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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Evanston Now

The Democratic congressional primary field in the 9th district grew to 18 active candidates Tuesday.

Evanston economist Jeff Cohen, an advisor at Analysis Group in Chicago, announced he’ll join the field of candidates to replace Rep. Jan Schakowsky.

If all 18 make the ballot, it would give voters here the longest ballot for a congressional race in state history.

Cohen, who said in a news release that he believes his experience as an economist would separate him from the field, wrote, “If you want to fix the economy, send an economist.”

More on Cohen from Politico

Jeff Cohen, a veteran economist, is announcing his campaign for Congress in the 9th Congressional District Democratic primary. “I’m running because of the concern I hear from every corner of the 9th District about the lack of affordability,” Cohen said in a statement. “There are reasonable (even bipartisan) ways to lower costs and increase income for many folks, but we have to stop sending politicians to Congress who don’t understand how the economy works.”

Cohen is a senior adviser at Analysis Group in Chicago, where he’s done analysis on the economic feasibility of the 2016 Olympics and Evanston’s pension challenges. Earlier, he worked for the Department of Justice, where he helped halt a proposed merger of health insurance giants Anthem and Cigna.

* Justice P. Scott Neville Jr. has been selected as the next Chief Justice of the Illinois Supreme Court. WTTW

P. Scott Neville, a Chicago native and former Cook County judge, has been tapped to serve as the next chief justice of the Illinois Supreme Court.

Neville, who has served on the high court for the past seven years, will take over for current Chief Justice Mary Jane Theis beginning in October. He’ll become the second Black chief justice in Illinois history. […]

Neville himself said that public trust in the courts “requires justice that is accessible, procedures that are understandable, and support services that meet the needs of litigants.”

“I will also work to make the Illinois courts a national model, safeguarding the constitutional promise of equal justice without regard to who a person is, where they live, or what resources they have so all litigants are seen and heard,” he said.

*** Statewide ***

* Crain’s | Bears opener brings first big test of Illinois’ new sportsbook fees: It’s too early to say whether bettors will cut back their gambling budgets, move to the unregulated market or simply accept the fees. At least some bettors in Chicago seemed unfazed by the fees during the Bears’ loss to the Minnesota Vikings. Jerry Simon, for example, bets weekly on sports with individual wagers ranging from $10 to $500 across platforms like Fanduel, DraftKings and ESPN Bet. “Obviously tax is never good,” Simon said, though he maintained the entertainment is still worth the added cost.

* Crain’s | This cannabis giant was doing well in Illinois. It wasn’t enough to save the company:[4Front ex-Chairman Kris Krane] said the company had even been negotiating with a possible lender as recently as this past spring, and a deal to bring $40 million in cash into 4Front fell through just weeks before it filed a formal request for a court-appointed receiver in May. “We would’ve needed about $40 million to essentially handle a lot of the debt issues, to basically zero out a lot of the debt and consolidate the debt into one place,” Krane said. “And it looked like that was going to happen right up until about a month before we went to receivership. We went really, really, really far down the road with this lender.”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | El Grito is back on in Pilsen, organizers say: Organizers for El Grito in Pilsen will move forward with the celebration despite the threat of increased immigration enforcement across the city. It will be held 5 p.m. Monday — the evening before the beloved holiday — at St. Paul Catholic Church. “Canceling is not an option,” said Teresa Fraga, president of El Comité Cultural Mexicano de Chicago. “We are committed to celebrating our history.”

* Sun-Times | Another North Side homeless tent camp is targeted by the city: After several dangerous fires, a North Side homeless tent camp is scheduled to be torn down by the city beginning Tuesday. An estimated 15 to 20 people are living in tents and other structures along the Chicago River north of Bryn Mawr Avenue in Legion Park. City officials say the fires, three just this past summer, pose a serious threat and the wooded riverfront areas are hard to reach.

* Sun-Times | How Chicago doctors are encouraging telehealth during the expected ICE surge: “Any time there is a wave of increased ICE activity, we will see a wave of patients opting to cancel appointments or do them by telehealth,” said Steph Willding, CEO of CommunityHealth, a primary and specialty care provider that treats uninsured adults and many immigrants. […] “There’s a lot of ways in which our command structure right now is operating similarly to how we did during the first months of the pandemic, where we are taking it day by day,” Willding said.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | ‘Odd thing out’: Neighbors upset about proposed data center development in Naperville: Karis Critical has proposed a pair of data centers near Naperville and Warrenville roads. A glass-and-steel building, designed years ago for Lucent Technologies, formerly occupied the site. There’s “quite a bit of fiber optic cable” tied to the original Lucent campus, Karis CIO Brett Rogers said. “So much of the public discourse around data centers is tied to AI data centers or hyperscale cloud data centers, very, very large facilities,” he said. “What we’re proposing we’d call a colocation data center or a metro data center. These tend to be a little bit smaller, tend to be highly networked, and that’s kind of why we like this site so much.”

* Tribune | Union Pacific sues Metra amid payment dispute: Last week, Metra scored a win in the conflict via a U.S. Surface Transportation Board decision that granted the commuter railroad the right to use Union Pacific’s tracks. But the STB’s decision did not rule on how much Metra should pay to use the tracks. According to the lawsuit, Union Pacific issued what it calls a “Condition of Entry” for Metra to use its tracks, setting what it described as “market-level” payment rates to take effect when the parties’ previous agreement expired this summer.

* WTTW | Staff Shakeup at Fermilab and Argonne as Buyouts Follow Budgeted Funding Drop, Federal Research Shift: The buyout programs at two of the Chicago area’s pre-eminent scientific research facilities come at an uncertain time for research institutions and universities across the country. The proposed budget for the DOE Office of Science, which oversees many of the national laboratories and provides support to research across the country, was cut about 14% for fiscal year 2026.

* Evanston RoundTable | Local grocery tax moves to city’s checkout counter: Evanston City Council members on Monday moved to back a local grocery tax to replace the state grocery tax, which expires Jan. 1, leaving time for them to override Mayor Daniel Biss’ intended veto. Rather than wait until their next regular council meeting in two weeks, councilmembers voted 6-3 to adopt a 1% grocery sales tax as a special order of business at a meeting scheduled next Monday, Sept. 15, anticipating the mayoral veto.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Geneva firefighters get new union contract: The Geneva City Council last week approved a four-year collective bargaining agreement with the Geneva Professional Firefighters Association Local 4287 that extends from 2024 through 2028. Included in the contract are 3.15% annual raises for firefighters and 2.65% raises for lieutenants. The union represents firefighters and lieutenants who are part of the Geneva Fire Department, per the new contract. It does not represent, for example, employees with designations of captain, deputy chief or fire chief or civilian employees of the department.

* Tribune | Hollywood Casino Joliet opens to big revenue boost in August: The $185 million facility, which opened on Aug. 10, generated more revenue in three weeks than its predecessor riverboat did in any full month over the past five years, according to Illinois Gaming Board data. Hollywood Casino Joliet jumped up to fifth among the state’s 17 casinos with nearly $11.2 million in adjusted gross receipts during 23 days of operation in August. The casino ranked fifth in admissions with more than 101,000 visitors, according to Gaming Board data.

* Daily Herald | Park district awards contract for demolition of Palatine Stables: With only Commissioner Sue Gould voting no, the park board awarded the contract to Strategic Demolition & Excavation of Elmwood Park for an amount not to exceed $133,500. Gould motioned to table the vote, but did not receive a second. Last year, the board voted to close the stables, located near Northwest Highway and Dundee Road. The property, built in the 1950s, was privately owned until 1988, when Palatine Park District acquired it.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Champaign School District, teachers’ union reach three-year agreement: WCIA talked to school board member Christy Arnold and union President Mike Sitch. They’re both feeling good about what they put together and how it can set the district up for hiring success going forward. […] Some of the highlights include pay increase of 15-17% depending on the role, Champaign will now honor all experience from previous districts when it assigns its pay scale, and the implementation of two-weeks paid parental leave.

* WCIA | Long Creek votes to end ambulance service despite public opposition: In just eight months, the ambulances of the Long Creek Fire Department responded to 537 emergency calls, averaging 2.2 per day. They’ve transported 461 patients and maintained an average response time of 4 minutes and 34 seconds, which is far faster than the national benchmark of eight minutes or less in 90% of cases. Despite the success, the village board said the service is not generating enough money.

* Illinois Times | U of I to begin drilling test well this winter: Dr. Kathleen Campbell spoke in front of the Springfield City Council in June to express opposition to plans for drilling of a test well by University of Illinois Urbana Champaign’s Prairie Research Institute in partnership with City Water, Light and Power. Campbell, an emeritus professor at SIU School of Medicine and a Glenarm resident, lives roughly 5 miles from the test site – a rural plot off Pond Road in Pawnee. “I urge you to postpone, and preferably reconsider, the installation of this well,” Campbell told the council. “Though we are not CWLP customers, my neighbors and I are expected to bear the risk of a future carbon sequestration project. Experience tells us those risks are real.”

* WSIL | Lawyer in the Library program expands to Cairo Public Library: Alexander County Presiding Resident Circuit Judge Jeffery A. Farris, Cairo Public Library Director Toya Wilson, and First Judicial Circuit Chief Judge William J. Thurston announced the program’s expansion. Attorney Julian Valdes volunteers his time to support this initiative as well. The program offers patrons a chance for a 20-minute private session with an attorney to receive legal advice or assistance with documents. There is no fee, but pre-registration with the library is required.

* Tribune | Illinois renames its football venue Gies Memorial Stadium after $100 million donation from alumnus: The donation comes in the midst of a massive change in college sports thanks to the finalization of the House vs. NCAA settlement in June. College athletic departments now can participate in direct revenue sharing with their athletes, with the cap set at $20.5 million this year, and many still are figuring out how to navigate the new landscape. It also comes at a time of buzz around the Illinois department under athletic director Josh Whitman. The football team is ranked in the Associated Press top 10 for the first time since 2001. The men’s basketball team has won 20-plus games in six straight seasons, made an NCAA Tournament Elite Eight appearance in 2024 and advanced to the second round in 2025. The women’s basketball team has made two NCAA Tournament appearances in coach Shauna Green’s first three seasons.

*** National ***

* NYT | To Shrink Mamdani’s Lead, Cuomo Seeks to Broaden His Campaign Team: Now, as the contest enters its final two months, Mr. Cuomo — known for keeping a tight circle of advisers — is expanding his team to include a new campaign manager, Greg Goldner, who has worked on campaigns in Chicago for Rahm Emanuel, the former congressman and mayor; and a new pollster, Cornell Belcher, who worked on Barack Obama’s presidential campaigns. The selection of Mr. Goldner, who helped create a super PAC that sought to defeat Brandon Johnson in the Chicago mayor’s race in 2023, seemed aimed at drawing a parallel between Mr. Mamdani and Mr. Johnson, another progressive leader, whose mayoralty has been besieged by problems.

* Crain’s | Rivian plans $45,000 R2 crossover for 2026 in push toward mainstream: The move toward more mainstream vehicles begins with the midsize R2 crossover in the first half of 2026 with a starting price of around $45,000 before shipping, the company has said. The California electric vehicle maker will assemble the R2 at its factory in downstate Normal while it builds a new plant near Atlanta, which will make the R2 and a less expensive R3 model as early as 2028. Rivian hasn’t disclosed pricing for the R3.

* Columbia Journalism Review | I Tested How Well AI Tools Work for Journalism: Jeremy Merrill, a journalist at the Washington Post, used to spot-check AI tools to see which ones might work best for his data projects. But he realized his spot-check method was inadequate. “Vibes are not enough,” he said. “You’re not taking a good enough look at your real data. Is it 60 percent accurate? Seventy? Ninety-five? You just don’t know.”

  Comment      


Dabrowski said Bailey should’ve toned down gun stuff, Bailey fires back

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Republican gubernatorial candidate Ted Dabrowski was speaking at a Northside Republican 2026 Prospective Candidate Forum on August 27th at Glascott’s Saloon. An audience member asked about Darren Bailey’s 2022 gubernatorial campaign and the difficulties in coordinating with him in the city

Well, I think you know, everybody knows that for somebody who wins statewide, you gotta get something like 33 to 35% of Cook County. And so, you know, Darren Bailey was from downstate, and you know, he had to come up here to try to get that Cook County vote. You know, he made a few mistakes, sadly, when he pulled out his AR-15, which, which works well downstate, but it doesn’t work well in the suburbs. Yeah, and again, again, I’m all for, I’m all, I’m a huge second, second rights, proponent, defense. But I’m just saying, from a marketing perspective, Darren may not want to do that.

* I asked the Bailey campaign for a response. Jose Durbin…

The Second Amendment isn’t about marketing, it’s about freedom. Law-abiding citizens in Illinois have the right to defend their families in the way they see fit, whether they live in Chicago or downstate. There’s nothing wrong with being from downstate. Our families, businesses, and taxpayers matter just as much as anyone else’s. Treating our values like a liability means selling them out, and Illinois can’t afford leaders who cave when it counts.

  29 Comments      


Competition Works: Lower Bills. Reliable Power. Say NO To Right Of First Refusal

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois families are sweating through heat and higher electricity bills this summer. Across the Midwest, some relief from energy inflation is in the forecast. Thanks to competitive bidding, dramatically lower costs have resulted compared to no-bid Right of First Refusal (ROFR) proposals.

Here’s the proof:

    $87 Million Saved
    Fairport to Denny Transmission Line (MISO – Missouri)

      • Competitive bidding cut MISO’s initial estimate from $161 million to just $74 million – saving Missouri Customers millions!
    $6 Million Saved
    Reid EHV to IN/KY Border Transmission Project (MISO)

      • Open competition saved customers $6 million upfront
      • Delivered long-term cost savings
    $14 Million Saved
    Matheson–Redbud Transmission Line (SPP – Oklahoma)

      • Competition delivered $14 million in savings
      • Provided a superior engineering solution compared to other proposals

In many cases, incumbent utilities won these bids, proving that when they compete with other qualified builders, consumers win. It saves money and drives better results.

Competition Works.

Legislators should choose competition and protect Illinois families.

  Comments Off      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Rep. Mike Coffey (R-Springfield) appeared on Sam Madonia’s Springfield morning show today

Madonia: All right. Darren Bailey, what are you going to do?

Rep. Coffey: You know what I’m going to do? I’m going to worry about Mike Coffey and the 95th District. That’s what I’m going to do.

