p.m. The celebration is held at the Alton Amphitheater, and will also include food trucks and live entertainment.

*** National ***

* NYT | Paramount to Pay Trump $16 Million to Settle ‘60 Minutes’ Lawsuit: Paramount said late Tuesday that it has agreed to pay President Trump $16 million to settle his lawsuit over the editing of an interview on the CBS News program “60 Minutes,” an extraordinary concession to a sitting president by a major media organization. Paramount said its payment includes Mr. Trump’s legal fees and costs and that the money, minus the legal fees, will be paid to Mr. Trump’s future presidential library. […] But Shari Redstone, the chair and controlling shareholder of Paramount, told her board that she favored exploring a settlement with Mr. Trump. Some executives at the company viewed the president’s lawsuit as a potential hurdle to completing a multibillion-dollar sale of the company to the Hollywood studio Skydance, which requires the Trump administration’s approval.

* WaPo | Trump to cut protections for home health aides, migrant farmworkers: The U.S. Labor Department announced plans this week to slash more than 60 regulations — including eliminating overtime and minimum wage protections for home health care workers and union organizing rights for migrant farmworkers. The effort to deregulate the federal agency that governs workers’ rights and protections in the United States aims to deliver on President Donald Trump’s promise to “restore American prosperity,” the agency said.

* WaPo | A Trans Pilot Was Falsely Blamed for a Plane Crash. Now She’s Fighting the Right-Wing Disinfo Machine: Within two days, the rumor spread like wildfire. The morning of January 31, Jo Ellis, a part-time pilot with the Virginia Army National Guard, woke up to messages from a friend warning that she was being named online as the pilot who killed innocent passengers in the deadly crash. At first, Ellis thought it was an isolated claim—someone erroneously connected her to the crash, because just days earlier she had written an essay on being a transgender pilot from Virginia. But once she logged in to Facebook, she realized she was wrong.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition (Updated)

Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.

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Trump admin freezes $240 million in grants for Illinois K-12 schools

Tuesday, Jul 1, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* NPR

On Monday, the Trump administration notified states that it was withholding over $6 billion in previously approved federal education grants to schools. The announcement came a day before the July 1 deadline when those funds have traditionally been dispersed, and will likely impact school districts’ plans for the fall.

In messages sent to state education officials, the U.S. Education Department said, “Given the change in Administrations, the Department is reviewing the FY 2025 funding for the [Title I-C, II-A, III-A, IV-A, IV-B] grant program(s), and decisions have not yet been made concerning submissions and awards for this upcoming year.”

The message – which was shared with NPR by multiple sources, including The School Superintendents Association (AASA) – said grant money would not go out “prior to completing that review.”

“This is definitely unprecedented to my knowledge,” said Tara Thomas, government affairs manager at AASA.

* According to Education Week, Illinois will lose over $240 million in funding. The first list explains what the funding is for

* More from Chalkbeat

The withheld funds, which were approved by Congress earlier this year, include all $890 million meant to help English learners develop their language skills and $375 million to provide academic support to the children of migrant farmworkers, according to an email that was sent to states by the U.S. Department of Education and obtained by Education Week.

The money being held back also includes $2.2 billion in Title II funds that support teacher training, $1.4 billion for before- and after-school programs, and $1.3 billion in funding for academic enrichment programs, such as STEM and college and career counseling. […]

Congress had previously approved this funding as part of a continuing budget resolution in March, which was supposed to keep K-12 education funding mostly level for the 2025-26 school year. But the Trump administration told states on Monday that it has not yet decided how this money will be allocated, and won’t send funding notices until it completes a review, the email obtained by Education Week stated.

  6 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Jul 1, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Institute of Government and Public Affairs

The Illinois Flash Index for June fell to 101.9 from its 102 level in May.

An index reading above 100 indicates growth.

“The end of June marks the conclusion of the state’s fiscal year and the first half of 2025,” said Fred Giertz, Professor Emeritus, Institute of Government and Public Affairs, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. “Despite recent political and economic turmoil, the Illinois economy has remained surprisingly stable.”

The Flash Index has stayed within a narrow range, declining slightly. The state unemployment rate has held steady at 4.8 percent for the past three months, down from 5.1 percent a year ago. Illinois has also reduced the gap between the national and state unemployment rates. A year ago, Illinois’ rate was 1.1 percentage points higher than the U.S. rate. Now, the difference has decreased to six-tenths of a percentage point.

For the month, state tax receipts for income and sales taxes increased compared to the same month last year, after adjusting for inflation, while corporate receipts declined. For the fiscal year, real individual income tax receipts grew by 7 percent, whereas sales tax receipts dropped about 1.5 percent. Corporate receipts fell approximately 12 percent following a particularly strong previous year.

*** Statewide ***

* Crain’s | The cost of entry is crushing Illinois’ cannabis entrepreneurs: As of June 2025, the state of Illinois had issued 694 business permits to various companies looking to run marijuana dispensaries, grow facilities, THC-infusing manufacturing operations and transportation businesses. But of those, only 382 have managed to open for business thus far, according to information from the Illinois Department of Federal and Professional Regulation and the Department of Agriculture, which share industry oversight duties.

* WSIL | Grants bring $20M to Illinois libraries for community growth; here’s the list: This announcement comes as libraries nationwide face federal budget cuts. Giannoulias said in March, the Trump administration signed an executive order to eliminate and defund the Institute of Museum and Library Services, which provides $180 million annually to libraries. Illinois receives nearly $6 million of this funding annually. “We’re doing things differently in Illinois,” Giannoulias added. “Instead of cutting funding that would limit learning and prove harmful to Illinois communities, we’re fighting for Illinoisans to ensure they have the funding and resources to learn, grow and explore today and in the future.”

* WCIA | Corn crops way past ‘knee high at the Fourth of July’ in Central Illinois: “I’ve heard that all my life, and a lot of farmers talk about it, but, oh my gosh, it hasn’t been that way for many years,” Champaign County farmer Dennis Riggs said. Recent extreme heat in the area hasn’t been good for all plants, but it is causing the corn crops to thrive. “It’s really speeding the crop up,” Dr. Fred Below, a crop science professor at the University of Illinois, said. “Corn grows by accumulating heat units. It’s 90 plus, you’re maxing the crop out at 80 units so, as long as they’re getting enough moisture it’s growing as fast as it can.”

