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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Veto session update (Updated)
Wednesday, Oct 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Wednesday, Oct 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Subscribers were told about this earlier today. Tribune…
* NBC…
…Adding… ABC Chicago’s Rob Elgas…
* Crain’s…
* Background is here and here. From the Ted Dabrowski campaign…
Click here for some background on Mendoza. * Crain’s | Illinois and Trump clash in Supreme Court over mail-ballot rule: Democratic Illinois faced off against the Trump administration and a Republican congressman in the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday, not over the high-stakes issue of federal intervention but about state election rules and who may challenge them. U.S. Rep. Mike Bost, a Republican from downstate Murphysboro who won with about 75% of the vote in his two most recent general elections, has challenged an Illinois State Board of Elections rule that allows the counting of mail-in ballots 14 days after Election Day as long as they are postmarked by that date. * Sun-Times | Climate change wins another one over Illinois’ fall trout stockings: Illinois’ fall trout season will open as scheduled on Oct. 18. But the heat this fall has caused the IDNR to delay stocking this fall. […] Early catch-and-release trout opened at select sites on Saturday, Oct. 4. * Tribune | CTA ‘committed’ to Red Line Extension despite federal funding freeze, acting president says: “CTA is actively working to ensure the smooth delivery of the Red Line extension project as planned,” interim President Nora Leerhsen said at the agency’s board meeting Wednesday. News of the federal funding freeze came Friday, when White House budget director Russ Vought said on social media that the administration was pausing the funds “to ensure funding is not flowing via race-based contracting.” The move came amid broader attacks on federal funding waged by the Trump administration against Democratic-led cities and states. * Sun-Times | Chicago police misconduct settlement would give $26.5M to 2 wrongfully convicted men: The largest of the two settlements on Thursday’s agenda for the City Council’s Finance committee — $18.5 million — would go to Francisco “Frankie” Benitez, who was convicted of the 1989 murder of two Humboldt Park teenagers solely on a confession allegedly coerced by a pair of Chicago police detectives. Benitez’s lawsuit claims he was arrested and “kept in a locked interrogation room all night without sleep,” and that the detectives “brandished a flashlight menacingly” during the interrogation, feeding Benitez details about the crime. * AP | Soccer match between Argentina and Puerto Rico moved from Chicago to Florida amid immigration crackdown: A soccer match between Argentina and Puerto Rico, originally scheduled for next week in Chicago, has been relocated to Florida amid the immigration crackdown in the city, a person familiar with the decision told The Associated Press on Wednesday. The friendly match was supposed to be played Tuesday at Soldier Field in Chicago but will be moved to Chase Stadium in Fort Lauderdale. An Argentine Football Association executive confirmed the move to the AP and said it was because of unrest in Chicago, where President Donald Trump has deployed the National Guard to quell protests against the immigration crackdown. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the relocation had not been publicly announced. * Crain’s | Crypto payments company Coinflow raises $25 million in series A funding: Coinflow, a Chicago-based provider of payment services to companies using stablecoins, raised $25 million it said will allow it to expand its coverage to more than 100 countries, increase hiring and develop new products. The Series A funding round was led by Pantera Capital. CMT Digital, Coinbase Ventures, The Fintech Fund, Jump Capital, Reciprocal Ventures, and founders and operators from more than a dozen other companies also participated. The cash influx to the local startup is the latest sign of bullishness for an industry that was teetering on the brink of collapse three years ago. * Sun-Times | Damen Silos demolition resumes after owner submits dust-control plan: The owner of the Damen Silos has been given the go-ahead by the city to resume demolition of the historic structures after the work was paused last week due to concerns about harmful dust leaving the site. Heneghan Wrecking, the contractor for owner Michael Tadin Jr., was given the green light to continue demolition on Wednesday, according to city health officials. City officials said they were concerned about the potential for excess dust and asked for a revised plan to contain it. * Crain’s | Photographer behind ‘Folded Map’ project wins MacArthur ‘genius grant’: The MacArthur Fellows each receive an unrestricted $800,000, paid out over five years, to pursue their own creative, intellectual and professional inclinations, according to the foundation. The foundation highlighted her work using photography, maps and multimedia storytelling to “articulate the vast disparities in conditions, infrastructure, and investment between Chicago’s neighborhoods” while also creating “pathways for residents to begin the process of restitution and repair.” * Chalkbeat Chicago | 16 quotes about being a Chicago Board of Education member: Chalkbeat spoke to 15 current and one former board member about what it’s been like to navigate major issues, including passing a budget, hiring an interim leader, and figuring out how to be responsive to their constituents. Over roughly 16 hours of interviews, board members shared insight into the challenges of navigating political divides, the obstacles in communicating with so many colleagues, the time commitment for this unpaid role, especially while balancing jobs and family, and other topics. * Daily Southtown | Tinley Park eases temporary restriction on business licenses: Two months into a six-month ban on new business licenses and zoning permits, the Tinley Park Village Board carved out a few exceptions Tuesday. The revised moratorium allows building owners to replace business tenants if they leave and allows existing businesses to relocate, as long as zoning and use codes are followed. The original ordinance restricted the village from issuing new businesses licenses and certain zoning permits for 13 different types of establishments including grocery stores, coffee shops, gas stations, salons, dry cleaning and hotels. * Crain’s | Northwestern renaming Lake Forest Hospital after Ken Griffin gift: The announcement follows Griffin’s $10 million gift to Northwestern Medicine last year, the first splashy Chicago donation by the billionaire since decamping for Florida in 2022. Northwestern did not immediately respond to a request for clarification on the size of the gift tied to the Lake Forest hospital and its relation to last year’s donation. Gratz Griffin is a former Lake Forest resident, the health system said in a press release, and her family have relied on Lake Forest Hospital for care across generations. * WCIA | EIU offering separation incentive to staff amid ‘budget restructuring’: The Voluntary Separation Incentive Program document is dated back to Sept. 1. Eligible faculty and staff received a notification package on Sept. 12. More recently, those who decided to agree to the separation needed to sign the notification letter and return it to HR by Oct. 3. The separation agreement will be distributed by HR to staff by Oct. 10. Then, EIU said, the signed separation agreement is due back to HR by Oct. 21. * WICS | University of Illinois band to perform in 2026 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade: The announcement, made by Barry Houser, director of the Marching Illini, came as a surprise to the students, who were chosen from over 100 nationwide applicants. The band will be one of 10 marching bands featured in the centennial edition of the parade. The Marching Illini, known as the “Nation’s Premier College Marching Band,” has a storied history of captivating audiences with its innovative performances. * WSIL | From North Carolina to Montana: Southern Illinois teen captivates communities through art: “I would say that I practically came out of the womb with a crayon in my hand!” Deiters said. “As most kids, I thoroughly enjoyed drawing, but my main motivation was always to create art for the people who I loved in my life. Along my artistic journey, there were many stick figure drawings of my family. As I got a little older, I gravitated towards drawing, especially colored pencils.” * AP | Dolly Parton responds to concerns about her health: ‘I’m not dying’: Dolly Parton “ain’t dead yet,” the country superstar said on social media Wednesday following public speculation about her health. “There are just a lot of rumors flying around. But I figured if you heard it from me, you’d know that I was OK,” the 79-year-old singer said in a new two-minute video posted on Instagram. “I’m not ready to die yet. I don’t think God is through with me. And I ain’t done working.” * NYT | Before Trump Ordered In Troops, Federal Officers Called Portland Protests ‘Low Energy’: Internal reports from the week before Mr. Trump ordered troops into Portland show that, by and large, the officers observed displays of civil disobedience, including protesters standing in front of vehicles on the road, playing loud music and “flipping a bird,” and an older woman using chalk to write on a wall. They also described some tense incidents, such as at least two confrontations between protesters and counterprotesters and a suspicious car that “lurched” at Department of Homeland Security officers. But local officials have said the city is well equipped to manage the demonstrations, and that an infusion of federal troops is not warranted.
