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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Mar 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Ted Dabrowski skips GOP Unity Breakfast


* Meanwhile, the Democratic Party of Illinois…

This morning, the Illinois Republican Party is gathering for a so-called “Unity Breakfast” to rally behind their slate of candidates – the same people who spent months publicly tearing each other apart on the campaign trail and all over social media.

Even the top of the ticket has a history. In 2022, Aaron Del Mar ran for lieutenant governor alongside Gary Rabine, and the two ran hard against Darren Bailey – and it’s been messy ever since. Now Del Mar is Bailey’s running mate even though he spent months preparing to run for governor himself and has spent the time since the announcement making fun of his running mate’s accent and discussing his failures campaigning in Cook County.

In response, the Democratic Party of Illinois sent a mobile billboard to greet attendees as they arrive at the breakfast. The billboard features the candidates’ own words:

Darren Bailey: “Every time [Aaron Del Mar] runs for something, I say, ‘Don’t vote for this guy.’”

Aaron Del Mar: “I just don’t think [Darren Bailey’s] a viable candidate.”

Rick Heidner: “If I thought Bailey could win, honestly, I wouldn’t have ran.”

James Mendrick: “Darren Bailey will not win the general election against Pritzker.”

Ted Dabrowski: “Darren Bailey can’t beat Pritzker.”

The ILGOP can pose for photos and call it unity all they want, but Illinois voters watched for months as Republican candidates attacked each other’s character, competence, and chances of winning.

Here’s a look back at some of the best moments:

    - Ted Dabrowski: “Darren Bailey can’t beat Pritzker”
    - Darren Bailey: “Every time [Aaron Del Mar] runs for something, I say, ‘Don’t vote for this guy.’”
    - Rick Heidner: “If I thought Bailey could win, honestly, I wouldn’t have ran.”
    - James Mendrick: “Darren Bailey will not win the general election against Pritzker. With Aaron Del Mar as his running mate, he will likely win fewer votes than he did the first time.”
    - Rick Heidner: Said he would “absolutely not” give money to another candidate if they won the primary.
    - Rick Heidner: Told Dabrowski he was done with his “crap.”
    - Darren Bailey: Called Dabrowski “a nice guy polling in single digits.”
    - Jeanne Ives: “Why is Bailey hiding in his basement?”
    - Bailey War Room: “Rick is such a biter. Instead of poaching our clips and captions he could save himself the time and drop out.”

* Bailey’s response

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | Maria Peterson wins state House District 52 primary: ‘I’ve built a strong grassroots foundation’: Peterson, a North Barrington resident, claimed victory in the 2026 Democratic primary Tuesday with 64.7% of 11,423 votes cast over Erin Chan Ding of South Barrington, with 35.3%, according to unofficial results. Late Tuesday night, Ding said in a text she called Peterson, conceded defeat, and “wished her well as she goes on to try and flip this seat.” Rather than knock on more doors Saturday, Peterson said it was more important to pay her respects to former Wauconda police Officer Christian Pascente, who took his life on March 9. She said police from many departments were coming to Wauconda, and she wanted to help.

* Capitol News Illinois | Political will grows for data center regulations as POWER Act remains in committee: The POWER Act thus far remains in committee. But Illinois has a history of passing large-scale energy packages, such as the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act and the Clean and Reliable Grid Act, as extensive amendments late in their regular or fall legislative session. The session is slated to adjourn on May 31. […] The POWER Act has similar requirements, and negotiations on the bill are ongoing. Those conversations include municipalities and workforce, labor, manufacturing and environmental groups. “What we’re asking for in this legislation are principles that I think, widely, people understand,” said state Sen. Ram Villivalam, D-Chicago.

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | Chicago City Council Boosts Downtown Hotel Taxes to 19%: With the backing of hotel owners and the Illinois Hotel & Lodging Association, the city’s tax on hotel rooms downtown, near McCormick Place, the Illinois Medical District and Hyde Park will rise from 17.5% to 19%, the highest in the nation. The creation of Chicago’s first Tourism Improvement District would last for five years, and would have to be renewed by an oversight board of hotel operators and the City Council.

* Bloomberg | Ishbia’s Chicago Land Deal Hints at New Stadium for White Sox: Billionaire Justin Ishbia’s deal to buy a large parcel of land near downtown Chicago is fueling speculation that he’s planning a new stadium for the Chicago White Sox. Ishbia’s private equity firm, Shore Capital Partners, is under contract to buy a 47-acre (19-hectare) property from Amtrak, the rail operator. A spokesperson for Ishbia offered few details on his plans, saying only that Shore is in the early stages of planning a mixed-use development that could include a health-care facility in partnership with Northwestern Medicine.

* Block Club | Jerry Garcia’s Famed ‘Tiger’ Guitar Bought By Chicago Collector For $11.56 Million: Now “Tiger” could be coming back to Chicago after local guitar collector Bobby Tseitlin bought it at auction for $11.56 million, which was briefly a record for a guitar sale. (A black Fender Stratocaster used by Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour sold at the same Christie’s auction last week for $14.5 million.) Tseitlin, 44, is co-founder of Family Guitars, a Chicago company that collects historic instruments and is “home to some of the most legendary instruments ever played,” per its website. For the past 20 years, Tseitlin’s passion project has been collecting guitars, he told Rolling Stone.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Injustice Watch | Judicial election results: Three appointed judges rejected by voters in Cook County judicial primaries: Illinois Democratic Party leader Michael Cabonargi will lose his recent appointment as a Cook County judge despite raising more than $150,000 in campaign funds and winning endorsements from Illinois political heavyweights including Sen. Dick Durbin. Cabonargi was defeated in Tuesday’s democratic primary by family law attorney Ashonta C. Rice, whose low-key campaign was almost entirely self-funded. An Injustice Watch profile of Cabonargi, published last month as part of the newsroom’s judicial election guide, revealed ethical questions and campaign finance violations during his 11 years as a commissioner on the Cook County Board of Review. The questions involved his ties to a powerful developer, his repeated campaign fundraising violations, and his hiring of political aides as county property tax analysts.

* Tribune | What happened in Chicago suburban primary elections on Tuesday: Also, appointed Cook County Commissioner Kisha McCaskill declared victory Tuesday night in her bid for a full term, apparently fending off a challenge from Dolton Trustee Kiana Belcher in the Democratic primary for the 5th District Cook County Board seat. In the 6th District, a field of five Democratic contenders seeking to replace Commissioner Donna Miller appeared to narrow to Worth Township Supervisor Patricia Joan “Trish” Murphy and Palestinian-American attorney Wesam Shahed, according to preliminary results Tuesday night.

* Daily Southtown | Reilly and Jones claim victory in Will County sheriff primaries; incumbents lead County Board races: Republican Will County Sheriff Deputy James “Jim” Reilly and Democrat Sgt. Patrick Jones both claimed victory Wednesday in their primary elections to replace retiring Sheriff Mike Kelley. Jones had 59% of the votes to Undersheriff Dan Jungles who received about 41% of the votes cast, according to unofficial results. Reilly had 75.3% of the vote while Deputy Justin Fialko had about 24.7%.

*** Downstate ***

* IPM News | Michelle Jett in lead for Champaign County executive, with thousands of votes yet to be counted: Michelle Jett still holds the lead in the race for Champaign County Executive, holding nearly 60% of the vote. Her opponent, Sanford Hess has a little over 40%. The Champaign County Clerk’s Office told IPM News Tuesday night that about 7,700 mail-in ballots still need to be counted.

* Forbes | U. Of Illinois President Proposes 5 Ways To Restore Trust In Higher Ed: Affordability is “the foundation of confidence,” Killeen told me. “At Illinois, we froze resident undergraduate tuition rates for 7 of the previous 11 years, and for the upcoming academic year, tution will increase only 2% for those students.” In addition, all of the system’s universities guarantee free tuition for families meeting financial eligibility standards. As an example, the Urbana-Champaign campus offers a financial aid package that covers four years of tuition and campus fees for students who are Illinois residents and have a family income of $75,000 or less.

* WCIA | PBL teacher resigns, then charged with attempted sexual assault: Court records show that Paul Meuser, 72 of Buckey, was charged with a total of three counts: two of attempted criminal sexual assault and one of grooming. Those are Class 2 and 4 felonies, respectively. A warrant for his arrest was issued on March 15. WCIA’s partners at the Ford County Chronicle reported that he was taken into custody in Oklahoma County, Okla. Records from that county’s jail show he was booked the day after the warrant was issued.

* WCIA | City of Decatur taking inventory on blight in neighborhoods: Council member David Horn said that 19 neighborhoods were involved in this survey, and most of them were located in downtown Decatur. He also said they examined 14,000 parcels, including homes and land. […] “When blight is reduced, crime goes down,” Horn said. “And we saw that when we made a significant investment in the Johns Hill neighborhood, criminal activity decreased 30% over a three-year period.”

* Alton Telegraph | Illini freshman sensation Keaton Wagler named AP All-American : Wagler was named a second-team All-America selection Tuesday by the Associated Press. He is the first University of Illinois freshman to earn AP All-America honors, the fifth of the Illini coach Brad Underwood era and the 22nd All-America pick in Illinois history. Wagler was also named Big Ten Freshman of the Year and a first-team All-Big Ten selection.

* WMBD | Peoria event to showcase artifacts telling Illinois history: The program will explore Illinois history through 10 carefully selected artifacts from the Illinois State Museum. It will be presented by curator Erika Holst. Holst will show how objects from Illinois history show personal experience, covering themes that include the first Indigenous peoples of Illinois, the Civil War, the Great Depression and more.

*** National ***

* Wired | Why Walmart and OpenAI Are Shaking Up Their Agentic Shopping Deal: Since November, Walmart has let some ChatGPT users order a limited selection of products without ever leaving OpenAI’s chatbot interface. Sales have been disappointing, a Walmart executive vice president exclusively tells WIRED. The results suggest that a future where chatbots and AI agents take over ecommerce is still a way off, if it ever materializes. Last year, OpenAI made a bet that it could boost revenue by charging a commission on purchases made through ChatGPT. It partnered with Walmart, Etsy, and other shops on an “agentic commerce” feature called Instant Checkout.

* NYT | Why Tech Giants Are Ditching the Power Grid: Going off grid was no one’s first choice. Off-grid power generally costs a lot more, partly because developers need to install more equipment than will be used at any one time in case machines break or need servicing. A lot of this gear is also less efficient than the airplane-size machines used at big power plants, meaning it needs to burn more gas to generate the same amount of electricity. But in some states, it might take years to get permission to plug new power plants into the grid. By the end of 2025, an estimated 39 percent of the gas power capacity being developed in the United States was designed to serve data centers on-site, according to the Global Energy Monitor, a nonprofit organization that tracks energy projects. That is up from 5 percent at the end of 2024.

  13 Comments      


Catching up with the congressionals

Wednesday, Mar 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Starting off with the unofficial results from the 2nd, 7th, 8th and 9th congressional districts

* The Sun-Times

There were at least five PACs related to AIPAC that tried to influence five congressional races — and the group saw two victories: Donna Miller in the 2nd and Melissa Bean in the 8th. The groups fared worse in the 9th District, spending money to harm Kat Abughazaleh’s chances and trying to boost State Sen. Laura Fine. Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss won instead.

One AIPAC-affiliated group spent big dollars to help Chicago City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin in the 7th and to oppose real estate executive Jason Friedman. State Rep. La Shawn Ford instead won the race.