* Press Release | IDPH Adds More ZIP Codes to Lead Testing List: The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) has announced an expansion of its list of ZIP codes where lead exposure testing is required for children who live within those areas. 180 new zip codes, representing parts of 47 Illinois counties, have been added to the list this year, bringing the total of high-risk ZIP codes to more than 1,350. By this time next year, all remaining ZIP codes in the state will be included, implementing universal childhood lead testing statewide.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press Release | New Division of Behavioral Health and Recovery Launches: - Today, Governor JB Pritzker announced that the newly formed Division of Behavioral Health and Recovery (DBHR) has officially begun operations. Housed in the Illinois Department of Human Services (IDHS), the new division integrates the former IDHS Division of Substance Use Prevention and Recovery (SUPR) and Division of Mental Health (DMH). Governor Pritzker signed an Executive Order February 2025 instituting the change to improve outcomes and access to behavioral health care and to streamline and reduce administrative burdens for providers. The executive action went through the legislative process and became law.

* WGLT | State Rep. Regan Deering announces re-election bid: “If you’re fed up with high prices, woke nonsense, broken schools, and politicians who care more about power than results, I’m your candidate,” Deering said in a statement. During her first term in the state legislature, Deering proposed 11 bills; one passed. It would require the Illinois State Board of Education to post submitted career opportunities for high school students on its website.

* WVIK | Halpin: Vote Against Budget Reflects Underfunding Higher Ed: State Senator Mike Halpin (D-Rock Island) discusses the recently concluded Illinois legislative session, his vote against the budget, education, economic issues, district accomplishments, mental health, the budget process, tariffs and what the national Democratic party needs to do to improve its image.

* WAND | Proposal helping farmers with deer control arrives on Pritzker’s desk: Farmers across the state have told Democrats and Republicans that nuisance deer have caused expensive and costly damage to their crops and farmland. This plan would allow the state to issue antlerless-only deer removal permits based on the percentage of permits redeemed in the previous season. It could also expand youth hunting tags from one to two.

*** Chicago ***

* Chalkbeat | Chicago Public Schools laid off 161 employees. More cuts could be on the way: The layoffs included 87 people represented by SEIU Local 73 — nearly all of whom were crossing guards — plus 67 employees in the district’s central and network offices, and seven people represented by the Chicago Teachers Union, CPS confirmed to Chalkbeat. The district also said it will not fill more than 200 vacant positions, including 166 at the central office and 19 CTU-represented positions. The district originally said it would not fill 24 open crossing guard jobs as part of freezing those open positions, but late Monday revised that figure to 19.

* Sun-Times | Chicago Police say an ICE worker’s 911 call prompted them to patrol an immigration raid protest: “There were federal agents that needed assistance” with “crowd control,” Chenetra Washington, a police communications operator, said at a hearing on allegations that CPD assisted ICE in enforcement actions last month. Still, Glen Brooks, the director of CPD’s Community Policing office, contended officers weren’t aware that a civil immigration raid was taking place when they arrived at the scene and entered the federal immigration office.

* ABC Chicago | Chicago leaders host hearing over South Loop ICE operation, CPD’s involvement: On Tuesday, the committee on Immigrant and Refugee Rights will vote on a measure for Chicago Police, the Office of Emergency Management Chicago, and the mayor’s office to provide all data and communication related to that day. Chicago police were called to the scene, but the department says they were not aware of any ICE activity when they arrived and did not help with any arrests.

* Bloomberg | Trump Hotel Pays $4.8 Million to Resolve Complaint Over Killing Fish in Chicago: Trump International Hotel & Tower Chicago will pay $4.8 million to resolve a complaint that it was killing fish in the Chicago River. A system used to cool the building by drawing in river water was sucking in thousands of fish and other organisms, the plaintiffs in the case said Tuesday in announcing the settlement. The complaint was brought in 2018 by the Illinois attorney general and state environmental agency, as well as the Sierra Club and a group called Friends of the Chicago River.

* Crain’s | Fulton Market landlord defies office market struggle with big refi: A joint venture of Chicago-based Shapack Partners, Focus Development and Walton Street Capital is set to close this month on a new $247 million loan backed by the 17-story office building at 167 N. Green St., according to a presale report on the debt offering from ratings agency KBRA. The new mortgage will be used to pay off a $232 million balance on a loan the trio took out from Deutsche Bank in 2021 to refinance the property, which was completed in late 2020.

* Sun-Times | Veteran police dispatcher who was a calming voice for Chicagoans at their worst moments goes off the radio: Debra White’s OEMC dispatch colleagues describe her as the “mama” of the unit, making everyone feel welcome and treating emergency callers with empathy. They held her up when tragedy struck her own family and sent her off to retirement with cake, tears and a procession of police and firefighters.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Illinois Answers Project | Cook County Tried to Erase Medical Debt. For Many, Help Came Too Late: But data shows the majority of debt was relieved for people who likely should have qualified for free care — a sign that hospitals are failing to screen for some of the region’s poorest patients.

* Lake County News-Sun | EPA weighing how to address Lake County asbestos contamination; ‘It’s a pretty isolated location’: Currently inaccessible to the public both by physical means — there is a fence — and an EPA ruling, Dave Nadel, the EPA’s community involvement coordinator for Region 5, which includes the Chicago area, said he is in the process of finalizing the decision-making. Adjacent to the Johns Manville EPA Superfund site, Nadel said the contamination occurred years ago — likely in the 1940s or 1950s — before it became part of the nature preserve in 1964. Not part of Manville’s property, dumping occurred in the past. The discovery of asbestos was more recent.

* Daily Southtown | South, southwest suburban high school districts prepare to implement new AI programs: Several high school districts, including Orland High District 230, Bremen District 228 and Oak Lawn District 229, have expanded technology committees and implemented guidelines on AI in discipline codes, giving teachers autonomy to use AI but prohibiting certain uses, such as generating content. “Because it’s been embedded in so many programs now, we had to come up with a clause in our policy that actually covers that. I mean, AI is just everywhere,” said Marcus Wargin, assistant principal at Oak Lawn Community High School. “We knew we didn’t want to say no to AI, so we just wanted to put some guardrails in place.”