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Catching up with the federal candidates
Wednesday, Oct 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The Hill…
* Hilarious…
His campaign took the video down… * Click here for a little background if you need it. A completely false and now-deleted post from 7th Congressional Candidate Anthony Driver Jr…
According to his campaign, Jason Friedman has “no affiliation and nothing to do with Friedman Real Estate.” Multiple outlets who covered the rally where Driver also made this claim (Block Club and Tribune) did not report on the erroneous accusation. * Raja Krishnamoorthi’s Senate campaign…
The video…
Transcript…
* On to the 7th Congressional District. Press release…
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United States president calls for jailing of Illinois governor, Chicago mayor (Updated)
Wednesday, Oct 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * The party of limited government…
The post is here. * The president didn’t elaborate, but the Tribune speculates…
* CBS 2…
* Drudge’s front page… * Asked for comment, the Speaker of the United States House of Representatives dodged the question. I do not believe a follow-up question was asked. *** UPDATE *** Gov. Pritzker was asked about the president’s statement today…
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RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois
Wednesday, Oct 8, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Retailers like Joliet’s Internode Greenery and Home serve their communities as more than just brick-and-mortar stores. Internode owner Michelle Arana-Bianchi says she wants Illinois lawmakers to know that her store, and other small businesses, are the backbone of communities and the support they provide goes far beyond selling of retail goods. 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. Policies that support small businesses help communities thrive as retailers like Michelle are better equipped to meet local needs. We Are Retail and IRMA are showcasing the retailers who make Illinois work.
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ICC panel: Nicor’s rate hike should be cut by $110 million
Wednesday, Oct 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Daily Herald…
Click here for the 380-page proposed order. * Tribune…
* Some react from the Sun-Times…
Thoughts?
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Say No To Anti-Competitive Transmission Legislation
Wednesday, Oct 8, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Voters and the Governor already rejected lawmakers’ push for anti-competitive “Right of First Refusal” (ROFR) legislation that hands transmission contracts to incumbent utilities. Gatekeeping legislation with the principles of ROFR limits competition and raises the barrier for other qualified transmission operators – all which increases the power of ComEd and Ameren while passing on higher rates to consumers. The new approach won’t fool voters. Let’s remember:
• 76% say anti-competition laws only strengthen utilities, not citizens. • 75% say ending competition drives up prices and kills savings. The message is clear: voters want more competition, not less. Voters’ concerns about higher energy prices are rising fast. Since this poll, they’ve endured a sizzling summer with skyrocketing prices, and a new report says the cost of heating a home this winter is expected to jump nearly 8%. Illinois families are feeling the squeeze of energy bills. Competition is the key to relief Voters have made their voice clear: Say no to energy inflation. Don’t hand more power and control to ComEd and Ameren. Say no to ending cost-cutting competition.
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‘We could hear them laughing’
Wednesday, Oct 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
* More…
* Sun-Times | Feds dropping charges against couple who lawfully carried guns outside ICE facility: The move comes after a grand jury refused to hand up an indictment in the case, a defense attorney told the Chicago Sun-Times. Richard Kling cited the old expression that a good prosecutor could convince a grand jury to indict a ham sandwich. “Apparently they had less evidence than a ham sandwich,” said Kling, who represents Ray Collins. * Tribune | Charges dropped against couple in Broadview immigration protest after federal grand jury refuses to indict: Although Havey said the charges were being dismissed “without prejudice,” meaning prosecutors could seek to refile the case within 30 days, Kling said he highly doubted that would happen, noting the standard to get an indictment was very low. “If they couldn’t get a grand jury to indict, how are they going to prove the case beyond a reasonable doubt to a jury?” he said. * ABC Chicago | Decision on lawsuit over Broadview ICE detention center fencing will be made by Thursday: judge: The north side entrance of the facility remains blocked by tall fences. Attorneys for the federal government argued in court the fencing across Beach Street was needed to conduct business and to protect vehicles and personnel, after conflicts erupted during protests of ICE action during “Operation Midway Blitz.” * News Nation | Feds use ‘violent force’ on protesters, press, clergy at Broadview ICE facility: ACLU suit: The ACLU filed the suit jointly with a coalition of news outlets, media associations and protesters, including the Illinois Press Association, Block Club Chicago and the Chicago Headline Club. In it, they say federal agents used “indiscriminate” force and interfered with First Amendment rights, including freedoms of speech and the press. “Never in modern times has the federal government undermined bedrock constitutional protections on this scale, or usurped states’ police power by directing federal agents to carry out an illegal mission against the people for the government’s own benefit,” the scathing suit read.