Here’s a rundown of the groups: Affordable Chicago Now! spent nearly $4.4 million supporting Miller in the 2nd District. Chicago Progressive Partnership spent $266,000 in opposition of Abughazaleh in the 9th District. Elect Democratic Women Action Fund spent more than $500,000 supporting Fine in the 9th District. Elect Chicago Women (ECW) spent $5.8 million supporting Fine and opposing Biss in the 9th, plus $3.9 million supporting Bean in the 8th District. United Democracy Project (UDP) spent $5 million in the 7th District race, mostly in support of Conyears-Ervin, but also about $60,000 against Friedman.

AIPAC claimed it as a net win, declaring in a statement “these results further demonstrate that campaigns defined largely by opposition to AIPAC, our members, and the values we represent continue to fall short on election night.”

* AIPAC also claimed they helped defeat progressive Bushra Amiwala

An APIAC-affiliated group, Chicago Progressive Partnership, spent $1.2 million to support Amiwala in an attempt to further divide the progressive vote.

* Fortune

State Rep. La Shawn Ford, who had supported state legislation regulating the AI and crypto industries, won the Democratic primary to succeed U.S. Rep. Danny Davis. Fairshake spent nearly $2.5 million opposing Ford’s candidacy in a race that featured at least four other political groups spending against the progressive lawmaker or for his opponents.

Meanwhile, Cook County Commissioner Donna Miller prevailed in the Democratic primary to succeed Kelly after Fairshake spent more than $800,000 against state Rep. Robert Peters, another progressive who supported legislation to regulate the crypto industry.

The AI-backed Think Big PAC invested more than $1 million to boost the candidacy of Jesse Jackson Jr., a former congressman who pleaded guilty in a fraud scandal in 2013. But Jackson also faced about $1 million in negative campaign spending from the Jobs and Democracy PAC, another AI-backed group.

* The Tribune

Pumping his fist as he walked in, Ford informed a room full of supporters at the National Association of Letter Carriers headquarters on the South Side that Chicago city treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin had called him to concede. Then he turned to address Davis, who had endorsed Ford after holding the seat for nearly 30 years. […]

Conyears-Ervin’s campaign had released a statement about 8:40 p.m. saying she congratulated Ford on clinching the nomination. The Associated Press called the race for Ford a short time later.

“While this is not the outcome we were hoping for, I am comforted by the words of Scripture: ‘I have fought the good fight, I have run the race, I have kept the faith,’” she wrote.

* Politico

Former Illinois Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. fell short in his attempt to return to Congress on Tuesday, after resigning more than a decade ago amid a federal corruption investigation.
Cook County Commissioner Donna Miller defeated him and a host of other candidates to win the Democratic primary for Illinois’ 2nd district, a seat currently held by Rep. Robin Kelly, who left to run for the Senate. […]

Meanwhile, Miller consolidated support across key parts of the district and benefited from spending by a group aligned with the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, which funneled more than $4 million into ads promoting her campaign. The contest drew national attention in part because the group, Affordable Chicago Now, gave Miller’s campaign substantial airtime in the Chicago media market and funded mail pieces highlighting her record.

The spending helped elevate Miller’s profile even as a separate political action committee, the Leading the Future PAC, which is funded by OpenAI stakeholders, spent more than $1 million to promote Jackson after he signaled support for the industry with op-eds and ads.

…Adding… Drop Sight News reporter Ryan Grim

* More…

    * NYT | Centrist Melissa Bean Wins 8th District Democratic Primary: In the final days of the campaign, Ms. Bean received a rush of financial support from a group tied to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the hard-line pro-Israel lobbying organization, as she fended off a progressive rival, the tech entrepreneur Junaid Ahmed. Ms. Bean campaigned on a promise to offer a check on President Trump and to help revive a more functional version of Congress. The race drew attention from national figures and interest groups.

    * NYT | La Shawn K. Ford Wins Nomination for House Seat Long Held by Danny Davis: A victory by Mr. Ford in November would preserve Black representation of the Seventh District, which has been served by a Black member of Congress since the 1970s. A plurality of Seventh District residents are Black, though the district is also home to large numbers of white, Hispanic and Asian residents. The leading Democrats in the race criticized President Trump and pledged to serve as a check on his priorities in Washington. United Democracy Project, a super PAC affiliated with the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, invested millions of dollars in the race and supported Ms. Conyears-Ervin.

    * Politico | AIPAC, AI money propels Melissa Bean to comeback victory in Illinois: Her win was heavily boosted by outside spending: A group called Elect Chicago Women, aligned with the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, poured nearly $4 million into the race to support Bean, and another AI-focused committee ran ads in favor of her. Bean, who had lost her seat during the 2010 Tea Party wave, built her campaign around a message of pragmatism — an approach she argued voters were seeking amid a hyper-partisan national political climate.

    * WaPo | Crypto’s bet against Stratton doesn’t pay off: Fairshake also spent nearly $2.5 million attacking Ford, who defeated Conyears-Ervin. The super PAC fared better in the race Miller won, where it spent more than $800,000 opposing state Sen. Robert Peters. Ford and Peters both voted for the legislation that Pritzker signed last year that the crypto industry opposed.

    * The 19th | Kat Abughazaleh loses primary election bid for Illinois U.S. House seat: Speaking to a room full of supporters, Abughazaleh said, “The work isn’t over. There are progressives all over the country who are taking a chance just like we did and we have to help them win, no matter how hard it is. We have to send a message to this administration and anyone who enables them, and I’m talking to them right now: You and your jobs are not safe. This is the start and not the end. We are not tolerating the status quo. You cannot kidnap and kill us and our neighbors. You cannot start illegal wars. You cannot trample on our rights and see our lives as a means for profit. We will continue to come back and every single loss like this one just makes the path easier for the next person who takes the same chance.”

  18 Comments      


Some recent AG Raoul news

Wednesday, Mar 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Every now and then we take a look at what AG Kwame Raoul has been up to, since a lot of it doesn’t get covered by the news media. Press release yesterday

ATTORNEY GENERAL RAOUL ANNOUNCES ANOTHER VICTORY TO STOP TRUMP’S UNLAWFUL ATTEMPT TO FREEZE FEDERAL FUNDS

Attorney General Kwame Raoul released the following statement after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit largely upheld a lower court order blocking the Trump administration’s illegal effort to categorically freeze trillions of dollars in essential federal funding to states.

“This is a huge win for the health and safety of Illinoisans and all Americans. Within the first week of President Trump’s second term, his administration attempted to freeze trillions of dollars that they did not have the legal authority to freeze. We pushed back. We said no. We came together under the direction of the law to ensure the Trump administration could not take action that could have a devastating impact on funding for our state’s most vulnerable residents.

“The U.S. Constitution is clear: Congress is granted the power to appropriate funding. The executive branch cannot unilaterally disregard appropriations passed by a separate branch of government. Now, the court’s opinion prevents the executive from running roughshod over that principle. Blocking this freeze ensures our residents, including our children, are safe with access to health care, childcare, lifesaving medical research, mental health programs and sex education in public schools, and crime victim compensation.

“This federal funding is also essential for Illinois universities that depend on National Institutes of Health grants to develop new medical treatments that save lives. I applaud the court’s decision and will continue to fight any reckless and illegal efforts that threaten this essential funding for the health and safety of our residents.”

In January 2025, Attorney General Raoul co-led a coalition of 22 other attorneys general in suing to stop the implementation of a new federal policy that would have categorically withheld trillions of dollars in essential funding, impacting a vast array of important public services that states provide. In March 2025, Raoul won a preliminary injunction blocking the policy, and now the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit largely affirmed that order.

* Monday

Attorney General Kwame Raoul today co-led a coalition of 16 attorneys general in filing a lawsuit challenging unlawful actions by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), including threats to withhold funding from state and local fair housing enforcement agencies for abiding by state laws and to impose illegal conditions on HUD funding. These actions threaten to weaken America’s fair housing enforcement system and undermine states’ ability to ensure equal access to housing. If unchallenged, discrimination in housing is almost certain to increase. […]

Sixty years ago, Congress enacted the Fair Housing Act to address pervasive housing discrimination. Congress also created a robust partnership between HUD and state and local agencies, known as the Fair Housing Assistance Program (FHAP), to enforce this landmark civil rights law in tandem with state fair housing laws. The FHAP has had strong bipartisan support in Congress and stable funding since it was established in 1980.

In their lawsuit being filed today, Raoul and the attorneys general allege that the Trump administration is seeking to illegally undermine this partnership by attacking states’ ability to combat housing discrimination under their own democratically enacted state laws.

Through the FHAP, HUD refers allegations of housing discrimination to state and local partner agencies for investigation and enforcement. These agencies receive HUD funding, which they use to process housing discrimination complaints, train staff, and support community outreach and education.

In September 2025, HUD issued guidance to the Illinois Department of Human Rights and partner agencies in other states, threatening to decertify them from the program and cut off funding unless they stop enforcing crucial protections against housing discrimination based on sexual orientation, gender identity, language, criminal records and source of income. The guidance also bars agencies from pursuing claims targeting housing practices that may appear neutral but, in reality, are discriminatory and have a disparate impact on certain populations. In Illinois and many other states, these fair housing protections are enshrined in state law.

In addition to the threat to decertify partner agencies, HUD is attempting to impose vague, ideologically motivated, and unlawful conditions on program funding.

In their complaint, Raoul and the attorneys general assert that the administration’s actions will raise the costs of enforcing state and federal fair housing laws in their states. They also argue that HUD’s vague conditions will sow confusion over enforcement. […]

The coalition’s lawsuit alleges that HUD’s guidance violates the Spending Clause of the U.S. Constitution and the federal Administrative Procedure Act, which governs how federal agencies implement rule changes.

* Last week

Attorney General Kwame Raoul today issued the following statement after a federal court judge granted Raoul’s motion for a preliminary injunction to enjoin the federal government from halting health-related funding to states and void the public health grant terminations that have already occurred.

Last month Raoul led attorneys general from California, Colorado and Minnesota in suing the Trump administration over the Office of Management and Budget’s (OMB) directive to target those states and unlawfully cut more than $600 million in Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) grants based on its policy disagreements with those states. The court previously granted a temporary restraining order in this case, which lasted 28 days.

“Thanks to the order we secured, hundreds of nurses, disease detectives and other essential public health workers will keep their jobs as we fight the Trump administration’s unlawful attempt to terminate more than $600 million in health-related funding. This preliminary injunction means Illinois will continue to receive more than $100 million in CDC grant funding that protects Illinois children from lead poisoning, as well as testing for and treatments of HIV. This funding also allows Illinois and other states to track disease outbreaks, maintain and improve data systems, and collect basic public health data the CDC relies on. […]

On Feb. 9, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) notified Congress of its intent to terminate CDC grant funding in those four states without providing any specific reasons. Cuts to Illinois’ public health programs alone exceed $100 million. In their complaint, Raoul and the coalition allege that OMB’s directive commanding agencies to cut funding, along with its implementation, violates the Constitution and the Administrative Procedure Act because it is arbitrary and capricious and exceeds the agencies’ statutory authority.

* More from last week

Attorney General Kwame Raoul today, as part of a coalition of 24 states, asked the U.S. Court of International Trade to rule in the states’ favor and block implementation of President Trump’s latest efforts to impose illegal tariffs on products purchased by American consumers and businesses.

