Afternoon briefing
Monday, Nov 28, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * This game went as expected…
* Here’s your roundup… * Crain’s | How dark money helped the only Republican Cook County official win re-election: The official is suburban Commissioner Sean Morrison, who also happens to be the Cook County GOP chair. I wrote in September about how $200,000 mysteriously appeared in Morrison’s campaign fund in September, money that originally was donated by hedge fund mogul Ken Griffin to a group that opposed Gov J.B. Pritzker’s graduated income tax amendment in 2020. … While the Coalition to Cut Taxes isn’t registered with the elections board, it is registered as a not-for-profit with the Illinois Secretary of State’s Office. The group’s registered legal agent is Chicago attorney John Fogarty–the same John Fogarty who is general counsel for the Illinois Republican Party. * Daily Beast | Inside the Billionaire-Backed ‘Hub for Election Denial’: VoteRef has focused its efforts not just in Arizona, but the Midwest. (The Uihleins live in Illinois and have focused much of their giving in Wisconsin.) Over the past year, VoteRef has disclosed the personal information of millions of voters as part of a broader effort to empower members of the public to search for alleged “errors” in voter rolls. (Some states make it illegal to publish voter registration rolls.) * Tribune | Mayor Lori Lightfoot files for reelection: ‘Only rational choice is to return me to office’: “With the filing today, one chapter in the campaign ends and another opens,” she said after submitting a stack of nominating papers that, sitting on the Board of Elections table, almost reached her shoulders. Surrounded by supporters and Chicago first lady Amy Eshleman, Lightfoot quipped that her pile of more-than-40,000 signatures “looks like enough to me” before expressing that the next focus is on telling voters “why the only rational choice is to return me to office.” * Blair Kamin | How do we achieve equity-driven urban design in Chicago? The city’s future depends on it. : We should keep that joyous scene and its intimations of equality in mind as Mayor Lori Lightfoot and multiple challengers battle to determine who runs Chicago and the direction the city takes in the post-pandemic, post-George Floyd era. For while the need to stanch gun violence likely will dominate the campaign, another issue, no less urgent, deserves to be on the agenda: building a more equitable Chicago. * Salon | The postliberal crackup: The GOP’s post-midterm civil war starts with the New Right: Earlier this month, after the midterms failed to deliver a promised “red wave,” those fights spilled into the headlines, as Republicans’ disappointed hopes led to some of the first open shots in what’s been a cold civil war over the party’s future. Partly that fight revolves around whether Donald Trump or Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis will lead the GOP into the 2024 presidential election. But it goes much deeper than that, and the fight also has implications that go well beyond the right. * Telegraph | Illinois receives $14.4M to buy locally produced food: The two-year program will involve direct purchases from eligible farmers and multiple aggregation sites where goods will be consolidated and then distributed to schools, nonprofits and food banks. * ABC 7 | Joliet Amazon workers stage walkout on busy Cyber Monday: The protest took place around 3 a.m. on Monday morning. This is the second walkout in two months. * Illinois Public Media | The pseudoscience spreading to police precincts around Illinois: A phenomenon known as 911 phone call analysis is being used by more and more police departments across the country, including in Illinois. It’s a pseudoscience that claims that what someone says, how they sound and how they act during a 911 phone call, can determine if they are calling for help, or if they are trying to cover for a crime they have committed. * Patch | $200,000 Settlement In Black Joliet Officer’s Discrimination Lawsuit: The city of Joliet has agreed to a $200,000 settlement to resolve retired Joliet Police Officer Lionel Allen’s racial discrimination lawsuit against the city, Joliet Patch has learned. * WGLT | In post-Roe America, pilots take the abortion battle to the skies: The idea for a volunteer organization that would transport women seeking abortion care, and physicians who provide it, to states where it is safe and legal to do so, began with a volunteer stint Mike did at Midwest Access Coalition. “As a pilot, I was looking for some way that I could use my skills to help people,” Mike says. “And being someone who believes in someone’s ability to make their own choices, I thought helping people access abortion could be it.” * Grist | Herschel Walker, South Park, and the Prius: How loving gas-guzzlers became political: When states moved to ban rolling coal, some drivers pushed back, the New York Times reported in 2016. “Why don’t you go live in Sweden and get the heck out of our country,” one diesel truck owner wrote to an Illinois state representative who proposed a $5,000 fine for removing emissions equipment. “I will continue to roll coal anytime I feel like and fog your stupid eco-cars.” * Can a Millstadt Republican represent all of IL House District 114? Black leaders worry: Their concerns became a reality with Republican Kevin Schmidt of Millstadt unofficially taking the House District 114 race over incumbent Democrat LaToya Greenwood of East St. Louis. The Associated Press declared him the winner, though the ballots must still be canvassed and certified. … In 2016, she had 8,195 votes from East St. Louis as part of her 26,029-vote total. Those totals dropped this year to 4,990 in East St. Louis and 17,177 districtwide, according to unofficial election results. Meanwhile, the number of votes that Stuart received in St. Clair County for District 112 increased from 4,495 in 2016 to 6,891 in 2022. Hoffman’s totals in St. Clair County in District 113 decreased from 23,533 in 2016 to 20,621 in 2022. * KMOV | Border protection officers seize counterfeit Super Bowl rings headed for Jerseyville, Illinois, feds say: The shipment arriving from China contained 422 rings with the image of the Lombardi Trophy. An import specialist determined the rings to be counterfeit.
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Sen. Hastings will not chair a committee in new GA, but caucus is divided
Monday, Nov 28, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Dan Mihalopoulos at WBEZ…
Go read the rest for more.
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Pot tax cut pushed, despite continuing growth and huge retail markups
Monday, Nov 28, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Daily Herald…
* I asked Isabel to compile some numbers from two state sources and produce this chart… ![]() As you can see, growth is definitely slowing, but a 6-7 percent increase the past several months year-over-year is still pretty darned good, considering the run they’ve had. * Not to mention this tidbit from Crain’s…
If the retailers think prices are too high, maybe cut their own prices first? Hopefully, with more competition coming soonish, they’ll have no choice but to cut prices. * Also, from ABC 7…
Cutting the cannabis tax means reducing those programs unless the tax cut is completely offset by higher sales. But there’s no guarantee of that happening. * Related…
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*** UPDATED x1 *** Question of the day: 2022 Golden Horseshoe Awards
Monday, Nov 28, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * The holiday season means two things on this ol’ blog: 1) Fundraising for Lutheran Social Services of Illinois; and 2) our Golden Horseshoe Awards. From Mariah Heinz Wiggins at LSSI…
The thanks should really go to y’all, not me. The kids we buy presents and winter coats and other needs for are served by LSSI’s Foster Care Services. They’re good people doing a great service for children who need it and we get to play a role in that. I quietly opened up the donation page last week and without much fanfare we’ve already raised $1,200. As soon as we hit $2K, I’ll donate a matching amount. So, please, click here and help out the kids. * On to the question. Because of the pandemic, it’s been a while since we’ve voted on these topics…
* Best session tavern/hangout As always, do your very best to vote in both categories and make sure to explain your votes or they will not count. Thanks and have fun! Also, after you’ve cast your ballot, maybe click here and donate to LSSI. Let’s help those kids! *** UPDATE *** Wow, that was quick! I just kicked in my pledged $2,000. Thanks!
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list
Monday, Nov 28, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Tony McCombie news coverage roundup
Monday, Nov 28, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The Tribune…
* WGEM…
* Greg Hinz…
* Shaw Local…
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - A few updates
Monday, Nov 28, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller
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When literally all else fails, blame the people
Monday, Nov 28, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * The collar counties “need to be fixed”…
* Creepy…
* Attacking a guy who took a seat from the Democrats and has held onto it ever since, which are accomplishments that Proft is not exactly known for…
* This sums it up best: The voters are to blame for right-wing losses…
Back in June, Proft called the governor’s contest a “tough but winnable race. A dogfight.” And then his guy got creamed, so he naturally blames voters.