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Vote YES to 340B Legislation That Protects Healthcare Services in Your Community
Wednesday, Oct 8, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] There’s a lot at stake for Illinois hospitals participating in the federal 340B program: first and foremost, it’s their patients. The program, which dates to 1992, has helped hospitals serving uninsured and low-income patients expand access to care and provide more comprehensive healthcare services. Drugmaker restrictions have made it difficult for hospitals to offer the services and discounted prescription drugs that underserved communities deserve. Nearly 20 states have passed legislation to protect 340B contract pharmacy arrangements. Illinois has an opportunity to return the 340B program to its original intent through legislation before the General Assembly, House Bill 2371 SA 2, the Patient Access to Pharmacy Protection Act. While Big Pharma has legally challenged similar laws passed in other states, the courts have repeatedly sided with healthcare providers. Most recently, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit last month upheld a lower court ruling that refused a drugmaker request to stop enforcement of a Mississippi law protecting 340B pricing in pharmacy contracts. It was the second appellate court ruling to uphold state law protecting 340B contract pharmacy arrangements, adding to the eight district court cases decided in providers’ favor. Over 100 Illinois hospitals and the patients they serve benefit from 340B savings. Vote YES on HB 2371 SA 2 to safeguard the 340B drug discount program—and help hospitals care for low-income and uninsured patients. Learn more.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, Oct 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Lawmakers ‘ready to move’ on transit reform, but funding agreement remains elusive. Capitol News Illinois…
- “The cliff is coming,” Rep. Eva-Dina Delgado, D-Chicago, the House Democrat leading transit reform, told Capitol News Illinois. “It’s coming either in July or maybe it’s coming in October for Metra, and maybe it’s coming in (20)27 for Pace. But it’s coming. And I just think that we’re at a point right now where we’re ready to move.” … Delgado said lawmakers are on the “2-yard line,” but she declined to rule out any specific taxes from the final product. … Delgado said preserving free, reduced-fare and paratransit rides is also a major priority and added it is a key sticking point in negotiations over funding. -“The reforms are easy to vote for,” Illinois AFL-CIO President Tim Drea told Capitol News Illinois. “The funding is not. So, if people are going to stand up and say, ‘I support public transit,’ they have to support it 100%, not just a little bit.” Sponsored by Ameren Illinois
* Block Club | ICE Violated Consent Decree With Warrantless Arrests, Federal Judge In Chicago Says: They claimed that such arrests violated a three-year consent decree banning warrantless arrests unless agents have probable cause to believe someone is in the United States unlawfully and is a flight risk. On Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Cummings concluded that attorneys for the National Immigration Justice Center and the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois provided enough evidence to show that ICE arrested 22 people without a warrant in violation of the consent decree and federal law. * Tribune | ICC judges recommend cutting $110M from proposed Nicor Gas rate increase: * WCIA | Illinois climatologist: Rain won’t change drought conditions: State climatologist Trent Ford said he was getting readings of less than an inch in areas that got rain on Tuesday. Ford said one good thing about the dreary wet weather is that it’ll reduce evaporation due to cloud cover. But, Ford also said it’ll take a lot more rain than what we saw to reverse the drought conditions. “What we need is not just one big event, but several wet months consecutively throughout the rest of the fall, the winter into the spring to kind of dig us out of the, you know, the deficit that we have right now,” Ford said. * Sun-Times | Pentagon chief Hegseth more interested in pushups than talking with Illinois leaders, Pritzker says: “I got no call. And I got no call all afternoon, all evening, and I have not received a call at all,” Pritzker said in an interview with the Chicago Sun-Times Tuesday. “And it turns out that Pete Hegseth was at a football game, and he was doing pushups as part of a show of Guinness Book of World Records. So he was out having fun after saying that he was going to call me and didn’t. And they’re sending troops while he’s going to a football game and ignoring what he should have been doing.” * Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker says President Trump deploying troops to Chicago due to ‘dementia’ and obsessive fixations: “This is a man who’s suffering dementia,” Pritzker said in a telephone interview with the Tribune. “This is a man who has something stuck in his head. He can’t get it out of his head. He doesn’t read. He doesn’t know anything that’s up to date. It’s just something in the recesses of his brain that is effectuating to have him call out these cities. “And then, unfortunately, he has the power of the military, the power of the federal government to do his bidding, and that’s what he’s doing.” * Press Release | Governor Pritzker Announces NANO Nuclear to Establish Operations in Illinois: NANO Nuclear recently acquired a property in the Chicagoland area featuring a 23,537 square foot stand alone facility, including a dedicated 7,400 square foot non nuclear demonstration area. The facility is expected to support nuclear engineers, component manufacturers, researchers, and support personnel who will work in collaboration with the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign on NANO Nuclear’s lead project, the KRONOS MMR™ Microreactor Energy System. * Jim Dey | State’s September revenues come out on the positive side: For September, revenues increased by $413 million (8.6 percent), and for the first quarter of fiscal year 2025-26, they were up by $450 million (3.7 percent). State income-tax payments were decisive, increasing by $307 million — 10.3 percent — in September compared with 2024. Comparing the first quarter of fiscal year 2025-26 to 2024-25, they’re up by $258 million — a 3.7 percent hike. * Sun-Times | Chicago cultural commissioner Clinée Hedspeth resigns City Hall post: Before reaching her year anniversary in the post, Hedspeth faced bullying accusations from several staffers. By spring, a group of more than 140 artists under the banner of Artists for Chicago called on Johnson to address the dysfunction within the department. * NYT | Neighbors Warn Neighbors as Fear of ICE Ripples Across Chicago: Tensions are flaring up like small, intense wildfires. At elementary schools on the West Side, parents have organized to stand guard at dismissal time. Some construction businesses are keeping their warehouse doors open to keep an eye out for ICE agents. Owners of small businesses are doing their own deliveries, to protect their Latino employees from driving through the city streets. * Tribune | Staffing issues cause ground delay at O’Hare amid government shutdown: According to flight tracking website FlightAware, 21% of flights departing O’Hare on Tuesday were delayed. “This is what happens when you have a government shutdown,” said Dennis Tajer, an American Airlines pilot based out of O’Hare and spokesperson for the Allied Pilots Association union. Tajer said he expects delays to get worse the longer the shutdown drags on. Still, he said, it’s the right call to institute a ground delay when staffing in air traffic towers is lacking. * The Triibe | So, about that letter of support for Chicago Ald. Jessie Fuentes: 13 alderpeople didn’t sign it: Back in January, Alds. Beale, Quinn, Lopez, Tabares, Scott, Sposato, Napilitano, Reilly and Gardiner were among the 11 councilmembers who voted in favor of amending the city’s Welcoming City Ordinance to allow Chicago police to work with federal immigration officials. It was rejected by a 39-11 vote. The TRiiBE interviewed Fuentes after the letter of support went out. “If any of those alderpeople don’t find that incident a violation of our constitutional rights, then I don’t know what they will find a violation of our constitutional rights,” she said. “What I was doing in that moment was representing, standing up for my constituents as the local elected alderperson of the 26th Ward.” * Sun-Times | Patricia Smith, a Chicago poet ‘who writes screams’: “The Intentions of Thunder,” the new collection of poems by the city’s own Patricia Smith, is a gorgeous, heartbreaking evocation of her life, family and troubled nation. Tuesday it was named as a finalist for the National Book Award. * CBS Chicago | Jefferson Park residents confused over CDOT’s installation of bump-outs as solution to speeding: A chicane is a series of alternating curb extensions and islands that narrow the roadway and require vehicles to follow the S-shaped curving to discourage speeding.