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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Thursday, Nov 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Tribune…
* Tribune | Judge orders release of US Border Patrol head Gregory Bovino deposition videos: Watch them here: Bovino, who is leading Trump’s immigration enforcement effort in the Chicago area, testified that he is leading roughly 220 U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents as part of the so-called Operation Midway Blitz. He said he reports directly to Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. * Tribune | What to know about immigration enforcement raids in Chicago after 3 months: Political tensions have deepened, hundreds of immigrants, protesters and bystanders have been detained or arrested during raids, and thousands have protested across Chicago and the suburbs, from Home Depot and Target parking lots to outside the two-story brick U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in suburban Broadview to the massive No Kings Rally downtown. * AP | Judge will order federal agents in Chicago to restrict using force against protesters and media: Ellis said it is “simply untrue” that the Chicago area is a violent place of rioters. “I don’t find defendants’ version of events credible,” Ellis said. She described protesters and advocates facing tear gas, having guns pointed at them and being thrown to the ground, saying “that would cause a reasonable person to think twice about exercising their fundamental rights.” * WTTW | Federal Judge Imposes Strict Restrictions on Immigration Agents’ Use of Force Against Protesters, Media, Clergy: Ellis is now the second federal judge in the Northern District of Illinois to find that federal agents have presented unreliable testimony about their actions and the actions of Chicagoans in response to President Donald Trump’s mass deportation effort. * Sun-Times | Federal judge enters broader order governing feds’ use of force during immigration blitz: Bovino, in full uniform, testified on video that the use of force by federal agents in Chicago has been “more than exemplary.” He also admitted that he threw tear gas in Little Village last month before he was purportedly hit in the head by a rock, contradicting earlier claims, lawyers said. But Steven Art, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, told the judge the Trump administration defendants in the case “should be ashamed of themselves.” “It’s a disgrace,” Art said of the way people in Chicago have been treated during Operation Midway Blitz. “And one of the great things about our Constitution is that, if that’s what we think, we can say it.” * 9th CD candidate Daniel Biss talked with detained ICE protestors Jennifer Moriarty… * WAND | ISBE opens applications for $37.8m after school grant competition: ISBE said that the grant competition will provide an estimated $37.8 million in federal funding over the next three years. The competition is funded through Title IV, Part B of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, the program that ultimately supports schools and other community organizations in establishing or expanding after-school programs helping students meet learning expectations. * Stand for Children | Confused about… ISBE’s Accountability System Overhaul?: The “consistent attendance” (i.e., inverse of chronic absenteeism) metric sorts schools into categories based on whether they hit certain attendance benchmarks. For example, if over 85% of high school students are consistent attendees, the school is ‘Exemplary.’ If 70% – 85% are consistent attendees, the school is ‘Commendable.’ (Keep in mind here that 70% is five points lower than state average.) If fewer than 40% of students are consistent attendees, the school is ‘Comprehensive.’ But if a school grows its consistent attendance rate from 70% to 80%, the system does not recognize that. * Capitol News Illinois | ‘Clean Slate’ Act passes after failing to clear legislature in past years: The Clean Slate Initiative — a bipartisan organization that seeks to pass automatic record sealing laws across the U.S. — estimates that sealing records would infuse $4.7 billion in lost wages back into the state’s economy annually. “To me, this is a jobs bill,” Sims said of the Clean Slate Act. Twelve other states and the District of Columbia have similar laws in place, according to advocates. * CBS Chicago | Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch touts success of transit funding bill: Supporters said it will avert the need for drastic cuts to the Chicago area’s mass transit systems without a significant statewide tax hike.”We did that without new taxes on ridesharing, on food delivery, on streamlining services, or on homes,” Welch said. “We improved public transit in Illinois with reforms and funding.” * Obituary | Mark D. Obrien: Mark was born August 7, 1950 in Springfield, Illinois, the son of Edward P.O’Brien, Sr., and Virginia (Davlin) O’Brien. Shortly after graduating from