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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Feb 3, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Tribune’s Alice Yin has some more information on a new super PAC

* Rich and I are wishing the Illinois Credit Union League’s Keith Sias a speedy recovery!

*** Statehouse News ***

* Center Square | GOP candidates for Illinois governor challenge Pritzker on state finances: “I believe that when we crack this budget open and start showing the people where all this is going, I think we’re going to have most of what we need to work with to start tamping down on property taxes, energy prices and especially working with our pensions,” Bailey told The Center Square. Bailey said the state budget rose from around $32 billion in 2017 to more than $55 billion this year.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson says up to Cook County state’s attorney to prosecute federal agents: Speaking at a City Hall news conference, the mayor sought to redirect focus from his office’s authority by saying it’s up to Burke to approve criminal charges. But he declined to say whether any specific incidents fit the bill, a sign that his office does not have imminent plans to test out the order. “So I personally, I’m not looking at cases,” Johnson told reporters when asked if he was going to act on his new decree. “I don’t have jurisdiction authority over the state’s attorney, right? … We’re prepared and willing to always lead and to go first to create a pathway for accountability, and then, like any other case, the state’s attorney has their jurisdiction to decide if they’re going to move forward with prosecution. But that’s the autonomy that the state’s attorney has.”

* Chicago Mag | The Battle of O’Hare: Industry analyst Robert Mann Jr. characterizes the conflict as a battle of press releases and big egos: “Mr. Kirby is attempting to essentially extend United’s lead in Chicago, and this put up a marker for [American CEO] Mr. [Robert] Isom, who has decided that he would like to even the score.” The professional history between Kirby and Isom may color the acrimonious relationship. In 2016, American pushed Kirby out as president, sending him packing with a $13 million severance package, and promoted then-COO Isom. Kirby quickly landed at United, where he started as president, then ascended to CEO in 2020.

* Block Club | Families Scammed By Convicted Mortgage Fraudsters Are Still Fighting For Their Homes:
Dunn’s family was one of more than 100 swindled by Diamond. In January 2025, after Diamond pleaded guilty to wire fraud, U.S. District Judge Franklin Valderrama sentenced him to more than 17 years in federal prison and ordered him to pay $2.7 million in restitution. Several of his accomplices were also sentenced to prison last year. But the saga is far from over. As the leaders of the scheme serve their time, some of their victims are still fighting to get control of their family properties. They often find it difficult or impossible. After battling the lenders used for the reverse mortgages, dozens of victims have already lost in court, stripping them of their properties for good.

* WTTW | Push to Expand CPD’s Curfew Power Stalls After Last-Minute Revision: However, Hopkins introduced a significantly revised measure moments before the City Council was set to vote on his third effort to expand the city’s curfew to stop teen gatherings. Hopkins said the revised measure is “vastly improved” and “avoids the constitutional question” raised by the original version. The new proposal does not mention the city’s curfew, but gives the city’s top cop the power to issue what it calls “a dispersal declaration” in areas where police leaders have determined they have probable cause to believe there will be a “disruptive youth gathering.”

* Sun-Times | Only 1 in 4 of Chicago’s indie music venues is profitable. Owners say that data spells potential trouble: Adds Bruce Finkelman, the founder and managing partner of the hospitality collective 16” on Center, whose portfolio includes Empty Bottle, SPACE, Thalia Hall and the Salt Shed: “If we don’t get some of our business and government leaders to understand what the economic state of these venues is and the importance to the economic and cultural engine of Chicago, as the study clearly reports, then we’re in some trouble.” The biggest issue for many independent venue owners are the skyrocketing operating costs that have been affected by rampant rates of inflation since the COVID-19 pandemic. “It’s something that everybody is feeling with the cost of living increases,” said Finkelman. And as he’s seen with 16” On Center’s varied portfolio, the predicament affects rooms of all sizes, no matter the capacity: “It’s plaguing everybody in the independent infrastructure.”