[…] The spokesperson said as with all CDOT designs, the installation was developed to accommodate larger vehicles and snow and ice removal operations. An object marker sign will also be installed on the new infrastructure to enhance visibility for drivers. * Daily Herald | ‘Great fear and uncertainty’: Lake County leaders speak out against escalating ICE operations: Dulce Ortiz, executive director of Mano a Mano Family Resource Center and president of the board of the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, said activities the group cautioned about in September were coming to pass. “We are here today with urgency and determination,” she said. “The escalation we warned about is here.” * Lake County News-Sun | Border Patrol arrestee gets hero’s welcome at Waukegan meeting: ‘Stand up for what you believe in’: Slightly more than an hour after she was released Monday from federal custody for allegedly impeding a federal investigation, Dariana Fajardo arrived at Waukegan City Hall to say thank you to supporters, and before she left, she received four standing ovations. Arriving during a City Council meeting, she quietly took a seat and initially went unnoticed. As she sat there, she heard speaker after speaker talk about what happened to her earlier in the afternoon, when U.S. Border Patrol agents pulled her from her car and took her into custody. * Daily Southtown | Will County Board will consider resolution to prohibit immigration enforcement: The Will County Board will consider next week a resolution asking the state and federal government to adopt polices to prohibit immigration enforcement in courthouses, schools and other sensitive community spaces and ensure that residents, regardless of immigration status, can live without fear of harassment and racial profiling. The proposed resolution was passed Tuesday at the board’s Legislative Committee meeting with four Democratic committee members supporting it. The measure moves to the County Board for a vote on Oct. 16. * Tribune | Oak Park vote to protect gender affirming care generates community debate: With the addition of gender affirming to its Human Rights Ordinance, Oak Park will now prohibit village agencies or agents from providing information about or otherwise investigating or aid in the investigation of any person or entity for providing or receiving gender affirming care. The ordinance also states the village will object to any subpoena or requests for information from any out of state person or entity which is investigating someone in connection with a law criminalizing gender affirming care. * Daily Herald | Will Buffalo Grove join other communities in regulating e-bikes?: Although the village has waged a public education campaign, including sharing information at such public events as the Buffalo Grove Police Bike Rodeo, it does not have an ordinance. Anderson suggested a local ordinance of limited scope that adopts current state laws, while enabling the village to use its own administrative adjudication program. Village Manager Dane Bragg said adopting state provisions would allow police officers to write citations. * Aurora Beacon-News | Batavia police will be getting new body cameras with AI features: This will be a new contract for the department, as its current five-year contract with Midwest Public Safety for Getac body-worn cameras for officers is expiring in March, according to a memo from Batavia Police Chief Eric Blowers. As its current contract ends, the department considered three different vendors, including its current vendor, per the memo. The Axon contract was the most expensive of the three options, coming in at just under $765,000 for five years. […] Blowers said Axon’s services include AI features like an auto-transcription tool that he said will increase efficiency in writing police reports, and a live translation feature on the body cameras. They also offer an AI-assisted tool for making redactions on body camera footage for release. * Block Club | 72 Drivers Ticketed In 10 Days For Using Shoulders To Beat Traffic, Cook County Sheriff’s Office Says: The Cook County Sheriff’s Office ticketed 72 drivers for illegally riding on expressway shoulders as part of enhanced patrols. The sheriff’s office has issued over 900 citations for the offense since late June, a spokesperson said in a statement. The emphasis on enhanced expressway patrols is meant to address “ongoing concerns about unsafe driving,” according to a video posted on the Cook County Sheriff’s Office’s X account. * Daily Herald | Eyeing redevelopment, Des Plaines agrees to purchase downtown building for $1.1 million: The deal gives the city control over the former Leona’s at 1504 Miner St. While only occupying a fraction of an acre, the building fronts the main drag of downtown Des Plaines and is at an entrance to the Metropolitan Square development. “It is such a key, important piece,” Community and Economic Development Director Jeff Rogers told the city council before its vote Monday. * Daily Herald | Amazon set to build high-tech service hub for delivery trucks in Arlington Heights: No employees will work in the garage, which will be constructed east of the main warehouse fronting Kennicott Avenue. Instead, an automated sensor system will scan each truck and assess maintenance needs, such as tire pressure and rotations. * Daily Herald | Learn the history of the suburban trolley network Oct. 11: A new mode of transport was created after the discovery and commercialization of electric power. Learn about electric intersuburban trolleys at 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 11, at the Glen Ellyn History Center, 800 N. Main St. Douglas Rundell, a volunteer train operator at the Fox River Trolley Museum in South Elgin, will cover the fascinating history of some lines that served Northern Illinois, including the one that served the village of Glen Ellyn. * WIFR | Fire departments across Winnebago County leave Mercyhealth’s 911 system: In 2024, the chief led North Park through a major switch – leaving Rockcom for the Winnebago County Sheriff’s Office. “It was a very hard decision because you have that connection to them too that you walk away from, and that’s hard to do,” said the North Park Chief. ”Like, ‘Oh boy, are they going to do this well?’” In an interview on Oct. 7, Hallstrom argued the switch paid off with better response times and budgets for his district. * KWQC | Preliminary hearing postponed for 2 Mercer County School District employees: Amberly Norton and Andrea Long are facing charges after police said they illegally accessed students’ medical records. In court Tuesday, the preliminary hearing for Norton and Long was continued to Oct. 20. Norton and Long, along with the district’s superintendent, Timothy Farquer, were taken into custody on Sept. 24. * WGLT | Town of Normal provides update on Vision 2050 Sustainability plan: Davison said at places like Uptown and the Connie Link Amphitheater, single-use water bottles are plentiful. At large events and meeting places, the department would like to see them eliminated. “It’s very specific, but it’s also a very high-profile item that we have at a lot of our events, especially when you think about all the events in Uptown and at Connie Link most of them are happening at the hottest part of the year,” she said. “And people need to drink water, that’s super important.” * WSIL | Jackson County Ambulance Service celebrates first fielded all-female EMS crew: Jackson County Ambulance Service made history last night by deploying its first all-female crew. Led by Lt. Diamond, the team demonstrated professionalism, strength, and dedication. The ambulance district said this marks a significant milestone for Carbondale and Jackson County. * CNN | Government shutdown hits air travel, closing a control tower and causing delays across the country: Perhaps the most dramatic impact was at the Burbank airport where the control tower was entirely shut down around 4:15 p.m. Monday afternoon. Flights could take off and land but had to follow procedures typically used at small airports without control towers. Delays of more than two and a half hours were reported at one point. Denver International and Newark Liberty International airports saw ground delays where flights were prohibited from taking off until controllers were able to handle them. Both airports are major hubs for United Airlines; the airline did not respond to CNN’s request for comment. * Bloomberg | Can Canada Survive Donald Trump?: Canada’s future is less secure than perhaps at any time in postwar history. Over recent decades, with a free flow of trade between the nations, Canada has grown increasingly intertwined with the US. Three quarters of Canadian exports go to the US. Roughly half of foreign direct investment in Canada originates in the US. Until recently, many companies straddled the border as if no line existed. According to the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, 2.3 million jobs in Canada — 10% or more of total employment — depend on US trade. Tens of thousands of jobs have already been lost as result of President Donald Trump’s trade war. Even industries that might seem immune to US pressure are not: For example, an overwhelming share of Canadian crude oil exports go to the US. Remarkably, Canadian national defense depends even more on a deeply integrated US alliance. * NYT | N.J. Attorney General Investigating Uber Over Handling of Sexual Assaults: The investigation was prompted by a New York Times report in August that found sexual violence on Uber rides was far more pervasive than what the company had previously disclosed, the people said. Uber received a report of sexual assault or sexual misconduct in the United States almost every eight minutes on average between 2017 and 2022, according to court documents. * WATE | Dolly Parton not ‘feeling her best,’ sister says, asks for prayer: “Last night, I was up all night praying for my sister, Dolly,” Freida Parton said on Facebook. “I truly believe in the power of prayer, and I have been lead to ask all of the world that loves her to be prayer warriors and pray with me.” She added, “She’s strong, she’s loved, and with all the prayers being lifted for her, I know in my heart she’s going to be just fine. Godspeed, my sissy Dolly. We all love you!”