Griffin High School, Mark began working for the Democratic House of Representatives staff in 1971, retiring as a Special Assistant to the Speaker of the House in 2003. Mark married the absolute love of his life, Paulette Rettinghaus O’Brien, on August 1, 1975. They had celebrated their 50th anniversary shortly before Mark’s death. Upon retiring, Mark then spent several years on his personal project, “Pretty City,” volunteering to help elderly people with their yardwork or anything else they might need done. While known for his loud growl and occasional bark, Mark had no bite, all he really wanted to do was help others. * Crain’s | Johnson defends budget plan despite warning of credit downgrade: Mayor Brandon Johnson defended his $16.6 billion 2026 budget proposal today despite what amounted to a warning it could lead to the city’s credit being downgraded because of an over-reliance on one-time solutions. ”In the past two and a half years, every single budget that I put forth has been overwhelmingly structural in nature,” Johnson said, despite S&P Global Ratings lowering the city’s credit outlook one notch to negative. * AP | Texts appear to show Border Patrol agent bragging about shooting a woman in Chicago: The messages were presented as evidence in federal court Wednesday. Martinez, a 30-year-old U.S. citizen, and Anthony Ian Santos Ruiz, 21, are charged with assault on a federal officer using a deadly or dangerous weapon. In the text, agent Exum wrote that he had “an amendment to add to” his story. “I fired 5 rounds and she had 7 holes. Put that in your book boys,” the text read. * Sun-Times | Chicago’s new transit money, set to kick in late 2026, will first revive disability ride-share program: The bill awaiting Gov. JB Pritzker’s signature is set to pump an additional $1.5 billion a year to the state’s money-starved transit system. But the additional revenue won’t kick in until the last half of 2026, when new taxes are expected to raise nearly $320 million for transit by year’s end, officials said. That’s not enough money in 2026 for the promised “transformational” change to public transit. Officials say to expect that in 2027, when a full $1.2 billion in extra funding is expected for the CTA, Metra and Pace. But there is enough cash expected next year to shore up the system’s workforce and revive an ADA ride-share program that was on the chopping block. * Chicago Reader | Many unhoused Chicagoans uncounted among the disappeared: These factors make the abductions of unhoused Chicagoans difficult to verify and track. Their disappearances further highlight their vulnerability in a city that has seen multiple high-profile closures of tent encampments, some in below-freezing temperatures. For example, Gompers Park, near where Samuel and Theo were taken, has featured prominently in headlines this year. It’s become a flash point for intense community disagreement about whether unhoused residents living in tents in the park should be evicted or allowed to stay at a time when Chicago is enduring an affordable housing crisis. (There is no emergency shelter for unhoused single people on the city’s northwest side, where Gompers Park is located.) * Daily Herald | Here’s what to know about shutdown-related flight cancellations at O’Hare: CEO Scott Kirby told employees that long-haul international flying and hub-to-hub flying “will not be impacted by this schedule reduction.” United’s domestic hubs are at O’Hare plus Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, Newark (New Jersey), San Francisco and Washington Dulles international airports. “Instead, we will focus our schedule reductions on regional flying and domestic mainline flights that do not travel between our hubs,” Kirby said. * Sun-Times | How Merit School of Music built a culture of inclusion for Chicago music students: The school’s 20-year-old band program is run by Merit School of Music, a West Loop nonprofit that removes barriers to classical music through its community programs and tuition-free conservatory. The school serves more than 2,900 students, across nearly 140 zip codes. A third of the students are Latino. And a Chicago Sun-Times and WBEZ survey revealed that, compared to the slow progress of some of the city’s other large arts and culture organizations, Merit has made sizable efforts to diversify its organization, with people of color making up 44% of its board and 61% of its full-time staff. In Chicago, people of color make up 68% of Chicago’s population, with Latinos representing 30% of residents, according to the 2023 American Community Survey. * Naperville Sun | Naperville commission vote on data center delayed again after residents pack meeting: “I think there’s certainly been more residential in the corridor in the last couple years,” Whitaker said Wednesday. “But I think the corridor has to evolve. … It’s going to take some reimagining. It’s going to take uses that are consistent with the future of the economy.” But residents — especially those who will live in the nearby Naper