Raoul and the coalition filed a lawsuit challenging the tariffs earlier this month. […]

For more than a year, President Trump unlawfully invoked the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) and attempted to impose tariffs on essential goods purchased by American consumers and businesses. In April 2025, Raoul and a coalition filed a lawsuit to block the administration’s attempt to impose illegal tariffs because, as the suit explained, only Congress has the power to “lay and collect” taxes.

In February, the Supreme Court rejected the president’s unprecedented and unlawful use of IEEPA and agreed that the tariffs were unlawful.

Rather than accepting that loss in court, President Trump is now attempting to use a different law that has never been used before, Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, to impose 10% tariffs on most products worldwide, apparently in response to trade deficits. But, as Raoul and the attorneys general argue, those tariffs are illegal too. Section 122 allows tariffs only when there are “large and serious balance-of-payment deficits.” A trade deficit is not a balance-of-payment deficit, and so Section 122 does not apply.

The president’s first round of illegal tariffs threatened Illinois’ economy and harmed taxpayers by increasing costs to the state and local governments. For example, the Illinois Department of Transportation alone estimated that over two years, the state’s costs for transportation projects would have been $249 million to $585 million higher due to tariffs.

The Supreme Court’s decision last month might have mitigated those increased costs to the state in construction projects, technology and other expenses, but the newly imposed illegal tariffs again create harms to Illinois’ economy.

Economic analysis submitted to the court shows that state governments in the 24 plaintiff states stand to pay at least $748 million per year in additional costs due to the new tariffs. Additionally, a recent analysis by researchers at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York concluded that nearly 90% of the costs of tariffs last year were paid by American consumers and businesses.

Today’s motion asks the U.S. Court of International Trade to order federal agencies to stop collecting the latest round of illegal tariffs by issuing a summary judgment or, in the alternative, a preliminary injunction.

  4 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Wednesday, Mar 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* HB5011 from Rep. Patrick Sheehan

HB 5011 is bipartisan legislation aimed at eliminating “indirect” or “de-facto” quotas put on local law enforcement officers. Indirect quotas lead to perpetual traffic stops which frustrate the public. By disallowing evaluation of a police officer based on the number of police officer’s points of contact, State Representative Patrick Sheehan (R-Homer Glen) and proponents aim to further codify the legislative intent of previous, common-sense, legislation to ban ticket quotas.

“Law enforcement officers should be there to protect and serve the public, not to serve as revenue sources for local politicians,” said Sheehan, who also serves as a southwest suburban police officer. “I am working to shore up bipartisan support for disallowing this outdated tool. House Bill 5011 helps to reduce distrust, by discouraging forced contacts and preventing retaliation by command staff.”

With numbers of mental health incidents too high for law enforcement officers already, Rep. Sheehan urges policymakers examine the various ways policies are further taxing the well-being of officers, who are often asked to work overtime and extra shifts due to law enforcement shortages in Illinois. HB 5011 is scheduled to be heard in the House Police & Fire Committee on Friday March 20 at 8:00am in Capitol Room 118.

* ACT Now Illinois…

Legislation (HB5362 and HB5363) supporting the expansion of Full-Service Community Schools in Illinois will be heard in the Illinois House Education Appropriations Committee on Wednesday, March 18th. The legislation would provide state funding and an established framework for expanding Community School partnerships.

The hearing and legislation come as the federal government abruptly cancelled multi-year FSCS grants mid-school year with only weeks’ notice. ACT Now has been actively challenging the termination of these grants in federal court and recently secured a ruling to restore the funding through the end of June.

While the court order restored funding temporarily, there is no indication what will happen after June, underscoring the urgent need for sustained state investment.

* A press release from an “informal group of concerned Illinois technologists”…

The Illinois Legislature should reject the Children’s Social Media Safety Act (HB5511 & SB3977) as it fails to protect children and poses significant danger to the privacy and security of the residents of Illinois as well as making it impossible for all but the largest tech companies to operate in Illinois.

What does this bill do?

The bill requires software developers, including operating system manufacturers like Apple and Microsoft, to verify your age or be considered illegal software. It would require app makers to conduct age verifications for any websites, discussion forums, or any website that allows comments to verify your age. The bill would require developers who offer “addictive feeds” to offer versions of their services without said addictive functionality to minors and makes it illegal to monetize them.

Why is this bill a problem?

First, age gates often do not work as research has shown that they are simple to bypass. Worse, they require invasive date collection that puts users at risk of data breaches. Additionally, companies can use age verification to track and monetize personal data even further. This bill would centralize the power to govern identity with Google, Apple, and Microsoft and provide the Federal Government ways to access residents’ entire usage history and close to everything they do on their computer. This bill is a gift to Trump’s Department of Homeland Security and ICE who already use digital ad tracking to target and locate people.

It creates an expensive and unnecessary burden on software developers. The bill doesn’t specify how the applications will verify ages, but simply puts the requirement in. It also doesn’t specify the security requirements for handing the personally identifiable information that would be necessary to verify ages. Securing scans of drivers licenses and birth certificates require significant cybersecurity measures to do so safely. The most likely outcome would be that a company with lax security will leak scans of sensitive documents to potential bad actors.

The implementation of this bill would make Illinois less safe. This burden is high enough that when similar laws were passed in other states, companies simply opted not to do business in Illinois. It doesn’t consider free open source software and software built by independent developers. This bill makes open source operating systems such as Linux illegal in Illinois without burdensome age gate requirements. This bill stifles competition by raising the barrier to entry for small startups as they’ll be forced to adopt these services and technologies, and hand over some forms of identity management to the big tech companies.

If Illinois wants to protect children, the Illinois legislature should consider data privacy reforms to protect the security of kids and adults alike.

* Capitol News Illinois

[S]tate lawmakers are taking aim at Chicago’s tax — and trying to prevent other municipalities from setting their own local sports betting taxes.

Sen. Patrick Joyce, D-Essex, filed Senate Bill 2760 in January, which seeks to penalize Chicago by taking the total amount the city gained from its sports wagering fee and deducting it from Chicago’s share of the Local Government Distributive Fund, one of the largest sources of state funding for cities and counties. That amount would then be redistributed to other municipalities following the fund’s allocation formula.

Joyce said in an interview that he, along with other members of the General Assembly, was open to sitting down with Chicago officials to discuss the bill.

He also filed Senate Bill 2800, a bill identical to Didech’s House version (HB4171)that denies home rule units the authority to regulate or tax sports wagering.

* Rep. Thaddeus Jones…

State Rep. Thaddeus Jones, D-Calumet City, introduced legislation aimed at keeping teens and their surrounding communities safe from large, disruptive and unlawful gatherings that have recently gained popularity on social media.

“When tragedy strikes, it is up to us to take action to protect our families and communities,” Jones said. “This measure is going to help ensure social media platforms bear the burden of preventing their services from being used as tools to enable dangerous activities. Holding companies accountable for monitoring unlawful activity is nothing new, and when we are called to protect our communities as legislators, we will respond.”

Jones introduced House Bill 5561 with two specific goals in mind: keeping teens safe and holding social media platforms accountable. This legislation takes aim at the increasingly popular “teen takeovers,” a social media trend that continues to grow in popularity and danger. The events often include large groups of teenagers who converge in public centers and streets to disrupt a community event, traffic and pedestrians. Some takeovers have resulted have in serious injury or death for participants and bystanders alike. For example, 14-year-old Armani Floyd was shot and killed during a teen takeover that occurred in the Chicago Loop near the Chicago Theatre last November. Eight other teens were also wounded during the incident.

Jones’ bill makes it a Class A misdemeanor to organize or promote such an event that poses clear risks to young people and the broader community. The bill also requires social media platforms to make an effort to restrict shared content that promotes such events, and states that anyone hurt by an unlawful and large youth gathering can take civil action against a social media platform that allowed for the promotion of the event.

HB 5561 has not been assigned to committee and Rep. Jones is the bill’s only sponsor.

* Center Square

Illinois Senate Bill 3838, dubbed the Broadband Deployment Act, would streamline how internet service providers secure access to land along roadways, a change supporters say is needed to meet federal deadlines and avoid losing the funding. Opponents warn the shift would weaken longstanding protections for property owners.

Instead of typical protections, the bill requires only that property owners are notified at least 14 days before work is to be done on the private property.

The Illinois Dept. of Commerce and Economic Opportunity and a representative for 12 internet service providers spoke as proponents of the bill, arguing that the bill provides protections and remedies for landowners. […]

The Illinois Farm Bureau’s representative, Chris Davis, spoke in opposition to the bill on the grounds that it would undermine property rights across the state, passing along an up-front burden of seeking restitution only after any damages may have been done.

  5 Comments      


Call and response

Wednesday, Mar 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* JB for Governor…

JB for Governor Releases New Video Called “He’s Back” – Watch Here

Yesterday, the Illinois Republican Party selected Darren Bailey as its candidate for governor, reviving a ticket that Illinois voters already rejected in 2022. Bailey has been explicit that he intends to change his tone to attract new voters, but a closer look at his record makes clear that his positions haven’t moved an inch.

Illinois voters didn’t buy it four years ago, and they won’t buy it now. Darren Bailey can try to change his message but his ideas haven’t changed – he’s too extreme for Illinois.

* The video



* Meanwhile, Darren Bailey dropped a new digital ad attacking Pritzker


Rate ‘em!

  32 Comments      


340B Helps The Most Vulnerable Patients: Infants With Rare Diseases – Support HB 2371 SA 2

Wednesday, Mar 18, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Newborn screenings can uncover neuromuscular disorders in a healthy-looking baby, allowing for early treatment. The 340B program has helped many parents facing the profound reality of a child who may never walk, talk or breathe on their own. Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago treats over 400 patients with neuromuscular disorders such as spinal muscular atrophy and Duchenne muscular dystrophy—and 60% of the children come from low-income families covered by Medicaid.

As a 340B provider, the hospital can offer these patients new high-priced gene therapies. When the federal 340B program works as intended, economically disadvantaged parents have the medication their child needs and the hope that comes with it.

“Prior to these new therapies that have come out, [children with neuromuscular disorders] would usually pass away before their first birthday,” said Kristen Alianello, Lurie Children’s neuromuscular nurse coordinator. When administered early, she added, gene therapy can help these children live normal lives. “The 340B program is so important, especially in our organization and with our patient population of spinal muscular atrophy.”

In addition to covering high-cost medication, Lurie Children’s puts 340B savings toward supporting families, which includes counseling, emotional support, home modifications for patients who can’t walk and transportation for families with children using a wheelchair.

340B provides hope for children facing the most wrenching health challenges. Stand with patients and providers:

Vote YES to House Bill 2371 SA 2
—the Patient Access to Pharmacy Protection Act. Learn more.


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Quentin Fulks open thread

Wednesday, Mar 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* A whole lot of commenters here second-guessed Quentin Fulks the past several months. As you know, Q ran Pritzker’s super PAC supporting Juliana Stratton’s congressional bid. I understood the doubters because Quentin previously ran Pritzker’s failed graduated income tax constitutional amendment, so people naturally had their reservations. Lots of folks complained (myself included) that his spending started way too late for Stratton (which was a major complaint with the CA back in the day) and that Raja was so far ahead Q’s ads would never let her catch up. Those comments were likely in the hundreds.

Well, LG Stratton not only caught up, but she won

* Also, the legacy media journalists who bought into the prospect that Pritzker would fail in this race and are now covering for their sources is so fascinating and amusing. From the Wall St. Journal

Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton of Illinois won her state’s Democratic primary for U.S. Senate on Tuesday, helping Gov. JB Pritzker dodge political embarrassment as she placed herself in a strong position to become the sixth Black woman to serve in the chamber.