Madonia: You know, I don’t think—I really don’t think—the Republicans can win the governor’s office. But I think with a legitimate, serious candidate and enough money, it could be closer than people think. Yeah, I really do. Mike, I think there are a lot of people, even in the burbs, a little concerned with the direction the state is going. I think taxes could be an issue raised with people, public safety could be an issue. The sanctuary city—I don’t really care what those polls are showing. You may not like the messenger, but are you okay with the message? I don’t think JB Pritzker is beatable, but I think Republicans could really make a much closer showing. But Mike, nobody’s going to do it. Nobody wants to go out there and spend all that money and time and effort and say, “Oh, you ran a good race. You came within five or six points.” They’re not going to do it. So it doesn’t look good for Republicans at the state level. […]

Coffey: Hey, I’ve got a great candidate: Tony McCombie. I would love for her to run for statewide office. I think she’s very dynamic. She’s a great female leader, she’s smart, she’s a great people person, great campaigner. I’ve encouraged her. But she wants to remain as the leader of the House Republicans. From my point and purpose right now, new to the House, I’m worried about those races—what we’re going to do, how we’re going to pick up seats. And we’ll see how the governor’s race shakes out. We don’t know what the political landscape is going to be over a year from now, and we’re just going to have to put out a good message. And we’ll see who comes out of the Republican primary and puts that message forward. […]

Madonia: Mike, but again, you’re not going to get anything until you get a legitimate candidate that has deep pockets, that can make a serious run. And at the state level, you tell me, it starts at the local level and you can make that argument. I’m not going to disagree. I think you have to have legitimate candidates who have a chance, and there’s nobody in the bullpen. I can make an argument that you would be as good a candidate for statewide office as anybody I’ve heard mentioned.

Coffey: Yeah, and that’s a problematic state of affairs.

Madonia: No, it is. Because you’re one term. I think you’ve done everything you need to do. You return calls, you’re running the office, you’re speaking the language. People listen to you and say, whatever party they agree with—property taxes are too high, we’re a high-tax state, we should not have been a sanctuary state, and so on and so forth. That would resonate. But there aren’t a lot of people in the Republican elected hierarchy right now that share your opinion.

Coffey: Well, and I will tell you, in politics in general, it’s become so divisive. And in order to be in it, they want me to say something bad about you. And I don’t think people—the general public—likes that real nasty politics. And so it’s driven a lot of people off. Because if you’ve got a good job and you’re successful and you’ve got the money to maybe, you know, put in a run for governor—all that, you know—why do you want to expose your family to it? You’ve got to be kind of a special person to want to do it. No, I understand—we need to. We need to fill in the ranks and get people running statewide. And hopefully, as we get people… you know, it’s not like you’re going to win these races in one cycle. You’re just not. I mean, we can get out there and say we’re going to win everything and tell you that—rah, rah, rah—but we’ve got to get people out there, get them exposed. Because it’s all about exposure. It’s all about name recognition. And we’ve got to get some candidates out there with name recognition.

* The Question: Which Republicans do you think could be viable statewide candidates? Make sure to explain your answer.

  63 Comments      


*Yawn*

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* No Chicago legislator has one iota of honest motivation to vote for this proposal unless there’s something in it for the city. If the Bears don’t pay off the hundreds of millions still owed on the Soldier Field renovations, if the city gets no new projects, then why support it?…


* Explained

  65 Comments      


What Illinois Can Learn From Texas On Battery Energy Storage

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

As Illinois confronts skyrocketing electric bills, legislators are on the hunt for solutions that provide relief as quickly as possible. Battery energy storage is our best and most cost-effective solution.

But last session— without evidence —opponents attempted to claim that battery energy storage wouldn’t work. Try telling that to Texas, where the rapid deployment of battery storage has already prevented blackouts and saved consumers billions.

Called “Ground Zero for the US Battery Boom” by Bloomberg, Texas added enough storage in 2023 to power 3 million homes and drop grid emergency risk during peak hours from 16% to less than 1%. The result? Storage saved consumers an estimated $750 million in 2024.

Texas has proven that storage is the quickest, cheapest, most reliable way to get consumers relief from skyrocketing, demand-induced price spikes. Storage is a nimble way to address growing populations, power-hungry data centers, and meet other electrification-related power needs. These are benefits Texas saw from storage even as the state reduced its gas generation capacity by 166 MW last year.

Illinois lawmakers should follow Texas’s lead and pass SB40 this fall to deploy 6GW of energy storage by 2035. Click here for more information.

  Comments Off      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: President Donald Trump’s administration announces immigration ‘blitz’ beginning in Chicago. Tribune

    - The announcement comes more than two weeks after the Republican president began to say he was planning to target Chicago over crime, causing Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker and Mayor Brandon Johnson to caution residents to prepare for potential immigration sweeps.
    - There was no word on how long the ICE operation would last, and there was also no mention of whether Trump would deploy the National Guard to play a supporting role.
    -Despite the “blitz” announcement, it remained unclear Monday how extensive the actions were in the early going. Local officials and immigrant activists cited only a handful of arrests.

* Related stories…

* Governor Pritzker will meet with ICIRR at 11:30 am in Brighton Park, then hold a 1:15 pm press availability outside the National Museum of Mexican Art in Pilsen. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WGN | Illinois state prisons can’t compute recidivism rates: IDOC officials acknowledge they have not been able to calculate the recidivism rate since 2022 due to what they describe as a computer “programming issue.” In 2022, the last time the number was updated, IDOC reported just under 37-percent of inmates re-offended within three years of their release. […] Sheriff Hain partnered with State Rep. Matt Hanson (D-83rd district, Batavia) to pass a law they hoped would better prepare inmates for life beyond prison walls. The law passed the Illinois General Assembly unanimously. It said, if the local sheriff was willing, state prisoners could be transferred back to county jail for the final few months of their sentence to receive localized and specialized re-entry services, everything from substance abuse to job training and housing help.“Not a single person has been able to take advantage of this law,” State Rep. Hanson said while acknowledging the text of his bill said IDOC “may” instead of “shall” do so. “They might be afraid the success that Kane County would have would illustrate they need to have a [better] re-entry program themselves.”

* Sun-Times | Justice Department’s civil rights boss takes on Illinois’ assault weapons ban: The Justice Department’s top official in charge of civil rights has joined the legal battle over Illinois’ controversial assault weapons ban, and is expected to personally argue against the law this month before the federal appeals court in Chicago. The 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed late last week to hear from Harmeet Dhillon, the Justice Department’s assistant attorney general for civil rights. A group challenging Illinois’ gun law agreed to cede five minutes of its time before the court to Dhillon, records show. It’s “extremely unusual” for the Justice Department “to treat Second Amendment rights as civil rights and advocate for them in such a direct and personal way at the appellate level,” Hannah Hill, vice president of the National Foundation for Gun Rights, told the Chicago Sun-Times.

* Stateline | Illinois among blue states to keep public health dollars while red states lose out: After the Trump administration slashed billions in state and local public health funding from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention earlier this year, the eventual impact on states split sharply along political lines. Democratic-led states that sued to block the cuts — including Illinois — kept much of their funding, while Republican-led states lost the bulk of theirs, according to a new analysis from health research organization KFF. The uneven fallout underscores how politics continues shaping health care in the United States. The nearly 700 CDC grants were worth about $11 billion and had been allocated by Congress during the COVID-19 pandemic.

*** Statewide ***

* WSIU | Second Amendment Foundation Challenges Illinois Firearms Ban in Foster and Day Care Homes: The Second Amendment Foundation has filed a motion challenging Illinois rules that ban firearms in foster and day care homes. Current law prohibits licensed foster parents and day care providers from keeping functional firearms in their residences. SAF argues that being a caretaker should not mean giving up fundamental rights, and criticized the state for spending taxpayer dollars to defend what they believe is an indefensible law.

* WCBU | Chicago Republican enters congressional primary against Rep. LaHood, who he calls a ‘RINO’: MAGA candidate John Kitover is a former Internal Revenue Service employee who worked in project and facilities management. He previously served for four years in the Army National Guard. He resigned from his job in May to run full time in the district of central and northwestern Illinois. Garth Gullette of Chillilothe is also seeking the GOP nomination in the 2026 primary. Referring to himself as a “carpetbagger,” Kitover said the reason to leave his job after five years was to primary LaHood. While currently residing in the Chicago-area neighborhood of Jefferson Park, he is running in LaHood’s district to take him on directly.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Stateline | Wagers on touchdowns, strikeouts and even penalties: States eye limits on prop bets: Major League Soccer, for example, successfully pushed Illinois regulators last year to ban wagering on whether yellow and red penalty cards will be shown during a match and whether a specific player will receive a yellow or red card penalty. Similarly, the state in February banned prop bets on NFL player injuries, player misconduct, officiating assignments, replay results and the first play of the game, following lobbying from the league. Illinois Gaming Board spokesperson Beth Kaufman told Stateline the regulatory agency doesn’t maintain a list of specific prop bets that are allowed. But the board does require licensees to receive approval from the agency for specific wagers offered, she said. “The IGB regularly monitors ongoing trends and developments in the industry and in major sports for any possible impact to the integrity of sports wagering in Illinois,” she said in a statement.

* Center Square | State rep says IL GOP will be outspent ‘20 to 1′ in 2026 elections: State Rep. John Cabello, R-Machesney Park, told Lars Dalseide of the American Legislative Exchange Council that Gov. J.B. Pritzker has spent hundreds of millions of dollars on elections, allowing unions and other groups to spend down ballot. “So that’s one of the reasons why we’re having a real hard time trying to pick up some seats. I’m hoping that we don’t lose any this time around, but we’re going to be outspent 20 to one,” Cabello said.

* WAND | New Illinois law allows student teachers to be paid: While the law does not require payment for student teachers, it eliminates longstanding prohibitions that block school districts colleges, and nonprofit organizations from providing stipends or wages. “This is how we start solving the teacher shortage, not by asking people to do more with less, but by removing the structural obstacles that have stopped too many from getting started,” said Sen. Adriane Johnson (D-Waukegan).

* WAND | New IL law will require insurance coverage for peripheral artery disease screening: Screening will be given to anyone above the age of 65 or people who have a history of smoking, lung disease and heart issues, among other health indicators. “My brother passed away from a similar disease,” said Rep. Thaddeus Jones (D-Calumet City). “He had his leg amputated and passed away. This bill seeks to identify and help at-risk individuals and allow them to have the blood pressure taken through their legs.”

*** Chicago ***

* ProPublica | Three Chicago Schools Get Expensive STEAM Makeovers. Can the Effort Reverse Declining Enrollment?: Students returning to Chalmers last month found an expansive new engineering space, computer lab and arts studio. The teachers who greeted them had received special training. A cache of new technology — 3D printers, computers and bee-shaped robots to teach students basic coding — offered fresh possibilities. The influx of dollars and attention has lifted hopes at Chalmers, with officials at Chicago Public Schools and City Hall testing the idea that investing in high-poverty schools can reverse enrollment losses. But it could take years and millions of dollars to see if it works.

* Tribune | Fight over Chicago ‘granny flat’ legalization to move forward with vote: A version sponsored by Ald. Bennett Lawson, backed by Mayor Brandon Johnson, would make the additional units legal throughout the entire city, with per-block limits in single-family residential areas. A competing plan from Ald. Marty Quinn would give aldermen the ability to effectively block the added units from such areas, but allow them elsewhere. The political wrangling over the issue has stretched over a year, a headache for Johnson that outlasted his last Zoning Committee chair tasked with landing the change, former Ald. Walter Burnett Jr. The ordinance appeared poised to pass in July until Quinn, 13th, and Ald. Greg Mitchell, 7th, used a parliamentary maneuver to delay a vote. “We’re gonna pass something in September, whether it’s his version, my version or a combination of the two,” Lawson, 44th, told the Tribune Monday.

* Sun-Times | What parents should know about sending kids to school as feds scale up immigration enforcement: The district is reminding parents that it already has policies in place for interacting with federal agents. CPS doesn’t share student records with U.S. Immigration and Customs and Enforcement officials and doesn’t allow agents to enter school facilities without a criminal warrant signed by a judge. It also doesn’t ask a family’s immigration status. CPS has also created a guidance document on how families can stay safe in their communities. And the district has partnered with the city’s Office of Immigrant, Migrant and Refugee Rights to promote family preparedness workshops being held this month.

* Block Club | Inter-American Magnet Parents Push CPS To Remove Principal As School Faces Safety, Staffing Turmoil: A CPS investigation into Principal Juan Zayas’ leadership has already concluded, but the disciplinary review process is still pending. Parents say that while the district deliberates, Zayas has continued to make decisions that destabilize classrooms and drive families and teachers away. The climate at the Lakeview elementary school has deteriorated over the past year under Zayas’ leadership, parents and council members told Block Club. Zayas has ignored serious safety concerns and made unilateral budget decisions without transparency, they said.

* Crain’s | Chicago-connected quantum startup makes IPO plans: Infleqtion, a quantum-computing company with strong Chicago ties, plans to go public and raise more than a half-billion dollars. The company recently said it would build a quantum computer at the Illinois Quantum & Microelectronics Park being developed on the former U.S. Steel South Works site in Chicago. The Boulder, Colo.-based startup is one of several companies that are trying to build a utility-scale quantum computer, one that’s large enough to be commercially useful.

* Tribune | Obama center construction tab reaches $615M as opening nears: The cost to build former President Barack Obama’s namesake center campus rose to $615 million through the end of 2024, according to the latest reports from the Obama Foundation, quickly nearing the total construction budget as fundraising efforts continue to bring massive amounts of money into the foundation’s coffers. That cost is more than double the earliest $300 million estimate from when the center was first contemplated. Foundation officials revised the estimate up to $500 million when the design was unveiled in 2017, then again in 2021 to $700 million for construction costs alone.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Republican candidate clarifies comment about immigrants’ rights: A Republican congressional candidate who in social media posts Sunday said immigrants in the U.S. illegally “do not have constitutional rights” has clarified the remark. Glen Ellyn’s Niki Conforti on Monday said she made the statement in the context of voting rights, which was the focus of her posts on X — the platform formerly called Twitter — and Facebook. […] When asked via email to explain her stance, Conforti — the lone GOP hopeful for the 6th District seat now held by Downers Grove Democrat Sean Casten — acknowledged the Constitution affords anyone in the U.S. some rights. “But they are to a much lesser degree than those granted to U.S. citizens and are mostly in regard to due process,” Conforti said. Those rights “certainly do not include voting in elections,” she added.

* Daily Herald | Advantage Metra: Feds give agency track rights in Union Pacific dispute: Metra and Union Pacific may be embroiled in a power struggle, but a significant federal ruling in the commuter railroad’s favor ensures riders won’t experience any drama, officials said Monday. The U.S Surface Transportation Board agreed last week to award Metra rights over the tracks used by the UP North, Northwest and West lines in the Chicago region. Union Pacific decided in 2019 it wanted to focus on freight and shift passenger operations to Metra. But the two are millions of dollars apart on the cost of using UP’s tracks, according to legal documents.