* Daily Herald | What’s next for Spring Brook restoration in Blackwell Forest Preserve?: The Illinois State Toll Highway Authority funded the first two phases of the project — within St. James and Blackwell, respectively — to help mitigate construction impacts associated with road widening. In Blackwell specifically, the Forest Preserve District of DuPage County rerouted a section of the creek so that it’s more sinuous or natural. The district also removed a dam structure — a barrier to fish movement. The intergovernmental agreement with the tollway provides funding for the third and final phase of the Spring Brook project, according to district documents. On Tuesday, the forest preserve board is set to vote on a contract with RES Environmental Operating Co., with substantial completion of the work expected by December 2025.

* Daily Herald | ‘A trusted colleague’: veteran Des Plaines Public Works Director Tim Oakley retires: Throughout his lengthy municipal career, Des Plaines Public Works and Engineering Director Tim Oakley kept the city running — above and below ground. But now the state of the city’s streets, sewers and overhead utilities are someone else’s responsibility. After nearly 40 years of public service, Oakley retired June 27.

* Sun-Times | This year’s fireworks could cost you more and cost some suburbs extra, too: All of the fireworks on sale at Uncle Sam’s Fireworks Store in Hammond, Indiana, come from China, said co-owner Dan “Dynamite” Mota. Though the shop bought most of its stock before the president’s tariff policies were first imposed in April, some items required replenishing — Roman candles, for example — and were bought more recently. Last year, the candles at Uncle Sam’s went for $6.95 per package. This year, the same pack is $13.95, according to Mota.

* Daily Southtown | South Holland woman sentenced in theft scheme, pocketed rent payments: A South Holland woman was sentenced to two years in prison for taking more than $18,000 in rent payments while she was working for a property management company, according to Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office. Delvya Harris also admitted to fraudulently obtaining more than $41,000 in federal Paycheck Protection Program loans by falsely claiming she owned a business, Raoul’s office said in a news release.

* Crain’s | Chicago’s pro golf drought continues — except in Bolingbrook: When LIV Golf, the controversial Saudi-funded tour challenging golf’s establishment, lost its residency more than a year ago at the exclusive Rich Harvest Farms club in far west suburban Sugar Grove, local golf fans figured organizers would seek out a new welcome mat at another of the storied private clubs — maybe Medinah or Olympia Fields or Butler National — in the professional golf-starved Chicago marketplace. Not hardly. More than a year ago, on a tight deadline, LIV announced a deal to move its 2024 event to the municipal Bolingbrook Golf Club, a nondescript public course unlikely to appear on the radar of elite touring pros. It’s flat, largely treeless and mostly defenseless in the face of low-handicappers except for the man-made ponds that its designer, Arthur Hills, carved into cornfields three decades ago.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Illinois Wesleyan adds nutrition, physical education and quantum science for 2025-26 school year: A new concentration in Quantum Science and Technology [QST] will be delivered by the Physics department, becoming one of few Midwestern schools offering quantum science at the undergraduate level. Physics chair Narendra Jaggi said QST courses were initially offered on a trial basis to assess student interest and available resources, with introductory courses quickly filling to capacity. “We see this program as a prime example of the deep and broad learning that defines a liberal arts education,” Jaggi said. “It offers interdisciplinary training and encourages strong student-faculty collaboration — an approach that has already propelled our physics majors, and students in our Optics & Photonics concentration, into leadership roles in both academia and industry.”

* WGLT | Connect Go rural transit service launches July 1: The service called Connect Go provides door-to-door transportation for McLean County residents living outside Bloomington-Normal and Towanda. Reservations for Connect Go’s wheelchair accessible vans must be made before noon, one to three weekdays before a scheduled ride. The service is currently available weekdays from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at no cost to customers.

* WCIA | Coles Co. Board to vote on wind project during Tuesday’s meeting: WCIA previously reported that the Coles Wind project would include 51 turbines, is estimated to create nearly 300 constructions jobs and is projected to add $2.7 million in tax revenue to the area each year. But, not everyone in the community is on board. In previous meetings, residents attended in droves, hoping to prevent the project from happening.

*** National ***

* Reuters | Despite last-minute changes, US Senate bill deals big blow to renewable energy: The U.S. Senate’s massive budget bill that passed on Tuesday will make it harder to develop wind and solar energy projects, despite the removal of some contentious provisions, industry advocates and lawmakers said. The Senate dropped a proposed excise tax on solar and wind energy projects that don’t meet strict standards after last-minute negotiations with key Republican senators seeking better terms for renewables.

* The Atlantic | That dropped call with customer service? It was on purpose: “Yes, sludge is often intentional,” he said. “Of course. The goal is to put as much friction between you and whatever the expensive thing is. So the frontline person is given as limited information and authority as possible. And it’s punitive if they connect you to someone who could actually help.” Helpfulness aside, I mentioned that I frequently felt like I was talking with someone alarmingly indifferent to my plight. “That’s called good training,” Tenumah said. “What you’re hearing is a human successfully smoothed into a corporate algorithm, conditioned to prioritize policy over people. If you leave humans in their natural state, they start to care about people and listen to nuance, and are less likely to follow the policy.”

  6 Comments      


SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth

Tuesday, Jul 1, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

For more information, click here.

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Comptroller Mendoza: All GRF bills released, $1.9 billion in the bank, pension payments will be made early

Tuesday, Jul 1, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller


* Press release…

With the close of fiscal year 2025 on June 30, Illinois Comptroller Susana A. Mendoza reports another successful year in paying the state’s bills in a timely manner while the state’s Rainy Day Fund balance has again increased to new records.

For the fourth consecutive year, the Illinois Office of Comptroller (IOC) released all pending bills to vendors from the state’s General Revenue Fund (GRF), while reporting an end-of-year GRF cash balance of $1.9 billion.

This means the IOC is current on all bills received related to Medicaid, the state’s Group Health Insurance program, elementary and high schools, higher education, and other government operations and programs. 

“Working with Governor Pritzker and the General Assembly, we have positioned the state in the most fiscally stable position we can, given the uncertainties of federal funding in the months to come,” Comptroller Mendoza said. “While we keep a close watch on the latest from Washington D.C., my office will continue to pay providers and vendors as quickly as possible to ensure they have the stability and predictability that they and the people who depend on them deserve.”