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After election results, a constitutional amendment on abortion appears in the cards
Monday, Nov 28, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * My weekly syndicated newspaper column…
Thoughts?
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Monday, Nov 28, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Morning briefing
Monday, Nov 28, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Do you go all out on Christmas decorations?…
* Here’s your morning roundup…
* Center Square | Illinois lawmakers return this week amid calls for changes in the SAFE-T Act: Illinois lawmakers return to Springfield Tuesday as state’s attorneys and law enforcement officials await changes to the SAFE-T Act. The controversial justice reform package eliminates cash bail on Jan. 1, making Illinois the first state to do so. * Politico | A Progressive Latina Thinks Democrats Are Blowing It with Hispanic Voters: Delia Ramirez won her suburban Chicago district with a strong progressive message. She thinks it’s the key to stemming gains by the GOP. * Politico | How redistricting shaped the midterms: The first election held under new congressional maps reflected both parties’ successes in shaping the House landscape for the next decade. * Sun-Times | Tim Degnan, Daley top gun and state senator, dies at 82: Tim Degnan a trusted point man, was key to Richard M. Daley’s political, policy success. As a lawmaker, he raised funds for the new Comiskey Park to keep the White Sox in Chicago. * WSIU | Democrats made midterm gains in rural areas. Can they keep them?: “I think there’s like a coming to Jesus moment, for lack of a better analogy, around if Democrats are going to like make a more full-throated decision and investment to contest for the rural vote,” said George Goehl, a community organizer with a focus on rural areas. “And I think this election shows what’s possible, even in many cases without resources, and that the rural vote is not static.” * Rolling Stone | Inside the Far-Right’s Fight for College Campuses: With tensions rising around the country, and many progressives experiencing increasing fear and rage at Trump’s presidency, it wasn’t hard to catch an angry assistant professor or usually mild-mannered lefty student driven mad by TPUSA’s more aggressive stunts. And TPUSA chapter leaders and staff members were at the ready, watching for outbursts, provoking them if they could, and capturing them on their iPhones. Their videos were quickly slapped together for maximum impact, given sassy titles, and sent out into the cyberworld, where, if all went as planned, they went viral. Circulating online in late 2017 was the video of an anti-Trump grad student at the University of Illinois who grabbed a TPUSA member’s phone — after the student hollered at him, “No one is scared of you 50-year-old man. Don’t you have kids to look after?” — then threw the phone across the lawn, cracking it. It was, it seemed, designed as a visual reminder that liberals were violent. * Tribune * SJ-R | Wards 5 and 7 will have contested races in 2023 election; filing closes today: The nonpartisan election is April 4. If more than four candidates emerge for a race, a primary will be held on Feb. 28. Also on the ballot are races for District 186 board of education, the Springfield Metropolitan Exposition and Auditorium Authority (SMEAA) board, the Springfield Park District trustees and the Lincoln Land Community College trustees, among others. Those offices file from Dec. 12 to Dec. 19. * Daily Herald | Has interest in recreational marijuana in Illinois peaked?:Last month alone, the 110 recreational dispensaries throughout Illinois collected $131,547,031 in revenue, their fourth-highest monthly tally ever. But those sales figures have remained relatively flat since March, leading some to worry the state’s cannabis cash cow has reached the highest hill in the state’s revenue pasture. * WBEZ | Formerly incarcerated students can now Zoom back into prison to finish their degrees: The pandemic forced prison programs across Illinois to adapt to remote learning. It also paved a path for college students leaving prison. * Tribune | What will Obama center mean for nearby home values on the South Side? Wary of being priced out, groups