Hilarious.

* As I’ve been saying for months, Raja’s support was likely a mile wide and an inch thick. December polls mean nothing in mid March when the real spending starts. For example, once a Black candidate and her allies start spending money, Black votes can change…


There was indeed a massive shift. Politics 101. Totally predictable.

* I was talking to Christian Mitchell last night about all the Q hate from some of y’all here. And it occurred to me that maybe we should have a post where people could clear the air.

It might be interesting to hear from Q’s detractors about what they think now.

Have at it.

  53 Comments      


Chaos Coming July 1: Illinois’ Radical Credit Card Law Could Upend Everyday Purchases

Wednesday, Mar 18, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Starting July 1, Illinois families could face chaos when paying for everyday purchases like groceries, gas, or a dinner out because of a new state law that changes how credit cards work.

At the checkout line, shoppers may suddenly be told they cannot use their credit cards to pay for sales taxes or tips, forcing them to split payments or pay those portions in cash.

It is a radical change that only benefits corporate mega-stores, while small businesses, local banks, and consumers are left to deal with the fallout.

Experts who understand the global payments system have been sounding the alarm for months:

    • The Biden administration’s Department of Treasury noted the law is an “ill-conceived, highly unusual and largely unworkable state law,” and “it is likely that fraud risk would increase significantly, consumer services would be constrained and public trust would decline.”
    • A federal judge weighing a preemption-related matter noted the policy is “indisputably disruptive,” “costly” and calls out “business-ending consequences” for local banks and credit unions.
    • Crain’s Chicago Business said, “Springfield’s Swipe Fee Gamble Deserves an Appeal.”

Before chaos hits on July 1, lawmakers should reverse course and repeal the Illinois Interchange Fee Prohibition Act.

Learn more at: guardyourcard.com/Illinois

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Mar 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton wins Democratic nomination for US Senate. Tribune

    - With 90% of the estimated vote tallied, Juliana Stratton had 40% of the vote to 33.2% for Raja Krishnamoorthi and 18.2% for Robin Kelly, with the remaining votes divided among seven other candidates.
    - Stratton’s victory also marked a major win for Gov. JB Pritzker, who in 2018 chose the then-freshman state representative to be his running mate.
    - Stratton underscored her campaign pledge to push to abolish U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and alluded to community resistance to President Donald Trump’s Operation Midway Blitz immigration enforcement crackdown and other aspects of the president’s agenda.

* Related stories…

************** Advertisement **************

Sponsored by the Illinois Nurses Association:

Bedside Nurses urge a “No” vote on HB4369. The Nurse Licensure Compact Act is being marketed as harmless “flexibility,” but Illinois nurses see the fine print. Championed by the right-wing Illinois Policy Institute, this proposal could subject Illinois nurses who provide reproductive and gender-affirming care to cross-state investigations or discipline for following Illinois law. It would also hand hospital corporations a powerful tool to import strikebreakers, undermining bedside caregivers fighting for safe staffing and fair contracts. Labor nurses across Illinois are united in opposition, and voters should ask why anyone who once stood with healthcare workers is now advancing a bill backed by corporate interests and right-wing think tanks.

************** Advertisement **************

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois governor’s race will be a rematch in 2026: Bailey, a farmer from southern Illinois and the party’s 2022 nominee, claimed victory Tuesday night in a four-way primary for the GOP nomination, defeating Ted Dabrowski, former head of the conservative policy website Wirepoints. According to unofficial returns compiled by the Associated Press, Bailey had carried about 50% of the vote as about 8:35 p.m. when the race was called. Dabrowski garnered about 32%.

* Tribune | Downstate and Chicago North Side challengers declare victory in state House primary races: In what appears to be an indictment of Illinois’ Republican establishment, Deputy Republican leader Norine Hammond, who shares the second-highest ranking position in the Illinois House GOP, trailed her challenger, Joshua Higgins, in her downstate race by 25 percentage points with 91% of the estimated votes counted, according to The Associated Press. AP has not called the race for Higgins, a candidate who is aligned with the far-right Illinois Freedom Caucus, a group of downstate Republicans considered the most conservative in the legislature. But he declared victory over Hammond, who has been in the Illinois House since 2010.

* Sun-Times | Community organizer Miguel Alvelo Rivera defeats State Rep. Jaime Andrade Jr. in Northwest Side district: Rivera ran as a progressive outsider while Andrade counted on his track record with voters in the 40th District, which includes a stretch of the Northwest Side from Bucktown to Albany Park. Andrade’s fundraising surged since January with big support from Illinois Democrats in Springfield and the Illinois Democratic party. His campaign brought in nearly $1 million in donations over $1,000 since January.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | Feds back off threats to withhold funds from the CTA, but begin pressing the Illinois transportation department: The Federal Transit Administration is backing off previous threats to withhold up to $50 million in federal funds from the Chicago Transit Authority over safety issues. At the same time, the feds are putting the screws on the Illinois Department of Transportation, which has some oversight authority over the CTA’s rail system. On Tuesday, President Donald Trump’s FTA said it believed IDOT “has not properly leveraged its oversight authority and resources to protect Chicago passengers and transit workers,” citing the results of what it described as a routine audit.

* Capitol News Illinois | Croke leads Democratic comptroller race as downstate voters dominate GOP primaries: State Rep. Margaret Croke, D-Chicago, held a 24,000-vote lead with 83 percent of votes reporting as of 10 p.m. — a roughly 2.4% advantage over state Sen. Karina Villa, D-West Chicago. The Associated Press had not called the race as of 10 p.m. […] Trailing her was Villa, who has served in the General Assembly since 2019 and is regarded as the most progressive of the candidates. She was the only candidate without a background in finance. Instead, she’s said her social work career gives her the insight to understand what it means to balance budgets with services people rely on.

* Daily Herald | Peterson appears headed toward rematch with McLaughlin in November: If unofficial results stand, Peterson will get another chance to prove the district can change from red to blue. With ballots still left uncounted, Peterson received 4,926 votes, while her opponent in the Democratic primary, Erin Chan Ding, tallied 2,657 votes. The two waged a bitter campaign featuring insults, negative literature and questions about campaign ethics.

* Daily Herald | Harris beats Adamczyk in GOP primary race for secretary of state: Diane Harris has defeated fellow Republican Walter Adamczyk to become the GOP nominee for Illinois secretary of state. With 89% of votes counted on Tuesday night, Harris, a longtime Joliet Township precinct committeeman, received 265,447 votes or 53%. Adamczyk, a GOP precinct committeeman from Chicago who works as a Cook County Forest Preserve District laborer, received 235,592 votes or 47%.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | CHA Board Defies The Mayor And Picks Its Own CEO After Surprise Vote: The resolution was not shared publicly before the vote, and several CHA residents murmured in surprise when operating chairman Matthew Brewer announced Pettigrew’s name. “Who?” one of them blurted out. Pettigrew is currently the leader of the housing authority in Washington, D.C. A search committee put together by Johnson first picked him as a CHA finalist last year. He was not at the meeting Tuesday.

* Sun-Times | Council Black Caucus chair wants to rename city college to honor Rev. Jesse Jackson: Ald. Stephanie Coleman, whose South Side ward includes Kennedy-King College, said adding the Rev. Jesse Jackson’s name to the Englewood school would create a “historic civil rights trinity.”

* Block Club | Thompson Center Will Keep Its Name, With Google Planning A 2027 Move-In: Previous renderings show plans for a multi-terrace atrium with greenery as well as a multitude of seating along what is planned to be retail and restaurant space. The atrium will remain publicly accessible. Another rendering showed what the renovated building is slated to look like from the corner of Randolph and Clark streets. It features a second-floor outdoor space and updated landscaping.

* WGN | FAA proposes deeper cuts to O’Hare flights to ease congestion: The FAA said without major reductions, even more major disruptions could hit O’Hare after hub giants United and American added waves of new flights, vying for dominance over one of America’s busiest airports. “It’s bad news for an airport recovering pretty fast from the pandemic,” said Joe Schwieterman, a DePaul University professor and aviation expert who spoke to WGN-TV on Monday. “O’Hare is the hottest airport in the country in terms of traffic growth. Just watching American and United grow so fast, and now, the FAA hit a wall saying they can’t handle it all.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Preckwinkle poised for record-tying fifth term after primary win: With 89% of precincts reporting, the four-term leader of the nation’s second-largest county bested Democratic primary challenger Brendan Reilly 430,123 votes to 197,506 votes, according to unofficial results Tuesday night. That gave Preckwinkle about 68% of the total. […] Preckwinkle, who turned 79 on primary Election Day, would match George Dunne as the county’s longest-serving leader if she’s elected in November and completes a fifth four-year term.

* Crain’s | Pat Hynes unseats Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi: Hynes defeated Kaegi in the Democratic primary contest for Cook County assessor, winning 56% of votes cast in the county with 99% of precincts reporting and 49% of votes cast with 91% of precincts reporting in the city as of about 9:30 p.m., according to election officials’ unofficial count. That lines him up to be the county’s next assessor pending the results of a November general election; there’s no Republican candidate in the race. A spokesman for Kaegi’s campaign confirmed he had conceded.

* Naperville Sun | DuPage Clerk Kaczmarek loses reelection bid by large margin: Incumbent DuPage County Clerk Jean Kaczmarek appears to have lost her reelection bid in a primary loss Tuesday to fellow Democrat Paula Deacon Garcia. With 100% of the unofficial vote count tallied, the results as of 10:45 p.m. Tuesday were: Garcia: 54,761; Kaczmarek: 42,670

* Aurora Beacon-News | Voters appear to shoot down Geneva’s ask to issue $59.4 million in bonds for a new police station: With all precincts in Kane County reporting, unofficial results showed 34.38% of voters in favor of and 65.62% of voters against the city’s pitch as of around 10 p.m. Tuesday, according to data from the Kane County Clerk’s Office. […] Tuesday’s bond measure asked local residents whether they supported the city issuing $59.4 million in bonds to help pay for the construction of a new police station on a city-owned property adjacent to the city’s Public Works site on South Street.

* Naperville Sun | Naperville D203 board nixes plan to cut 38 teachers after outcry from students, parents: District administrators presented a proposal to honorably dismiss the educators as one way to close a projected $12.4 million budget deficit. The board unanimously rejected the plan to thunderous applause from a packed house who remained at the meeting for about five hours waiting for the vote. Dan Iverson, second vice president of the Naperville Unit Education Association, said the vote to reject the job cuts, known as a reduction in force, was the right thing to do and he was grateful the board heard the passion from the community. While there is still a deficit, he said, “this was not the right way” to close it.

* Daily Herald | GOP voters back Noonan over Moore in DuPage sheriff’s primary: Former DuPage County Board member Sean Noonan won the Republican nomination for sheriff Tuesday. Noonan garnered 30,157 votes, while current Undersheriff Eddie Moore had 15,232 votes, according to unofficial tallies as of about 10:30 p.m. Noonan said he would come in as a “reformer” and wants to take the sheriff’s office “to the next level.” He spent most of his law enforcement career with the Bloomingdale Police Department, rising through the ranks to become a sergeant. He now is an officer in Oakbrook Terrace.

* Daily Herald | Newcomers win Democratic nod for DuPage County Board seats: Bloomingdale attorney Eric Poplonski secured the GOP nomination for a seat representing the northeastern corner of the county. Unofficial tallies showed Poplonski with 6,569 votes compared to 330 votes for candidate Onkar Singh Sangha. Poplonski will challenge Democratic incumbent Michael Childress in the general election. Democratic voters selected Melissa Villanueva as their nominee for a two-year seat.