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Good morning!
Wednesday, Oct 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Today’s song wasn’t intended by the late songwriter Mark Linkous (Sparklehorse) to be about this topic, but art is universal and it touched me deeply, so I’d like to send it out to everyone who is either enduring cancer and everything that goes with it or loves someone who is… Sometimes I get so sad It’s a sad and beautiful world Sometimes I just won’t go It’s a sad and beautiful world Sometimes days go speeding past It’s a sad and beautiful world Ms. Staples will be at the Chicago Theatre in January. * How’s your life?
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and a campaign update
Wednesday, Oct 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Wednesday, Oct 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Wednesday, Oct 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Wednesday, Oct 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news on the website formally known as Twitter. We’re experimenting this week with a new app which feeds Bluesky posts. Still tweaking it…
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Oct 7, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Shaw Local…
* The Electronic Frontier Foundation…
* WCIA | From the Farm: IL Ag Director talks shutdown, proposed research shifts: Farming and agriculture continue across the country amidst the government shutdown, but the folks who connect farmers to the world and the economy have been instructed to go home until further notice. It’s left Jerry Costello, Director of the Illinois Department of Agriculture, quite incensed. “To furlough 50% of the employees at the U.S. Department of Agriculture on the very first day that the shutdown is commenced, it’s ludicrous,” Costello said. * Subscribers know more. KWQA | Air Force veteran Josh Higgins to run for Illinois House District 94 seat : Josh Higgins, a U.S. Air Force veteran and West Central School Board member, has announced he will run for the Illinois House of Representatives in the 94th District. […] He will face incumbent Rep. Norine Hammond, who has represented the district since December 2010. Hammond currently serves as Deputy Republican Leader in the Illinois House and has served on the Rules, Human Services, Consumer Protection, Executive, Public Utilities, and Gaming committees. * Herald Whig | Dabrowski encouraged by response of area Republicans to his candidacy: Buoyed by the response his campaign has received in a little less than a month, Republican gubernatorial candidate Ted Dabrowski spent Tuesday in Quincy shoring up support from his party’s faithful and speaking to the media about his plans if elected to the governor’s mansion. On the third day of a four-day blitz through Central and West-Central Illinois, Dabrowski, who announced his candidacy for the GOP nomination Sept. 12, discussed what he deems are the most crucial issues the state’s voters face in determining who should be elected governor in November of 2026. * WTVO | Pritzker threatens to exit governors association over Texas troop deployment to Illinois: “The credibility of the National Governors Association — and our integrity as state executives—rests on our willingness to apply our principles consistently, regardless of which administration attacks them. Should National Governors Association leadership choose to remain silent, Illinois will have no choice but to withdraw from the organization. I remain hopeful that principled leadership will prevail over political calculation and we can chart a path forward together,” Pritzker continued. * Fox Chicago | Chicago named best big city in US for 9th straight year: survey: The 2025 Readers’ Choice Awards, based on more than 750,000 votes, once again recognized Chicago’s mix of culture, architecture, dining, and hospitality. The city was also named one of the friendliest in the world by the U.K. edition of Condé Nast Traveller, the only U.S. city to earn that honor this year. * Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson says federal agents who break city law should be charged with crime: “It’s a crime. Here’s the thing, anyone who commits a crime should be charged,” Johnson said when pressed on his stance during a Tuesday morning news conference. “I mean, isn’t that the basic rule of what they ostensibly refer to as ‘law and order?’” But Johnson offered no specifics on how he thinks enforcement against such agents should work. And Chicago police Supt. Larry Snelling said this week that cops will not and cannot arrest federal agents “because someone deems what they are doing is illegal.” * Chicago Reader | The Hyde Park Jazz Festival defies federal defunding to shine brighter than ever: This year, I’d planned to cut town during the Hyde Park Jazz Festival—I thought I’d finally follow in the footsteps of notorious photographer Jim Marshall and shoot the Monterey Jazz Festival in California. After all, Chicago is so dangerous, as we’re constantly being told. And in May, the noisome Trump administration had withdrawn the HPJF’s grant from the National Endowment for the Arts—$30,000, or nearly a third of its core artist budget. * Tribune | Judge to rule this week whether ICE security fence in Broadview must come down: During arguments in the lawsuit Tuesday, U.S. District Judge LaShonda Hunt began by warning both sides she didn’t want to get caught up in the politics of the moment. “It is very charged, it is very challenging,” Hunt said. “There are so many words we could use here, but it is volatile. But those issues are not before me.” * Lake County News-Sun | Waukegan mayor intercedes in Border Patrol arrest: ‘I want to … make sure our residents are safe’: With a large Mexican flag on the hood of her car, Fajardo was in a line of vehicles on West Street, near Washington Street, in the vicinity of City Hall, unable to drive forward when agents approached her and told her to move her car. “I was driving around and told to leave,” she said. “I was boxed in. Two men were standing in front of me. I could not move. I told them I couldn’t leave, and they pulled me out of my car.” […] “The young lady called out to me by name,” [Mayor Sam Cunningham] said. “I know her parents. I told her to calm down, and do what they tell you. I said don’t worry about your vehicle, we’ll get it secured for you. I spoke to one of the agents, and let him know who I am.” * Daily Southtown | Dolton settles sexual harassment lawsuit involving Trustee Andrew Holmes and former Mayor Tiffany Henyard: The settlement approvals come in the wake of another lawsuit filed against Holmes alleging he abused his power to sexually assault a 16-year-old when she was recovering from sex trafficking. Holmes was a prominent anti-violence activist before being elected a Dolton trustee in 2016. While Holmes tried to vote against the settlement for the former employee Monday, he was told he must abstain from both settlement votes due to being named in the lawsuit. The former employee’s settlement was approved 5-0, while the settlement for the other plaintiff was approved despite Trustee Stan Brown voting no and Trustee Kiana Belcher voting present. * Daily Herald | ‘It’s an honor’: Attorney appointed as Glen Ellyn village trustee: Robert Duncan fills the seat made vacant by the passing of the late Trustee Steve Szymanski, who died only months into his first term. Duncan will bring “additional balance, insight and professionalism to our board, as well as empathy and understanding of what our residents experience in daily life,” Glen Ellyn Village President Jim Burket said. * Daily Southtown | Sixth graders at Calumet City middle school given nicotine gum by teacher: Daphin March said she picked up her son Dae’jon, who goes