* Tribune | Case referrals to Cook County restorative justice courts lag amid policy debate: Making good on a campaign promise, State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke has stopped approving gun possession cases for participation in the court, instead sending other types of offenses, such as retail theft, burglary and criminal damage to property. Burke’s office says the move is in line with her oft-stated concerns: “For us, it’s guns, guns, guns. Every single day,” said Yvette Loizon, chief of policy at the state’s attorney’s office. And in response to Tribune questions about the shift, Loizon pointed out that the office has sought to address cases like Robinson’s when Burke lobbied for a state law that makes it easier, in certain cases, for people who have been arrested for carrying guns illegally to obtain a firearm permit.

* Shaw Local | Data center construction could be more expensive in Yorkville with increased building fees: The new fees would increase the permit application fee per building from $750 + $0.20 per square foot to the higher $1,000 + $1.00 per square foot. They would also increase plan review fees per building from $650 + $6.50 per 10,000 cubic feet over 200,000 feet to the higher $950 + $9.50 per 10,000 cubic feet over 200,000 cubic feet. The new rates would only apply to data center buildings. Data center campuses often have more than a dozen buildings at full build-out.

* Shaw Local | Will County Democrats host forum for U.S. Senate candidates: The Illinois Democratic Women of Will County (IDWOW) will host a forum for Democratic candidates for U.S. Senate and Illinois comptroller on Sunday, Sept. 14, in Joliet. The forum, which is open to the public, is 1 to 3 p.m. at the Illinois Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 176 Hall, 1100 NE Frontage Road, Joliet.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | U.S. Steel will move processing from metro east to Indiana and Pennsylvania: “This commercial decision allows U.S. Steel to maintain future flexibility, while maximizing our domestic production footprint,” the company said in a statement. “This option avoids challenging product mixes at each facility, impact on customer orders, and extensive cost inefficiencies.” The newly acquired company’s acknowledgement on Monday confirms a union memo sent to local steelworkers late last week, which outlined there will be no layoffs at the Metro East steel mill. Instead, the roughly 900 remaining employees will “maintain the facility in case the situation changes and run ancillary facilities,” according to the company.

* BND | Former East St. Louis library director pleads guilty to wire fraud, embezzlement: The former director of the East St. Louis Public Library pleaded guilty in federal court to five counts of wire fraud related to the misuse of library funds. Kenyada Harris entered her plea in the U.S. District Court of Southern Illinois before Judge Staci Yandle admitting to five counts of wire fraud and embezzlement. Harris agreed to the charges as part of a plea agreement, acknowledging she used library funds for personal purchases and cash advances.

* Muddy River News | Couple spends wedding anniversary at Quincy City Council meeting to make the case for Hope House: This is another attempt by Hope House to operate in Quincy. Back in July, the council rejected its request for a Special Use Permit at 2122 Jefferson Street for pregnant mothers at risk of homelessness. Hope House Board President Todd Hastings says that was probably because the area was zoned for residential only. He told Muddy River News the Center Avenue location is an area where there’s a combination of residential and industrial, with a group home not too far away. So, he’s more optimistic. He says he appreciates the concerns some neighbors might feel.

* WCBU | State Police release video of Peoria officers shooting man with wooden bat: Illinois State Police have released body camera footage of Peoria officers shooting and killing a man who swung a wooden bat at the officers and tried to run away. In the video of the Aug. 5 incident in the East Bluff neighborhood, 41-year-old Brandon Lewis of Peoria is seen swinging the bat. He hits one of the officers. One officer responded by firing a taser. Another officer — the one hit by the bat — shot Lewis as he tried to flee. […] The incident started when police told Lewis they planned to detain him for public urination on the sidewalk. An officer ordered him several times to stand up as he sat while holding the bat. As the officer slowly took three steps toward Lewis, he stood up and swung the bat at them.

* WAND | IL livestock apprenticeship lets students go hog wild with debt-free tuition, certificates: The Illinois Pork Producers Association announced in a Sept. 8 press release that a new livestock apprenticeship program will be available at five Illinois community colleges. Participating colleges include Lincoln Land Community College in Springfield, Lake Land Community College in Mattoon, Kaskaskia College in Centralia, John Wood Community College in Quincy and Illinois Central College in East Peoria.

* Herald Whig | Bicentennial finale celebrates “the agricultural roots of Adams County”: Barb and Brent Speckhart stood in the Heritage Farms Pavilion, studying a wall filled with history and honoring farm families across Adams County. “You see familiar names, neighbor names. It’s pretty awesome,” she said.

* WCIA | Chatham Police Dept. wins statewide award in traffic safety challenge: The CPD was recognized by the Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police with an award for the Illinois Traffic Safety Challenge, which recognized law enforcement for their efforts in traffic safety. The challenge promotes improving community safety related to traffic and encourages law enforcement to adopt a comprehensive strategy to enhance safety through various initiatives, policies, education and enforcement. The winning agencies were recognized during the Midwest Police and Security Expo in Tinley Park. The CPD received the award for municipal agencies with 11-25 sworn officers.

*** National ***

* The Guardian | US union membership declining in ‘right-to-work’ states, report reveals: The report on the state of unions by the Illinois Economic Policy Institute and the Project for Middle Class Renewal at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign found significant discrepancies between the 26 states in the US with “right to work” laws compared with the 24 states and Washington DC that protect collective bargaining rights. The right-to-work states, concentrated in the south and central US, have a union density of 5.1%, compared with 14.2% for states with collective bargaining rights, concentrated on the coasts and in the north.

* NYT | Trump Administration Quietly Seeks to Build National Voter Roll: The Justice Department is compiling the largest set of national voter roll data it has ever collected, buttressing an effort by President Trump and his supporters to try to prove long-running, unsubstantiated claims that droves of undocumented immigrants have voted illegally, according to people familiar with the matter. The effort to essentially establish a national voting database, involving more than 30 states, has elicited serious concerns among voting rights experts because it is led by allies of the president, who as recently as this January refused to acknowledge Joseph R. Biden Jr. fairly won the 2020 election. It has also raised worries that those same officials could use the data to revive lies of a stolen election, or try to discredit future election results.

  11 Comments      


Good morning!

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Little Richard busts through the door to super-charge your morning

Everything’s alright

What’s happening in your world?

  5 Comments      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Tuesday, Sep 9, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  Comment      


Source: Darren Bailey has decided to announce for governor

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* A source close to 2022 Republican gubernatorial nominee Darren Bailey just called to say that Bailey will indeed run for governor again in the coming 2026 election. The source said that Bailey’s running mate will be Aaron del Mar. A more formal unveiling will take place next week, I was told.

  35 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

The Department of Homeland Security says it has begun an immigration-enforcement crackdown in Chicago that it’s calling “Operation Midway Blitz.”

A statement from DHS was short on details about the enforcement action, which has been expected for weeks as the agency began mobilizing agents here, but took aim at Gov. JB Pritzker, the state and Chicago for so-called sanctuary policies on immigrants.

“DHS is launching Operation Midway Blitz in honor of Katie Abraham who was killed in Illinois by a criminal illegal alien who should have never been in our country. This operation will target the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens in Chicago,” Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in the statement.

“For years, Governor Pritzker and his fellow sanctuary politicians released Tren de Aragua gang members, rapists, kidnappers and drug traffickers on Chicago’s streets—putting American lives at risk and making Chicago a magnet for criminals. President Trump and Secretary Noem have a clear message: no city is a safe haven for criminal illegal aliens. If you come to our country illegally and break our laws, we will hunt you down, arrest you, deport you, and you will never return.”

Ed Yohnka, communications director for the ACLU of Illinois…

“Donald Trump’s Administration appears to possess so little understanding of the State of Illinois that they are justifying militaristic ICE actions in Chicago based on the tragic death of Katie Abraham in a car accident more than one hundred miles away.  There is no emergency justifying these harsh and destabilizing operations — other than the Trump Administration’s authoritarian impulses to attack communities that do not support his unpopular and harsh immigration policies.”

Governor JB Pritzker



 
Pritzker spokesperson Matt Hill…

“The Governor’s Office has received no formal communication or information from the Trump Administration. Like the public and press, we are learning of their operations through their social media as they attempt to produce a reality television show. As Trump has said himself, this is not about seriously fighting crime or reforming immigration – it’s about Trump’s plan to go to war with America’s third-largest city. If he cared about delivering real solutions for Illinois, then we would have heard from him. Unlike Trump’s reality show, we don’t like keeping people in the dark. Since we have learned of the Trump Administration’s plans to deploy federal agents and active-duty military to Illinois, Gov. Pritzker has shared information with the public and the Governor’s Office has remained in regular contact with leaders and partners at the City of Chicago, Cook County, the Illinois congressional delegation, state legislature, and mayors and representatives from the collar counties.”

* Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton…

Today, Congressman Danny Davis announced his endorsement of Juliana Stratton for United States Senate. Congressman Davis is the first House Democrat from Illinois to make an endorsement in this race. Elected officials and community leaders State Senator Mattie Hunter, State Representative Camille Lilly, Alderwoman Emma Mitts, and Pastor Michael Eaddy joined Congressman Davis in expressing their support for Juliana.

“I am deeply honored to receive the endorsement of Congressman Danny Davis. His lifelong commitment to public service and tireless advocacy for the 7th District inspire me every day.” said Juliana Stratton. “I’m grateful to have his endorsement, and I hope to continue his legacy of fighting for the people he has served by making sure their communities are invested in and their voices are heard.”

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | Black McDonald’s operators detail history of alleged racial discrimination in lawsuit: Bonner was the owner-operator of six McDonald’s stores in Illinois and the St. Louis region. But he left the chain after enduring numerous alleged racist actions from McDonald’s that he says impeded his opportunity for entrepreneurial growth and generational wealth. “Those Golden Arches … you have the belief that at some point this is going to go the way you were promised it would go,” he said. “The day you get the keys, it becomes an us and them mentality, corporate versus the people who run the store.”

* WSIL | West Nile spreads in Illinois with 42 human cases and in 66 counties: The Illinois Department of Public Health confirmed the presence of the West Nile virus in 42 human cases across 66 counties this year in Illinois. Pulaski County recently reported a confirmed case of the virus on September 5. […] In 2024, there were 69 human cases of West Nile virus, with the virus found in 72 counties.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WAND | Illinois law will improve access to hypodermic needles, syringes January 1: The law will require pharmacies to sell sterile syringes and needles to patients with prescriptions if they are in stock. Sponsors said pharmacists will be able to use their professional judgement to sell the equipment to any customer for proper administration of medications. This plan was filed after a constituent was unable to receive the equipment from their pharmacist. “This legislation is necessary for those who are looking to access syringes or needles and are not able to access them through venues they would normally go to that are not pharmacies,” said Sen. Mike Simmons (D-Chicago). “We did something similar a couple years ago when we passed legislation to make PrEP and PEP access available through pharmacies under a standing order.”

* Center Square | GOP AG candidate: IL’s triplex of Democrat statewide offices ‘fails the people’: Joe Cervantez said after serving in the Marines, he decided to stay in southern Illinois and became a lawyer. Eventually, he was elected Jackson County state’s attorney in 2020. Running for attorney general made sense, he said. “I really can see now in retrospect the evolution of my career starting off as an assistant state’s attorney and seeing things that definitely could be improved,” Cervantez told The Center Square.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Burnett appointment delayed further as feds say CHA must seek waivers: The U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development has told CHA leadership Burnett requires at least two waivers to lead the $1.3 billion agency that has been without a full-time CEO for nearly a year, according to a letter obtained by Crain’s, a process that could take months with an uncertain outcome. “Our office requests that the CHA take no action on the appointment of former Ald. Burnett until the CHA submits” the two waiver requests and until HUD has “formally approved them,” William O. Dawson III, HUD’s regional director, said in the letter dated Sept. 5.

* Tribune | British woman caught at O’Hare with $6.2M in cocaine sentenced to 6 years after allegedly seeking deportation: Whether on purpose or by accident, Hall was taken by federal agents to a facility in Indiana and ticketed for an airline flight before prosecutors realized what happened. They were notified when the Cook County sheriff’s office received back her electronic monitoring band, according to court records.

* WTTW | Cost to Settle, Defend Lawsuits Accusing CPD Officers of Misconduct During 2020 Unrest Tops $10.8M: Analysis: Chicago taxpayers paid $6.3 million to settle 54 lawsuits identified by WTTW News that were filed by Chicagoans who said they were the victims of misconduct by CPD officers during the protests and unrest, according to records from the Chicago Department of Law. An additional $4.5 million went to pay private lawyers to defend the conduct of CPD officers from late May until mid-August 2020, one of the most tumultuous periods in Chicago history, according to records obtained by WTTW News through a Freedom of Information Act request.

* Block Club | Bob Newhart Gets A Block Named After Him In Edgewater: About 200 neighbors, friends and Newhart’s family gathered Friday to celebrate the honorary sign’s unveiling outside the Thorndale Beach North Condominium, 5901 N. Sheridan Road, known best from the opening sequence of “The Bob Newhart Show.” In it, Newhart’s character takes a long and convoluted commute, during which he crosses multiple Downtown bridges in opposite directions before heading to Evanston. He then gets off the “L” before apparently walking more than 6 miles to Edgewater.

* Block Club | Meet The Bike-Riding ‘Pint Peddler’ Bringing Homebrews To The People: Avid cyclists and local Instagrammers may already know Miller by her distinctive ride: a blue bicycle — more like a large tricycle — carrying a huge, black metal box on its back wheels. The box houses two taps with four kegs, a boom box blasting Miller’s favorite tunes and an orange neon sign that reads “Drinkers with a cycling problem.” Another colorful sign proclaims, “PINTS TO THE PEOPLE.” Miller, 29, often passes out free pints at Critical Mass and other Chicago festivities as a way to share her love of homebrewing and make the events a little more unique.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Fox Chicago | Chicago suburb alerts residents to possible ICE activity as Trump admin ramps up enforcement: The City of Evanston is warning residents that federal immigration agents may be present in the community in the coming days, following signals from the Trump administration about ramped-up enforcement in the Chicago area. Late this weekend, city officials said they were informed about the likelihood of ICE activity in Evanston. The city encouraged residents to report sightings of federal agents to the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights hotline at 855-435-7693 or icirr.org.

* Lake County News-Sun | A Lake County veteran asked people on social media to join her protesting outside Naval Station Great Lakes. Roughy 600 people showed up.: Hundreds of people stood with signs at the corner of Illinois Route 137 and Martin Luther King, Jr. Drive expressing their opposition to the Trump Administration’s immigration enforcement plans. Both the Indivisible Northeast Lake County and Party for Socialism and Liberation learned about the event and got people there. After more than an hour of demonstrating along Highway 137, the group heard impromptu speeches from a variety of people. After listening, Alvarez said, they crossed the highway, walked to Sheridan Road outside the main gate of the base.