Commons, Fairmeadow and Danada Woods subdivisions — have been pushing back against the plan. A petition circulating online in opposition to the project had more than 3,000 signatures as of Thursday afternoon. * Tribune | Banana-selling robots pitch customers in test run at three suburban Jewel stores: Take Servi, an AI-powered robotic cart that has popped up recently in three suburban Jewel-Osco stores, following shoppers around the produce aisle and spouting prerecorded witticisms in an effort to sell bunches of bananas atop its trays. “We’re still gathering data, but so far, it shows very promising results,” said Danny Dumas, senior vice president for Florida-based Fresh Del Monte, which is testing out the produce robots in the Chicago area for a potential national rollout. “The robot may have a voice that can scare a few people away, but overall, people like it.” * Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora considering new location, provider for winter warming shelter : The proposal, which will go before the Aurora City Council for potential final approval on Tuesday evening, would have the shelter operated by Becoming Oswego Church at a cost of around $135,000. The temporary warming shelter would be open overnight when temperatures are at or below 32 degrees for at least six hours within a 24-hour period, a change from past years’ threshold temperature of 15 degrees. * WSIL | Murphysboro Food Pantry receives $11K from Samron Midwest: Samron Midwest Contracting employees have made a significant contribution to the Murphysboro Food Pantry. Their donation of $11,000 will support families in need during the holiday season. “This generous gift will help us provide countless families in our community with full tables and warm meals,” said a representative of the Murphysboro Food Pantry. * BND | Backed by state grant, construction of metro-east grocery store is set to begin: The Illinois Grocery Initiative covered $2.4 million of the $5 million total cost to build the store and restaurant in Venice. The General Assembly created the $20 million program in 2023 to help seed grocery stores in food deserts in urban and rural parts of the state. The closest grocery stores or supermarkets are at least four miles away from Venice residents in Granite City. Urban communities are considered to be a food desert if grocery stores are more than one mile away, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. * The Southern | $2 million Carbondale street project aims to connect key corridors, boost safety: Funded through Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s Rebuild Illinois program, the $2 million project will rebuild sections of three downtown streets — Poplar Street between Mill and Oak streets, Cherry Street between Oakland and Illinois avenues and College Street between Forest and University avenues. The streets serve as vital links connecting Southern Illinois University, SIH Memorial Hospital and downtown Carbondale and the improvements aim to enhance safety and accessibility throughout the area. * The Daily Egyptian | Carbondale grocery tax replaces Illinois state levy starting Jan. 2026: Mayor Carolin Harvey said after a City Council meeting on Oct. 28 that the decision maintains existing revenue streams. “The 1% was already there,” Harvey said. […] The grocery tax revenue is deposited into the city’s general fund, which has revenues of approximately $31 million and expenditures of $31.5 million out of a total city budget of approximately $80.1 million, according to Davis. * SJ-R | Illinois’ oldest living resident Wenonah Bish of Sherman dies at 113: Bish turned 113 years old just a month prior. Born in Springfield in 1912, Bish was cited by the Gerontology Research Group as being the fifth oldest-living person in the U.S. and the 19th oldest-living person in the world. […] Family friend Kathryn Harris noted that Bish had seen “everything from the beginning of automobiles to moon landings. ‘It happened, it’s done, let’s just keep moving,’ seemed to me her philosophy and outlook.” * CNBC | Job cuts in October hit highest level for the month in 22 years, Challenger says: Job cuts for the month totaled 153,074, a 183% surge from September and 175% higher than the same month a year ago. It was the highest level for any October since 2003. This has been the worst year for announced layoffs since 2009. * WSJ | Builders Are Offering Mortgage-Rate Discounts. Home Buyers Aren’t Biting.: America’s biggest builders are struggling to sell homes even when they offer buyers a 4% mortgage. Their experience suggests rate cuts alone won’t be enough to boost weak sales in the wider housing market. The number of completed but unsold new homes has reached levels last seen in the summer of 2009, data from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis shows. At the end of last year, builders were confident that sales would recover in 2025 and built tens of thousands of units to have enough supply for the spring-buying season. But demand didn’t pick up, and