push for housing benefits and protections: A similar campaign by the same coalition won protections for Woodlawn after a five-year campaign and long negotiations with city housing officials. But organizers in South Shore say they were shut out, and that initial steps announced by the Chicago Department of Housing to help area condo owners did not go far enough. * Sun-Times | Al Capone’s grave in Hillside is defaced: A photo on social media shows the word “Evil” spray-painted in red on Al Capone’s grave marker. * Block Club | Edgewater’s ‘Young Lincoln’ Statue Vandalized On Thanksgiving By Group Advocating Indigenous Rights : An anonymous group of activists poured red paint on the Lincoln statue in Senn Park, tagging the site with slogans including “colonizer” and “land back.” * Sun-Times | White supremacist, Holocaust denier Nick Fuentes, who met with Ye and Trump, raised in suburban Chicago: “Fuentes is among the most prominent and unapologetic antisemites around,” David Goldenberg, the Anti-Defamation League director of the Midwest regional office, told the Chicago Sun-Times on Sunday. * Tribune | An actual game-time decision? Brad Biggs’ 10 thoughts on the Chicago Bears’ Week 12 loss, including that pregame QB chaos.: Leave it to the Bears to have their quarterback situation appear to be in complete chaos Sunday morning. * Tribune | Will Justin Fields start at QB for Chicago Bears vs. Green Bay Packers? ‘It’s about mobility and strength in his left arm.’: The Chicago Bears already had declared Justin Fields inactive because of a left shoulder injury when more quarterback uncertainty popped up Sunday morning. Trevor Siemian, who prepared all week to start if Fields couldn’t play against the New York Jets, also was injured. * Tribune | ‘I thought I would make it’: The strange psychology behind the crashes at Long Grove’s covered bridge: Before them sits a charming covered bridge that would fit right into a Robert James Waller novel. The only difference is the large yellow sign affixed to the wood that reads “8-foot-6,” a height significantly shorter than the average school bus or box truck. More to come!
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Open thread
Monday, Nov 28, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * I hope everyone had a wonderful Thanksgiving and got your rest, because we’re going back to session! What’s on your Illinois-centric mind?
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Live coverage
Monday, Nov 28, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Follow along with ScribbleLive…
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Reader comments closed for the Thanksgiving break
Tuesday, Nov 22, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * I have so very much to be thankful for this year. Isabel is proving to be even better than I’d hoped. My family is doing well. My life is on a good track. My friends are a joy. My subscribers, readers and commenters continue to be outstanding. If I’ve have said it once, I’ve said it a thousand times: I have the best job in Illinois. I am deeply grateful for all of you and I truly hope you have a wonderful Thanksgiving break. We’ll start the Golden Horseshoes Awards next week. We’ll also start actively fundraising for Lutheran Social Services of Illinois. If you’d like to get your contribution out of the way now, you can click here. I’ll be prettifying the landing page during the break. * Per our tradition… “Closed on Thanksgiving”
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You may get a chance to meet these three new House Speakers next year
Tuesday, Nov 22, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Michigan…
Tate played in the NFL and then signed up for the Marine Corps. * Pennsylvania…
* Maine…
“Only” the fourth woman to preside over the Maine House? We’ve yet to see that happen here, and we’ve been a state longer than Maine has. * Anyway, I reached out to House Speaker Chris Welch’s office when I saw the news about Rep. Tate in Michigan. I was told that Welch, Illinois’ first Black House Speaker, sent congratulatory messages to all three legislators and plans to follow up with an invite to visit Springfield and speak to the House next year. Not exactly big “news,” I know, but, hey, it’s a holiday week. Discuss.