*** Downstate ***

* Community News Brief | Macomb Poll Worker Relieved of Duties on Election Day:
Sutton requested a Democratic ballot, and the poll worker assisting with Macomb Precinct 2 responded: “You should be shot.” “I wasn’t sure if I heard correctly, so I asked her ‘You think I should be shot?’ and she confirmed what she had said,” Sutton said Tuesday afternoon following the incident […] “None of the other election judges said anything about what she just said,” Sutton shared. After casting his ballot, he immediately drove three blocks to the McDonough County Clerk’s Office, and spoke to County Clerk Jeremy Benson, who assured him the situation would be handled accordingly. The Community News Brief reached out to Benson after the incident was brought to the newspaper’s attention.

* WGLT | Voters approve new fire station for Randolph Township Fire Protection District: The referendum passed by a 64%-36% margin [572-315] on Tuesday with all five precincts reporting, according to the McLean County Clerk’s office. […] Some of those buildings in use currently are nearly 70 years old and are not build for modern fire trucks, according to fire protection district trustee president Frank Friend. The bonds will be paid off through a property tax increase that will add $192 per year to the tax bill of a $200,000 home.

* BND | $17.2 million career and technical education expansion comes to East St. Louis HS: The project, which is expected to be completed around June 2027, is primarily financed through a $17 million grant from the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity. The remaining $197,627 will come from the district’s fiscal year 2026-27 capital projects budget, East St. Louis School District Executive Director of Communications Sydney Stigge-Kaufman said.

* WGLT | Hail to the new state champion!: It’s official. Last Tuesday’s severe storms produced the largest hail ever recorded in Illinois. Representatives from the South Carolina-based Insurance Institute for Business & Home Safety traveled to Northern Illinois University to confirm the record. They measured and created 3-D models of several hailstones collected by Kankakee-area residents during the March 10th storm.

*** National ***

* Chalkbeat | A viral case against screens in schools is winning converts. Does the evidence hold up?: I wanted to figure out how strong the case against ed-tech really is, so I took a careful look at Horvath’s evidence. My takeaway: There’s no smoking-gun data showing that ed-tech is at the root of, or even contributing to, recent learning declines. But Horvath’s case should still give schools and educators some pause. Could the tech tools they’ve adopted be doing more harm than good?

* CNN | US airports scramble with TSA staffing shortages amid partial government shutdown: More than a third of the security screeners at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport didn’t show up to work Tuesday, the airport’s general manager said, causing passengers to have to wait in line for up to two hours. Long lines have stretched through different airports this week as Transportation Security Administration officers worked without pay during the busy spring break travel season.

* WCIA | Illinois Dept. of Revenue: USPS changes could impact tax returns, payments: In a news release posted on Monday, the IDOR said that while USPS postmarks will still show the date of the first processing operation, it might not reflect the date the mail was dropped off at your local post office. The deadline to file an Illinois individual tax return is Wednesday, April 15. But due to the postmark change, the IDOR is asking taxpayers who mail their returns and tax payments to do it earlier than they typically would.

  13 Comments      


Good morning!

Wednesday, Mar 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Bangles

* How are y’all feeling today?…

  11 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Mar 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

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

Wednesday, Mar 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Mar 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage and live comptroller’s race results

Wednesday, Mar 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news on the website formally known as Twitter. Our Bluesky feed…

  Comment      


*** LIVE *** Declared primary winners

Tuesday, Mar 17, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller


  31 Comments      


*** LIVE COVERAGE *** Primary night

Tuesday, Mar 17, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along as we gather info. We’ll also have a separate post for declared winners. As an added bonus, NBC’s Steve Kornacki is doing live coverage of Illinois starting at 7 and we’ve embedded it at the top of this feed. Also, use this as an primary night open thread. [Adding: The Hill feed ended. If you know of another one, please let us know in comments]…


  15 Comments      


Late-afternoon precinct reports and some news updates

Tuesday, Mar 17, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What are you seeing out there at your polling place? Any issues or long lines? Let us know your approximate location. Thanks! We’ll have election coverage tonight, so stay tuned.

Click here and here for live election coverage from the Sun-Times and the New York Times.

* Chicago voter turnout as of 3 pm…

296,884 total ballots cast (includes Early Voting and previously processed Vote By Mail)

1,554,337 active registered voters in Chicago

19.10% citywide turnout so far

Ballots Cast By Age Group:
18 -24: 11,990 ballots cast

25-34: 42,369 ballots cast

35-44: 43,198 ballots cast

45-54: 37,393 ballots cast

55-64: 50,720 ballots cast

65-74: 62,148 ballots cast

75+: 48,129 ballots cast

Ballots Cast By Gender:
Female: 166,198 ballots cast

Male: 129,898 ballots cast

Non-Binary/X: 397 ballots cast

Undeclared: 391 ballots cast

Ballots Cast Per Hour:
(as reported by e-pollbooks at this moment, will be continually updated through the day)
6:00am-7:00am: 5,120 ballots cast

7:00am-8:00am: 7,889 ballots cast

8:00am – 9:00am: 9,473 ballots cast

9:00am – 10:00am: 9,814 ballots cast

10:00am – 11:00am: 11,408 ballots cast

11:00am – 12:00pm: 13,328 ballots cast

12:00pm – 1:00pm: 13,547 ballots cast

1:00pm – 2:00pm: 13,837 ballots cast

* DuPage County Clerk Jean Kaczmarek…

As of 2:00 p.m. on Mar. 17, 2026, 115,069 voters out of 636,822 registered voters have voted in DuPage County for a turnout of 18.07% percent. 41,212 voters took advantage of in-person Early Voting. 35,966 out of 73,822 requested Vote-By-Mail ballots have been received and verified as of this afternoon. 37,891 voters have voted in-person on Election Day as of 2:00 p.m.

In 2014, the final midterm primary turnout was 19.19%.

In 2018, the final midterm primary turnout was 24.88%

In 2022, the final midterm primary turnout was 22.79%.

“Election Day voting by hour has been trending higher all day than comparable past elections. With five hours left to vote and more Vote-by-Mail ballots to be delivered, DuPage County is on pace for its highest midterm turnout in recent memory. I encourage DuPage County voters to take advantage of the opportunity to vote at any polling place throughout the county before 7:00 p.m. this evening,” said County Clerk Jean Kaczmarek.

* More…

    * WJBD | Today Is Election Day….So Far No Issues Have Been Reported in Marion County: “I think with a primary election coming up like this, just the parties voting, it’s already a lower turnout than what we see for the general elections. I think we’re going to be right in line with what we saw in the 2022 primary, which would be the similar races locally. I think we’re going to be around 25% total voter turnout for that election.”

    * Shaw Local | Lots of election judges, but few voters for Illinois Valley primaries: Polling places in the Illinois Valley were full on Tuesday morning – with election judges, that is. Voters, on the other hand, were pretty scarce. Primary voting kicked off before daybreak and a theme quickly emerged in La Salle County polling places. Efforts to recruit more election judges have been successful, spurred by a pay raise.

  17 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Mar 17, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

The Electronic Payments Coalition is launching a multimillion-dollar advertising campaign urging the Illinois Legislature to repeal the controversial law exempting state and local taxes and tips from so-called swipe fees charged by credit card processors.

The ad campaign represents a public appeal by the banking industry following a key loss on the legal front last month. It comes a few months before the law, which was passed in a late-night session in 2024, is set to take effect.

“We did not think we could waste any more time, and it was our duty and a responsibility to educate the folks in Illinois exactly what Springfield did just a few years ago,” said Richard Hunt, executive chairman of the Electronic Payments Coalition. “They are about to become an outlier in a very complex global payment system.”

A 30-second commercial, which will begin airing across the state during the first round of the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament tonight, claims the law may block consumers from using their credit or debit cards for taxes and tips. It highlights an untipped waitress, pizza delivery worker and barista saying they will be the ones paying the price from the law. The ad also says the law was “secretly tucked into the budget” by Springfield politicians.

The spot is here.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Sun-Times | Three state lawmakers, a county treasurer seek to replace Illinois comptroller in Democratic primary: State Reps. Margaret Croke and Stephanie Kifowit, state Sen. Karina Villa, and Lake County Treasurer Holly Kim are vying to replace Comptroller Susana Mendoza, who announced last year she would not seek re-election. Mendoza has served as the state’s chief financial officer since 2016. She endorsed Kim, 45, of Mundelein, as her replacement. Croke, however, has the largest campaign war chest, according to recent state filings. She raised $1.8 million, just slightly more than Villa, who raised $1.4 million. Billionaire business executive Michael Sacks has been Croke’s largest funder, providing nearly $160,000 to her campaign.

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | CHA Board Picks Head of Washington, D.C. Public Housing Agency as CEO Over Mayor’s Objections: Seven members of the board voted to appoint Pettigrew, with Commissioners Jawanza Malone and Angela Parker voting no. Commissioner Mildred Harris abstained from the vote. After Parker vehemently objected to Pettigrew’s appointment, CHA Board Chairman Matthew Brewer threatened to have her removed from the meeting. […] The board’s decision to appoint Pettigrew comes after Mayor Brandon Johnson pushed for nearly a year to name former Ald. Walter Burnett (27th Ward) to lead the CHA, only to run into a brick wall of opposition from board members and federal officials.

* Crain’s | Chicago’s average homeowner age is climbing — and it’s not just young people who can’t afford to buy: The median age of Chicago-area homeowners in 2024 was 56.5 years old, according to a National Association of Realtors report published earlier this month. That’s up four years from 2010. It’s a bigger increase than the nation’s homeowners saw in the same period, from an average age of 54 in 2010 to 57.5 in 2024. “While the country is aging,” NAR’s report says, “homeowners are aging even faster.” Young people get into homeownership later than they used to, the report says, “while existing homeowners are staying longer.”

* Crain’s | Chicago crypto broker BlockFills files for bankruptcy after selloff: BlockFills, which counts Susquehanna Private Equity Investments and CME Ventures among its backers, is one of the first crypto firms to seek court protection since the market crash that started in early October. Cryptocurrencies have lost almost $2 trillion of combined market value since then, forcing some companies to retrench. Gemini Space Station Inc., the crypto exchange founded by Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, in February announced plans to cut as much as 25% of its workforce and wind down operations in the UK, European Union and Australia. It later said three top executives had left the company.

* Block Club | Firefighter Mike Altman Dies From Injuries Suffered While Battling Rogers Park Apartment Fire: Chicago Fire Department Commissioner Annette Nance-Holt identified the firefighter as Mike Altman, 32, and said he had been with the department for nearly two years. Altman was the fourth generation in his family to serve the city’s fire department, Nance-Holt said during a press conference Tuesday. His grandfather was a former commissioner of the fire department, ABC7 reported. “We are heartbroken by yet another loss of our own,” she said. “We will never forget his courage and sacrifice.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Appellate court upholds trial court keeping Lake County Board candidate off ballot: Though [Juan Beto Ruiz’] name still appears on ballots for Tuesday’s primary, votes cast for him will not count, according to Lake County Clerk Anthony Vega. […] “The responsibility for this outcome exclusively lies with my opponent, as he was solely responsible for correctly completing and submitting the required paperwork,” [incumbent Esiah Campos] said. “The courts have affirmed that he should never have appeared on the ballot.”