* Crain’s | Plan for 28-story apartment tower adds to growing number of high-rises in Lincoln Park: A venture of Chicago-based Honore Properties and Elmhurst-based Peerless Development is seeking city approval for a 340-unit rental building at 1415 N. Dayton St., which currently holds a four-story loft office building. The team had initially targeted the property for an adaptive reuse project, like the office-to-residential conversion it’s completing at 811 W. Evergreen Ave., but the building’s configuration proved too challenging. Instead, the developers intend to use air rights from three nearby properties for a much denser development, something Honore founder Michael Shenouda said was “quite the puzzle” to put together.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

*
Greg Hinz | Two veterans, two visions, one high-stakes Cook County primary
:
Reilly, 54, a leading member of a City Council bloc that increasingly has frustrated Mayor Brandon Johnson, is trying hard to hang Johnson around Preckwinkle’s neck, alleging that she effectively mentored him in his prior post as a member of the county board and then helped elect him mayor. I’m not sure that’s fair. Preckwinkle wasn’t responsible for the conduct of board members or Johnson’s political sponsorship by the Chicago Teachers Union, and her campaign help came only in the runoff election against conservative Paul Vallas, not in the far more competitive initial election round. But that said, Preckwinkle, who will turn 79 just after the March primary, has given Reilly a fair amount of ammunition to work with.

* Tribune | Northwestern will open the new Ryan Field on Oct. 2 vs. Penn State — its 3rd home game of the season: Northwestern will open the new $862 million Ryan Field on Oct. 2 against Penn State, the athletic department announced Tuesday. The Friday night game will be played 100 years to the day of the first football game at the original stadium, then known as Northwestern Stadium. It will be the first of five games this season at the new stadium, followed by Ball State on Oct. 10, Rutgers on Oct. 24, Iowa on Nov. 7 and Illinois on Nov. 28.

* Lake County News-Sun | Lake County’s Kevin Bickner headed to his 3rd Olympics for ski jumping: ‘There’s nothing like it’: Out of retirement and ready to prove himself again, national ski jump record-holder and Wauconda native Kevin Bickner is returning to the Olympic stage for a third time this month, sharing what it’s like going from rookie to team veteran, and how he balances the sport with a “normal life” after reigniting his motivation. Bickner previously competed in the 2018 and 2022 Olympics. In 2017, he set the current American national ski jumping record, flying 244.5 meters, about 802 feet, during a jump in Vikersund, Norway. That’s a distance of nearly two and a quarter football fields, and just 80 feet short of the entire length of the Titanic.

* Naperville Sun | Naperville ranks No. 12 in US for number of remote workers, study finds: The third-largest city in Illinois was recently recognized for having one of the highest rates of remote workers in the country, according to a study by SmartAsset, a company that provides educational content for consumers to make better financial decisions. SmartAsset ranked 357 of the largest U.S. cities based on the percentage of people working from home. The study used data from the 2023 and 2024 U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey.

*** Downstate ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Search warrant reveals FBI is investigating former Carlyle police chief: The FBI is investigating Pingsterhaus, a 30-year law enforcement veteran, for possible wire fraud and theft of federal funds, according to the search warrant, obtained by Capitol News Illinois and the Illinois Answers Project. The FBI rents space in the Carlyle police station in downstate Clinton County. No criminal charges have been filed against Pingsterhaus, who resigned in December, and neither the city nor the FBI would discuss the nature of the allegations.

* WGLT | Normal refutes the need for extra fire station at town council meeting: The Normal firefighters union, Local 2442, has repeatedly claimed in town hall settings and at town council meetings that closing the College Avenue station would negatively impact response times and has urged the council to keep it open after the new east side station came online. At Monday’s meeting, a presentation was made that focused on town staff surveying response times for the 2024 calendar year, plotting response times for each incident, overlayed with expected response times calculated from a prediction model. The model did not account for traffic.