more homes sat unsold. * The Hill | Household debt hits record $18.6T as delinquencies remain elevated: Total household debt climbed to a record $18.6 trillion last quarter, and while most borrowers remain on track with payments, young Americans are feeling the pressure. During the third quarter, 3 percent of outstanding balances became seriously delinquent — 90 days or more past due — the largest quarterly increase since 2014, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Among those ages 18 to 29, the rate was about 5 percent — more than double a year earlier and the highest of any age group. * NBC | Jury acquits D.C. ’sandwich guy’ charged with chucking a sub at a federal agent: The jury — which feasted on sandwiches for lunch Thursday, according to a person familiar with jury lunches — deliberated the charges for several hours Wednesday and Thursday before delivering the verdict. […] Border Patrol Officer Greg Lairmore received two “gag gifts” related to the incident — a plush sandwich and a patch featuring a cartoon of Dunn throwing the sandwich with the words “Felony Footlong” — which the defense team argued showed this was not a serious event in his life. * NYT | Meg White’s Drumming Spoke Louder Than Words: The rest has been silence. After exactly a decade with the White Stripes, Meg White disappeared into the quiet banality of a private life. It’s highly unlikely that she will break that lull by appearing at this weekend’s Rock Hall ceremony in Los Angeles, even as her band earns the honor of being inducted alongside Cyndi Lauper, Outkast, Chubby Checker and others. * Electrek | Australia has so much solar that it’s offering everyone free electricity: So, the Australian government has decided on a scheme to bring those electricity savings to the consumer, with what its calling its “Solar Sharer” program. The program would require electricity retailers to provide free electricity to everyone for at least three hours a day, in recognition of the incredibly low wholesale cost of electricity during daytime due to extensive solar power penetration.
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COGFA: State revenues up a ’solid’ $474 million in first four months of fiscal year
Thursday, Nov 6, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * From COGFA’s October state revenue report…
* October’s personal income tax receipts explained…
* Meanwhile, in Chicago…
Among other things, the city and its school district have a bad habit of relying too heavily on one-time revenues to fund long-term spending. And this is not a recent habit. Remember Mayor Daley’s parking meter deal? A billion dollars put right into the city budget. Poof, it was gone.
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O’Hare, Midway among 40 airports that could be impacted by FAA flight cuts
Thursday, Nov 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The Hill…
Chicago’s O’Hare and Midway are on the list of affected airports. * NBC Chicago…
* AP…
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Musical interlude
Thursday, Nov 6, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller What the people need is a way to make ‘em smile
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Catching up with the congressionals
Thursday, Nov 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Tribune…
* Sun-Times…
The deadline to file as an Independent is May 26. * The Tribune…
Much more in that story. Go read the rest. * 8th Congressional District candidate Junaid Ahmed announced he’s been endorsed by Sen. Rachel Ventura…
* Laura Fine for Congress…
Click here for the full list of endorsements. * Another 9th CD candidate, Sen. Mike Simmons, announced endorsements…
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Roundup: Judge orders feds to improve conditions at Broadview ICE facility
Thursday, Nov 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Sun-Times…
Click here for the full temporary restraining order. * The Tribune…
* More from Capitol News Illinois…
* More…
* NYT | ‘Unnecessarily Cruel’: Judge Expresses Alarm About ICE Detention Conditions: Though it was not addressed in court on Tuesday, Catholic clergy members were recently blocked from administering Christian rites at the facility. Pope Leo XIV, who grew up in suburban Chicago, encouraged American immigration officials to allow faith leaders to deliver communion. The pope has spoken more forcefully against the Trump administration’s treatment of immigrants in recent months. “I would certainly invite the authorities to allow pastoral workers to attend to the needs” of detained immigrants, the pope said. * WTTW | Federal Judge Orders Broadview ICE Detention Center to Improve Conditions, Access to Food and Water: According to the lawsuit, as of June 4, the median time a detainee was held at Broadview was nearly 48 hours — already four times longer than the supposed 12-hour limit for detainees. But by mid-June, ICE data showed the median detention time at Broadview had risen to three days, the