During fiscal year 2025, the state’s Rainy Day Fund received more than $256 million in transfers and deposits. Over the next 12 months, another $166 million is estimated to be deposited or transferred, bringing the total to more than $2.5 billion by the end of fiscal year 2026. Comptroller Mendoza continues to be a faithful advocate for making additional payments into the pensions systems and Rainy Day Fund during good years.

“We work hard each year to pay bills on time, build up the state’s emergency reserves and stress fiscal discipline, even in these uncertain times,” said Comptroller Mendoza. “My office will strive for continued improvement in state finances and credit ratings in the new budget year.”

With healthy GRF balances anticipated in July, Comptroller Mendoza will once again exercise a law enacted last year that permits the IOC to pre-pay required monthly pension payments when the state has the financial flexibility to do so.    

“We informed the state retirement systems to send us the vouchers for their November pension contributions this month so we can advance these payments early. This will enable the systems to plan accordingly and keep additional dollars in their investment portfolios into the new budget year,” Mendoza said. 

  17 Comments      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Jul 1, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

U.S. Term Limits (USTL), the leader in the national, non-partisan movement to limit terms for elected officials, is gathering support from state lawmakers across the nation. Its mission is to get 34 states to apply for an amendment proposal convention specific to term limits on Congress. 2025 Illinois state house Rep. Sonya Harper (district 6), has committed support for term limits on Congress by signing the term limits convention pledge.

The U.S. Term Limits pledge is provided to candidates and members of state legislatures. It reads, “I pledge that, as a member of the state legislature, I will cosponsor, vote for, and defend the resolution applying for an Article V convention for the sole purpose of enacting term limits on Congress.”

In the 1995 case, Thornton v. U.S. Term Limits, the Supreme Court of the United States opined that only a Constitutional Amendment could limit the terms of U.S. Senators and House Representatives. According to Nick Tomboulides, Chief Executive Officer of USTL, the best chance of imposing term limits on Congress is through an Article V Proposal Convention of state legislatures.

“The Constitution allows for amendments to be proposed by either 2/3 of Congress or 2/3 of the states. While we’d like for Congress to take the high road and propose term limits on itself, we know they are too self-interested to do that without external pressure.” said Tomboulides. “That is why it is important to get buy-in from state legislators,” he added. Once proposed, the amendment must be ratified by 38 states.”

Tomboulides noted, “More than 87% of Americans have rejected the career politician model and want to replace it with citizen leadership. The way to achieve that goal is through a congressional term limits amendment. Sonya knows this and is willing to work to make sure we reach our goal.”

According to the latest nationwide poll on term limits conducted by Pew Research, term limits enjoy wide bipartisan support. Pew’s analysis states, “An overwhelming majority of adults (87%) favor limiting the number of terms that members of Congress are allowed to serve. This includes a majority 56% who strongly favor this proposal, just 12% are opposed.”

* The Question: Do you support a national constitutional convention to enact term limits for Congress? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.


  32 Comments      


Catching up with the federal candidates

Tuesday, Jul 1, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton says she’s raised just over $1 million in her campaign for the U.S. Senate.

The campaign didn’t release an exact amount or details on donors, which should be available in filings later this month.

The race to succeed U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin in 2026 is already crowded. Stratton faces off against fellow Democratic U.S. Reps. Raja Krishnamoorthi, a prodigious fundraiser who has amassed a war chest of more than $19 million, and Robin Kelly, who had about $2 million on hand at the end of the first quarter, according to Federal Election Commission reports.

* US Rep. Robin Kelly…

Many top leaders, advocates and champions of the state’s gun violence prevention movement today endorsed Robin Kelly for U.S. Senate. The group has founded gun violence prevention organizations, raised their voices, told their stories and led with passion on ending senseless gun violence in our communities.

“Any Illinois voter who cares about curbing gun violence in our state should know that Robin Kelly is the only choice for the U.S. Senate,” said Cleopatra Cowley-Pendleton, an activist who began the Wear Orange movement after losing her 15-year-old daughter Hadiya to gun violence. “Robin has proven her leadership in Congress and is the only candidate who will continue championing lifesaving gun violence prevention legislation in the Senate.” […]

Members of the gun violence prevention movement endorsing Kelly for Senate include:

    Cleopatra Cowley-Pendleton
    Camiella Williams
    Corey Hardiman
    Delphine Cherry
    Martinez Sutton
    Cassandra Greer-Lee
    Elizabeth Gerald
    Tonya Burch
    Dawn Valenti
    Donald Williams
    LaShawn Littrice
    Carl Williams
    Pamela Bosley
    Trevon Bosley
    Maria Pike
    Pastor Brenda Mitchell

* Politico

Jason Friedman has raised more than $1 million since announcing two months ago that he’s running for the 7th District seat held by Congressman Danny Davis.

What’s interesting: Friedman, a businessman whose family runs the Friedman Properties real estate company, has built up his campaign coffers from individual donations — not his own, according to a statement from his campaign. Friedman has been working the phones and meeting with voters and community leaders since announcing his run April 17.

“I’m energized by the strong support we’ve received since launching our campaign and [am] eager to build on that momentum to deliver results for the 7th District,” he said in a statement.

Waiting game: Davis, who’s 83, told constituents during a weekend town hall that he’ll make a decision in a few weeks about whether he’ll seek re-election for a 16th term.

* The Daily Northwestern

Tucked away in a spacious eventroom in Skokie’s Sketchbook Brewing Company on Sunday afternoon, residents of Illinois’ 9th Congressional District shared drinks, laughs and conversations with eight prospective Democratic candidates who could rewrite the district’s political future for years to come. […]

Attendees from the district heard two-minute campaign speeches from eight candidates — including content creator Kat Abughazaleh, Skokie politician Bushra Amiwala (Kellogg ’25), Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss, State Sen. Laura Fine, Evanston native Miracle Jenkins, Evanston advocate Bethany Johnson and Skokie attorney Howard Rosenblum. One contender who presented, State Sen. Mike Simmons, has not yet officially filed his candidacy with the Federal Election Commission as of Sunday night. […]

The younger candidates, Amiwala and Abughazaleh, who are both in their 20s, drew excitement from younger voters in the crowd, including 26-year-old Lincolnwood resident Mynk Richardson.