* WCIA | Willard Airport, 700 homes left without power in Champaign-Urbana: The outage affecting the most customers is concentrated in Champaign and Urbana between I-74 and U.S. Route 150. The outage at Willard Airport started at 11:40 a.m., according to Ameren’s outage map. The first homes to lose power in Champaign and Urbana went dark at noon, growing over the next 45 minutes to include about 700 homes. Equipment damage was blamed for starting one part of the outage. The causes of the other outages were not made clear.

*** National ***

* WaPo | U.S. Manufacturing Is in Retreat and Trump’s Tariffs Aren’t Helping: Manufacturers shed workers in each of the eight months after Trump unveiled “Liberation Day” tariffs, according to federal figures, extending a contraction that has seen more than 200,000 roles disappear since 2023. An index of factory activity tracked by the Institute for Supply Management shrunk in 26 straight months through December, but showed a January uptick in new orders and production that surprised analysts. The Census Bureau estimates that manufacturing construction spending, which surged with Biden-era funding for chips and renewable energy, fell in each of Trump’s first nine months in office.

* WaPo | Homeland Security is targeting Americans with this secretive legal weapon: Homeland Security is not required to share how many administrative subpoenas it issues each year, but tech experts and former agency staff estimate it’s well into the thousands, if not tens of thousands. Because the legal demands are not subject to independent review, they can take just minutes to write up and, former staff say, officials throughout the agency, even in mid-level roles, have been given the authority to approve them.

* Ken Klippenstein | Feds Identify “Leader of Antifa”: Twenty-nine year old Chandler Patey has been regularly protesting outside his local ICE facility in South Portland for months, offering up his apartment to fellow protesters to use the bathroom or wash off pepper spray, according to local news. To the Department of Homeland Security, “he is the leader of Antifa in Portland, OR.” […] The government’s elevation of an ordinary citizen like Patey to terrorist mastermind is the result of a subtle bureaucratic process revealed in this and other DHS documents I’ve obtained. They show that since almost the beginning of the Trump administration, DHS has been desperate to pull together evidence—no matter how thin—of an epidemic of left-wing domestic terrorism.

* NYT | How the Supreme Court Secretly Made Itself Even More Secretive: Over the years, journalists and authors have sought to penetrate the court, and the justices have tried varying methods to guard its secrets. Some generations of clerks, but not others, said they were asked to sign a different kind of confidentiality pledge. The New York Times has not reviewed the new agreements. But people familiar with them said they appeared to be more forceful and understood them to threaten legal action if an employee revealed confidential information. Clerks and members of the court’s support staff signed them in 2024, and new arrivals have continued to do so, the people said.

* Tech Crunch | Firefox will soon let you block all of its generative AI features: Firefox will begin catering to those who don’t want AI in their browser. On Monday, Mozilla announced that Firefox will soon let users block all current and future generative AI features. Users will also have the option to block certain AI features in Firefox, while keeping others, Starting with Firefox 148, which is rolling out on February 24, users will find a new AI controls section within the desktop browser settings.

  8 Comments      


Um, Sid?

Tuesday, Feb 3, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This is such an “effective” tool that Sid Blumenthal apparently doesn’t even realize that the Illinois General Assembly has been doing this very thing for years

The Democrats hold in their hands constitutional means yet unused to check the Trump regime’s ruthless attempt to impose a police state. That the Democrats thus far have failed to create this oppositional political center of gravity may be because the method has been lost to history, not wielded effectively for 113 years. Focused on the ICE outrages, however, this political instrument can be revived in the 16 states where the Democrats control the governorships and both chambers of the state legislatures, as well as introduced in states with mixed power.