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Afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Nov 22, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Tribune…
Except, the signatures on the applications have already been verified as matching signatures on voter registration cards. Whatever. The state loophole needs to be closed one way or another. * Tribune…
* Isabel has the day off…
* WICS | $9 million to address education and career equity in Illinois: The funding will be used to help minority and low-income students as well as individuals with disabilities remove barriers to completing their education and career goals through the Innovative Bridge and Transition Grant program (IBT). * WTTW | Friends of the Chicago River, Openlands and Others Join Chorus Calling on Pritzker To Halt Damen Silos Sale: “The governor should put this project on hold and open a meaningful discussion with the community about the future of the Damen Silos site for the betterment of public health and the ecological transformation of the Chicago River system,” said Margaret Frisbie, executive director of Friends of the Chicago River. * Tribune | UIC dentistry professor used racist imagery and treated students of color unequally, lawmakers say in letter to school: “Students and alumni of UIC College of Dentistry have expressed to us that racist teachings and the unequal treatment of students has been ongoing for years,” the letter went on. “A recent revelation made us aware of a noose appearing in a PowerPoint presentation for seven years, which is disturbing. … This professor has continued to teach without any response or action from the university. Students of color have reportedly continued to be targeted at the university from being asked about their ‘natural hair’ to being called the N-word.” * Crain’s | How Lynn Osmond plans to bring conventions and tourists back to Chicago: Osmond has some wind at her back as the pandemic wanes. Leisure travel has recently returned at a faster clip, with downtown hotel revenues exceeding 2019 averages in two of the past four months, according to hospitality data and analytics firm STR. Conventions and trade shows are back—albeit with crowds that in many cases are smaller than they were before COVID—and Osmond enjoys broad support from local civic and cultural leaders who have known her for more than two decades. * Tribune | Cook County court clerk is latest to exit federal oversight of hiring practices, though administrator has lingering concerns: In a statement, a Martinez spokesperson did not directly address the concerns Feibus raised in her final report but rather reiterated that the judge in the case granted the “substantial compliance” finding. * Crain’s Chicago Business | Tim Degnan, influential Daley aide, dies at 82: For the Crain’s profile, a colleague recalled Degnan’s blunt message to one bureaucrat: “Look, this is not on your schedule next year. This is on our schedule today.” Even Michael Madigan, the long-reigning House speaker, got that message. “Tim walks up to me and says, ‘You wanna help us, right?’ ” Madigan told Crain’s in 1995. “He hands me a piece of paper (a draft of a bill). ‘See that word? Take that f—— word out of there.’ We did.” Madigan added, “His effectiveness lies in his simplicity.” * Washington Post | LGBTQ club shooting suspect’s troubled past was obscured by a name change, records show: In June 2021, Aldrich was arrested for an alleged bomb threat, one that prompted a partial evacuation of the Colorado Springs neighborhood where his mother lived at the time. He was charged with kidnapping and felony menacing, but was never prosecuted, for reasons that remain unclear. No bomb was ever found. … Suthers and other officials deflected questions about whether Aldrich’s 2021 arrest could have led to a legal action, perhaps under Colorado’s 2019 red-flag law, to prevent the suspect from obtaining a weapon. * Washington Post | The upside to FTX’s downfall: While FTX’s downfall may be the first cryptocurrency scandal of this scale, the story is all too familiar. Allegedly, Bankman-Fried loaned $10 billion of his customers’ dollars to his investment company, Alameda Research, and used it for risky day trading. When consumers lost confidence and tried to pull their money out, they learned that FTX did not have their funds on hand. FTX covered up the misuse from its customers, its auditors and its own employees. Heard that before? John Ray III has. Ray was the man who oversaw bankruptcy proceedings for Enron. Yet taking over as chief executive of FTX after Bankman-Fried’s departure, Ray said: “Never in my career have I seen such a complete failure of corporate controls.” * Sun-Times | Chicago mobster gets 4 months in prison for stealing Social Security money: It wasn’t the first time Marcello made his case before a federal court. Marcello, the half-brother of Chicago mob boss James Marcello, was sentenced in March 2008 to 8 ½ years in prison — the first to be sentenced in the Family Secrets case. He once ran a lucrative video