Richardson said she was inspired by the pair’s political ambitions despite being so young, and said her ideal Democratic candidate would present new ideas beyond the Democratic Party’s strategy of “playing it safe” in national politics.

* Jewish Insider

As he competes for Illinois’ open Senate seat, Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL) is hoping that the state’s sizable Jewish community, concentrated in the Chicago area, will help him chart a path to victory in the Democratic primary. […]

“I think Jewish Americans are just like everyone else, first of all, and they care about the full range of issues that all voters care about,” Krishnamoorthi said, when asked by Jewish Insider in a recent interview why the Jewish community should back him.

“However, I do think that they have a desire for a strong U.S.-Israel relationship,” Krishnamoorthi continued, “and I don’t think there’s anybody else with the track record in this race that I possess, showing strong support for that relationship, but also knowing why that relationship needs to continue to be strong on a bipartisan basis, and we need to take this out of politics.” […]

On a series of key votes on Middle East and antisemitism issues since the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attacks in Israel, Krishnamoorthi has sometimes voted against legislation supported by Jewish and pro-Israel groups, but his record on those issues has been stronger than Kelly’s. On several occasions when the two have voted differently, Krishnamoorthi has sided with positions supported by leading Jewish and pro-Israel groups.

Krishnamoorthi was endorsed by AIPAC in his 2024 reelection race; Kelly was not.

* The Daily Northwestern

[Miracle Jenkins], an Evanston native, Democratic political organizer and 31-year-old father, joined the crowded Democratic primary to compete for U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky’s (D-Evanston) open seat for 2026 in early June, announcing his candidacy via a June 10 YouTube video. The barbecue served as the campaign’s official in-person launch event.

His congressional campaign, “Miracle for the Future,” reaches every corner he’s lived in the 9th district, from his early childhood home in Chicago’s Uptown to his move to Evanston at age 10. […]

Rebecca Johnson, (SPS ’25) one of the campaign’s managers, said she first met Jenkins while working on Toni Preckwinkle’s Chicago mayoral campaign in 2019.

She pointed to his political prowess as a deputy political director for Schakowsky’s 2018 reelection campaign and U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders’ (I-Vt.) 2020 presidential campaign, as well as his own homegrown experience, as integral to his leadership.

“Who better than Miracle, who grew up here in two different parts of the district and saw how different (they) are from each other,” Johnson said. “He just wants to make it equal, not just for the 9th Congressional District, but for everybody.”

* More…

    * WSPY | Davis opts out of congressional run, stays in state race: 75th District State Representative Jed Davis says he’s running again for the Illinois Statehouse. The announcement means Davis won’t be pursuing a run for Congress in the 14th District. “Congress was a serious consideration, but my heart remains with the people of this district, so [I’m] running for reelection as State Representative,” Davis said. “As with all elections, the results rest in the people’s hands.”

  9 Comments      


More proof that the Tribune editorial board doesn’t read or trust its own newspaper

Tuesday, Jul 1, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. Chicago Tribune

George Karzas kept his cards close to his chest. At Weston’s Coffee, where he often orders a blueberry muffin and drip coffee with room for cream, the baristas had no idea the longtime restaurant owner planned to close Gale Street Inn. Nor did his many customers in and around Jefferson Park.

“It’s too soon to talk,” Karzas said Friday from the bright red doorway of his restaurant at 4914 N. Milwaukee Ave. He has kept the door locked since Wednesday night.

Karzas announced on Instagram Thursday that Gale Street Inn, a neighborhood staple in operation since 1963, was permanently closed, a troubling trend among local restaurants, industry professionals say. He cited staffing shortages as the primary reason for the abrupt closure.

“Hiring and retaining quality staff has proven too tough for too long,” he wrote. “We are tired of sucking, we have standards you know. But overworking our existing crew is not the answer. There are simply too many of you and not enough of us.”

I loved Gale Street Inn, and I was last there the Friday before it closed. The legendary Hannah Meisel was our guest and our table had a great time. The food was superb, the service was excellent and the music elevated us all.

George is such a cool dude. Very into live music and a longtime Dead Head. The bearded man has some stories, lemme tell you. I’ll miss his restaurant and I’ll miss him.

* That brings us to the Chicago Tribune editorial board

We hardly need to tell you that many locally owned restaurants are the foci of their neighborhoods, which accounts for why there was such a howl of anguish in recent days when the cozy Gale Street Inn on Milwaukee Avenue in Jefferson Park announced its closure. Its famously genial operator, George Karzas, had owned and run the restaurant since 1994. Among his many other good works, he supported his local Jefferson Park theater, The Gift, storefront theaters and storefront restaurants sharing much of the same homegrown DNA in this city. At the Gale Street Inn, you always knew you were in Chicago.

The problem? The current headwinds are many in the restaurant business, including the well-documented rise in food costs. But top of mind of those in the hospitality industry in Chicago is the high cost of labor and the city’s shortsighted decision to get rid of the so-called tipped minimum wage following a campaign by an out-of-state activist group, One Fair Wage, which had worked its agenda on Mayor Brandon Johnson and enough of the aldermen in the City Council. Karzas’ decision to close the Gale Street Inn comes as the tipped minimum wage was set to increase again Tuesday, rising from $11.02 to $12.62 an hour as part of a phased-in approach that has been a progressive nightmare for restaurants.

Um, Mr. Karzas didn’t say the problem was high labor costs. Just the opposite. George said his problem was “Hiring and retaining quality staff” and that he hated “overworking our existing crew.”

That crew was fabulous, by the way. I never had a bad time at the Gale Street Inn.

Also, Karzas spent a bunch of cash during the past year or so turning that restaurant into a shining palace. If money was a problem, it sure didn’t show.

* Frankly, I’m not a fan of the One Fair Wage group and its agenda. They’ve so far failed at the Statehouse to expand the Chicago experiment statewide for good reason.

But my absolute biggest pet peeve is people who will super-impose their own pet peeves on whatever is in today’s news regardless of the reported facts, as the Trib’s edit board has done here.