* Daily Southtown | Blue Island mobile home residents moving out after fighting to save park: Kuecher said the compensation is not enough, and she advocates the residents having more time to move. “For some of them, it’s just not possible to get them enough compensation,” she said. “These people have higher value and higher investment in their homes and also for those families that have children in schools that might need to relocate before the school year is over, putting considerable strain on the family.”

* Daily Southtown | Orland Park may increase fines, update noise and feral cat regulations: The proposed ordinance prohibits noise that “unreasonably disturbs, injures or endangers the comfort, health or safety of reasonable persons of ordinary sensitivity” between 10 p.m and 7 a.m. Thursdays through Sundays and from 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. on Fridays and Saturdays.

*** Downstate ***

* The Daily Illini | Champaign County closes 15 polling locations, cites judge shortage: Fifteen polling locations across Champaign County will be closed on Election Day, Tuesday, due to election judge shortages. […] The list of open polling sites can be found here, and a guide to the primary ballot can be found here. The polls will be open from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m.

* WGLT | McLean County could seek reimbursement from clerk’s office for budget overruns: The McLean County Board could decide to claw back more than $400,000 in budget overruns from County Clerk Kathy Michael’s office. Last week, McLean County Board Executive Committee members took County Clerk Michael to task for going over her budget last fiscal year. Board chair Elizabeth Johnston said in a WGLT interview that depending on what invoices and other documentation Michael submits in the next month, the county general fund may need to be reimbursed by Michael’s office.

* WGLT | Normal approves 2026-27 budget, pause in sales tax sharing and new street work: The town council on Monday approved an operating and capital investment budget for the 2026-27 fiscal year. The $233.5 million budget represents a 10% increase over last year. Kathleen Lorenz was the only “no” vote. Rory Roberge was not present. […] The budget includes a $100,000 allocation to the Bloomington-Normal Economic Development Council, despite criticism from Mayor Chris Koos following the departure of CEO Patrick Hoban. “I continue to believe that a strong EDC is very valuable for the community, and so I’m hopeful that will contribute that full $100,000 to the EDC,” said council member Andy Byers.

* BND | How a collection case landed a Madison County judge’s name in the Epstein files: A man wearing a sandwich board protesting outside of the Edwardsville courthouse last month revived sleeping worries and anxieties Madison County Judge Andrew Carruthers had hoped to leave in the past. […] His name is in the Epstein files because he once represented Epstein on a collection matter more than a dozen years ago. […] “I was assigned to serve as local counsel for attorneys in another jurisdiction seeking to enforce a civil money judgment for their client who, at the time, was completely unknown to us, just as he was unknown to most of the country 13 years ago,” Carruthers said in a statement he provided after speaking with reporters.

* WGLT | Recent closures leaves families on a ‘Hunger Games’-style search for child care: In addition to the Cadence Academy in north Normal closing, two centers in east Bloomington, Kidsville and Bright Horizons, have also closed in recent months. Two new centers, the Farmhouse and Joshua Tree Ministries, both in Bloomington, are enrolling kids on a waitlist. […] Pacha said the only place that met her needs and had an opening far exceeded her budget. In the end, she rearranged her schedule to be able to pick up the kids at school and be with them in the afternoons.

*** National ***

* Tribune | Consumer price data: Gas prices surge, natural gas costs near all-time highs and ground beef sets new record: Notably, the February consumer price index data doesn’t factor in the latest shocks to global markets after the United States and Israel launched a major attack on Iran on Feb. 28, killing Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and kicking off a war that has lasted more than two weeks. The biggest economic impact thus far has been on the already volatile energy sector, with oil prices skyrocketing to $100 a barrel, gasoline prices steadily climbing and natural gas expected to follow. Rising fuel costs mean shipping and transportation will be more expensive, and companies may look to pass those hikes off to customers. That could translate into higher prices on all kinds of goods and services.

* Reuters | Kalshi charged criminally in Arizona for operating illegal gambling business: The charges filed by Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes marked the first time a state has pursued a criminal case against Kalshi, which has been at the center of an escalating battle over the ability of state gaming regulators to police prediction markets operators. “Kalshi may brand itself as a ‘prediction ⁠market,’ but what it’s actually doing is running an illegal gambling operation and taking bets on Arizona elections, both of which violate Arizona law,” Mayes said in a statement. New York-based Kalshi in a statement lamented that “a state can file criminal charges on paper-thin arguments.” It said its business was different from sportsbooks and casinos and “should not be overseen by a patchwork of inconsistent state laws.”

* AP | Republicans are launching a voting bill debate that could last days or even weeks: Republicans are launching an unprecedented effort on Tuesday to hold the Senate floor and talk for days about a bill that they know won’t pass — an attempt to capture public attention on legislation requiring stricter voter registration rules as President Donald Trump pressures Congress to act before November’s midterm elections. The talkathon could last a week or longer, potentially through the weekend, as Senate Majority Leader John Thune tries to navigate Trump’s insistence on the issue and Democrats’ united opposition. Trump has urged Thune to scrap the legislative filibuster, which triggers a 60-vote threshold in the 100-member Senate, or find another workaround to pass the bill, but Thune has repeatedly said he doesn’t have the votes to do that.

  7 Comments      


IDOT now in federal crosshairs

Tuesday, Mar 17, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* US Department of Transportation press release

Trump’s Transportation Secretary Sean P. Duffy Cracks Down on Illinois DOT for Mismanagement of CTA System

U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean P. Duffy today announced that the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) is launching a Safety Management Inspection (SMI) and a Special Directive for the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) — the state agency responsible for safety oversight of the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) rail transit system. FTA determined that under Governor J.B. Pritzker’s failed leadership, IDOT has not properly leveraged its oversight authority and resources to protect Chicago passengers and transit workers. FTA’s actions build on Secretary Duffy’s nationwide campaign to make transit systems safer for American families.

“It shouldn’t take federal intervention for Illinois to take oversight of CTA seriously,” said U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean P. Duffy. “I’ve made clear since my first day on the job – safety is non-negotiable. Governor Pritzker and state leaders should be embarrassed for the chaos they’ve allowed on Chicago’s subways, buses, and rail lines. While they may not care about your safety — this administration does. The Trump Administration is using use every tool available to hold IDOT accountable and ensure every American using Chicago transit feels safe.”

The Special Directive requires IDOT to take 11 actions to improve its oversight of CTA, including implementing FTA’s recommendations from an April 2025 audit of IDOT’s rail transit safety oversight function.

FTA will determine, based on the results of the inspection, whether additional enforcement actions, such as the issuance of additional Special Directives or other enforcement actions, are warranted. […]

To date, FTA has conducted several safety activities, including: (1) issuing a Special Directive to IDOT in October 2023 to address staffing and other concerns; (2) Evaluating IDOT’s response to FTA’s October 2025 report on a State Safety Oversight audit; and (3) Participating in the investigation of recent safety events at CTA.

FTA has identified repeated and persistent deficiencies in IDOT’s oversight performance, including:

    • Limited onsite presence
    • Weak accident investigation governance
    • Ineffective corrective action plan management, and
    • Minimal use of enforcement authority

Given these longstanding issues with IDOT’s oversight of CTA, FTA believes a safety investigation is necessary to determine the root causes and a way forward.

The safety investigation will assess how IDOT performs critical safety oversight functions, such as how IDOT:

    • Independently identifies, evaluates, and prioritizes safety risk
    • Conducts and/or critically reviews safety event investigations, ensuring their sufficiency and thoroughness
    • Exercises active and informed oversight of CTA’s Roadway Worker Protection (RWP) program to ensure the safety of those working on or around CTA tracks
    • Critically reviews and, where necessary, challenges CTA’s analyses and conclusions to ensure that safety risk is appropriately identified and mitigated
    • Verifies the implementation and effectiveness of corrective actions; and
    • Takes timely and appropriate action to intervene when CTA’s safety performance is inadequate

Additional Information on the Special Directive:

IDOT has not made sufficient progress in addressing long-term issues, including FTA’s findings from a recent audit. These deficiencies have allowed critical safety concerns to continue. FTA believes this new directive is necessary to address unsafe conditions and practices consistent with the prevention of substantial risk of death or personal injury.

In order to accelerate reforms of IDOT’s oversight of CTA, the new Special Directive will:

    • Incorporate the eight findings from FTA’s safety audit of IDOT as immediately enforceable findings under this directive;
    • Establish specific required actions and expedited completion timeframes for IDOT to correct these deficiencies; and
    • Issue three additional findings and corresponding required actions where FTA has determined that further direction and enforcement are necessary to address ongoing safety risk at CTA.

The letter to IDOT is here.

* Tribune

The FTA directive requires IDOT to take various actions to strengthen its oversight of the CTA, including conducting on-site safety inspections, conducting a review of the CTA’s in-house hazard assessments and developing a spending plan for federal dollars. The directive specifies that the actions be taken throughout the spring and summer.

Failure to do so, acting FTA executive director Jamie Pfister warns in the directive, could lead the feds to require IDOT to use federal funds to correct safety problems.

The FTA, which previously threatened to withhold up to $50 million in federal grant funding from the CTA over public safety and crime, also said Tuesday it “reserves the right to take additional enforcement action as necessary.”

An FTA spokesperson did not immediately respond to a question about whether or not that action could include withholding federal funds.

* Gov. Pritzker’s response

As the Trump Admin fails to keep airports running and make transit safer, Sec. Duffy launched a sham investigation into our local transit.

Maybe when you care less about pajamas at the airport and more about real solutions as we do, we’ll take note.

Get back to work, Sean.

  21 Comments      


Early afternoon precinct reports and some news updates (Updated)

Tuesday, Mar 17, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tell us about your voting experience today, or if you’ve already voted. Please remember to give us your approximate location. Thanks.

* The Sun-Times and WBEZ are pumping out live election updates. One snippet

State Rep. La Shawn Ford, who is running for Congress in Illinois’ 7th District, said he was initially unable to vote in person this morning at George Rogers Clark Elementary School in Austin.

“This has never happened to me,” he said.

Ford said when he placed his electronic ballot card in a voting machine, it said he had already voted. He had not, he said. He was given the option to vote with a provisional ballot, and he declined.

The Board of Elections eventually gave him approval to vote on a paper ballot and canceled the electronic process, he said. […]

“Imagine how many other people this could happen to and they’ll just walk away. This is an example that we have to make sure our systems are improved,” [Ford] said.

The New York Times will have live updates here.

* Chicago voter turnout as of noon…

250,364 total ballots cast (includes Early Voting and previously processed Vote By Mail)

1,554,337 active registered voters in Chicago

16.11% citywide turnout so far

Ballots Cast By Age Group:
18 -24: 9,278 ballots cast

25-34: 34,495 ballots cast

35-44: 36,710 ballots cast

45-54: 31,448 ballots cast

55-64: 42,982 ballots cast

65-74: 53,074 ballots cast

75+: 41,534 ballots cast

Ballots Cast By Gender:
Female: 140,744 ballots cast

Male: 109,019 ballots cast

Non-Binary/X: 294 ballots cast

Undeclared: 307 ballots cast

…Adding… Tribune

Elections officials said Chicago voter turnout reached just over 16% around noon Tuesday as voters across the city came out in the cold to cast their ballots, citing concerns around affordability and excitement over the state’s first open U.S. Senate seat in 16 years. […]

More than 250,000 total votes have been cast so far in Chicago, bolstered by early and mail voting that outperformed the midterm primaries in 2022, according to the Chicago Board of Elections. Votes on Election Day so far have kept pace with day-of voting during the state’s June 28, 2022 primary, which by the end of the day saw a city voter turnout of about 23%, according to Max Bever, spokesperson for the elections board.