* Naperville Sun | Naperville 7 Brew ends special ‘Jackpot’ deals to curb traffic issues: “We get the finger. We get yelled at. We get profanities because we’re just trying to get in and out,” said Collins, who works at the Naperville Acupuncture Center. “That’s very stressful to come to work and say, ‘Oh, am I going to be able to get in today or not, or leave today or not?’” Since opening in October 2024, the drive-thru-only franchise off Ogden Avenue has drawn customers from all over the Chicago area. Nearly half of all customers who visit the Naperville location travel anywhere between 10 to 30 miles for the coffee, according to Laura Karet, whose 7 Brew franchise territories are in the Chicago and Nashville markets.

*** Downstate ***

* Shaw Local | Oglesby man to be extradited to Minnesota for threats: Caden J. Sluder, 22, was picked up Friday on a warrant and taken to La Salle County Jail, where he’ll remain pending transfer to Minnesota. Monday, he appeared in La Salle County Circuit Court and told the judge he won’t fight efforts to remand him to Ramsey County, Minnesota. What did he allegedly do? According to a Minnesota TV station, he made social media posts threatening Minnesota Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan. “Authorities say Sluder was posting with the username lfoke85949 and had responded to two posts that Lt. Gov. Flanagan made about the (Annunciation School) shooting,” according to a report from KMSP. “Flanagan’s posts mourned the loss of life in the shooting and thanked first responders dealing with the tragedy.”

* WGIL | 8 apply for Galesburg’s Ward 1 City Council vacancy. Here’s what is next: Schwartzman expressed satisfaction with the applicant pool, telling WGIL, “I was actually [satisfied] with the number, diversity and the quality.” He noted this is the largest and most diverse group he’s encountered in his three appointments, saying, “This is definitely the largest and most diverse contingent to apply.” The mayor said the field includes two men and six women, four candidates of color, and an age range he estimates from late 20s to mid-70s. He pointed out that the candidates bring a variety of professional backgrounds, including academic roles, food industry experience, and other local employment.

* WMBD | Peoria City Council to vote on $11M amphitheater proposal: At their meeting Tuesday, council members will vote whether to accept a “letter of intent” by the foundation to build the 5,000-seat facility on Peoria’s riverfront. Approving the proposal would mean the council would accept the money given by the foundation and what their vision of the outdoor venue would be. This proposal, was rerouted to the city after the Washington City Council decided earlier this year that the foundation’s proposal it wasn’t for their city.

* WCIA | Decatur’s Faries Parkway to close nightly for construction, beginning Monday: The City of Decatur announced that bridge work will cause overnight closures of Faries Parkway at Brush College Road — but, the road will remain open during the daytime. The jughandle road will also remain open. Faries Parkway will close from 8 p.m. to 5 a.m. each night. The road is expected to close each night until 5 a.m. on Sept. 19.

* Capitol City Now | Springfield students win ‘Governor’s Hometown Award’ for special service project: Lincoln Magnet School‘s Beta Club, with help from the city, recently won the Governor’s Hometown Award for a project called “Fishing Tales and Bytes of Wisdom.” It was a project that started simple enough. “When we all started, we just liked to fish together,” said Ian Presnell, student. “We wanted to find a way to connect the older and younger generations. We just started by going to nursing homes and talking to the older generations about our catches our catches while fishing, and they’d talk about theirs. Then, eventually, it expanded into something bigger, where we’d go and talk about how to stop digital scams, and teach them something from us, the younger generation, who’s more acquainted with the tech.”

*** National ***

* 404 Media | ICE Spends Millions on Clearview AI Facial Recognition to Find People ‘Assaulting’ Officers: The records are unusual in that they indicate ICE is buying the technology to identify people who might clash with the agency’s officers as they continue the Trump administration’s mass deportation efforts. Authorities have repeatedly claimed members of the public have assaulted or otherwise attacked ICE or other immigration enforcement officers, only later for charges to be dropped or lowered when it emerged authorities misrepresented what happened or brutally assaulted protesters themselves. In other cases, prosecutions are ongoing.

* NYT | The Supreme Court lifts court-imposed restrictions on Los Angeles immigration stops: The Supreme Court on Monday lifted a federal judge’s order prohibiting government agents from making indiscriminate immigration-related stops in the Los Angeles area that challengers called “blatant racial profiling.” The court’s brief order was unsigned and gave no reasons. It is not the last word in the case, which is pending before a federal appeals court and may again reach the justices.

* AP | Wisconsin legislative feud erupts in public with lawmaker accused of threatening fellow legislators: Wisconsin Democrats are accusing one of their own of threatening to kill three of her colleagues, an allegation that the lawmaker has told local media stems from “poorly worded hyperbole.” Democratic leaders said in a statement Saturday that state Rep. Sylvia Ortiz-Velez made a comment about shooting three caucus members with whom she’d had disagreements. The statement followed one Thursday announcing that Ortiz-Velez was leaving the Democratic caucus.

  5 Comments      


Tribune editorial board uses memory of crime victim to make a faulty both-sides argument

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here for the background. WCIA in May

During Kristi Noem’s visit to Springfield on Wednesday, she spoke in front of the former residence of Emma Shafer.

Shafer, 24, was found stabbed to death in her apartment in 2023. Her ex-boyfriend, Gabriel Calixto-Pichardo, is accused of killing her. Police are still looking for him.

Shafer’s death rocked the city. She was a pillar of the activist community, and had organized for several different causes, including immigrant rights.

On Wednesday, Noem speculated about Shafer’s case and used her death as a political talking point, and not only without her family’s consent, but while Shafer’s mother was actively protesting Noem’s trip to Springfield.

Shafer’s family members released this statement after Noem’s speech…

My daughter Emma radiated love and light everywhere she went and for all people. Even as a child, she was a friend to everyone and someone who spoke up for the less fortunate. She dedicated her life – her career and her free time – to causes of social justice and equity. That was just who she was.

To see her used by Secretary Noem and others to advance a cruel and heartless political agenda is not just deeply painful to us – it is an insult to her memory. Noem’s words are in direct conflict with who Emma was as a person. Emma built up community and stood with all members, including immigrants.

No parent should have to experience the loss of a child. But every time her name is brought into these conversations – conversations she would have wanted nothing to do with – we have to relive the pain of her death.

Secretary Noem, as a mother still grieving the loss of a child, I beg you to stop. This is not who she was. This is not helping us. Her memory should live in all the people she touched and the causes that she fought for. And I ask all of you to remember Emma as she was. And to live your life as she did: with courageous empathy and love for all.

The Sangamon County State’s Attorney’s Office, Springfield Police Department and the U.S. Marshal’s Service jointly announced late last month that Calixto was apprehended in Mexico.

* Today, the Tribune Editorial Board used Emma Shafer’s memory to take a weird swipe at the governor

For Pritzker, who is eyeing a White House run, Noem’s charged narrative gave him an opportunity to present himself as an antidote to the Trump administration’s excesses.

Yet Pritzker, too, has gone way too far. His recent rhetoric personally insulting the president does not serve the state’s interests. And his comments about how Chicago and Illinois don’t need federal help to fight crime were always ill-advised, as this page warned. Pritzker’s comments ran into a hail of bullets over Labor Day, with nine killed and 52 wounded in the city’s most violent weekend of the summer.

Contrary to Pritzker’s wishful thinking, Chicago and Illinois most certainly do need robust cooperation between local, state and federal authorities to stop violent crime — and bring dangerous criminals such as Shafer’s killer to justice. The fact that state and local authorities worked together with federal marshals to make progress in the Shafer case is an example of the good results that can happen when law enforcement professionals tune out hotheaded pols and do their jobs.

* Here is the governor during a press conference last week

Pritzker: I refuse to play a reality game show with Donald Trump again. What I want are the federal dollars that have been promised to Illinois and Chicago for violence prevention programs that have proven to work. That is money that Illinois taxpayers send to the federal government, and it’s an insult to any and every citizen to suggest that any governor should have to beg the president of any political party for resources owed their people. I’d like to ask a question of my own, and it’s one the press should be asking as well. When did we become a country where it’s okay for a US president to insist on national television that a state should call him to beg for anything, especially something we don’t want.

* Pritzker met with members from community violence intervention organizations last week. Press release

Studies indicate that CVI programs are remarkably effective in preventing violent crime and making neighborhoods safer. President Trump froze $158 million for violence prevention programs and rescinded more than $800 million in anti-violence and crime reduction grants nationwide.

Illinois has a number of CVI programs and partners with a clear track record of success. The Peacekeepers program sends trained community members out to de-escalate and mitigate conflicts in the most violent hotspots in the city. Those interventions were found to have decreased shootings 41% in program areas, with a 31% decrease in the surrounding community. ​

Since taking office, Governor Pritzker has worked to address the root causes of violence through evidence-based policy. The Reimagine Public Safety Act (RPSA) has invested $250 million in trauma-informed, evidence-based programs to reduce gun violence. He has also invested historic amounts in law enforcement – Illinois ranks 6th in the nation and 1st in the Midwest for per-capita police spending, well above the national average. ​ ​

Those strategies have proved effective, as crime in Chicago has dropped significantly – despite President Trump’s false claims to the contrary. Murders are down more than 30% in the past year and cut in half since 2021. Robberies are down 33% from 2024 and 37% since 2023. Shootings, burglaries, and motor vehicle thefts are all similarly down in the last year.

* August 29

Pritzker: I also want to be clear that if [the federal government] would talk to me, they would hear that the business people in the city of Chicago for example, and maybe President Trump would listen to that. What they want is for us to interrupt violence. They want us to use violence interruption tactics. And organizations that are very effective, like Chicago CRED for example, the work they do in the communities has brought down crime by 73 percent in the toughest neighborhoods across the city of Chicago.

That’s what works. And you know what President Trump did in the face of that? He cut funding for those programs from the federal government. That doesn’t help us fight crime. He’s defunding police. He’s defunding our efforts to fight crime at so that he can send troops into the city of Chicago. For one reason, I want everybody to pay attention. What the reason is? It’s about the elections in 2026 and about interrupting our ability to have a fair and free election in 2026 we’re not the only targeted city. He’s talked about lots of other cities. We’re just the first one outside of Washington DC where he has federal control. We’re the first one that he wants to invade, and it’s for that purpose. And not about fighting crime.

* August 28

Pritzker: I’ve done that as governor, but we should absolutely be promoting more police hiring in cities like Chicago and all across the state. He ought not be taking money away from violence prevention programs that the federal government had been funding, but now they’re taking that money away. And by the way, why are they doing that? Why is he defunding the police? Because he wants to give major tax breaks to the wealthiest people in this country. It’s not right. He needs to be called out on it. I’m doing that. I hope more people will as well.

* August 27

Pritzker: I want to point out the state of Illinois is 19th best among the 50 states in terms of violent crime. In other words, we’re in the best half of all the states in terms of violent crime. We’ve been working very hard to make that happen, and the city of Chicago isn’t even in the top 25 major cities with high crime rates, because we’ve worked to bring it down, we got more work to do. Every death is a tragedy. Every crime that’s committed is a tragedy, and we need to protect our families and help the victims of violent crime, but Donald Trump has defunded the programs that would help us most to make sure that we’re interrupting violence and also providing the kind of coordination between federal law enforcement and state law enforcement the resources that are necessary for doing that. That’s a real shame, and it’s Donald Trump that is defunding the police. It is not the state of Illinois. It’s not the city of Chicago. It’s Donald Trump doing that.

* August 23


  27 Comments      


Today’s quotable

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Rockford’s WTVO

A new, temporary security fence erected around the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois on Friday has drawn attention amid reports that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents are deploying soon to the Chicago area. […]

In a statement to Eyewitness News, a spokesperson for the U.S. District Court Northern District of Illinois said that temporary fencing has been installed near the Stanley J. Roszkowski Courthouse to help those who need to access the courthouse to do so safely.

“The Courthouse remains open and accessible. The District Court Clerk’s Office will be open during normal business hours, 8:30 am to 4:30 pm, and in-person proceedings will continue as scheduled by the assigned judge. In Rockford, the designated Freedom of Speech and Expression area is the public space located at the corner of South Church and Cedar Streets. The General Services Administration maintains this area and may require special permitting.

  11 Comments      


Two takes on Wheaton

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Daily Herald

At least 250 people protesting on the streets of Wheaton Saturday made one message clear — they don’t want immigration agents arresting people in their hometown.

Standing along sidewalks in front of a Jewel-Osco store at Main Street and Geneva Road, they held signs, rang bells, drummed and chanted.

“ICE out of Wheaton! We are all Wheaton,” cried Cristobal Cavazos of Casa DuPage Workers Center, rallying the crowd of mostly white, middle-aged and older people, which was the point. “He (President Donald Trump) did not take into account his base of older, white Americans would fight back.” […]

Organizers of the Wheaton protest chose the Jewel-Osco site because an immigrant man was arrested in the store’s parking lot Aug. 1.

* Illinois Republican State Central Committeeperson Jeanne Ives, who lives in Wheaton…

THESE PEOPLE HAVE LOST THEIR MINDS!

First, Wheaton is not a hotspot for illegals to reside. Even though we are the home of World Relief, that organization brings in bona fide refugees who have been vetted. Yes, Wheaton has several progressive Christian organizations that have bought into the “No one is Illegal” mantra, but there is not a lot of low-income housing or jobs available in the city.

Second, Wheaton is one of the safest cities in Illinois precisely because our laws are enforced. These ingrates don’t appreciate that they are literally demanding that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement not enforce our national laws. It’s either that, or they think ICE is wrongly enforcing the laws. Which is it, organizers?

And what exactly does “Harm to One is Harm to All” mean? Maybe the organizers should ask if the harm – murder of Katie Abraham and her friend Chloe Polzin – by an illegal alien in Champaign means harm to all. Why aren’t they focused on that? Or the harm illegals do by just simply flaunting our laws and expecting us to pick up the tab for everything.

This particular rally in Wheaton, though, is just trying to get the Democrats riled up in the suburbs for political gain. They are looking to piggyback on all the attention Chicago is receiving about the threat of heightened ICE enforcement and possibly the National Guard coming to patrol the streets of the City.

Ms. Ives is widely rumored to be on the short-list of potential running mates for Republican gubernatorial candidate Ted Dabrowski.

  44 Comments      


Two more Republican-filed Enrolled Bill Doctrine lawsuits fail

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

I’m coming a bit late to this (national current events having overtaken everything), but a lawsuit filed by House and Senate Republicans was recently tossed out by Sangamon County Circuit Court Judge Jack Davis, II. The suit sought to strike down a new law — Senate Bill 328 — backed by trial lawyers. The Republicans say they will appeal.

The Republican lawsuit claimed that the majority Democrats had violated the Illinois Constitution’s “three readings rule.”

The titles of bills are required to be read aloud on three separate session days in each chamber. In the state’s early days, the entire bills had to be read aloud apparently because so many legislators were illiterate.