Respect your own reporters, for crying out loud.

  19 Comments      


Today’s graphs: Mixed success for Pritzker

Tuesday, Jul 1, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s has a story entitled “As Pritzker seeks a third term, the numbers tell a mixed story of his record so far.” From that piece

  33 Comments      


Pritzker announces Christian Mitchell as LG pick (Updated)

Tuesday, Jul 1, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Press release…

Governor JB Pritzker announced that experienced government leader Christian Mitchell will join the ticket as a candidate for Lieutenant Governor of Illinois. Mitchell, a former three-term state representative and current First Lieutenant in the Illinois Air National Guard, served as Deputy Governor for over four years during which time he was a principal force behind the transformative $45 billion Rebuild Illinois capital plan and the landmark Climate and Equitable Jobs Act. The campaign released a new video, Meet Christian Mitchell, highlighting the announcement.

“Christian Mitchell is a proven leader with deep experience, steady judgment, and an unshakable commitment to the working families of Illinois,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Whether it’s transforming our clean energy future, rebuilding our infrastructure, or keeping our communities safe, Christian has been a force behind so much of our progress. I couldn’t ask for a better partner to continue delivering results for the people of Illinois.”

“There is no one who fights harder for working families than Governor JB Pritzker and I am deeply honored to be his choice for Lieutenant Governor,” said Christian Mitchell. “The Governor has led with courage and compassion, and together we’ve built a foundation that’s moving Illinois forward. I’m ready to build on that progress—lowering costs, expanding opportunity, and making sure every community has the resources and opportunities they deserve. This is about delivering real results for the people of Illinois, and I’m excited to get to work.”

Christian Mitchell began his career as a community organizer on Chicago’s South Side, before going on to serve as a state representative and the first African American executive director of the Democratic Party of Illinois. As a Deputy Governor from the start of the Pritzker administration to 2023, Christian oversaw a portfolio that included infrastructure, energy, and public safety.

During his tenure, Christian led efforts on core administration priorities including passing the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, which made Illinois a leader in clean energy. Christian was also a key force behind Rebuild Illinois, the largest capital plan in state history, and cannabis legalization with a nation leading social equity framework. Through the COVID-19 Pandemic, Christian oversaw the state’s medical supply chain, leading on everything from procuring supplies from overseas to ensuring hospitals and frontline workers had the tools they needed to save lives.

After overseeing the Illinois Department of Military Affairs as Deputy Governor, Christian commissioned and now serves as a First Lieutenant and Deputy Staff Judge Advocate in the Illinois Air National Guard. He also serves as Vice President for Civic Engagement at the University of Chicago, where he oversees government relations, civic partnerships, and business diversity initiatives to drive equitable growth on the South Side and across the region.

* Launch video



…Adding… Governor Pritzker was asked about his LG pick this afternoon at an unrelated news conference

Reporter: Governor, you recently announced today that Christian Mitchell will be your running mate for as lieutenant governor. Why? Why is Christian Mitchell ready to step in as governor as required?

Pritzker: Well, let me start by saying that we have a great Lieutenant Governor right now, and she’s going to continue to serve as lieutenant governor, Juliana Stratton, for another 18 months. She’s been really a terrific partner, and [it’s] important to me to have somebody who understands government and who has a heart for the people of Illinois, wherever they live and whatever party they belong to.

And Christian Mitchell has demonstrated, I’ve worked with him since he was a state representative, since I was just a candidate for governor, and then he became my deputy governor. He also has worked at the University of Chicago as their community liaison. He is a lieutenant in the Air National Guard, and he is somebody that I have grown to trust.

I’ve seen him usher enormous legislation through the legislature, working with legislators to pass the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, to pass the infrastructure bill, $45 billion capital bill for the state. So he’s a guy who knows how to get big things done, and I’ve worked with him to get it done.

I’m excited for the people of Illinois to get to know him, and also for him to become one of their leaders.

Reporter: How many candidates did you consider and when did you arrive at [that decision?]

Pritzker: Oh, gosh, I mean, there are a number of qualified people that that I considered, and I don’t know if I could name the number. But I can say that we have, I said earlier in my remarks, a lot of really highly qualified people in government today in Illinois. I know that people are down on government in general, but I can tell you, I’ve worked with some really spectacular [people]. You’re seeing some here. And so, if you want to pick somebody who has real government experience, there are a number of people to choose from. There are people outside of government who are highly experienced as managers, as people who can lead. And so I considered people both inside and outside government.

Reporter: When did you make your decision?

Pritzker: It’s one of these things, when did I make the decision. made the decision as soon as I could. But you have to kind of evolve as you’re looking at candidates and contemplating it. I think it wasn’t an easy choice, because there really are some great people to choose from, but I guess the final decision was made maybe more than a week ago.

But I say ‘final,’ there were lots of things to do. Somebody who’s choosing to run as a candidate, [Mitchell] can’t continue, for example, working at the University of Chicago while he’s a candidate. And so that’s one of those things that you’ve got to kind of give a person time to work out

So just to give you a sense for it—but it wasn’t too terribly long ago.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

Discuss.

  95 Comments      


Open thread

Tuesday, Jul 1, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Finding this video online is like digging up a super-cringe time capsule. Check out the hair and the outfits. Whew, boy. It’s one of those phases some of us would prefer not to remember, including the awkward Wolfman Jack cameo

I said, “You got my number?”
He said, “Yeah, I got it when you walked in the door”

What up by you?

  11 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Jul 1, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Feds want more than 4 1/2 years for ex-ComEd lobbyist convicted in Madigan conspiracy. Sun-Times

    - Federal prosecutors say a former lobbyist for ComEd should be sentenced to more than 4 ½ years in prison for his role in a conspiracy designed to illegally sway former Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan — and for lying on the witness stand.
    - The recommendation for John Hooker, 76, comes more than two years after he and three others were convicted for their roles in the lengthy scheme, for which Madigan faces his own 7 ½-year prison sentence.
    - Now Hooker and three others face sentencing in the weeks to come. Hooker is set to go first, on July 14. Monday’s recommendation is the first indication of how the feds want U.S. District Judge Manish Shah to rule in the case.