lawsuit states, adding that the facility does not “have the capacity or capability to hold the number of detainees” currently being held. * Fox Chicago | Judge orders feds to improve conditions at Broadview ICE facility: Attorneys asked to get inside the facility but were denied. They requested security video to get an idea of the setup and just how many people are really in there. They were told that video for half the month of October somehow disappeared. * Sun-Times | Sen. Duckworth demands end to ’secret detentions’ of citizen protesters by FBI, calls for DOJ investigation: The senator is also asking for all communication requests of people seeking the location of citizens detained by immigration agents, and the cost of detaining people ultimately released without charges. “It has become the modus operandi of Federal agents operating in Chicago to abdicate responsibility for the people they snatch and deny having custody of our citizens for hours before ultimately releasing them, often without criminal charges,” Duckworth wrote in a letter addressed to Patel.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, Nov 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: ‘It’s a disgrace’: Chicagoans describe jarring encounters with feds as judge prepares to rule on ‘blitz’. Sun-Times…
- Bovino, in full uniform, testified on video that the use of force by federal agents in Chicago has been “more than exemplary.” He also testified he would have used more tear gas in Little Village last month if he’d had it. And he admitted that he threw it before he was purportedly hit in the head by a rock, contradicting earlier claims, lawyers said. -U.S. District Judge Sara Ellis says she will rule on a more permanent preliminary injunction at 10 a.m. Thursday. That ruling will almost certainly be appealed to the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. * Related stories… * Sun-Times | Federal judge issues temporary restraining order governing conditions at Broadview ICE facility: Among other demands, the judge is requiring officials at the ICE facility to provide detainees with a clean bedding mat “with sufficient space to sleep”; adequate supplies of soap, toilet paper, towels, oral hygiene and menstrual products; a shower for at least every other day; three full meals with water per day; and prescribed medication. Holding cells must be cleaned twice per day. * Tribune | US Rep. Jesús ‘Chuy’ García defends insider move that cleared path for top staffer to enter Congress: “The clock was ticking, and I was concerned about having an option,” said García, 69, outlining a series of events last week that included his cardiologist admonishing him to take better care of his health and step away from the stress of Congress. That appointment occurred on Oct. 27, the same day his candidate paperwork was filed with the Illinois State Board of Elections in Springfield, he said. * Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker says an Indiana remap might force Illinois to act as he celebrates Democratic wins Tuesday: “An awful lot of people want us to consider redistricting and I have to say we’re watching what Indiana does. You know, we’ve been looking at pairing with different states,” Pritzker told reporters in Alton. “We don’t think that this is a good idea, the redistricting across the country, not a good idea. But unfortunately, Donald Trump is trying to cheat,” he said. “So we’re watching what Indiana does. We may have to react to that. It’s certainly something that people have considered here and the legislature has considered here, but we’ll have to see what happens.” * Capitol News Illinois | Inmate families, advocates speak against mail scanning program: “People often read and re-read mail to remind them of their support system,” he said. “To digitize physical mail is to eliminate the art, beauty and emotion, the texture and even a scent that is unique to physical correspondence. Additionally, there is no evidence to support that the proposed permanent rules will be effective in stopping contraband from entering the IDOC.” Ben Ruddell, director of criminal justice policy at the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois, also questioned whether any evidence supported the idea that the mail was a major source of contraband. He said limiting inmates’ access to mail raised many legal concerns, including First Amendment rights of prisoners and the people who correspond with them. * Chalkbeat Chicago | Illinois releases draft proposal of new school rating system: Illinois is planning to change how it labels schools and switch some of the data it uses to assign those designations. A draft of the accountability redesign posted by the Illinois State Board of Education indicates there would still be five labels, but their names would change slightly. The proposed changes would eliminate the use of the 9th-grade On-Track metric, which measures the percentage of freshmen likely to graduate based on their attendance and grades. The draft also suggests