Often, though, bills that have already passed one chamber are gutted and replaced with amendments by different legislation, usually after the bills have been moved in the second chamber to third reading. The final bills can then be passed by both chambers in a single day without committee hearings because their titles had already been read three times in each body. And as long as both legislative leaders certify that the bills complied with procedural requirements, known as the “Enrolled Bill Doctrine,” the legislation is considered constitutionally passed.

“This special interest proposal was passed by the Democratic majority using a shady process that clearly violates the substance and spirit of the Illinois Constitution,” said Illinois Senate Republican Leader John Curran when he and others filed the suit in June.

The Republicans noted in their lawsuit that even though the Illinois Supreme Court had shot down other lawsuits attempting to kill legislation based on alleged violations of the Enrolled Bill Doctrine, justices on the state’s top court had sternly warned the legislature in 1992 that their judicial patience was wearing thin: “(T)he General Assembly has shown remarkably poor self-discipline in policing itself,” the court said at the time. “Indeed, both parties agree that ignoring the three-readings requirement has become a procedural regularity.”

But Davis countered that the Supreme Court has since addressed three readings challenges “on several occasions and has, without exception, followed the enrolled bill rule.” All appellate courts have also done the same, he wrote. Davis said he was therefore bound by precedent.

The judge also ruled that the plaintiffs lacked standing to sue because the legislation, allowing out of state businesses to now be sued for “exposure to a substance defined as toxic,” can “never affect plaintiffs.”

Earlier last month, Sangamon County Circuit Court Judge Adam Giganti used the exact same enrolled bill doctrine history cited by Davis to throw out a lawsuit filed by several members of the Illinois Freedom Caucus against the new state budget.

Giganti also ruled that because people involved in actually implementing the budget were not included as defendants in the lawsuit — including the governor, the comptroller, the treasurer and the Illinois Department of Revenue director — then that required dismissal as well under Section 2-615 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

Aside from the obvious press pops that the lawsuits have already attracted and will continue to receive, the object here is to eventually get these lawsuits in front of the Illinois Supreme Court to see if they can convince the justices to finally follow through on their 33-year-old warning.

A 2003 Supreme Court ruling referenced its own 1992 “remarkably poor self-discipline in policing itself” comment in a new case involving a similar constitutional challenge. However, the top court noted that the record of alleged violations had not been “sufficiently developed to support or contradict this claim” of a violation.

“Nevertheless,” the opinion continued, “because this court is ever mindful of its duty to enforce the constitution of this state, we take the opportunity to urge the legislature to follow the three-readings rule. While separation of powers concerns militate in favor of the enrolled-bill doctrine, our responsibility to ensure obedience to the constitution remains an equally important concern.”

So, as I told my blog readers when the Republican lawsuit was filed, “the Republicans are likely hoping that if they keep bringing these cases to the court’s attention, the Supremes will eventually decide that the record has been ‘sufficiently developed’ to support their claim.”

But it’s highly doubtful, to say the least, that the 5-2 Democratic majority will accede to the Republicans’ wishes even then.

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When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Findings of a recent economic study are clear: the retail sector is a cornerstone of the state’s economy and crucial to our everyday lives. Retail in Illinois directly contributes more than $112 billion in economic investment annually – more than 10 percent of the state’s total Gross Domestic Product.

Retailers like Alejandro Urzagaste in Wilmette enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA are showcasing the retailers who make Illinois work.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: States move to protect vaccines in the face of attempts to remove mandates. AP

    - Now that Florida is taking steps to be the first state to get rid of school vaccine mandates, some states are looking at following its lead while others are promising to protect vaccines for children and adults.
    - The [Illinois] state health department said it plans to issue specific guidance by the end of September that will help health care providers and residents make informed decisions about vaccinations. The health director said the department will consult with medical experts.
    - The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said roughly 4 million deaths are prevented annually worldwide by childhood vaccinations.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Daily Herald | ‘A very large gap for us to fill’: Pantries struggle to meet surging demand amid federal cuts to food banks: As its member pantries face persistently high demand, the Northern Illinois Food Bank is raising funds through an emergency initiative to help offset federal cuts. The Geneva-based food bank has seen a 30% decrease in federal support — in the form of food and funding — translating to a $3 million to $4 million gap. In the fiscal year that ended in June, the food bank received 4.4 million meals through federal programs that have either been discontinued or cut by the USDA.

* Daily Herald | Antioch mayor mulling GOP run for governor: Antioch Mayor Scott Gartner announced Sunday he is considering running for Illinois governor as a Republican in 2026, adding that he expects a final decision by the end of the month. “If I can gather 10,000 signatures and raise $500,000 by then, I’m all in,” Gartner wrote in a Facebook post addressed “To my Antioch family.” “I’m not a millionaire or billionaire — but maybe that’s exactly what we need: someone who understands the struggles of everyday people and isn’t beholden to special interests,” he added.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WAND | Illinois will ban fraudulent restaurant reservations Jan. 1: The bipartisan plan will ban third-party reservation companies from listing, advertising, promoting, or selling reservations without written agreements with restaurants. Any person who violates the ban could face a civil penalty of up to $1,000 for each violation. Customers will also have the ability to sue companies for listing fraudulent reservations online.

* Sun-Times | State Sen. Napoleon Harris reimburses his campaign fund more than $23k over questionable expenses: State Sen. Napoleon Harris recently cut his main campaign fund a check for $23,459.30, reimbursing the political account for what appeared to be a series of personal expenses that stretched, if not breached, the bounds of what’s allowable under election law. […] That total cited by Odelson in the email amounted to just over $20,000, and he declined to explain the difference between that amount and what ended up being reimbursed on or about Aug. 27.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s new speed cameras see big early revenue as aldermen tout safety impact: Drivers ticketed for speeding there on June 1 — the first day the camera went online — have so far paid the city more than $60,000, in increments of $35 and $100. It’s a drop in the municipal bucket for Mayor Brandon Johnson’s citywide camera expansion meant to help him balance this year’s budget. But if early returns are any indication, speeding tickets from the new cameras are quickly hurtling toward the $11.4 million benchmark Johnson counted on for 2025. As the first batch of new cameras went live in June, the city issued more tickets than it has in any other month in nearly three years, a Tribune analysis showed.

* WBEZ | CPS says no to virtual learning as ICE immigration enforcement ramps up: “In-person instruction continues to provide the strongest foundation for learning,” school district officials said in a statement. However, they added that they are monitoring the situation and will reassess if necessary.

* Tribune | Chicago deploys salt trucks as safety precaution at protest and Taste of Chicago: President Donald Trump has signaled that he may authorize the use of military assets, specifically the National Guard, as part of a stepped-up operation by federal agencies under the Department of Homeland Security, including Immigration and Customs Enforcement, anticipated to begin as soon as this weekend. But as of Sunday afternoon, there was no evidence of widespread ICE activity. The spokesperson said the trucks were present at an anti-Trump protest that drew thousands downtown and the three-day food festival in Grant Park.

* Sun-Times | No, Chicago salt trucks are not being used to interfere with ICE: The department “deployed salt trucks to support public safety efforts related to a planned protest and the Taste of Chicago. This is a routine practice,” a spokesperson said. Videos of the salt trucks lining Grant Park popped up on social media over the weekend. Several claimed that Mayor Brandon Johnson deployed the trucks to form a roadblock and interfere with ICE operations. The posts also erroneously say the trucks were slowly moving on I-294, I-94 and the Edens Expressway and occupying all lanes into the city.

* Hyper Allergic | A Chicago Artist-Run Gallery’s Last Hurrah Before Forced Closure: The property housed 30 apartments full of tenants, many on social security, plenty of whom had lived there for over a decade. Downstairs were three beloved, creative, intergenerational community spaces: Archie’s Café, Edge Art, and Roman Susan. A protest was held by residents, neighbors, supporters, and elected officials, including Illinois state senator Mike Simmons and 49th Ward alderwoman Maria Hadden. Roman Susan, with the longest lease, advocated for its neighbors to be able to stay at least until they themselves were forced to clear out. The university cannot even develop the site anytime soon, due to future renovations of the adjacent Red Line El station.

* Sun-Times | As Sundays on State returns, businesses say street festivals are a welcome boost: “The goals of Sundays on State is to accelerate the Loop economy, but also unite the community and provide opportunities to businesses that may not typically have this chance,” Gibson said. More than 90% of street activations will be operated by underrepresented businesses, including 74% women-owned ventures, 31% minority-owned companies and 11% that are LGBTQ+-owned.

* WBEZ | Yoko Ono, Theaster Gates, Bob Faust and more dominate Chicago’s busy must-see art calendar for fall: Myriad facets of this cultural dynamo will be open for exploration in “Yoko Ono: Music of the Mind,” a touring exhibition on view Oct. 18–Feb. 22, 2026, at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, 220 E. Chicago Ave. The MCA is the show’s only U.S. venue. This large-scale retrospective — organized by the Tate Modern in London, where it drew record crowds — features more than 200 objects, including a cross-section of Ono’s installations and physical artworks. And while “Music of the Mind” is sure to dominate the Chicago art world’s attention this fall, there are plenty of other notable exhibitions worth visiting. Here are 10 others.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | As other NFL teams build new stadiums, the Bears will soon release plans for a new dome in Arlington Heights: Bears President Kevin Warren and other officials are meeting regularly to refine their plan with Arlington Heights village officials. Sometime in September, October or November, the team will make a public presentation and answer questions about the 326-acre site, according to Arlington Heights Mayor Jim Tinaglia. Then the village planning, design and housing commissions will review the proposal before it goes to a Village Board vote. The whole process could take a few months.

* Tribune | Records show the VA failed to treat a Plainfield father’s common infection. Now he’s paying the price.: And now they’re left to wonder: How could something like this have happened? How could personnel they trusted at the VA miss something so obvious? The weeks that changed everything are detailed in their lawsuit, and supported by medical records and documentation they shared with the Tribune. It all began on July 21, 2023, when Walker was admitted to Hines after suffering from fatigue, a cough and a swollen leg. Records show a blood test detected the presence of Streptococcus mutans, a common bacterial infection, and the next day the lab reported the discovery to Walker’s doctor. The diagnosis, though, never made it to Walker or his wife.

* Tribune | Study finds Kaegi has improved fairness in Cook County property assessments: Berry, director of the U. of C.’s Mansueto Institute for Urban Innovation, acknowledged taxpayers might be skeptical of the findings. “How can Kaegi be making assessments more fair, when my tax bill is going up?” Berry said in an interview with the Tribune. Homeowners were unlikely to feel the difference because property tax levies set by local governments each year have continued to rise, he noted. The city of Chicago’s levy has gone up by 19% since 2018. The Chicago Public Schools levy has gone up by 24%. Even so, “the important thing is the assessments don’t determine whether tax bills are going up or down on average, just how it’s spread amongst properties,” Berry said.

* Daily Herald | Geneva group’s plan to host Jan. 6 organizer draws pickets, protests: The conservative Three Headed Eagle Alliance’s Sept. 23 gathering at Eagle Brook Country Club was scheduled to feature Rhodes, who was convicted of seditious conspiracy in connection with Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol and sentenced to 18 years in prison, as its guest speaker. However, the Three Headed Eagle’s website now states the venue for Rhodes’ appearance has been changed and will be announced closer to the date. Rhodes was released from prison in January after President Donald Trump commuted his sentence, amid a flurry of pardons and clemencies granted to those convicted in the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora looks to recreate downtown organization: The former organization, known as Aurora Downtown, used to manage funds generated by a special tax applied to property within the downtown area, or more specifically within Special Service Area Number One. Using those funds, the organization worked to support property owners and businesses, plus develop new businesses, within downtown through things like marketing, improvements, events and more. Last year, that organization’s board voted to combine with three others — the Aurora Regional Chamber of Commerce, Invest Aurora and the Quad County African American Chamber of Commerce — to become the Aurora Regional Economic Alliance. The idea was to bring these separate economic organizations under one umbrella to combine their efforts and cut out repeat functions.

* Naperville Sun | Naperville to extend food and textile recycling programs following success: “These programs are really a response to what our residents are asking for,” said Ben Mjolsness, Naperville’s sustainability manager. “We’ve heard, ‘What can I do with clothing? What can I do with sheets? What can I do with towels? I don’t want to throw them away and have them be buried forever.’” With the textile program, residents stay in their vehicle while staff unload items, per the city’s website. Since launching in late spring, it’s seen an average of 12 to 15 cars a day drop off unwanted items, “resulting in more than 26,800 pounds of material diverted from landfills,” according to the memo submitted to the city manager’s office.

* Daily Herald | Billions for a Route 120 bypass in Lake County? Some residents warn it’s a pricey ‘pie in the sky’: “It’s over $2 billion and no one is going to finance it,” said Bill Morris, a former Grayslake mayor and state senator, who warns the “pie in the sky” bypass could take years to build. The Illinois Department of Transportation Route 120 Planning and Environmental Linkages study extends from Almond Road near Grayslake to Route 60 in Volo. That stretch of 120 includes busy rail crossings that tie up traffic and configurations that shift between two and four lanes, causing bottlenecks.

*** Downstate ***

* News-Gazette | New Champaign County Board District 10 rep resigns over residency error: Democrat Jason Votava, who filled the spot vacated by Chris Stohr, said he was preparing materials for the November 2026 ballot when he “discovered a slight difference in the maps” and realized that he actually lives in District 9. “I want the people of District 10 to have the representation they deserve, and my only recourse was to resign,” he told The News-Gazette. “I am currently collecting signatures to represent District 9 and hope to return to the board next year.”

* WGLT | Police departments in McLean County say camera data not shared with immigration officers: Officer Brad Park with the Normal Police Department said the department does not share its data with any agency outside of Illinois. “We only share that information with agencies that are approved by the chief, and currently we are only sharing those with about 39 approved agencies within the state of Illinois,” he said, adding Normal police regularly audit officers’ use of the cameras to ensure the images are only being used in criminal investigations

* WCIA | Urbana Business: Mayor talks weekend ‘Philo Road Ahead’ event, potential plans for former ‘Dart’ factory: After several businesses have closed their doors along Urbana’s Philo Road, Mayor DeShawn Williams is taking the next steps to turn the southeast side of the city around. He believes one step to fixing the problem and moving things forward starts this Sunday, Sept. 7, at the Sunnycrest parking lot. The city is hosting ‘Philo Road Ahead‘ from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. as a way to bring the community together and ‘reimagine’ what this part of Urbana could look like.

* WIFR | DeKalb Co. deputy circuit clerk accused of theft of government funds, fraud: In the spring of 2021, investigators say Walker got two PPP loans totaling $41,250, claiming she was the sole owner of a remodeling company. A police report filed in court claims Walker filed false tax returns in order to get the loans. Detectives report that during an interview, Walker admitted the home remodeling company did not exist.