* Related stories…

* The will be in Peoria at 2:30 pm to sign into law healthcare bills that lower prescription drug costs and expand healthcare access. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Advocates look at next steps after Illinois law requiring halal, kosher options at state-run facilities left out of budget: But hurdles remain as the legislation requires state funding before lawmakers can enact a 12-month implementation period. “We’re just waiting for the appropriation to be made to really implement the program,” said state Rep. Kevin John Olickal, the primary sponsor for the bill in the Illinois House. “This is what we have to work on over the summer.” Olickal, a Chicago Democrat, said he and others who supported the bill understood it was a hard ask to make in an already difficult budget year. But because the bill exists in statute, it’s just a matter of pushing its priority through to the legislature, he added.

* Crain’s | Stratton raises $1M in U.S. Senate bid: Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton says she’s raised just over $1 million in her campaign for the U.S. Senate. The campaign didn’t release an exact amount or details on donors, which should be available in filings later this month. The race to succeed U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin in 2026 is already crowded. Stratton faces off against fellow Democrats U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, a prodigious fundraiser who has amassed a war chest of more than $19 million, and U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly, who had about $2 million on hand at the end of the first quarter, according to Federal Election Commission reports.

*** Statewide ***

* WNIJ | Illinois State Climatologist wonders how cuts to weather services could play into climate change.: Today, WNIJ Host Jason Cregier and Illinois State Climatologist Dr. Trent Ford discuss what federal funding cuts to weather services could mean for dealing with climate change. Ford says it’s a question worth posing and adds “there’s been a lot of back and forth and what federal policies are proposing.” The challenge he says is figuring out where the federal government is going on the matter. Proposed cuts have included zeroing out a lot of the climate research the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration does.

* Tribune | In July 1: Tax hikes for gas, Zyn and betting. Out: Hotel mini shampoos: While Gov. JB Pritzker earlier this year ruled out across-the-board sales tax increases or another attempt to tax higher earners to cope with a tough financial year, several more tightly focused revenue hikes were included in the $55 billion budget passed by legislators in May and set to take effect July 1. As part of an annual increase tied to inflation, Illinois’ gas tax will increase by about 1 cent to just more than 48 cents per gallon. The tax on diesel fuel will also go up about 1 cent to just under 56 cents per gallon.

* Chicago Mag | Making Some “Illinoise”: Sufjan Stevens’s 2005 concept album about Illinois is indie folk, sure, but so much more: wonky time signatures, epic orchestral suites, vivid lyricism describing oft-forgotten figures in our state’s history, and iconically hokey cover art inviting listeners to “come on feel the Illinoise.” It’s a critical darling and fun for the whole family, especially if your family includes an Illinois history teacher. And if you’ve never driven down DuSable Lake Shore Drive at night blasting the anthemic earworm “Chicago,” I implore you to drop everything and do so now. I’ll wait.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Aurora Beacon-News | Eddie Perez announces run for Illinois State Senate 42nd District seat: Edgardo “Eddie” Perez, a U.S. Air Force veteran who currently works at the Kane County Sheriff’s Office, announced Monday that in the 2026 general election he will be running as a Republican for Illinois State Senate in the 42nd District. State Senate District 42 covers a large chuck of Aurora as well as parts of other towns along the Fox River from St. Charles to Yorkville. Currently serving as the state senator for the district is Linda Holmes, a Democrat who has held the seat since she was first elected in 2006.

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois to roll out direct admissions program for most state universities: Illinois students won’t need to fill out applications for most state universities to be admitted — if they have high enough grades. With his signature, Gov. JB Pritzker on Monday approved a bill creating the direct admissions program. Along with it, he approved bills that implement new state standards for programs offering college credits to high school students, and new requirements for financial aid application assistance.

* WGN | New laws aim to make higher education easier for Illinois students: “Today, we’re making it cheaper and easier to go to college,” Pritzker said. “Preventing headaches for parents and students and tearing down the hurdles for people to reach their full potential.” Peggy Heinrich, President of Elgin Community College, praised the second of four bills passed, which applies new standards to dual credit programs for high school students.

* KSDK | New law invites Illinois counties to join Indiana, but chances are ‘almost nonexistent,’ expert says: A new law takes effect in Indiana on Tuesday that invites counties in Illinois to join the Hoosier State. The counties include Madison, Calhoun and Clinton. While it’s an interesting discussion, many experts said the likelihood of this happening is slim to none. Christopher Duncan, Saint Louis University political science professor, said it would be pretty difficult because even though the Indiana governor signed the bill into law, it would still require approval from both state legislatures and Congress.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Chicago ended 2024 with a $161M deficit: Mayor Brandon Johnson’s already gaping budget hole will be even tougher to fill heading into next year as City Hall officials on Monday closed the book on the 2024 fiscal year, showing the city’s general fund was $161 million underwater. Major sources of revenues in the city’s general fund came in far lower than anticipated, most notably a $175 million pension payment that City Hall wanted Chicago Public Schools to pay back but didn’t, and a $165 million drop in personal property replacement taxes from the state. In all, general fund revenues in the $16.77 billion budget were $378 million lower than the city expected.

* Sun-Times | City Hall wrapped up 2024 with a zero balance in its operating checkbook: Chicago closed the books on 2024 with an unassigned balance of zero for the first time in recent memory, in part because the Chicago Public Schools failed to reimburse the city for a $175 million pension payment for non-teaching school employees. At the end of 2023, the unassigned balance not yet dedicated for a specific purpose was $226.6 million, even after Johnson followed his predecessor Lori Lightfoot’s lead by devoting $306.6 million to a “pension advance” that exceeded Chicago’s statutory requirement.

* Crain’s | Audit reveals Chicago blew through a key budget reserve in 2024: To cover that loss, the city’s so-called unassigned fund balance, which has been dipped into to cover emergency costs and help close budget gaps over the years, was completely wiped out and finished 2024 without a dollar in the account, city officials told reporters today. Johnson’s financial team sought to downplay the consequences of the move in a briefing with reporters ahead of the audit’s release.