swapping out chronic absenteeism, which measures how many students are absent for 10% or more of the school year, and instead measuring how many students are present for 90% or more of the school year. * Capitol News Illinois | Illinois lawmakers approve state-specific vaccine guidelines, punt on gambling bill: House Bill 767 would allow IDPH Director Sameer Vohra to issue state-specific guidelines while granting more authority to the Immunization Advisory Committee — a group of doctors, nurses and public health professionals who offer guidance to the director. “This bill makes important changes that both codify the role of trusted experts in our vaccine recommendation process and ensure science-based vaccine access through Illinois-regulated insurance plans,” Vohra said in a news release. * Press release | Kifowit’s Momentum Grows Heading Into November; Painters District Councils 14, 30, and 58 Endorse State Rep. Stephanie Kifowit for Illinois: Illinois Painters District Councils 14, 30, and 58 have announced their endorsement of State Representative Stephanie Kifowit for Illinois Comptroller, citing her tireless work ethic and dedication to organized labor. The Councils represent over 10,000 members statewide. * WGN | ‘Absolute terror’: Day care teacher detained by ICE agents on Chicago’s North Side: “ICE agents followed her in and violently detained her. There was a child inside, they identified it as a school. Her sister was on site and showed her paperwork. ICE took her away, nevertheless,” said Ald. Martin. He added, “This is truly horrible. You have the president who will say ‘we’re taking the worst of the worst off the streets’ and ‘there’s more to come in Chicago’ and like, what else? They’ve come to hospitals. They’ve come to day cares. What’s next?” * NBC Chicago | Chicago residents say immigration enforcement is leading to children getting tear-gassed: “I didn’t know what happens when a 2-year-old — they’re so little and their little lungs and everything — gets tear gas in them? And it’s on you?” Parise said. “I didn’t see a ton of what was going on, because my only thing in my mind was like, ‘I have to get home, and we have to get this rinsed off.’” That day, Parise said, she blew through her front door as her husband stared on, startled. She shouted “We just got hit with tear gas!” and headed to the bathroom, where she rinsed her daughter repeatedly, then herself, with water. When that didn’t work, she said, she doused them with milk. * Tribune | More money, stricter rules for Chicago police overtime spending face City Council scrutiny: Mayor Brandon Johnson hopes to give the Chicago Police Department a bigger pot of cash to spend on overtime next year, but wants the money to come with strings attached. […] The department is expected to provide monthly reports and participate in quarterly City Council hearings on its overtime spending next year, where aldermen will decide whether the department can exceed its new overtime cap of $200 million. Police officials are required to compile a monthly report with hours of overtime within each district, the reason for the overtime and other details, including whether it is reimbursable or when officers are detailed to a sister agency such as the Park District. * Sun-Times | CPS CEO search narrowed to 2 candidates and interim CEO Macquline King not 1 of them, sources say: The Chicago Board of Education has narrowed its choice for the next leader down to two candidates and current interim CEO/Supt. Macquline King did not make the cut, according to multiple sources close to the search. […] “We’re just very extremely disappointed, upset and angry for her not to make the final cut,” said Dwayne Truss, a former school board member who is active with the West Side NAACP. Truss said the organization was told about the decision by its own source. “It is totally disrespectful and we hope there’s no politics.” * Block Club | From Chicago To LA, Neighborly Solidarity Fuels Resistance To ICE: But with Immigration and Customs Enforcement set to receive a $75 billion budget increase, LA and Chicago are offering a blueprint to residents of other cities for the fight to come. In recent weeks, Block Club Chicago and LA Public Press interviewed people in both cities to understand how activists are defying ICE, learning from each other, documenting agents’ actions and supporting people impacted by arrests. * Sun-Times | Watch how government ‘propaganda’ techniques portray Chicago as a city at war with the feds: Altogether, the media blitz aims to build public support for these enforcement efforts. Yet the government’s storytelling doesn’t always match what’s happening in communities across the nation’s third-largest city and its suburbs. Nick Cull, a professor at the University of Southern California’s Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism, calls it government “propaganda.” “By propaganda, what I mean is mass political persuasion,” says Cull, who co-edited the book “Propaganda and Mass Persuasion: A Historical