* WGEM | Number of school resource officers in Adams County continues to grow: In the last two years, the Adams County Sheriff’s Office has added three School Resource Offices (SRO). Before, they had only one. Adams County Sheriff Anthony Grootens said every school district in Adams County has an SRO, but they don’t plan on stopping there. Eventually, he said he wants to hire an SRO for each school. Until then, he said the number they have has already made it easier for them to keep schools and students safe.

* Press Release | Sen. Tracy to bring Mobile DMV service to Carrollton: tate Senator Jil Tracy (R-Quincy) has partnered with the Illinois Secretary of State’s Office to host a Mobile DMV event in Carrollton. “Making government services more accessible is a priority of mine, and I’m proud to help bring the Secretary of State’s office directly to Carrollton,” said Senator Tracy in a press release. “Events like this save people time and travel while ensuring they can take care of important needs right here at home.”

*** National ***

* WaPo | Military-related work absences at a 19-year high amid deployments: Between January and August, workers reported 90,000 instances of people missing at least a week of work because of military deployments, jury duty or other civil service, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That is more than double the number of similar absences in the same eight-month period last year, and the highest level since 2006, when President George W. Bush deployed the National Guard to Iraq, Afghanistan and the Southwest U.S. border in large numbers.

* CNN | A property tax revolt is spreading — with help from key conservatives: For decades, property taxes have underwritten the basic functions of local government — schools, parks, roads, police and fire departments, trash collection. But as home values have surged, tax bills have ballooned in tandem, fueling what David Schleicher, a Yale professor of local government, described as a “property tax revolt” shaking cities and states alike. “This is a really big trend that is below the radar because it doesn’t involve President Trump,” Schleicher said. “But it doesn’t need fireworks to announce itself. It’s already changing our relationship with government and how schools work and property markets.”

* The Atlantic | Just How Bad Would an AI Bubble Be?: The dot-com crash was bad, but it did not trigger a crisis. An AI-bubble crash could be different. AI-related investments have already surpassed the level that telecom hit at the peak of the dot-com boom as a share of the economy. In the first half of this year, business spending on AI added more to GDP growth than all consumer spending combined. Many experts believe that a major reason the U.S. economy has been able to weather tariffs and mass deportations without a recession is because all of this AI spending is acting, in the words of one economist, as a “massive private sector stimulus program.” An AI crash could lead broadly to less spending, fewer jobs, and slower growth, potentially dragging the economy into a recession. The economist Noah Smith argues that it could even lead to a financial crisis if the unregulated “private credit” loans funding much of the industry’s expansion all go bust at once.

* Bloomberg | S&P Warns of Reinsurer Protections as Catastrophe Risks Escalate: As natural catastrophes become more frequent and destructive, a key backstop intended to help cover losses has gotten harder to access. The reinsurance industry, which exists to help primary insurers cope with losses when disaster hits, has taken significant steps to shield itself against the financial fallout of storms, floods and other severe weather events, according to S&P Global Ratings.

* SCOTUS Blog | Group of small businesses calls on Supreme Court to decide tariffs case : A group of small businesses challenging the tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump in a series of executive orders urged the Supreme Court to provide a definitive ruling on the legality of those tariffs. In a five-page brief filed on Friday afternoon, the challengers encouraged the justices to act quickly, telling them that the tariffs are “inflicting profound harms on” their companies, which are “suffering severe economic hardships as a result of the price increases and supply chain interruptions caused by the tariffs.” “[T]hese impacts,” the challengers stressed, “are ‘not survivable.’”

  12 Comments      


Good morning!

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* For Kyle , Caryn, Blake and the entire Hillman family and all their many, many friends

Come on home
Come on home
No you don’t have to be alone
Come on home
Come on home
No you don’t have to be alone
Just come on home

More here. Big hugs to everyone.

What’s up by you?

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

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - 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)

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The String Cheese Incident with Molly Tuttle

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias…

For the second time in recent weeks, Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias has uncovered that Illinois license plate camera data has been shared with U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and has ordered that access be shut off.

In its continued effort to expand the auditing process for automated license plate reader (ALPR) systems, Giannoulias’ office discovered that the Motorola Solutions technology was being utilized by the Village of Forest Park’s Police Department to give CBP access to its license plate camera data. Motorola has since worked with Forest Park to shut off and disable the data sharing capabilities with CBP and other federal agencies at the direction of the Secretary of State’s office.

This comes off the heels of last week’s announcement where the audit conducted by Giannoulias’ office uncovered that Flock Safety, operator of the largest automated license plate reader system in the nation, had allowed CBP to access Illinois license plate cameras. Following the discovery, Giannoulias ordered the company to shut off access to CBP immediately. In addition, Flock has since paused a nationwide pilot project and data sharing with CBP and other federal agencies.

* Sun-Times

Deploying National Guard troops to Chicago could cost taxpayers nearly $1.6 million per day, according to a nonpartisan federal budget research organization.

The estimate is based on 3,000 troops potentially being sent to Chicago, though no official number has been made public.

The National Priorities Project, a research group that’s part of the progressive nonprofit Institute for Policy Studies, used a figure of $530 per Guard member per day, which was the estimated cost in 2020 when National Guard members were deployed to Washington, D.C., during protests following the death of George Floyd.

The ultimate price tag for a Chicago deployment would be affected by factors such as the pay scale of individual National Guard members and whether the government provides them with housing, said Hanna Homestead, a research analyst with the National Priorities Project.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Security fencing at Chicago’s federal courthouse an early sign of Trump immigration push: The fencing, which surrounds the high-rise courthouse at 219 S. Dearborn St. and is buttressed by concrete barriers, offers added protection should protests break out across the street at Federal Plaza, officials said. The block has been the site of numerous rallies challenging Trump administration initiatives, particularly immigration. Anyone seeking to enter the courthouse Friday morning was being directed to a single entrance through the fence on the northeast corner of Dearborn and Monroe streets. Once past it, however, there was no additional visible security inside the building.

* Sun-Times | Volunteers on ICE patrol in Pilsen, looking for agents: Cepeda and the other patrollers are among the many residents and advocates hoping to prevent or stop federal officials from making arrests by warning families of ICE sightings. Cepeda says they scout alleyways, parking lots and the main streets around the schools while parents are dropping off or waiting for their kids. The idea is to sound the alarm if they spot ICE or other federal agents before they can start making arrests. Their main focus now is around Pilsen schools, but Cepeda says they also want to help protect churches, community organizations and businesses, like restaurants and car washes.

* WTTW | CPS Rebuffs Remote Learning Calls, Says School Remains ‘Best and Safest’ Place for Students Amid ICE and National Guard Fears: “Our students are finalizing their third week of the school year, and our focus remains on teaching and learning,” a CPS spokesperson said in a statement. “Schools are consistently following established procedures to welcome students, provide in-person instruction, and keep families informed of any updates. We remain committed to making sure every CPS school is a safe and supportive place for students each day.”

* Tribune | With Chicago under a microscope, anti-violence group responds to mass shootings in Bronzeville: “I can tell you we’re going to continue to do our job,” said Bamani Obadele, community engagement director for Acclivus, Inc., a community organization that provides violence intervention programs to help people in Chicago’s most vulnerable neighborhoods. “We’re not taking any days off.” City violence data reviewed by the Tribune found that, after last weekend, 10 mass shootings have occurred in Bronzeville since the start of 2019. Cook County court records indicate charges have not been filed in any.

* Crain’s | Free health care clinic moves to shield patients from ICE ahead of surge: CEO Stephanie Wilding said today Community Health’s strategy to ensure patients get access to health care, and stay safe doing it, includes encouraging telehealth visits, using its partnership with Uber Health to transport patients to its flagship clinic, coordinating access to medications and “having someone at the door of our facility to ensure only patients, their companions and those with appointments” are the only ones let in.

* Sun-Times | Chicago’s invisible property owners: Like many tenants, Carter knew the name of his property management company. But he didn’t know the names of the people who hired them: the investors ultimately accountable for the caved-in bathroom ceiling, the recurring heat shut-offs and litany of other building code violations he had endured in the past two years. […] In some cases, the anonymity that LLCs provide makes it next to impossible to find out what other buildings a landlord owns, impeding the city’s ability to go after neglectful property owners in a systematic way.

* Crain’s | Re/Max stakes claim in North Shore turf war: The acquisition of one real estate mega-brokerage by another created an opportunity for a third brokerage to dive into the lucrative North Shore market. Compass, the national powerhouse that acquired Chicago market leader @properties Christie’s International Real Estate in December, is selling offices that were made redundant in five North Shore towns. Janice Corley, who owns five Re/Max brokerages in Chicago and the suburbs, is doubling that number by buying the Compass offices in Winnetka, Glencoe, Highland Park, Lake Forest and Glenview, she announced Sept. 3.

* Block Club | Harvest Moon Walk Aims To Shine A Light On Avondale’s Forgotten Riverfront History: “As a city of industry, before there were rails, it was water. That was the transportation network and a vital link between the nation, connecting the Great Lakes Basin all the way to the Gulf of Mexico in New Orleans,” Pogorzelski said. “It played such a pivotal role — but what made it so attractive to industry kept residents away.” The free walk will begin 7 p.m. Sunday at Burning Bush Brewery, 4014 N. Rockwell St., and organizers ask that those interested RSVP on Facebook for a headcount. The walk should last 70-90 minutes, but participants can leave whenever they want, organizers said.

* NBC Chicago | Nearly 100 cars found in Chicago River amid search for missing couple: A crew of divers from downstate Illinois were searching for a missing couple from the 1970s when they uncovered something else beneath the water’s surface. The search efforts, which had been ongoing for at least a week, saw divers come across nearly 100 cars in the river. […] As of Thursday afternoon, the group said it had discovered 97 vehicles, though it anticipates topping 100 shortly. Crews had been in the water searching for Edward and Stefanie Andrews, a married couple who went missing on May 15, 1970. The couple disappeared after leaving a dinner party and crews were searching the water to see if their vehicle may have gone into the River that night. “We’ve searched extensively downtown, as well as other teams throughout the years. Unfortunately, they’ve never been found,” Bussick said. “But we wanted to expand our search in the event that he was confused that night.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | ‘You are not alone’: Suburban communities try to reassure residents ahead of threatened immigration raids: Mundelein, North Chicago and Lake County officials have issued online statements emphasizing their law enforcement officers won’t participate in federal immigration activities. The statements also stress that anyone living in the U.S. has legal rights regardless of citizenship status, and they provided links to groups that can provide information or assistance regarding immigration issues. Aurora officials on Friday emphasized their commitment to the city’s immigrant population ahead of a Mexican historical and cultural celebration scheduled for this weekend.

* Daily Herald | Trump’s National Guard threats upend Mexican parade plans in Waukegan, Chicago: One Mexican Independence Day parade in the Chicago area is postponed. Another doubled its volunteer staff to ensure celebrators’ safety. A third parade’s organizers are watching closely, poised to pivot if the political climate worsens. President Donald Trump on Tuesday said he plans to deploy National Guard troops to Chicago, casting a shadow over the region’s upcoming Mexican Independence Day festivities. The Sept. 16 holiday is usually a time of joy in the Chicago area, where more than 20% of the city’s population is Mexican. Now, community leaders are trying to balance residents’ safety and their cultural celebration.

* Daily Herald | Fox River Grove adds sales tax, plans to lower other fees and taxes: Fox River Grove will add a 1% sales tax starting next year, with officials planning to reduce other taxes and fees for residents to offset the new tax. Board trustees agreed in a 5-1 vote Tuesday to enact a 1% non-home-rule sales tax, with Trustee David Joseph being the sole no vote. At the same meeting, trustees also unanimously approved substantial cuts to a telecommunications tax imposed on residents and businesses.

* Daily Southtown | Lansing District 171 teachers’ union to pay custodian $110,000 in racial discrimination lawsuit settlement: The Sunnybrook Educational Association agreed to pay District 171 custodian Eugene Johnson $110,000 after Johnson alleged the union discriminated against him when it contested his promotion to head custodian in November 2018. […] District 171 Superintendent Erika Millhouse-Pettis said, as of Friday, the union had not made the district aware of the consent decree reached with the EEOC. She confirmed Johnson was not promoted since the union grieved his promotion to head janitor in 2018.

* Evanston Roundtable | Evanston on track to meet greenhouse gas reduction goals: The task force and city staff members agreed in July to put together a presentation that would focus on goals Evanston was supposed to meet in 2025 and earlier, as well as some goals that don’t have a firm timeline. As the RoundTable previously reported, the city has a mixed record of meeting CARP goals. It did not fully meet most of them for 2025, though it saw more progress on some than others, according to a presentation at the June 12 Environmental Board meeting.

*** Downstate ***

* ProPublica | The Floods Kept Coming. He Needed to Grow a Crop That Would Thrive in Water — or to Quit: Corn, soy and wheat were the crops Gerard, now 55, was growing in the early 1990s when he took over his family farm near the confluence of the Ohio and Mississippi rivers. By then, the floods were already coming more often. Gerard’s grandfather remembered them in 1943 and 1973, but as Gerard began farming, they came every two years — in ’93, ’95 and ’97. […] “I could grow something that would grow in water,” he said. Or quit. But for many farmers, making the transition to a new crop is nearly impossible, as ProPublica and Capitol News Illinois reported this week. Although rice is a commodity crop and Gerard receives insurance subsidies and commodity supports, corn and soybeans dominate U.S. agriculture, especially in the Midwest, and that’s what federal subsidies are set up to support.

* Manufacturing Dive | Boeing begins hiring to replace striking workers at Missouri, Illinois plants: Boeing has begun the hiring process to replace workers on strike at its fighter jet and weapon systems plants in St. Louis and St. Charles, Missouri, and Mascoutah, Illinois. It’s been a month since more than 3,200 Boeing workers, represented by the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers District 837, went on strike at the planemaker’s defense facilities after they voted to reject the company’s second contract offer. Boeing’s “last, best and final offer” withdrew alternative workweek schedules, added a reward for good attendance at $0.50 per hour, and a $5,000 bonus, contingent upon the contract being ratified by the end of the day of Aug. 3. Since the union voted to reject the offer, Boeing said it withdrew the $5,000 ratification bonus.

* WJBD | Centralia Sentinel, Salem Times-Commoner, 13 Other Papers to be sold to Kentucky based group: The family that owns the Centralia Sentinel, Salem Times Commoner, Carlyle Union Banner, Washington County News in Nashville, and the Greenville Advocate has sold the newspapers and 11 others to the Paxton Media Group based in Paducah, Kentucky. The Hoskins family, who owned Better Newspapers, Inc., is selling the newspapers according to a news release from John Cribb of Cribb and Associates, who represented the Hoskins family in the transaction. The terms were not disclosed.