Before the enactment of the 17th amendment in 1913, state legislators and not the voters selected US senators and regarded them frequently as their agents. It was a common practice for legislatures to send what were called “orders of instruction” urging senators and sometimes members of the House of Representatives to take a particular stand on important issues. The orders were not binding, but had significant force given the power of legislatures and political parties to decide who would hold Senate seats. These resolutions were variously called instructions, petitions and memorials. […]

Today, state legislative resolutions would have far more political weight than any poll, provide a galvanizing mechanism to drive public opinion, and solidify the states as defenders of basic American rights seeking to safeguard constitutional freedoms and the safety of electoral processes. State resolutions would expose the brazen hypocrisy of the Trump administration as it tramples on the formerly sanctified principles of states’ rights and free speech, and as Trump poses a clear and present danger to free and fair elections in 2026 and 2028.

The 17th Amendment did pass, however, and now these resolutions are purely symbolic. I cannot remember one resolution that had a demonstrable impact on federal decision-making.

Discuss.

  9 Comments      


Catching up with the congressionals

Tuesday, Feb 3, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Chicago Tribune’s Editorial Board endorsed Sen. Laura Fine today. Her press release…

Today, the Chicago Tribune endorsed Laura Fine for Congress in the Illinois 9th Congressional District Democratic Primary.

“…Our choice among this crowded Democratic field, which includes many impressive people including political newcomers with diverse and fascinating resumes, is Laura Fine, 59, a state senator from Glenview. Fine has served in Springfield since 2013, first as a representative and then as a senator. She told us she got into politics after her husband lost his arm 15 years ago in a car accident, and the family’s health insurance provider canceled the policy, leaving them with $600,000 in medical debt. […]

Fine led the charge in Springfield to give the state Department of Insurance far more authority to regulate health insurers, a law enacted in 2024. She strikes us as a measured, reasonable and principled lawmaker who understands how to work with fellow legislators and should appeal to those in the district who admire Schakowsky for her record as a fighter for women’s rights and a powerful female member of Congress. Fine is extremely well regarded in Springfield, a major factor in our endorsement of her…”

Emphasis added.

While Sen. Fine was a hyphenated co-sponsor of the Healthcare Protection Act (HB5395), Sen. Robert Peters was the bill’s chief sponsor.

* The Tribune crunched the fundraising numbers for Illinois’ five open congressional seats, including a look at the 8th CD

In the 8th Congressional District race, Melissa Bean, who held the office for three terms until 2011, led all candidates with about $1 million on hand to begin 2026, including a nearly $300,00 loan to her campaign.

Following her were Junaid Ahmed, who previously challenged Krishnamoorthi, with about $835,000 in his campaign fund, entrepreneur Neil Khot with $573,000, and U.S. Army Reserve Judge Advocate Dan Tully with $412,000. Cook County Board Commissioner Kevin Morrison had roughly $233,000 while Hanover Park Trustee Yasmeen Bankole had $171,000 in his campaign fund. Everyone else had less than $100,000.

Khot loaned his campaign $405,000 in the most recent quarter in addition to an even larger loan in the previous quarter, and Bankole loaned herself $136,000 at that time.

Among Republicans, entrepreneur Jennifer Davis led in cash on hand with almost $488,000, trailed by energy business founder Mark Rice with $173,000.

* Campaign consultant Dana Houle weighs in on 9th CD candidate Kat Abughazaleh’s fourth quarter expenditures.…

Though Abughazaleh did spend a lot on consultants, she never said she wouldn’t use any. Abughazaleh’s original pledge was “no consultants who haven’t won an election this century.” Her campaign page says “no useless consultants,” which I guess is TBD.

* Press release…

Today, Mayra Macías’s campaign announced that it has outraised establishment-backed candidate Patty García during the final quarter of 2025. This lead is particularly significant because Macías entered the race for Illinois’ 4th Congressional District as an Independent on December 3, 2025 — a full month after Patty García, who has the full backing of Congressman García’s political machine.

Even with the congressman’s endorsement and a 30 day headstart to fundraise, García was outraised by Macías, who notably raised the bulk of her funds during the busy holiday season. Macías, a lifelong Democrat and Back of the Yards native, launched her campaign to ensure voters have a choice after Congressman Chuy García announced his retirement following the filing deadline, essentially “anointing” his Chief of Staff, Patty García, as his successor. While the establishment campaign relies on the status quo and corporate PAC dollars, Macías is running a grassroots-powered campaign. […]

The campaign is now moving toward its next milestone by collecting over 11,000 signatures starting in February to secure Macías’s spot on the November ballot as an Independent.