poker machine operation in the western suburbs and carried out his half-brother’s orders while James Marcello was in prison, authorities have said. He admitted his role in the mob in a 2007 plea agreement. * WCIA | Iroquois County Public Health Department holds long-awaited meeting Monday night: McGinnis said board members received complaints about Schippert from her employees, claiming there was mistreatment of workers, gambling during the work day or simply not showing up to work. But he said the overtime pay is the biggest concern, with nearly $100,000 worth of overtime being paid to her over two years. * Sun-Times | Businessmen seek $5 million in TIF funding to install surveillance cameras in Fulton Market, Garfield Park: ACLU spokesman Ed Yohnka said promises that the cameras will reduce crime simply haven’t materialized. “It’s been this long-term kind of shadow game of saying just one more set of cameras will be effective, this is what we need,” Yohnka said. “It never works, and the answer is always more of the cameras.” * Tribune | One of the last of its kind, Lincoln Oasis serves as a welcome center for Illinois: It was designed by Chicago architecture dean Mies van der Rohe’s protégé David Haid, whose most famous building was a glass pavilion built to house sports cars at the Ben Rose House in Highland Park, which was featured in the movie “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.” * Vox | Vaccinate the turkeys (and the chickens): Bird flu is driving up turkey and egg prices — and killing millions of animals. Why won’t we vaccinate against it?
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Question of the day
Tuesday, Nov 22, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * WGLT…
* The Question: Should the new Republican legislative leaders put special emphasis on recruiting pro-choice candidates for 2024? Explain.
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It’s just a union questionnaire… so far
Tuesday, Nov 22, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Greg Hinz at Crain’s…
The wage question is 30th out of 36…
Thoughts?
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Oscar is 10 today
Tuesday, Nov 22, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Ten years ago today, a puppy was born into this world… ![]() Notice the union logo. * He’s always been such a cute little guy… ![]() * Oscar has also been a very happy puppy his entire life. It’s like having a cartoon character around the house… * This video was featured on the Orvis website because he loved his new bed so much… * At one time, I posted photos of Oscar almost every week. To this day, people recognize him on the street. Sometimes, they even ignore me as they fawn over the little guy…. * He loves everyone and has such a big heart. Here he is with his buddy, the late Steve Schnorf, just before we all went out for a cruise on the pontoon boat… ![]() * Oscar loves that boat and will bark at you if you sit in his seat… ![]() * Oscar can be a little odd. For instance, he had a weird reaction to a JFK bust… * And, unlike commenters here, Oscar clearly prefers to talk about the Illinois Senate… * Anyway, here he is today, still full of love… ![]()
Happy birthday!!!
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It’s time for the US Attorney’s office to step back in
Tuesday, Nov 22, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * The Americans with Disabilities Act took effect in 1990 - 32 years ago. From April 20, 2017…
* WBEZ…
* Let’s go back to that 2017 press release…
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Welch optimistic, but won’t definitively say an assault weapons ban will be approved in January
Tuesday, Nov 22, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Tribune earlier this month…
* Center Square earlier this month…
* From WGN TV’s interview of House Speaker Chris Welch this week…
* Capitol News Illinois today…
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The elephant in the room
Tuesday, Nov 22, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * House Speaker Chris Welch was interviewed by Capitol News Illinois…
The House is significantly more diverse. No argument there. But the East St. Louis-based House district has been represented by a Black person for what seems like forever, but it lost about a fifth of its Black population in the remap and was then lost on election day to a white Republican named Kevin Schmidt, who was backed by Eastern Bloc members, campaigned against the SAFE-T Act, blamed Rep. LaToya Greenwood (D-East St. Louis) for those refugees being bused to Chicago, blasted the Climate Equity and Jobs Act as “radical” legislation and opposes abortion rights.
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Open thread
Tuesday, Nov 22, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Tuesday, Nov 22, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Nov 22, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Follow along with ScribbleLive…
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