* If you need it click here for background. Jeremy Gorner


* Tribune | Chicago Housing Authority gives another big payout to terminated executive: Another recently departed Chicago Housing Authority executive has received a hefty payout from the agency, marking the 10th exited senior leader to obtain a settlement in the last five years and topping off the agency’s payout expenditures at more than $868,000. Ann McKenzie, CHA’s former chief development officer, was terminated from her role Feb. 14, the agency disclosed in June through public records, and received roughly four and a half months of severance pay, according to her separation agreement. The Tribune first reported her departure in February. CHA did not provide an explanation for her termination, nor do public records show any history of disciplinary action.

* Block Club | ‘Loose Cannon’ Lifeguard Who Shot 2 Teens At Pool Previously Shot Dogs In Lakeview, Sources Say: Michaels told Block Club she was talking to two neighbors after taking out the trash when a man approached with a “weird” demeanor. Michaels said the dogs never approached the man and she doesn’t believe they were acting aggressive. “He was being really weird, so they just barked,” Michaels said of the shooter. “I was like ‘come on guys, let’s go inside,’ and he turns and he grabs his gun and starts shooting.”

* WTTW | What’s the Story Behind Chicago’s Piping Plovers?: There used to be a few thousand of them, spread across the entire Great Lakes, but then people took away a lot of the beaches where they lived — building houses, hotels, marinas and resorts. By 1986, there were only about a dozen piping plover pairs left in the Great Lakes, all of them nesting in Michigan. The future looked so bleak for our feathered friends that they were officially added to the Endangered Species list.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Northwestern University president to appear again before Congress in August: Northwestern University President Michael Schill is slated to appear for a second time before a congressional committee over alleged antisemitism on campus. Schill will participate in an interview with the House Committee on Education & Workforce on Aug. 5, according to a Northwestern spokesperson. Committee Chairman Tim Walberg, R-Mich., first sent a letter to Schill to testify in April, accusing Northwestern of failing to fulfill its commitment to protect Jewish students.

* State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke: Cook County has new tools in the fight for reproductive freedom: The Cook County state’s attorney’s office is responding to this threat head-on by creating the Choice Protection Unit (CPU). The CPU brings together seasoned attorneys, investigators and victim/witness specialists from every division of our office. In addition to their current caseloads, these public servants have volunteered to participate in trainings, collaborate with experts, and stay abreast of current legal issues and legislative initiatives so that when these crimes are committed in Cook County, we will be prepared to successfully prosecute them with the full force of our office. The CPU will also monitor and analyze the evolving legal landscape so that we can respond swiftly and effectively as new threats and tactics emerge.

* Daily Southtown | Blue Island distributes water sampling kits in effort to eliminate lead lines: Blue Island resident Sarah Haskell said she avoids letting her 1-year-old son drink tap water, as she is worried about contamination of lead in water lines. Instead, she keeps a Brita water filter on hand in her refrigerator. When Blue Island expanded its water sampling procedures mid-June, distributing lead and copper test kits to 60 randomly selected households as part of a project aiming to replace all water lead lines, Haskell said she was relieved.

* Daily Herald | Kelvin Roston Jr. pays tribute to soul great Donny Hathaway at Northlight Theatre: Kelvin Roston Jr. channels singer/songwriter, Chicago native and soul legend Donny Hathaway (“A Song for You,” “This Christmas”) in “Twisted Melodies,” a solo show that Roston created. It unfolds over one day in 1979, the year Hathaway — who was also known for his collaborations with Roberta Flack (“Where is the Love?” “The Closer I Get to You”) — died. Ron OJ Parson directs Northlight Theatre’s production. Note: This production includes themes some audiences may find challenging.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Westville library awarded grant to improve technology, internet accessibility: The Westville Public Library District was awarded a tech grant from the Illinois Secretary of State. It’s getting around $30,000 to help improve the library experience. State officials said the grant’s purpose is to buy things like new software and technology and increasing internet accessibility. The library’s director said he’s not sure what they’ll be spending their money on but the goal is to get the community involved.

* WCIA | ‘Sometimes we would cry’: Danville says goodbye to Bresee Tower: Now that the tower is gone, many are wondering: what’s next? Several people in Danville voiced their opinions, but Mayor Rickey Williams Jr. said to be patient — because he’s hoping for something special. Breese Tower has been topping the city’s skyline for more than 100 years. Nearly two months ago construction crews started demolishing the building, which Williams said was a long time coming.

* WGLT | As energy prices rise, Ecology Action Center brings back a residential group buy solar program: EAC Energy Coordinator Michael Bay said they did partner with the state in recent years for the Illinois Shines program, but they were not able to partner with any other organization during that time. “But our partnership with Illinois Shines ended, I believe, at the end of last year, which gave us the opportunities to partner with MREA again and restart the program,” Bay said. “And we want to do it with them because it’s been a successful program … so we wanted to get started again.”

* BND | Madison County explosion leaves family of five injured and without a home: Samantha Romero, who lives directly across the street from the home and said she was awakened by the explosion, said her aunt and uncle had complained to Ameren Illinois about the smell of gas in the house. “This could have been prevented,” Romero said. “They had trouble smelling gas in the house. They kept complaining to the gas company. They came out and kept saying everything was OK.”

*** National ***

* NBC | Supreme Court turns away online censorship claim by RFK Jr.’s anti-vaccine group against Meta: The justices left in place lower court rulings that tossed out the lawsuit, which claimed that Facebook, starting in 2019, colluded with the federal government to restrict access to its content. The issue came to a head during the Covid-19 pandemic, with Facebook removing the group’s page in 2022. […] Lower courts, including the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, ruled in favor of Meta, saying there was no evidence of coordination with the government, meaning it was not a “state actor” bound by the First Amendment.

* The Hill | Focus turns to Murkowski as vote-a-rama stretches to 21 hours: In recent hours, the focus has turned to Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), whose vote one senator described as a “coin flip.” Late Monday, a group of conservatives huddled with Thune as it became clear an amendment they were pushing to further reduce Medicaid spending did not have the votes to pass.

* Politico | Lisa Murkowski slams the brakes on the GOP megabill: The Alaska senator has been the subject of an intense whip effort by GOP leaders over the past couple of hours as they try to offer her reassurances on Medicaid and food assistance. Thune, Finance Chair Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) and Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso talked to Murkowski on the floor for roughly an hour overnight. Thune and Murkowski huddled briefly in his office, and they were mum on details when they emerged shortly before 4 a.m.

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