Macías didn’t include her fourth-quarter numbers in her press release, which was $125,000. Democrat Patty García pulled in $123,000, and Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez, who just launched an independent bid, reported $7,000.

* In the 7th CD, Melissa Conyears-Ervin announces her fundraising haul for the first four weeks of the year…

The Melissa Conyears-Ervin for Congress campaign for the 7th Congressional District kicked into high gear at the start of 2026 with a strong cash position of $215,000 on hand and an announcement she raised $112,000 in the first four weeks of the year.

Now, her campaign announced the addition of a new member of her growing coalition: the proud professionals of the Chicago Teachers Union. Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin released a statement at the beginning of Black History month about the final six week stretch of the campaign.

“We have clear momentum in this race and I’m proud that the 25,000 members of the Chicago Teachers Union are by our side. As a proud Black woman and the mother of a young Black girl, I’m ready to kick off Black History Month by getting our message out to the voters: Donald Trump’s cuts to healthcare, SNAP benefits, and attacks on the people are personal to me and my family. Nobody is better positioned to fight back in Washington than I am,” said Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin.

* More…

    * Daily Herald | Democratic hopefuls in 9th Congressional District divided on Gaza: Chicagoans Justin Ford, Mike Simmons and Kat Abughazaleh, and Skokie resident Bushra Amiwala insisted [genocide is] happening in Gaza. […] Three other candidates — Daniel Biss, Patricia A. Brown and Bethany Johnson, all of Evanston — criticized Israel over what’s happening in Gaza without labeling it “genocide.” […] Glenview’s Laura Fine called the situation in Gaza a humanitarian crisis but said Israel has a right to defend itself. […] Evanston’s Jeff Cohen, Chicago’s Hoan Huynh and Wilmette’s Phil Andrew each said the U.S. needs to support Israel.

    * Evanston Now | Supermajority vote for acting mayor to stay, for now: While the need to appoint an acting mayor has seldom arisen in Evanston, Biss’ run for Congress raises the possibility that the City Council may need to appoint an acting mayor if he win a hotly contested Democratic primary next month and the general election in November. If that happens, Biss told Evanston Now late last year, he intends to resign as mayor early enough to have the mayor’s race appear on the April 2027 ballot. If he were to wait until less than 130 days before that election to resign, an acting mayor appointed by the city council would serve until May 2029.

    * Press Release | Former Chicago Mayor, Lori Lightfoot, Endorses Donna Miller for Congress: Congressional candidate Donna Miller’s campaign continues to build momentum as she heads into the final full month before the primary election, March 17, 2026. The 6th District Cook County commissioner has received the endorsement of former Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot. Mayor Lightfoot has come to know Commissioner Miller over the years and knows she is the right person at the right time to represent Illinois’ 2nd Congressional District “This endorsement is a no brainer,” says former Mayor Lori Lightfoot. ‘’Donna Miller is a proven leader who serves with integrity and effectiveness. She is exactly the kind of selfless public servant we need in Congress. Go, Donna, go!”

    * Press Release | Illinois Progressives Endorse Morgan Coghill as Grassroots Support Keeps Building: Morgan Coghill’s campaign for Congress today announced an endorsement from Illinois Progressives, adding to a growing list of organizations backing his candidacy in Illinois 10. The endorsement follows recent support from Northside Democracy for America, The Justice Coalition, the Illinois Muslim Action Network, and Cook County Latino Democrats. These endorsements reflect a growing rejection of the centrist strategy that has dominated this seat for years.

    * CBS Chicago | Who is running for the U.S. House in Illinois’ 7th Congressional District?