“We came into Election Day like a lion but looks like we might be exiting like a lamb,” Bever said. “I think we’ll likely fall somewhere in between 2018 and 2022’s turnout numbers.” In 2018, the city saw turnout just over 32%.

Bever said voting has gone relatively smoothly so far, with only minor problems reported in some precincts and no public safety incidents reported.

* Evanston Roundtable

Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss’ campaign admitted Tuesday that a 2004 relationship Biss had with a former undergraduate student of his at the University of Chicago was “ill-advised” after she posted about her experience to social media on Monday.

Megan Wachspress posted on both her Bluesky and Substack accounts that after she took an undergraduate topology course taught by Biss, he emailed her to “ask if I wanted to meet up, socially,” leading to a brief, consensual relationship between the two.

“After a few very intense evenings, he had second thoughts. It was wrong to date a student, of course, so we would have to stop making out,” Waschpress wrote. “Of course we could still hang out, and so we continued to spend time together in what to any external observer would look like dates, until gradually that stopped, too.” […]

Wachspress declined to comment on this story beyond what she wrote in her posts. When the RoundTable requested comment from the Biss campaign on this story, a spokesperson directed the RoundTable to a statement sent to The Daily Northwestern on Monday.

“In 2004, when Daniel was 26 and before he met his wife, Dr. Wachspress was a 20-year-old student in a course Daniel taught during his time as a postdoctoral instructor at the University of Chicago,” a Biss campaign spokesperson wrote to The Daily. “After the course ended, Daniel and Dr. Wachspress went on a handful of dates over the course of a few weeks. Daniel realized then, as he does now, that it was ill-advised, and he ended it.”

* New York Times

The weekend on the eve of the election is traditionally jammed with activities around Chicago that are voter-rich targets for eager politicians. There were four parades around Chicago marking the holiday. The Irish Fellowship Club hosted an annual dinner on the Friday before St. Patrick’s Day, attended by more than 1,000 people, where a $100 raffle ticket bought a chance to win round-trip airfare for two to Ireland, courtesy of Aer Lingus.

But there are limits to how much St. Patrick’s Day merriment is permitted to seep into the voting process, a city official warned.

No longer do dozens of taverns double as polling places all around Chicago, where it was once considered acceptable to cast a ballot and sidle up to the bar for a tipple of Jameson afterward, said Max Bever, a spokesman for the Chicago Board of Elections.

“We urge voters that once they get their civic duty done, get your ‘I Voted’ sticker, take that selfie,” he said, “and then go have that adult beverage.”

* More…

    * MS Now | A major Senate primary consumed by old feuds and new money: Despite lagging in most polls, Kelly — who appeared at a fundraiser last week with congressional heavyweight Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C. — has shown no interest in leaving the race before primary day. “I feel great on the ground,” Kelly told MS NOW on Sunday. “They have a lot of the money, and to me, are trying to buy the race. But I know I’m the most qualified candidate running.” Some political observers have attributed Kelly’s decision to remain in the race to lingering resentment over Pritzker’s role in ousting her as state party chair four years earlier. She has publicly rebuffed that sentiment.

    * Sun-Times | Early front-runner Melissa Bean seeks to reclaim 8th Congressional District seat she lost in 2010: With a moderate platform, and preaching pragmatism over polarization, Bean says she wants to confront President Trump over his administration’s policies. Since losing the seat in 2010, a loss Bean has pinned on her vote for the Affordable Care Act, she has worked at private finance firms. Bean’s campaign has benefited from $3.4 million from groups associated with the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. The pro-Israeli group has been flooding local congressional races with cash for candidates who are most friendly to Israel.

    * NY Mag | Crypto Cash Fuels Democrats’ Divide in Illinois Senate Race: Stratton’s reputation in crypto-land is made even worse by her support from Warren, who is the industry’s least favorite politician (rivaled only by Warren protégé Katie Porter, whose 2024 U.S. Senate race in California was demolished by heavy crypto-financed negative ads). Overall, the Krishnamoorthi-Stratton contest is in danger of becoming a surrogate fight between the money and influence of crypto and Pritzker.

    * Politico | AIPAC makes a $22 million gamble in Illinois: Interviews with a dozen Democratic elected officials, candidates and strategists — including both supporters and critics of Israel — revealed growing concerns about AIPAC’s interventions. Strategists warn that AIPAC’s attacks on Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss, the grandson of a Holocaust survivor, created an opening for progressive social media influencer Kat Abughazaleh, a Palestinian-American who is a vocal critic of Israel and appears to have late momentum in the race, over AIPAC’s preferred candidate, more moderate state Sen. Laura Fine. In the past week, the group has pulled down all of its anti-Biss messaging, but it could prove too late. “There’s been a strategy shift,” said a person directly familiar with AIPAC’s thinking, granted anonymity to discuss private conversations. “Our primary goal in Illinois is to prevent potential ‘Squad’ members from being elected to Congress.”

    * NYT | Illinois Primary Shows Rising Political Influence of Indian Americans: Mr. Krishnamoorthi’s campaign comes at a moment of growing influence for Indian Americans in politics and government. Six Indian Americans are in Congress — the most ever. Kash Patel, the F.B.I. director, and Usha Vance, the vice president’s wife, have high profile roles in President Trump’s administration. Mayor Zohran Mamdani of New York is among the most prominent Democrats in the country. And Representative Ro Khanna of California is seen as a likely Democratic candidate for president in 2028.

    * The Guardian | Illinois heads to elect next senator and five congressional district candidates: Melissa Conyears-Ervin, who challenged Davis in the 2024 primary, is making another run for the seat. She is currently treasurer for the city of Chicago, an elected position, after serving in the state house. The United Democracy Project, an Aipac-affiliated group, has run ads supporting Conyears-Ervin. La Shawn Ford, a state representative who ran for Chicago mayor in 2019, has Davis’s endorsement.

    * Reuters | Five US House primaries to watch in Illinois on Tuesday: River North developer Jason Friedman is the top fundraiser for Illinois’ 7th congressional district. His $2.5 million fundraising haul is more than three times as much as his nearest competitor in the Democratic primary. But Friedman’s campaign has been outspent by more than $4 million in advertising supporting Chicago Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin. United Democracy Project, a pro-Israel super PAC, has spent more ​than $3 million to boost Conyears-Ervin.

  29 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY — Campaign news

Tuesday, Mar 17, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Mid-morning precinct reports

Tuesday, Mar 17, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* What have you been seeing out there so far today at your polling place? Any shenanigans on St. Patrick’s Day? How are the crowds, the weather, etc.? Please let us know at least approximately where you are. Thanks!

…Adding… Tribune

Turnout for early and mail voting in Chicago outpaced that in prior years’ midterm primaries, officials said Tuesday morning as voters began to trickle into precincts to culminate an expensive election season. […]

As of Monday night, nearly 190,000 people in the city of Chicago had already voted either by mail or through early voting, according to data from the Chicago Board of Elections.

That’s more than 72,000 votes ahead of the early vote count in the same time frame during the primary election on June 28, 2022, which saw a city voter turnout that year of around 23%.

In suburban Cook County, more than 108,000 people cast their ballots early as of Monday, exceeding early vote totals during the last two gubernatorial primaries in 2022 and 2018, according to the Cook County Clerk’s Office.

  20 Comments      


This is a Netflix true crime documentary just begging to be produced

Tuesday, Mar 17, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Unofficial Statehouse historian John Amdor pointed to this Wikipedia entry last night during our conversation about how the comptroller’s office has never been much of a political springboard. Somehow, we moved on to former state treasurers

Donald R. Smith (November 13, 1926 – February 4, 1982) was an American politician.

Smith graduated from York High School in Elmhurst, Illinois and then joined the United States Navy in 1944 during World War II and served until 1946. He went to Loyola University Chicago and John Marshall Law School In Chicago, Illinois. He served as County Treasurer of DuPage County, Illinois and served on the DuPage County Commission. He was a Republican. From 1965 until 1977, Smith served as chief fiscal officer in the office of the Illinois Treasurer. In 1977, he was appointed Illinois Treasurer when Alan J. Dixon resigned to serve as Illinois Secretary of State. Smith served until 1979.

On February 4, 1982, Smith was found murdered in the Radisson Hotel on North Michigan Avenue. His hands were tied, towel had been stuffed into his mouth, and he had been strangled to death. On February 5, 1982, two suspects held for questioning in the death of Smith were released by the police after passing polygraph tests.

An unsolved murder mystery of a former statewide officeholder? And, wow, that’s a very unusual way to die. I’d definitely watch that true crime doc. UPI

A police spokesman said a security guard found Smith’s body in a ninth floor room at the Radisson Hotel on North Michigan Avenue, the posh shopping and business district that runs north of the Chicago River.

Police said no one was immediately arrested in the slaying and refused to say if Smith’s room had been ransacked or if he had checked in alone. He had been at the hotel since Tuesday.

State Treasurer Jerome Cosentino, Smith’s successor, said the state’s chief fiscal officer was in town to meet with him.

‘We were supposed to meet this afternoon to work on the 1983 budget,’ Cosentino said. ‘Mr. Smith is a very punctual man. When he didn’t show up, my secretary became concerned and called the hotel.

‘We figured he might have gotten sick. The hotel checked on him and then they notified me.’

Cosentino described Smith as ‘just a good family man. I don’t think he had any enemies anyplace.’

Anyway, I thought we could use a much-needed election day diversion.

  17 Comments      


Trump sics his veep on Illinois

Tuesday, Mar 17, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Reuters

U.S. President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Monday launching a national task force led by ​Vice President JD Vance aimed at proving Trump’s claims that federal funds ‌intended for social-welfare programs are being stolen in some states. […]

Vance, appearing with Trump in the Oval Office, said the order would force the federal government ‌to “stop ⁠the fraud of the American taxpayer and make sure that the benefits that ought by right go to American citizens, go to American citizens, and not to fraudsters.” […]

A copy of the executive order released by the White House said members of the ​task force are to ​come up with ⁠a plan in 90 days to implement anti-fraud measures.

A White House fact sheet describing the order mentioned California, Illinois, New York, ​Maine and Colorado as U.S. states with “insufficient” fraud oversight.

The EO is here.

* TNND

“The failure to ensure sufficient Federal oversight to prevent fraud, waste, and abuse has allowed irresponsible State politicians to increase Federal spending in their own States, which has contributed to inflation for health care services, housing, utilities, and groceries,” the order reads in part.

A fact sheet regarding the order states, “There is strong reason to believe similar vulnerabilities exist in California, Illinois, New York, Maine, and Colorado, where insufficient safeguards and weak oversight increase the risk of large-scale fraud.”

* Stephen Miller (no relation) is also on the task force

We’re going to see the first ever effort in American history to reclaim the ultimately trillions of dollars that are stolen from taxpayers. I believe, I know, President Trump believes that when this theft is exposed, we will see that if all of it were stopped, it would be enough to balance the budget. The extraction of wealth from American taxpayers to people who don’t belong here is the primary cause of the national debt, and this is the first ever effort to shut that down.

Um

Federal law, however, prohibits the use of federal Medicaid funds for undocumented immigrants except in limited circumstances, and economists cite a range of structural factors — including military spending, tax cuts and demographic pressures on entitlement programs — as drivers of the national debt.