by DJ, from school at about 11 a.m. on Friday after receiving a call from the nurse’s office that he was feeling nauseous. She heard he had been given a piece of gum in a prior class, along with about a dozen other children. District 149 issued a statement Tuesday that the teacher, who it did not name, was on leave while the case is reviewed. “While we cannot comment on personnel matters or ongoing investigations, please know that our District remains committed to maintaining a safe and supportive environment for all students,” the district said in an emailed statement. “We appreciate the understanding and trust of our community as we address this matter responsibly and with transparency.” * IPM Newsroom | Virtual water: Inside Illinois’ data centers, water flows quietly — and unchecked: The steady hum inside the National Petascale Computing Facility (NPCF) [in Urbana] is so loud that it’s hard to hear anything else inside. But beneath this noise is a hidden current of water. “Today, it’s not much water,” said Mohammad Rantisi, the engineer monitoring NPCF operations. He pointed towards one of the pumps: “This is 575 gallons per minute.” On that day, at least three pumps were moving water in quantities ranging from 179 to 400 gallons per minute. This is a relatively small load, according to Rantisi. * The Detroit News | Rivian CEO: New model, to be made in Normal, key to profitability: The Irvine-based EV maker is facing some challenges as it looks forwarding to launching in the first half of next year its smaller R2 SUV set to start at $45,000. The new model will be made in Normal, where the company is expanding its footprint and has produced all of its electric pickup trucks, SUVs and commercial delivery vans since 2021. * WIFR | Northern Illinois University faces unfair labor law charges: Employees at Northern Illinois University file unfair labor practice charges against the school after management tried to exclude supporters of the union from attending negotiations. Management reportedly told union members that if they didn’t agree to restrict supporters from attending bargaining, the university would refuse to negotiate. The Illinois labor law says that management cannot dictate to a union who is present on its behalf during negotiations. * BND | Negotiations stall on new contract for Cahokia School District teachers, staff: Monday marked the 37th day Cahokia Unit School District teachers have been working without a contract, and the 92nd day for the district’s secretaries and service workers. That’s an unprecedented for the district, both the Cahokia Federation of Teachers Local 1272 and Superintendent Curtis McCall Jr. said. As administrators and union members face sticking points with contract policies, there’s one thing both sides agree on: They want to avoid a strike. * STL PR | Illinois American Water buys Madison’s wastewater system for $3M: The publicly traded company acquired the small town’s wastewater system for $3 million, the company announced. The sale will add roughly 1,500 customers to Illinois American’s network in the St. Louis area. In a public notice, the city said the current monthly charge for wastewater treatment customers using 3,500 gallons of water per month is approximately $67. After the sale, the average wastewater charge for customers using 3,500 gallons will be approximately $76. * Harvest Public Media | Americans are drinking less. What does that mean for winemakers in the Heartland?: “I feel extremely optimistic about the next five years,” Phelps said, adding that Clad and Cordon and other wineries in southern Illinois are planting more vines to meet demand. But he emphasized that businesses need to offer more than one product and experience. Along with making wine and serving Illinois beer, Clad and Cordon plans to produce its own hard cider. Live music, event spaces and an on-site lake where visitors can catch fish are part of the model, as well. * The Hill | America saw ‘essentially no job growth’ last month, Moody’s warns: With official data on hold due to the government shutdown, economists are turning to private reports, and the early signs, according to Moody’s, aren’t good. “This data shows that the job market is weak and getting weaker,” Moody’s Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi wrote Sunday on social platform X. * Politico | Supreme Court seems skeptical of Colorado’s ban on conversion therapy: Several justices also wondered whether a ruling allowing Colorado to ban so-called conversion therapy would amount to a green light to conservative states to ban similar counseling that encourages young people to affirm feelings about their gender identity, even if it differs from the one they were assigned to at birth. “It’s pretty important that we think about how this would apply to cases down the road. … Can a state pick a side?” Justice Amy Coney Barrett asked. * AP | Bob Ross paintings to be auctioned to support public TV stations after federal funding cuts: Bonhams in Los Angeles will auction three of Ross’ paintings on Nov. 11. Other auctions will follow in London, New York, Boston and online. All profits are pledged to stations that use content from distributor American Public Television. The idea is to help stations in need with licensing fees that allow them to show popular programs that include “The Best of Joy of Painting,” based on Ross’ show, “America’s Test Kitchen,” “Julia Child’s French Chef Classics” and “This Old House.” * The Independent | ICE kept most offices open during the shutdown - but not the one that inspects facilities: Trump administration officials have vowed that there will be no change to “essential” ICE operations during the ongoing government shutdown - but the office that inspects detention centers to ensure humane standards has gone dark. ICE, thanks a massive $170 billion infusion of funds to its parent agency the Department of Homeland Security this summer, is in a better financial position than most government agencies at the moment, but that hasn’t stopped officials from temporarily shuttering ICE’s Office of Detention Oversight, despite an ongoing surge in detainee deaths Homeland Security confirmed to The Washington Post on Monday that the office was closed for the time being, blaming Democrats for causing the shutdown.
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Arguments for and against the ‘mega-projects’ bill
Tuesday, Oct 7, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * An argument for the so-called “mega-projects” bill by Illinois Economic Development Corp. Chair John Atkinson…
Not mentioned in the piece is that the Chicago Bears are pushing this bill to help build a stadium in Arlington Heights. * An argument against the mega-projects bill by Americans for Prosperity-Illinois’ deputy state director Brian Costin…
Your thoughts?
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign news (Updated)
Tuesday, Oct 7, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Catching up with the federal candidates
Tuesday, Oct 7, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * US Senate candidate Juliana Stratton…
Last week, Raja Krishnamoorthi’s campaign said it pulled in $3 million in the third quarter. Still waiting on Robin Kelly’s numbers.
* Tina Sfondeles at the Sun-Times…
* During a press conference in response to ICE staging at Yards Plaza, 7th Congressional District candidate Anthony Driver allegedly accused his opponent, Jason Friedman, of cooperating with federal agents. The Friedman campaign…
* Politico…
* Daniel Biss for Congress…
* More…
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MLB post-season open thread
Tuesday, Oct 7, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Figured I’d better post something now while an area team is still alive.