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition (Updated x3)

Tuesday, Feb 3, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Thanks, Debbie

Tuesday, Feb 3, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Great news…


* Back in the day, Illinois state Sen. Debbie Halvorson pushed hard to mandate the HPV vaccine in Illinois. But her proposal was met with an awful and ridiculously inappropriate pushback from the far-right Illinois Review publication and its anti-vax, witch hunt ilk. ArchPundit, among others, covered the story

The Illinois Review is happy to show off stupidity and just vileness on a regular basis:

    So when state Sen. Debbie Halvorson admitted she had HPV and worried others might get it, you would think she’d focus on her behavior that caused her to contract that sexually transmitted disease.

    Halvorson would be most helpful by discussing the health consequences of pre- or extra-marital sex. Here are some potential topics:

    * Halvorson could discuss the number of sex partners she has had throughout her lifetime and how each one increased the likelihood of contracting HPV.
    * If Halvorson even had only one sex partner aside from her husband, she could discuss how one can contract HPV from a sole encounter.
    * Halvorson could discuss whether she realized at the time her sex partner carried HPV, which most trusting, vulnerable women don’t.
    * Halvorson could disclose whether it was her husband who passed HPV on to her after sleeping with other women, demonstrating another reason for chaste behavior outside the marriage bedroom.
    * More uncomfortably, if Halvorson contracted HPV through rape, she could discuss ways to avoid rape.

Wut?

“She could discuss ways to avoid rape”?

Are you freaking kidding me?

* OK, so why do I say “witch hunt?” Well, because an element of the far-right wanted females to suffer and even die for their behavior

Illinois Review wrote that Halvorson “does not advocate avoiding a risky behavior that leads not only to HPV but to 20-plus other STDs and their strains, along with unplanned pregnancy. Halvorson merely advocates trying to avoid the consequences of risky behavior. Shame on her,” (Stanek, “Debbie Does…??” 2007).

I just can’t with them.

  25 Comments      


340B Drug Pricing Legislation Helps Patients At NO Cost To Illinois Taxpayers

Tuesday, Feb 3, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

As we anticipate Gov. JB Pritzker’s Feb. 17 budget address, one thing is sure: H.R. 1, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, will have a negative impact. Just last month, University of Illinois’ Institute of Government and Public Affairs noted that “federal policy changes are expected to decrease health-care-related funding and pose a serious long-term challenge for Illinois.”

They also pose serious challenges for hospitals and Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs). Our state’s hospitals are 24/7 care providers, major employers and economic engines in the communities they serve. They partner with FQHCs to ensure seamless continuity of care. Yet many Illinois hospitals are struggling to survive in the face of rising costs and H.R. 1’s massive cuts. According to KFF, those cuts in Illinois will amount to:

    • A 19% decrease from 10-year federal baseline Medicaid spending—one of the highest percentage reductions in the U.S.
    • Up to $57 billion in lost Medicaid funding over 10 years.

The expected Medicaid cuts aren’t just about money; they’re about individual lives. Many Illinoisans are struggling financially as food, electricity and housing costs have risen.

Created in 1992, the federal 340B Drug Pricing Program helps hospitals and FQHCs that serve many uninsured and low-income patients invest in needed healthcare services. This spring, legislators will be asked to protect the 340B program—at NO cost to taxpayers and with NO budget appropriation. Patients across Illinois are counting on you. Learn more.

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It’s just a bill

Tuesday, Feb 3, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

A bill filed last week would authorize autonomous vehicle pilot programs in a handful of Illinois counties, including Cook, before opening the door to statewide legalization of self-driving cars in three years.

The proposal from state Rep. Kam Buckner, a Democrat from Chicago, comes as self-driving car company Waymo has been trying to make inroads in Illinois. The company operates in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Phoenix, Austin, Atlanta and Miami and has announced plans to expand to a plethora of other cities worldwide. […]

“We can’t afford to get caught flat-footed,” [Rep. Buckner] said, acknowledging that the filing of the bill is no guarantee it gets passed this year. “It’s about creating a thoughtful framework that balances innovation with safety, accountability, labor protections and the legitimate concerns of folks in the litigation space as well.” […]

Buckner’s proposed legislation would allow self-driving car pilot programs in Cook County, Sangamon County — where the county seat is Springfield, the state’s capital — and Madison, St. Clair and Monroe counties, which are in southwestern Illinois outside St. Louis.