* WCIA | Champaign’s culinary scene getting a new flavor: Bezza Ayalew, the owner of the new restaurant, said that his original plan was to open before the pandemic, but is he grateful that it’s coming now instead. Ayalew is from Ethiopia, but has lived in Champaign for almost twenty years. The closest authentic Ethiopian restaurant is in Chicago or Indianapolis.

* Muddy River News | Old Adams County Courthouse brought back to life in miniature form: Todorov said it was his brother who inspired him to get into doing scale models. Todorov is especially interested in buildings that are of historic significance. While there are still many historic structures standing, he says he was drawn to the buildings that are no longer here. So based on old photos, he began to create. His first choice was the third Adams County Courthouse. It was built in 1876 but was damaged by a tornado in 1945 and then demolished four years later.

*** National ***

* AP | Gregory Bovino, head of Los Angeles campaign, shows how immigration agents rack up arrests: While Trump’s aggressive deportation plans accelerate, Bovino carefully hones his image, both his own and the one projected to the country that shows well-armed officers moving swiftly into place to make arrests. […] Undeterred by court orders over racial profiling, Bovino also revels in breaking norms. Agents have smashed car windows, blown open a door to a house and patrolled the fabled MacArthur Park on horseback. Bovino often appears in tactical gear, as he did outside Gov. Gavin Newsom’s news conference on congressional redistricting on Aug. 14.

* CBS | Appeals court rules Florida’s “Alligator Alcatraz” detention site can stay open: But on Thursday, the panel of appellate court judges froze that ruling. The court concluded that state and federal officials are likely to succeed in showing that the site isn’t subject to the National Environmental Policy Act, because it is a state-operated facility and Florida has not yet received any federal reimbursement for the cost of running the site.

* AP | US hiring stalls with employers reluctant to expand in an economy grown increasingly erratic: The Labor Department reported Friday that U.S. employers — companies, government agencies and nonprofits — added just 22,000 jobs last month, down from 79,000 in July and well below the 80,000 that economists had expected. The unemployment rate ticked up to 4.3% last month, also worse than expected and the highest since 2021.

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Trump administration investigating Medicaid spending on immigrants in Illinois, other Democratic states

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* AP and KFF Health News

The Trump administration is taking its immigration crackdown to the health care safety net, launching Medicaid spending probes in at least six Democratic-led states that provide comprehensive health coverage to poor and disabled immigrants living in the U.S. without permanent legal status.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is scouring payments covering health care for immigrants without legal status to ensure there isn’t any waste, fraud or abuse, according to public records obtained by KFF Health News and The Associated Press. While acknowledging that states can bill the federal government for Medicaid emergency and pregnancy care for immigrants without legal status, federal officials have sent letters notifying state health agencies in California, Colorado, Illinois, Minnesota, Oregon and Washington that they are reviewing federal and state payments for medical services, such as prescription drugs and specialty care.

* From the March letter sent to California’s Department of Health Care Services

[T]he Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General (OIG) conducted an audit that identified $52.7 million in overpaid FFP for Medicaid capitation payments made on behalf of individuals without a satisfactory immigration status and recommended additional work to recover overpayments. To date, [Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services] has collected over $500 million [Federal Financial Participation] for overpayments identified outside of the review period of the [Financial Management Review] and OIG audit. CMS has also been working with the state on corrective action for multiple state deficiencies identified by the state, CMS, and the OIG. […]

If CMS determines that California is using federal money to pay for or subsidize healthcare for individuals without a satisfactory immigration status for which federal funding is prohibited by law, CMS will diligently pursue all available enforcement strategies, including, consistent with applicable law, reductions in federal financial participation and possible referrals to the Attorney General of the United States for possible lawsuit against California.

* More from AP

States under review say they are following the law. […]

Emails show Illinois officials met with CMS and sought an extension to share its data. CMS denied that request and federal regulators told the state that its funding could be withheld.

“Thousands of Illinois residents rely on these programs to lawfully seek critical health care without fear of deportation,” said Melissa Kula, a spokesperson for the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services, noting that any federal cut would be “impossible” for the state to backfill.

We’ve asked the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services for its letter, the deadline to turn over the data, and whether any data has been provided. We’ll update when we hear back.

* Related…

    * Fox News | House GOP eyes more Medicaid reforms in second budget reconciliation bill: Rep. Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, chair of the House Budget Committee, confirmed to Fox News Digital that his panel had begun laying the groundwork for a second reconciliation package. “Reversing the curse is a continuous effort when you’re $36-plus trillion in the hole,” Arrington said, referencing the national debt. “It’s going to take more than one reconciliation bill to get out of it. So that process is underway.” […] When asked about Medicaid specifically, Arrington said he supported proposals potentially blocking federal dollars from covering transgender medical procedures and from going to illegal immigrants. “I’d be shocked if those don’t go back in, in some form,” he said. “They also happen to be 80-20 issues, like 80% of the American people would expect that that already happens and are shocked that it’s not happening.”

    * CPR News | House Republicans demand health care and Medicaid data from Colorado : In a letter sent Wednesday to Gov. Jared Polis and the state agency that administers Medicaid, House Republicans from the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform asked for detailed information about the “state and local programs that provide health coverage and other services for illegal aliens.” Specifically, they’re demanding lists and information, dating back to 2019, about costs associated with operations and medical procedures done on people unauthorized to be in the country. They asked for the number of individuals denied Medicaid due to unsatisfactory immigration status, a list of every procedure performed on unauthorized immigrants and “all documents and communications” related to Colorado’s charity care programs for immigrants.

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Today’s quotable

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Alice Yin at the Tribune

Speaking at a panel at the Hideout, the mayor again blasted state leaders and called upon them to give Chicago home rule authority to implement new levies because they aren’t “bold” enough to do it themselves. Then without naming him, Johnson appeared to take a shot at Pritzker by comparing the two-term governor and possible candidate in the 2028 presidential race to the governor’s political nemesis, Republican President Donald Trump.

“It is derelict of duty, quite frankly, to have all of this blue power and to make an excuse of why we can’t exercise our power. It’s no different than my complaint or quite frankly my frustration with the president,” Johnson said. “You have Democrats in this country or in Illinois who make excuses of why we can’t show up for working people, and then their cop out is, ‘Well, Mayor Brandon Johnson.’ This is the same mayor that went on a hunger strike.”

Johnson argued the reluctance from Springfield to move on his demand for Chicago Public Schools to receive $1.6 billion more — the mayor’s white whale goal, and one that few believe he can achieve soon given the lack of appetite in the Illinois General Assembly amid an austere budget — is not because of lack of funds. “The money is there,” Johnson countered before casting state leaders as tepid.

“They have supermajorities in both houses,” the mayor said about Illinois Democrats. “We occupy the governor’s mansion. Why are we so afraid to stand up for working people and poor people? It just doesn’t make any sense. It’s unconscionable.”

* One more from Alice…


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Roundup: Chicago braces for ICE raids

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Washington Post reported yesterday the Pentagon has officially approved ICE and Customs and Border Protection to use Naval Station Great Lakes, just outside Chicago, as a base for large-scale immigration raids

The Pentagon has approved the use of a Navy base on the outskirts of Chicago as a staging ground from which the Trump administration can launch operations against undocumented immigrants, said two defense officials familiar with the issue.

Naval Station Great Lakes will serve as a hub in upcoming operations overseen by the Department of Homeland Security, the officials said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

It could also potentially be used as a place to house National Guard or active-duty service members, if President Donald Trump orders a surge of U.S. troops to the city, as he did this summer in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.

The approval comes after DHS sought permission late last month for agents with Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other law enforcement personnel to use the base.

* A quick rundown ahead of this weekend…

    • Governor JB Pritzker said yesterday during an unrelated news conference he believes ICE operations will begin early Saturday morning, but said they could start as soon as today.

    • The Sun-Times reported agents are expected to leave the base by 5 am each day and will stay in hotels in nearby suburbs, including Waukegan. The operation is expected to last more than a month.

    • About 140 unmarked vehicles are already on site, and officials are seeking a no-fly zone to keep news helicopters and drones away, according to the Sun-Times.

    • El Grito Chicago, a Mexican Independence Day festival in Grant Park, was canceled yesterday due to concerns about increased immigration enforcement.

    • Organizers of the Pilsen Mexican Independence Day parade say it will go forward with extra precautions.

    • The ICE facility in Broadview will serve as the main processing site CBS Chicago reported yesterday, running seven days a week for roughly 45 consecutive days. Mayor Katrina Thompson told residents that “a large-scale enforcement campaign will soon be underway.” The building’s windows were boarded up Wednesday ahead of anticipated protests.

    • Advocates raised concerns last month about conditions at the Broadview facility, which traditionally was used to process detainees for less than a day. “People were going without beds, with cold food, no showers for three days on average, and that’s completely unacceptable,” Omar Flores, chair of the Immigrants’ Rights Working Committee, told WGN.

* Related stories…

    * WBEZ | Flash-bang grenades and early morning raids: How Trump is planning to target Chicago: At least 30 agents already have arrived at Naval Station Great Lakes near North Chicago, where they’ve been practicing crowd control with shields and flash-bang grenades, the sources said. Similar training has been underway for several months.

    * Sun-Times | Chicago’s Latino leaders urge ‘don’t take the bait’ as city braces for uptick in federal agents: Latino Leadership Council members, former U.S. Rep. Luis Gutiérrez, D-Chicago, and other officials at Daley Plaza Thursday repeatedly emphasized that residents “don’t take the bait” from Trump, suggesting his plan to send troops to Chicago is a ploy to agitate the community. They also called on residents to remain peaceful during protests that might arise from a National Guard deployment to the city.

    * Fox Chicago | Lake County defends immigrant families as agents arrive in Naval Station Great Lakes: Lake County and the City of North Chicago reassured residents that they would not take part in federal immigration enforcement after reports of “unprecedented” operations being coordinated out of Naval Station Great Lakes. In a joint statement released Thursday, officials said the activities are “entirely at the federal level,” adding that Illinois law prohibits state and local police from assisting in immigration enforcement.

    * Tribune | ICE agents detain 2 at county domestic violence courthouse this week. Advocates warn of chilling effect on victims: “It’s an affront to all the work this country has done over the last 40 years to ensure that victims of domestic violence and sexual assault have access to justice,” said Amanda Pyron, president and CEO of The Network: Advocating Against Domestic Violence. “There’s no other result to an action like this but a deterrent to victims seeking the safety and justice they deserve.” The Cook County public defender’s office confirmed to the Tribune that two of its clients were arrested by immigration agents — a 41-year-old woman on Wednesday and a 40-year-old man on Monday. Officials said they were still gathering information, but said the woman had no criminal background and was not a risk to the public. The woman who was arrested had been charged with two misdemeanor counts of domestic battery, but the charges were dropped on Wednesday, according to court records.

    * Crain’s | As Trump targets Chicago, businesses prep for raids and protests: “Once the agencies come in, you’re going to get protesters, and that will lead to street closures,” says Sam Toia, president of the Illinois Restaurant Association. Immigration raids present a challenge to restaurants on two fronts: Protests and street closures keep patrons away, and the threat of immigration enforcement can keep restaurant workers home. Restaurants still haven’t fully recovered on either front from the COVID-19 pandemic. “Some people will be timid about coming into work and restaurant operators are planning for that,” Toia said, anticipating absenteeism could run as high as 20%. “(Staffing) has gotten a little better, but restaurants are still running pretty tight.”

    * Sun-Times | CTU calls for remote learning option for families amid looming immigration raids: Union President Stacy Davis Gates said the district should have a plan to shift those students to online learning to minimize the impact of being outside of the classroom. But Gates wasn’t optimistic that the district would be able to achieve that. “CPS is not ready for that,” she said, though she noted CPS was in a better position to stand up remote learning than it was when the pandemic hit.

    * WIFR | With ICE raids planned for Chicago, city of Rockford alerts immigrants to know their rights: United States Senator, Dick Durbin agrees with McNamara’s statement, explaining there is a possibily it expands into Rockford. “There is a genuine concern in the Hispanic population that there’s a mass deportation underway,” Durbin explained. Sara Dady, an area immigration lawyer also spoke out. Adding it is important for individuals to know their rights. “Everyone needs to exercise their rights. It’s important to remain calm, know who you’re dealing with, and decline to answer any questions. No one has to be rude; be firm, people can be respectful, but be firm in their rights,” explained Dady.

    * ABC Chicago | Chicago area braces for expanded ICE operations, protests this weekend: People gathered outside Naval Station Great Lakes Thursday night to pray ahead of the expected enforcement. Pastor Julie Contreras with United Giving Hope Church says these operations will separate families while Illinois Republican Chair Kathy Salvi says the administration is following through on its campaign promises.

    * WTTW | Under Threat of ICE Strikes, El Grito Canceled and Communities Prepare for Mexican Independence Day Celebrations: Immigration and Customs Enforcement strike teams are likely to begin operations around Chicago in the coming days, and local officials expect agents to target large gatherings like Sunday’s parade in Little Village and Saturday’s 26th Street Mexican Independence Day Parade in Pilsen. While this weekend’s planned events are still scheduled to proceed, the two-day El Grito Chicago festival scheduled to take place in Grant Park Sept. 13-14 has been postponed due to the threat of raids.

    * NBC | How Chicago and Boston officials are readying for Trump’s promise of more immigration raids: Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey told NBC News in a statement Wednesday that “what we are seeing from Donald Trump across the country isn’t about public safety — it’s about political intimidation.” While there aren’t yet concrete indications of exactly when additional law enforcement could be expected in those cities, immigration enforcement has gone hand in hand with the Trump administration’s sending National Guard troops to Los Angeles and in the federal takeover of Washington, D.C. Trump said late Tuesday that he would be “going in” to Chicago and that he had a right to go into the city to “protect this country.”

    * CNN | Hundreds of undocumented immigrants apprehended in massive ICE raid at Hyundai plant in Georgia: About 450 people were apprehended as several law enforcement agencies descended on the Hyundai Metaplant site in Ellabell, about 25 miles west of Savannah, officials said, in the latest example of the Trump administration’s crackdown on immigration at workplaces across the country. The raid halted construction of a factory being built to produce batteries for electric vehicles, the Associated Press reported. The facility has been touted by Georgia’s governor as the largest economic development site in the state’s history, the AP added.

  38 Comments      


Pritzker slams DeSantis over end of vaccine mandates

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tampa Bay Times

Florida is set to push for an end to all state vaccine mandates, state Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo announced at a news conference Wednesday.

For decades, the state has required numerous vaccines for kids attending school, a list that today includes shots that protect against measles-mumps-rubella, polio, chickenpox and Hepatitis B.

But Ladapo on Wednesday compared these mandates to “slavery,” and promised that they all will soon end.

* I asked the governor’s office for a response. From Matt Hill…

There is no way to make measles, mumps, rubella, or polio great again. Immunizations have saved more than 154 million lives in the last 50 years — and mostly infants.