  25 Comments      


Credit Unions: A True Part Of The Community

Tuesday, Mar 17, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Credit unions have deep connections built within their communities. As Matthew Parrott, President/CEO of SIUE Credit Union explains, credit unions aren’t just located in the neighborhoods they serve—they are an active, visible part of them. Staff members work every day to understand local financial needs, offer guidance, and build trust with the families who rely on them.

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When a credit union disappears, a community loses more than a place to bank. It loses a trusted partner dedicated to helping local families succeed. That is why protecting credit unions matters—for the people and communities they proudly serve.

Learn more at: https://betterforillinois.org/

Paid for by Illinois Credit Union League.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Mar 17, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Hyundai division to revive two Joliet factories with 2,500 jobs. Crain’s

    - Hyundai Translead, North America’s largest maker of semi trailers, is bringing two shuttered factories in Joliet back to life with 2,500 jobs.
    - The company plans to invest nearly a half-billion dollars at the former Caterpillar and Lion Electric factories along U.S. 6 near Interstates 55 and 80 to expand its manufacturing capacity beyond Mexico.
    - It’s the latest in a string of big manufacturing projects landed by Gov. JB Pritzker’s administration. Gotion, a battery manufacturer plans to invest $2 billion and create 2,600 jobs in Manteno; automaker Stellantis, plans to create 3,300 jobs and spend $613 million re-opening its idled factory in Belvidere; and Rivian, a startup EV maker is investing $1.5 billion and adding 550 jobs at its manufacturing operations in Normal.

************** Advertisement **************

Sponsored by the Illinois Nurses Association:

Bedside Nurses urge a “No” vote on HB4369. The Nurse Licensure Compact Act is being marketed as harmless “flexibility,” but Illinois nurses see the fine print. Championed by the right-wing Illinois Policy Institute, this proposal could subject Illinois nurses who provide reproductive and gender-affirming care to cross-state investigations or discipline for following Illinois law. It would also hand hospital corporations a powerful tool to import strikebreakers, undermining bedside caregivers fighting for safe staffing and fair contracts. Labor nurses across Illinois are united in opposition, and voters should ask why anyone who once stood with healthcare workers is now advancing a bill backed by corporate interests and right-wing think tanks.

************** Advertisement **************

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Federal judge halts Trump administration’s health care funding cuts to Illinois, for now: The judge had previously issued a temporary restraining order prohibiting the federal government from holding back the funds from Illinois, California, Colorado and Minnesota – but that order was good only for about a month. U.S. District Court Judge Manish Shah issued the preliminary injunction in the case late Friday afternoon. “The loss of capacity to fund and maintain public health infrastructure puts the health of plaintiffs’ residents in jeopardy,” Shah wrote in his order for the preliminary injunction. “… The states’ sovereign interests here outweigh the executive branch’s likely unlawful interest in using preauthorized funding to shape state-run governance.”

* NBC | Jesse Jackson posthumously spurs ‘commotion’ in key Senate race: That was after another son, Rep. Jonathan Jackson, raised eyebrows when he doubted the endorsement in comments to Politico, saying: “He wouldn’t do that. … This smells of desperation.” Reached by NBC News on Monday evening, Rep. Jackson backed off those remarks, saying, “I may have overstated that,” and adding that he “wished her well.”

* Sun-Times | Can anyone beat Darren Bailey in the Republican primary for Illinois governor?: “I don’t think that people realize the damage that Pritzker [has done] in the last three years, and he’s certainly done that, because affordability is front and center today,” Bailey told the Sun-Times. “Our approach will be actually doing something about it.” Conservative commentator Ted Dabrowski argues he’s the only candidate that can actually do something about Pritzker, who beat Bailey by nearly 13 percentage points and is unopposed in his party’s primary for a third term as Illinois’ chief executive.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Sun-Times | Four Illinois State Legislative races to watch on Election Day: In the Illinois House, incumbent Rep. Jaime Andrade Jr. and community organizer Miguel Alvelo Rivera face off in the 40th District, which includes a stretch of the Northwest Side from Bucktown to Albany Park. Rivera has won some endorsement from some local elected officials, including U.S. Rep. Delia Ramirez, whose district includes part of Andrade’s district, and Alds. Rossana Rodríguez-Sánchez (33rd) and Anthony Quezada (35th). Rivera is running as a progressive outsider, while Andrade said he has a track record with voters.

* Sun-Times | Pritzker taunts Bovino amid reports of Border Patrol chief’s retirement: ‘No one is above the law’: Gov. JB Pritzker on Monday celebrated the reported retirement of U.S. Border Patrol Cmdr. Gregory Bovino, who led President Donald Trump’s aggressive — and at times deadly — deportation campaigns in Chicago and other cities. “Greg Bovino won’t just get to walk away — he will be held accountable and responsible for the damage he’s done to our nation,” Pritzker said on the social media platform X. “We won’t forget, and neither should you. No one is above the law.”

* Capitol News Illinois | Pritzker calls for setting new higher education attainment goals: Gov. JB Pritzker is calling on agencies in his administration to set goals for increasing the number of adults in the state with college degrees or other postsecondary credentials. In an executive order issued Friday, Pritzker announced the formation of a working group that will review the state’s existing workforce development programs, consult with industry and labor groups as well as local economic development organizations, and recommend new higher education attainment goals.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | City Council poised to vote on restoring Chicago’s subminimum wage for tipped workers: Johnson opponents motioned last week to force a council floor vote on legislation to pause the One Fair Wage policy, passed in 2023 and now in its third year of moving toward full implementation. However, the coalition would need at least 34 votes to override a potential mayoral veto of their ordinance, which seeks to halt the policy that servers be paid the city’s full minimum wage on top of tips starting in July 2028. The impending clash would be the latest of many between Johnson and an antagonistic council bloc. He has issued two mayoral vetoes already in his first term, after City Hall had gone since 2006 without one.

* Crain’s | FAA seeks deeper-than-expected flight cuts at O’Hare: The FAA, in a new notice issued Monday, proposes to cap total daily operations at 2,608 daily takeoffs and landings. That’s up slightly from 2,554 last summer. But it’s 15% lower than the peak of 3,080 that airlines had initially scheduled for the 2026 season before the FAA stepped in. The cap is lower than the current level of operations at about 2,800 daily flights, which the FAA initially had suggested. But it’s not as drastic as the 2,500 or 2,400 levels that were floated two weeks ago.

* Chicago Yimby | Commercial Leasing Begins For Thompson Center Redevelopment: Additional interior renderings and a new website have been revealed for the ongoing redevelopment of the Thompson Center at 100 West Randolph Street in The Loop. The iconic structure dates back to 1985 but had long been plagued by maintenance issues, until a group of local developers partnered with Google to remodel and reposition the property.
* Sun-Times | Mayor Johnson signals support for letting CPS students take a day off to push for school funding: Ald. Jeanette Taylor (20th), Johnson’s handpicked chair of the City Council’s Education Committee, has two grandchildren who attend Chicago Public Schools. Taylor said she does not believe the mayor should sanction students to skip classes, unless they learn something from it. “Are they going down to Springfield? Are they coming down to City Hall? What work is gonna be done? There needs to be something else other than just taking a day off. I want young people to understand them taking the day off. Are we teaching them about May Day? Are we teaching them about workers rights? Are we teaching them to advocate in Springfield for themselves? What comes with it?” Taylor asked.

* Sun-Times | After fires, officials prepare to remove another homeless encampment on Chicago’s Northwest Side: Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration says the encampment’s roughly 20 inhabitants will be offered long-term housing, but might have to wait weeks for the apartments to be ready. That means moving to a shelter, a “bridge” housing facility with social services, or staying outside, officials say.

* WBEZ | Mayor Brandon Johnson meets with men in prison working toward Northwestern University degrees: Ian Valencia, a Northwestern senior incarcerated at Sheridan, has been locked up half his life, since he was 17. The visit of a sitting Chicago mayor to a state prison – perhaps the first of its kind, according to Northwestern students – is symbolically important, Valencia said. “It’s helping give me a more hopeful look on what’s possible, if more people get involved in trying to change what prison is supposed to be like,” he said.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi faces suburban opponent for influential position over property taxes: Hynes called the pandemic reassessment an “unforced error,” and contended Kaegi’s proposed solution, so-called “circuit breaker” laws — versions of which have stalled in the statehouse — would be expensive and could have been avoided had the assessment stayed on track with market value in the first place. Kaegi warned Hynes’ ascent could be a return to form for an office still marred by past corruption.

* Tribune | Attorneys in ‘Broadview Six’ case say conspiracy charges violates First Amendment, has ‘chilling’ effect: The four remaining defendants in the case are: Katherine “Kat” Abughazaleh, a candidate in Tuesday’s Democratic primary for the 9th Congressional District seat; Andre Martin, originally of Providence, Rhode Island, who is Abughazaleh’s deputy campaign manager; 45th Ward Democratic Committeeman Michael Rabbitt; and Oak Park Village Trustee Brian Straw. Last week, Perry granted a request from the U.S. attorney’s office to dismiss charges against Catherine Sharp, a onetime candidate for Cook County Board, and Joselyn Walsh, a part-time garden store worker and singer.

* Daily Herald | After Naperville council nixes controversial data center, Pulte Homes development pitched for site: The property owner has since requested informal feedback from the city council on a potential residential development for the site. The owner has also tapped Pulte Homes as its development partner on the project. A preliminary site plan shows more than 260 units — both townhouses and rowhomes — to the south of the Nokia complex.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | Lawmakers call for expanded testing after E. coli found in Cahokia Heights water: The calls for action from U.S. Sens. Tammy Duckworth and Dick Durbin and U.S. Rep. Nikki Budzinski are in response to recent community-organized testing results first reported by the Belleville News-Democrat and its partners, St. Louis Public Radio and the Illinois Answers Project. The community testing detected E. coli in eight of the 118 samples collected from 23 homes over seven months, from June to December. Six of the community’s eight E. coli-positive samples came from the same home in the former city of Centreville.

* Alton Telegraph | Alton says $1.6 million in unpaid trash bills went uncollected: Comptroller Paul Fritsch, who was appointed in late January 2026, confirmed the figure and said his office has been reviewing the accounts, starting with those more than 90 days overdue. However, he cautioned that the $1.6 million number is still being refined. “We’ve been crossing the different numbers,” Fritsch said during the March 11 meeting. “We’re calculating that based on some other factors.” Fritsch also noted that the city cannot easily distinguish which delinquent accounts belong to rental properties because the billing system does not categorize them by address type. And some of the debt, he said, is extremely old.

* WCIA | Macon Co. aims to prevent homelessness, keep people in their homes: The Macon County Continuum of Care (CoC) has launched a 100-day homeless prevention challenge. […] On a regular day, CoC serves as a hub for resources meant for people facing homelessness in Macon County. But now, it’s the home of a new challenge: fighting to prevent homelessness before it can start. […] The program encourages landlords and community members to communicate when tenants are struggling early, so that those in need can access preventative care. That is when Dove Inc. can step in.

* WCIA | Decatur Public Transit System launches contactless fare collection system: “So, we are trying to modernize the fare process. So, we’re going to go to cashless, we’re going to hopefully go to cashless by late into the year, maybe early fall, late summer, somewhere in there, try to go to completely cashless,” City Operations Manager of Transit and Facilities, Riley Fanning, said. “So, this will help them to get on the app, they will just buy a card, tap a card and ride our system that way.”

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