Encyclopedia, 1500-present.” * Daily Herald | DuPage County pays up on two overdue election-related bills: “Nothing has changed regarding these legitimate and essential services that were performed for the voters of DuPage County,” she said. “There is no rhyme or reason to the county’s payment procedures. It’s just whatever direction the wind is blowing.” In the clerk’s request for a temporary restraining order to get the bills paid, officials from both companies indicated they would not provide services for the 2026 elections if the bills were not paid. They also wanted assurances that they would be paid for any services provided for the upcoming elections. * Tribune | ‘Doesn’t look good’: ICE agent charged with drunken driving after shift at Broadview detention center: According to police video obtained by the Tribune, Diaz-Torres told officers he had just finished working an 18-hour shift at the ICE holding facility in Broadview and was heading straight to his hotel in Lombard. Though it was nearly 2 a.m., and Broadview is less than 10 miles away, Diaz-Torres couldn’t account for his whereabouts during the roughly 90-minute period after his shift ended and said he didn’t know which direction he had traveled after work. * Lake County News-Sun | Waukegan police hail significant drop in crime: ‘We’re able to stop things before they happen’: Between Jan. 1 and Sunday, the overall crime rate dropped 11.76% from the same period last year, with crimes against persons falling 9.5%. The murder rate fell 40%, and there was a 44.44% reduction in rapes. “We increased the number of officers on patrol, particularly at night,” Police Chief Edgar Navarro said. “We increased the number of investigations. We moved people around. We increased the number of detectives in the criminal investigation unit. We used the drug and gang unit.” * Daily Herald | Mount Prospect residents call for village response to ICE, submit petition: Mount Prospect residents packed village hall Tuesday demanding Mayor Paul Hoefert and the village board take action in response to federal immigration enforcement operations in their community. But Hoefert issued a statement saying the U.S. Constitution prevents municipalities from regulating federal immigration officers. “If one of our Mount Prospect police officers were to actively obstruct or impede a federal agent during the course of their duty, that officer would be in violation of federal law and subject to arrest and federal criminal prosecution for a criminal offense,” he said. * Crain’s | How the transition to a new Pope delayed plans for Northbrook townhomes: A pair of longtime developers who have a deal to build townhouses on the site of a shuttered Catholic church in Northbrook sued the Archdiocese of Chicago over a delay that’s being blamed on recent events at the Vatican. The developers got nicked by a historic change of leadership in Rome, church officials tell Crain’s. The developers’ $7 million purchase of the 12-acre Our Lady of the Brook property on Dundee Road was contracted to close Sept. 2, according to the suit filed by development entity Venture 1 OLB against the Catholic Bishop of Chicago in Cook County Circuit Court. * Daily Herald | Wheaton proposes modest tax increases as part of next budget: Based on council feedback, city staff has recommended a combination of a 3% increase in the property tax levy, an increase in the local sales tax rate from 1% to 1.25%, and an increase in the natural gas use utility tax from 3 cents per therm to 5 cents per therm. The city last increased the local sales tax rate more than 15 years ago. The city has had no increase in the property tax levy for six years through this year. About 11.4% of a resident’s property tax bill goes to the city. * Crain’s | Glenview buying former Signode campus to control redevelopment: Setting up what Glenview’s top planning official called “one of the largest redevelopment opportunities that we have within the village’s limits,” the pending sale would kick off a process to create a master plan for the site with potential uses such as public and school playfields and sports facilities, park space, open space and retail businesses, among other “community-centered” options. * WCIA | LeRoy approves temporary food assistance program: LeRoy’s City Council has approved a temporary food assistance program and residents interested in applying can do so at City Hall. After being approved, recipients will get a voucher which can be used at Kirby Foods (IGA). Eventually, the city said the vouchers may be used at Dollar General. Households of 1-2 people will get $125 per month, while households with three or more people will get $275. LeRoy said the amounts must be used in a single shopping visit and only SNAP items can be purchased with the voucher. * 25News Now | Nearly a third of Tazewell County Board members not seeking re-election: Tazewell County Board is experiencing and unknown number of vacancies for its board, as six members are not seeking re-election, almost a