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Texas National Guard troops arrive in far southwest suburbs (Updated)
Tuesday, Oct 7, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The Tribune…
From Isabel: The Tribune’s story was updated. The Texas Guard is stationed at a federal property in Elwood at a U.S. Army Reserve training center.
* Yesterday from the Sun-Times…
* Related…
* CBS Chicago | Former Illinois National Guard commander says he’s “never seen” troops called up from out of state before: Richard Hayes is a former U.S. Army Major and former Commander of the Illinois National Guard. He said in all his years of service, he’s never seen anything like this. “I’ve never seen that done before, to federalize a National Guard from another state to send them to another state,” he said. “In my 34 years, I’ve never seen that.” * NYT | Texas Troops Head to Chicago as Trump Weighs Use of Emergency Powers: The president said he would consider using the Insurrection Act to bypass attempts to block National Guard deployments in Chicago and Portland, Ore. The governor of Illinois, JB Pritzker, called the mobilization “an unconstitutional invasion.” * Block Club Chicago | Federal Judge Won’t Immediately Block Troop Deployment After Illinois, Chicago File Lawsuit: In a memo to Illinois National Guard leadership Saturday, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the troops could be called into service “effective immediately” and be used in the area for 60 days, according to the Tribune. The troops’ objective would be to guard ICE facilities in Illinois, the Tribune reported. * Tribune | The National Guard has been activated to Chicago 18 times from 1877-2021. Here’s a breakdown: A review of the Tribune’s archives produced 18 events in which the governor activated the National Guard within Chicago. Two of them — both during the 19th century — involved a sitting U.S. president who acted in coordination with the governor. “The Pullman Strike (1894) and Railroad Strike (1877) were both considered state active duty,” said Adriana Schroeder, command historian for the Illinois National Guard. “Both of those involved the union, spread throughout the United States, and drew the attention of the president who was in close communications with the governors of the affected states.” On occasion, state and city officials have disagreed if a National Guard response was warranted.
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It’s Time To Bring Safer Rides To Illinois
Tuesday, Oct 7, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Waymo is ready to bring safe, reliable, autonomous rides to Illinois – but we need your help! Waymo is designed to follow all traffic laws and obey speed limits, and the data shows Waymo’s autonomous vehicles are involved in five times fewer injury-causing collisions compared to humans (as of 6/2025, see waymo.com/safety). Let’s bring safer rides to Illinois. ![]() Waymo’s autonomous vehicles can improve access to transportation for Illinois residents with travel-limiting disabilities like vision impairment, to reach medical care, groceries, and social activities. Waymo’s all-electric autonomous vehicles also provide a more sustainable way for people to get around, preventing 315+ tons of carbon emissions with every 250K trips provided through our ride-hailing service.
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Color me skeptical
Tuesday, Oct 7, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Official federal government background from Sunday is here if you need it. Sun-Times…
* Tribune…
One should always maintain a healthy level of skepticism whenever a governmental policing agency issues a statement. But the Border Patrol, ICE and DHS elevate that skepticism to a whole ‘nother level. * Meanwhile…
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Protect the 340B Program to Enhance Healthcare Services in Low-Income Communities
Tuesday, Oct 7, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Drugmaker requirements are making it hard for hospitals like Franciscan Health Olympia Fields to turn savings on drug costs into healthcare services for patients. The hospital joined the federal 340B program “to help serve the uninsured and under-insured community residents in Olympia Fields and Chicago Heights.” The poverty rates in both Chicago suburbs are higher than the 11.6% state average—nearly 13% in Olympia Fields and almost 25% in Chicago Heights. The hospital has put 340B savings toward healthcare services, including its:
• Medication to Bedside program that ensures medication access prior to discharge; and • Pharmacist-managed Anticoagulation Clinics and Pharmacotherapy Clinics that improve medication outcomes and reduce hospital readmissions. “The 340B program serves as a vital lifeline for safety-net providers to support critical health services in low-income or isolated rural communities, which are typically operated at a loss,” Franciscan Health said. Since 2020, drugmakers have blocked access to lifesaving medications acquired through the 340B program, making it harder for Illinois’ 100 participating hospitals to invest in healthcare services—and patients.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Oct 7, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: National Guard deployment moves ahead in Illinois after judge declines state’s suit to block Trump call-up. Tribune…
- Attorneys for the federal government said during a brief court hearing Monday afternoon that Texas National Guard units were in transit to Illinois and weren’t expected to “begin getting into position to perform federal protective missions until tomorrow at the earliest.” - Illinois Guard members have been ordered to report Tuesday. The federal government is uncertain when it will be ready for its “federal protective mission,” Trump administration attorneys told [U.S. District Judge April Perry]. * Related stories… Sponsored by Ameren Illinois
* Governor Pritzker will attend the North Star Summit for a panel with Governor Walz to discuss state leadership at 3:45 pm. Click here to watch. * American Prospect | How ICE Hides Detainees From Their Lawyers: Herrera left the facility that day with no idea where Giménez González was being held. The next morning, he returned to Broadview with elected officials, other advocates, and Giménez González’s wife to hold a press conference demanding information from ICE. At the end of the press conference, Giménez González’s wife received a phone call from her husband. He confirmed that he was being held in Broadview, just behind the building’s boarded-up windows and chain-link fence. “His wife handed me the phone. I was talking to him, and his tone changed, and someone asked him who he was talking to,” Herrera said. “And he said, ‘a lawyer.’ And then he told me later that he was made to get off the phone.” * WCIA | Illinois retirees, federal employees share concerns as shutdown drags into 6th day: Unfortunately Innis just can’t get away from the shutdown. He is still receiving Medicare but if a problem comes up with his coverage no one is there to pick up the phone. He also likes to fly but shutdowns at FAA has him worried about overworked air traffic controllers. But that’s not all. “I am also a veteran, so all the VA stuff that you’re hearing about, that stands to affect me if I should have any problems that way. So you’re just getting hit from every angle,” Innis said. * ABC Chicago | Journalists, unions sue ICE, DHS alleging ‘extreme force’ during Broadview detention center protests: Chicago journalists and unions have sued U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement and the Department of Homeland Security, alleging the federal government has used “extreme force” against reporters and TV crews during protests in Broadview. The groups suing include NABET Local 41, which represents members of ABC7 Chicago and other local TV stations. Click here for the proposed temporary restraining order. * Tribune | Feds: Chicago gang member solicited murder of Border Patrol chief Gregory Bovino: Juan Espinoza Martinez, 37, of Chicago, was arrested Monday morning and charged in a criminal complaint unsealed Monday with one count of solicitation of murder-for-hire. A court appearance has not yet been set, and it was unclear if Martinez had a lawyer. According to the complaint, Martinez, a ranking member of the Latin Kings, told a law enforcement source after an immigration agent shot a woman in the Brighton Park neighborhood “that he had dispatched members of the Latin Kings to the area of the 39th and Kedzie … in response to the shooting.” * Tribune | Chicago police will respond to federal calls for help, Larry Snelling says, and denies cops were ordered to stand down: “We want to make sure when we show up, we’re keeping every single person in this city safe, and we want to keep the peace,” he said. Snelling spent about 10 minutes of the 50-minute news conference defending Chief of Patrol Jon Hein following furor over a Saturday dispatch attributed to Hein that “no units would respond” to a call for assistance from armed Border Patrol agents who said they were in the middle of a crowd in Brighton Park following the traffic crashes and shooting. * Block Club | 27 Police Officers Among Those Injured By Tear Gas During Weekend Protest, Chicago’s Top Cop Says: Officers were also on the scene when federal agents began firing tear gas at the crowds. He said there weren’t any major injuries as a result, but 27 police officers were “affected.” “In order to help out at this location, we pulled officers from other places, and they did not have the equipment to fight off the chemical agent, and they were affected by it,” Snelling told reporters. “Our officers are resilient and tough. Those officers are doing good.” * Block Club | Mayor Brandon Johnson Bans Use Of City Property For Immigration Enforcement: The order follows reports that federal agents recently used city-owned lots at Harrison and Kedzie and at 46th and Damen for immigration operations, actions that city officials said erode community trust and violate Chicago’s Welcoming City Ordinance. * ABC Chicago | Waukegan mayor steps in as federal agents detain woman outside City Hall: VIDEO: Video shows Mayor Sam Cunningham talking to federal agents. Cunningham told ABC7 he saw the woman being cuffed, and then, she started calling his name. Cunningham helped get her car towed while she was being detained. ABC7 spoke with the woman’s father. He says she is an American citizen and that she was charged with obstructing a federal investigation. * Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora Mayor John Laesch proposes campaign ethics reform measures: The proposed changes to city code would put a $500 cap on campaign donations from those doing business with the city or looking to, would expand required economic interest disclosures and would set limits on how city property can be used for political purposes, among other things. The Aurora City Council’s Rules, Administration and Procedure Committee is set to hear the proposals at 3 p.m. on Tuesday. * Daily Southtown | Car crashes into Dolton Trustee Kiana Belcher’s campaign office: Kiana Belcher was using the office at 14200 Martin Luther King Drive as her campaign headquarters as she seeks election to the 5th District Cook County board seat in 2026. The office is no longer usable after the crash through the building’s main entrance, Belcher said Monday. “I don’t know if it was intentional or not,” Belcher said. “But at this point, I just know that the vehicle landed directly in the middle of the campaign office.” […] The driver was treated for nonlife-threatening injuries. No campaign staff members, volunteers or pedestrians were injured, Belcher said. * Daily Herald | Colin Gilbert confirmed as new Arlington Heights trustee: Colin Gilbert, an Arlington Heights attorney known for his involvement in community organizations and businesses, was confirmed and sworn in Monday night as a village trustee. Gilbert was Mayor Jim Tinaglia’s pick to replace Scott Shirley, who resigned last week to spend more time taking care of his elderly family members and at his full-time job as an engineer. * WGLT | Another aspect of the city-county-town dispute on sales tax money comes to light: A great deal of the public focus so far has been on the unspent mental health money in the Mental Health and Public Safety fund. Another approved use of money from the decade-old agreement is to replace an aging electronic record management system that integrates information for the courts, law enforcement, and other stakeholders. There has been a lot of unhappiness about that project too. The aging suite of programs called the county’s Electronic Justice System, or EJS, has tied together 14 McLean County police agencies, prosecutors, court services, circuit clerk, juvenile probation, and the coroner’s office with a common set of records and access. It also uses software that’s no longer supported and contains security vulnerabilities. * WGLT | Normal Town Council approves $8M contract for new records management system: The council approved a 10-year agreement with Axon for an unlimited premium plan of an integrated ecosystem of connected hardware and software, with the town citing evolving technology needs for its law enforcement officers. The system includes an agreement for body worn cameras, in-car camera systems, interview room cameras, digital evidence servers and records management for the Normal Police Department. * BND | Interested in a historic fixer-upper? Belleville may have a deal for you: The city of Belleville is buying two historic brick homes from St. Clair County’s delinquent tax agent with plans to either demolish or sell them, depending on local interest. Officials see the home at 102 N. 11th St. as the one most likely to become part of the infill program, which allows people to buy city-owned derelict buildings for $1 if they agree to renovate them. * NYT | Trump to Unveil Farmer Aid as China Shuns U.S. Crops: Punishing Chinese tariffs that prompt painful retaliation. American farmers on the brink of bankruptcy. A multibillion-dollar bailout to keep farmers afloat. It is 2018 all over again as the Trump administration prepares to address the same policy crisis it faced seven years ago when President Trump, who imposed stiff tariffs on Chinese imports, had to shield the U.S. agriculture industry from the fallout of his trade war. * Talking Points Memo | The Trump Admin’s Mostly Unnoticed Move to Crack Down on the Opposition: The orders have little legal grounding (the Antifa order, for example, applies a law that exists only for foreign groups to a poorly defined term for domestic protestors). But that does not fully blunt their effect. One former DOJ counterterrorism attorney argued to TPM that the threat of the orders comes not necessarily in the form of imminent charges but in the lengthy, resource-draining investigations that are set to begin. They could have other impacts, too, on opposition groups seeking to participate in politics or civic society: funders curtailing contributions to certain nonprofits, advocacy groups rolling back campaigns that differ from the White House’s view of social issues, and other firms like banks declining to work with organizations on the administration’s list. * Financial Times | America is now one big bet on AI: The hundreds of billions of dollars companies are investing in AI now account for an astonishing 40 per cent share of US GDP growth this year. And some analysts believe that estimate doesn’t fully capture the AI spend, so the real share could be even higher. AI companies have accounted for 80 per cent of the gains in US stocks so far in 2025. That is helping to fund and drive US growth, as the AI-driven stock market draws in money from all over the world, and feeds a boom in consumer spending by the rich.
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Good morning!
Tuesday, Oct 7, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * This is still a free country, so you don’t have to agree with him, and I wouldn’t ask you to do so because I don’t always agree with him, either. But your own personal opinion can’t diminish the fact that Kentucky’s Jesse Welles’ stunningly prodigious and well-crafted output of original songs about the week’s (or even the day’s) zeitgeist is truly something to behold. I don’t think we’ve ever seen anything like this guy. His latest timely lyric, from yesterday, hits local: get ready boys / look pretty / we’re goin into the city… winter came What’s up by you?
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Tuesday, Oct 7, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage (mostly)
Tuesday, Oct 7, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news on the website formally known as Twitter. We’re experimenting this week with a new app which feeds Bluesky posts. Still tweaking it…
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