Governor Pritzker takes public health seriously unlike Gov. DeSantis whose reckless rollback on vaccines puts children’s lives at risk. His Surgeon General’s comparison of lifesaving medicine to slavery is also insulting and dangerous.

In Illinois, we’ll keep standing up for science and protecting our kids.

  28 Comments      


What Illinois Can Learn From Texas On Battery Energy Storage

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

As Illinois confronts skyrocketing electric bills, legislators are on the hunt for solutions that provide relief as quickly as possible. Battery energy storage is our best and most cost-effective solution.

But last session— without evidence —opponents attempted to claim that battery energy storage wouldn’t work. Try telling that to Texas, where the rapid deployment of battery storage has already prevented blackouts and saved consumers billions.

Called “Ground Zero for the US Battery Boom” by Bloomberg, Texas added enough storage in 2023 to power 3 million homes and drop grid emergency risk during peak hours from 16% to less than 1%. The result? Storage saved consumers an estimated $750 billion in 2024.

Texas has proven that storage is the quickest, cheapest, most reliable way to get consumers relief from skyrocketing, demand-induced price spikes. Storage is a nimble way to address growing populations, power-hungry data centers, and meet other electrification-related power needs. These are benefits Texas saw from storage even as the state reduced its gas generation capacity by 166 MW last year.

Illinois lawmakers should follow Texas’s lead and pass SB40 this fall to deploy 6GW of energy storage by 2035. Click here for more information.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Pritzker says he’ll head to court as soon as troops show up. Crain’s

    - Gov. JB Pritzker says the state’s first move will be to the courthouse if troops come to Chicago as part of the Trump administration’s planned immigration crackdown that’s expected to begin later this week.
    - Pritzker, like other governors, has asserted that President Donald Trump has no authority to dispatch National Guard members or federal troops.
    -In recent days, the White House has been cagey about whether it plans to deploy troops.

* Related Stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WGLT | Rivian plans job cuts as it plans for R2 production in Normal: Rivian is cutting about 1.5% of its global workforce as the electric vehicle maker prepares its plant in Normal for production of its new lower-cost sport utility vehicle. The automaker had about 15,000 employees globally at the end of the year. It’s unclear how many of the job cuts could be in Normal. “We have made some recent changes to the commercial team as part of an ongoing effort to improve operational efficiency for R2,” according to a statement from a Rivian spokesperson.

* Sun-Times | In Illinois, soybean is king and helps fuel everything from farmers to Chicago Park District trucks: About 80 park district vehicles are fueled by biodiesel blends made from refined soybean oil. That’s about 25% of its diesel fleet, which includes service and forestry trucks, tractors and mowers. The parks department uses various kinds of clean energy for its vehicles and equipment. It started using soybean-based biodiesel blended with regular diesel in 2011. The liquid fuel can supplement regular diesel often used in heavy vehicles. “It performs better than standard diesel, and the power is the same. It also benefits the health of our employees and park visitors,” Mike Dimitroff, manager of cultural and natural resources for Chicago Park District, said.

*** Statewide ***

* SJ-R | Free monthly STI testing now at all 13 Planned Parenthood Illinois centers: Walk-in patients will be offered a variety of STI tests and have a consultation with a provider. While at the health center, individuals can schedule a wellness visit, make an appointment for other services and get enrolled in Medicaid. Walk-in appointments will end 45 minutes before closing, are first-come, first-served and results are confidential, according to the announcement.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Daily Herald | New Illinois law requires police to act swiftly on missing persons cases: You’ve probably seen it play out on a TV crime drama: A distraught person enters a police station to report a loved one missing, only to be told by the desk officer that there’s nothing they can do about it for at least 24 hours. A new state law championed by a suburban legislator and Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart will keep that scenario the stuff of fiction here in Illinois. Senate Bill 24 — also known as the Missing Persons Identification Act — was signed into law late last month by Gov. JB Pritzker, paving the way for major changes in how police handle missing persons cases.

* Education Week | How This State Is Protecting Undocumented Students’ Right to an Education: House Bill 3247—signed into law by Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker on Aug. 15—is the state’s response to rising fear among local immigrant communities over the Trump administration’s push for increased immigration enforcement across the country, lawmakers and advocates said. The law is also a response to the efforts of policymakers in other states to overturn the 1982 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Plyler v. Doe, which granted a constitutional right to a free, public education to all students regardless of immigration status. Since President Donald Trump’s re-election, policymakers in at least six states have taken actions to challenge Plyler, with at least one of these still in process, and the rest paused or defeated, according to an Education Week analysis.

* WAND | Illinois law could ensure families with NICU babies receive info on early intervention services: The Illinois Department of Human Services’ early intervention program helps children with disabilities or developmental delays up to age three learn and grow. However, many families are unaware they are eligible for these services. This law states hospitals must sign a written letter referring babies to early intervention programs if the child is sent to their neonatal intensive care unit.

*** Chicago ***

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago’s Air Force Academy High School to change name, switch to Army JROTC: The school opened in 2009 and was the only wall-to-wall public Air Force Academy high school in the country. It’s been lauded by Mayor Brandon Johnson and is one of six military schools in CPS where participation in JROTC is mandatory. Currently, there are roughly 130 students enrolled, down from more than 300 a decade ago. The deactivation of the Air Force Academy High School JROTC program means there are no longer Air Force JROTC programs in CPS. A program inside Phillips High School was closed for low enrollment in 2022. There are 815 active Air Force JROTC programs at other schools across the country.

* Sun-Times | ‘The powder keg is growing.’ Former Chicagoans in D.C. call guard deployment ‘unprecedented and scary’: “In Chicago, it feels like the powder keg is there. In D.C., I think the powder keg is growing. I’ve had friends who have been in Ubers or have been in situations where people around them have been stolen and arrested and taken to who knows where, and you can feel there’s tension building,” said Albano, 30. “But it does not quite feel as intense of a tension as how the activists and organizers in Chicago are planning to protect immigrant communities and their families and loved ones.”

* ABC Chicago | UIC student sues university police, claiming arrest was unlawful, led to visa revocation: In police body-worn camera video, you can hear one UIC officer say, “Mr. Presta, just to let you know you are being charged with theft under, it’s a class A misdemeanor, under meaning under $500 in value.” “The allegation is he was working out and, at some time during his workout, he stole someone’s little gym bag,” attorney Gregory Kulis told the I-Team. He represents Presta in a new lawsuit against four UIC police officers filed Thursday. Kulis says video evidence shows Presta did not take the bag in question.

* Sun-Times | White Sox’ 2025 loss cause: If 100 is inevitable, at least try to stay under 106: Unless the 50-88 Sox scratch out seven more victories, they’ll be tied to last year’s 121-loss team forever — with the two most “L”-acious seasons in franchise history coming back-to-back.

* Sun-Times | Angel Reese officially suspended after eighth technical foul: Angel Reese will miss the Sky’s game Friday against the Fever. She received her eighth technical foul in the first half Wednesday against the Sun, which triggered a one-game suspension. Coach Tyler Marsh said the Sky appealed the call, but the WNBA issued a statement Thursday confirming the suspension. The Sky have appealed other calls this year without success. Reese was assessed a technical for a “flail” in the second quarter against Sun forward Aaliyah Edwards. There was no whistle on the court, but officials upgraded the play after review. Marsh argued at the time and said he was frustrated by the explanation.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Naperville Sun | Naperville commission seeks more info before voting on Karis Critical data centers plan: “This is the only zoning district where data centers are permitted,” said Russ Whitaker, an attorney representing Karis. While the development is planned for an appropriately zoned area, it is also in close proximity to multiple residential areas, including the Naper Commons, Danada Woods and Indian Hill Woods subdivisions. Those residents opposed to the project say it will have a negative effect on their health and quality of life as well as the environment. An online petition urging the city to reject the development has been signed by about 1,900 people.

* Daily Herald | Former Arlington Heights school nurse sentenced for misappropriating students’ medicine: Eitz worked at from Aug. 19, 2019 through May 8, 2024, at Westgate Elementary School school, where prosecutors say she was responsible for documenting, storing, handling and administering prescribed medication that “included controlled amphetamine substances” for several students. She was fired in May 2024 amid an investigation into the allegations. In April of this year, the parents of nine Westgate students sued Eitz, school leaders and Arlington Heights Elementary District 25 administrators alleging she intentionally gave children the wrong medication and school leaders had the ability to stop her but “actively chose not to.”

* Daily Southtown | Orland Park passes Israel-Hamas ceasefire resolution, continuation of grocery tax: The board also voted to join neighboring suburbs in creating a 1% municipal grocery tax to begin when a statewide tax expires on Jan. 1. Similar action was taken by neighboring communities including Tinley Park, Homewood and Homer Glen. Milani and Healy voted against the measure while Dodge, Lawrence, Lawler and Leafblad voted in favor.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora committee tables talk of lifting ban on backyard chickens: No official ordinance was drafted, but aldermen who sit on the City Council Rules, Administration and Procedures Committee have spent time at the past several meetings discussing the possibility of allowing backyard chickens within city limits and the logistics of how that may work. They’ve also heard from the city’s Animal Care and Control division about the idea, including its current response to backyard chickens. Currently, city code bans people from keeping dangerous animals, bees or farm animals within city limits, but special permission can be given to things like pony rides and petting zoos.

* Daily Southtown | Blue Island’s random water sampling finds no hot spots for immediate pipe replacement: City Administrator Thomas Wogan said the results met the Environmental Protection Agency’s 90th percentile value, which means lead in the drinking water samples did not exceed 15 parts per billion, comparable to adding 15 drops of a substance to a 10,000-gallon swimming pool, in at least 90% of the homes sampled. Wogan also said no individual homes that were tested met the 90th percentile. He said in June the city would immediately notify any homes that had a high concentration of lead in their sampled drinking water.

* Daily Herald | How runway safety system slowed plane, averted disaster in Wheeling: Installed a decade ago on the north end of Runway 1634, the Engineered Material Arresting System is a rectangular, graded bed of large, concrete blocks that rise slightly above ground level. The blocks can support a person’s weight but are designed to give way under greater pressure, slowing and eventually stopping an aircraft that overruns a runway. Miller compares the system to the emergency escape ramps often found in mountainous areas that help trucks with braking problems stop safely.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Viper Mine coal plant in Central Illinois permanently closed; some caught off guard: On Thursday, Village President of Williamsville Mark Esker said that the coal plant was being torn down and officially closed on Sept. 4. At this time, there is not an estimated completion date on the demolition of the Viper Mine. The mine had been providing coal to the Springfield area over the course of the last 40 years. According to CWLP, the closure of the Viper Mine locations was first made public in November 2024 after the Springfield City Council approved a new coal supply contract with Foresight Coal Sales LLC to serve Dallman 4. However, Esker said he only found out about the closure a few months back when some of the workers laid off at the plants let him know they would be receiving severance.

* WGLT | Dueling letters show rising tension between local leaders over shared sales tax: An Aug. 22 letter sent by Normal Mayor Chris Koos to County Board Chair Elizabeth Johnston contains phrases that accuse the county of “stockpiling” sales tax revenue rather than spending it on purposes approved under a decade old intergovernmental agreement (IGA). The letter, obtained by WGLT through a Freedom of Information Act request, called the $20 million fund balance “excessive.” And it objected to county leadership’s refusal to have its full board consider the town and city request to pause sales tax sharing during negotiations.

* WGLT | Illinois State University approaches 22,000 students as enrollment sets new record: ISU has increased its student headcount by 448 students to 21,994 students this fall. “Given the climate and the environment that is becoming ever so competitive for college admissions, I am very happy with the group we are bringing in,” said Pat Walsh, the university’s director of recruitment and operations for admissions.

* WCIA | Blue Mound water unsafe for kids under six months old: In a news release sent to WCIA, the village said on Sept. 4, samples that were collected the day before showed nitrate levels of 12 milligrams per liter (mg/L). The standard for nitrate is 10 mg/L. Nitrate in drinking water can pose a serious health concern for infants less than six months old. And, nitrate in drinking water can come from natural, industrial, or agricultural sources, like septic systems and run-off. Levels of nitrate in drinking water can change throughout the year.

* WSIL | Bob Odenkirk returns to Carbondale for SIU event in September: The Odenkirks will participate in a public event at The Varsity Center on September 12 from 3-5 p.m. They will discuss their careers in the entertainment industry with H.D. Motyl, an associate professor at SIU’s School of Media Arts. Bob Odenkirk graduated from SIU in 1984 and has since built a successful career as a comedy writer. He is well-known for his roles in “Breaking Bad” and its spinoff “Better Call Saul,” as well as his recent work in the films “Nobody” and “Nobody 2.”

*** National ***

* KPTV Oregon | U.S. Border Czar threatens to ‘flood’ Portland, other cities with ICE agents: PORTLAND Ore. (KPTV) - U.S. Border Czar Tom Homan said Wednesday at a news conference that the Trump administration plans to “flood the zone” with ICE agents in sanctuary cities like Portland, Seattle, and Chicago. “We’ve got 10,000 more agents coming on, we’re going to flood the zone,” Homan said to reporters on the White House lawn. “You’re going to see a ramp up of operations in New York. You’re going to see a ramp up of operations continue in L.A. and, you know, Portland, Seattle. I mean, all these sanctuary cities refuse to work with ICE … we’re going to address that.”

* NYT | The Doctors Are Real, but the Sales Pitches Are Frauds: Dr. Robert H. Lustig is an endocrinologist, a professor emeritus of pediatrics at the University of California, San Francisco, and an author of best-selling books on obesity. He is absolutely not — despite what you might see and hear on Facebook — hawking “liquid pearls” with dubious claims about weight loss. “No injections, no surgery, just results,” he appears to say in one post. Instead, someone has used artificial intelligence to make a video that imitates him and his voice — all without his knowledge, let alone consent.

* Forbes | AI Startup Flock Thinks It Can Eliminate All Crime In America: Langley offers a prediction: In less than 10 years, Flock’s cameras, airborne and fixed, will eradicate almost all crime in the U.S. (He acknowledges that programs to boost youth employment and cut recidivism will help.) It sounds like a pipe dream from another AI-can-solve- everything tech bro, but Langley, in the face of a wave of opposition from privacy advocates and Flock’s archrival, the $2.1 billion (2024 revenue) police tech giant Axon Enterprise, is a true believer. He’s convinced that America can and should be a place where everyone feels safe. And once it’s draped in a vast net of U.S.-made Flock surveillance tech, it will be.

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Good morning!

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I tweaked my mom’s meatloaf recipe just a little bit yesterday and then added fresh sweet corn to the gravy. Man, it was good…

* Those are my own homegrown tomatoes, by the way

All winter without ‘em’s a culinary bummer

Weekend plans?

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Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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* Catching up with the congressionals
* Trump sends National Guard to Memphis, says Chicago is ‘probably next’ — again
* Isabel’s morning briefing
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* Selected press releases (Live updates)
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