third of the board. Half of the county board members not seeking re-election said they are deciding to step away fpr personal reasons, with one incumbent changing their mind and filing last minute. The other three members were not available for comment. * WMBD | A number of Tazewell County Board members are stepping down: “The primary reason is personal,” Schneider said, “My wife and I have a young family, my real estate business has really taken off and it’s hard to do everything well.” Schneider said that the job of a county board member should be done well, as the role entails major financial and personnel decisions that take time to make. For him, it was time to step down, but he encouraged young people to run for the position after serving for almost four years. * STLPR | Venice grocery store, backed by state grant, will soon begin construction: The Illinois Grocery Initiative covered $2.4 million of the $5 million total cost to build the store and restaurant in Venice. The General Assembly created the $20 million program in 2023 to help seed grocery stores in food deserts in urban and rural parts of the state. The closest grocery stores or supermarkets are at least four miles away from Venice residents in Granite City. Urban communities are considered to be a food desert if grocery stores are more than one mile away, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. * WCIA | U of I political science professor expects more funding issues, travel delays if shutdown drags on: Already, the FAA said it plans to reduce flights by 10% at 40 airports by the end of the week. “That might make more lawmakers nervous that a lot of constituents will end up angry that there will be extreme delays at airports just before the Tuesday and Wednesday before Thanksgiving when a heck of a lot of people travel,” said Gaines * Capitol City Now | Pritzker sticks up for Staunton man: The plight of a Staunton businessman was one of the subjects Gov. JB Pritzker hit Wednesday at a stop in southern Illinois. “Ismael Sandoval was a business owner for two decades in a community that showed up for him,” Pritzker said, “when he was taken away by Donald Trump’s storm troopers because of the color of his skin; and then they found out he was undocumented, and they said, we’re not sending him back. The people of Staunton and the surrounding communities know him and know him to be a good man who has raised his family there, and they showed up, and they are protesting to have him returned to their community.” * ABC | Household debt in America has hit a record high: Report: Total household debt reached $18.59 trillion from July through September of this year, up by $197 billion from the previous quarter. Overall debt levels are up by $4.4 trillion since the end of 2019, just before the pandemic recession. In a call with reporters Wednesday, researchers at the New York Fed said overall household balance sheets do remain “pretty strong,” though there are some signs of weakness among younger borrowers. * WGLT | Rivian CEO touts AI as the near future for automobiles: The head of electric vehicle maker Rivian says the future is not just EVs, it’s artificial intelligence and autonomous vehicles. And it’s coming sooner than you might think. Rivian CEO RJ Scaringe scattered enthusiastic comments about AI and autonomous vehicles throughout an hour-long third quarter earnings call with financial analysts. * NYT | Trump Officials to Cut Air Traffic at 40 Major Airports if Shutdown Continues: Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said the reductions were an attempt to “alleviate the pressure” on air traffic controllers, who have been working without compensation since the start of the shutdown and have not received a paycheck since mid-October. He said the administration would announce the affected markets on Thursday, as the year’s busiest travel season approaches. * LA Times | California backs down on AI laws so more tech leaders don’t flee the state:California’s tech companies, the epicenter of the state’s economy, sent politicians a loud message this year: Back down from restrictive artificial intelligence regulation or they’ll leave. The tactic appeared to have worked, activists said, because some politicians weakened or scrapped guardrails to mitigate AI’s biggest risks. California Gov. Gavin Newsom rejected a bill aimed at making companion chatbots safer for children after the tech industry fought it. In his veto message, the governor raised concerns about placing broad limits on AI, which has sparked a massive investment spree and created new billionaires overnight around the San Francisco Bay Area.
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Good morning!
Thursday, Nov 6, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Thursday, Nov 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Thursday, Nov 6, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news on the website formally known as Twitter. Our Bluesky feed…
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