* WCIA

An Illinois lawmaker wants to make sure the state and businesses aren’t missing out on extra revenue from a growing entertainment betting industry.

A new bill, SB 2667, introduced by State Senator Sara Feigenholtz would open up sportsbooks to bets on shows like the Grammy’s or the Academy Awards. […]

She said open wagering on entertainment also encourages people to turn awards season into social outings. This could open up new opportunities for neighborhood bars and restaurants.

“There are a lot of people who are a lot more interested in movies, musicals and theater than they are in sports. So this sort of opens it up, a crack, to something a little different. And I think it would fly. I know that people in my community have Oscar parties,” Feigenholtz said.

* Gambling Insider

State Rep. Edgar Gonzalez Jr. has refiled his Internet Gaming Act for the 2026 session, reviving an online casino (iGaming) proposal that is substantively identical to the version that stalled last year. It carries over the same 25% tax rate, three-skin limit, licensing structure, responsible-gaming mandates, and workforce protections that stalled in committee last year.

In past sessions, the push has also included a Senate companion from Sen. Cristina Castro, suggesting a parallel bill is likely to surface again in 2026.

The renewed effort seeks to authorize regulated online slots, table games, poker, and live-dealer casino products statewide under oversight from the Illinois Gaming Board. It could create one of the largest iGaming markets in the U.S. if approved, given Illinois’ already robust sports betting revenue. […]

House Bill 4797 creates the Internet Gaming Act. It defines “internet games” as online versions or “substantial equivalents” of casino-style gambling. That includes slot-style games, table games, poker, and live-dealer simulcasts.

Internet gaming would only be legal if conducted by licensed operators in compliance with Gaming Board rules.

* Sen. Robert Peters…

Artificial intelligence has been a source of consumers’ data and privacy concerns for over a decade, but in recent years, a new branch has started to stem from these concerns, as reports indicate stores may be using AI-gathered personal data to charge customers more for goods and services. To protect Illinoisans from this practice – known as surveillance-based discrimination – State Senator Robert Peters has introduced legislation that would block the use of modern technology to set personalized prices or wages. […]

Surveillance pricing and wage data includes personal information such as browsing history or behavioral patterns, and companies typically collect and analyze the data using AI and algorithms to charge personal prices for customers or set personal wage rates for gig workers – like Uber drivers. Peters’ measure aims to limit the use of surveillance data in the state, preventing companies from prioritizing maximum profits at the expense of individual privacy and dignity.

In July 2024, the Federal Trade Commission launched an investigation seeking information from companies that utilize surveillance-based pricing. In the findings, the FTC reported retailers use consumer behaviors – such as mouse movement on a webpage or the types of items added to online shopping carts – as well as demographic information and geolocation, to modify consumer pricing. Peters’ legislation would curb surveillance-based price and wage practices in Illinois, ensuring companies cannot manipulate costs of goods for consumers or pay for workers across the state. […]

Senate Bill 2255 awaits a hearing in the Senate Executive Committee.

* Center Square

Illinois lawmakers are pushing an amendment to ban restrictions or interference with a federal discount drug program.

Speaking at a rally in Chicago on Sunday, state Rep. Anna Moeller, D-Elgin, said access to affordable medication is a lifeline, not a luxury. […]

The Elgin Democrat said Senate Amendment No. 2 to House Bill 2371 would prevent manufacturers from imposing limits that make it harder for providers to deliver discounted medication. […]

The measure has bipartisan support. Co-sponsors include state Sens. Terri Bryant, R-Murphysboro, and Dale Fowler, R-Harrisburg.

Both the Illinois Senate and the House Executive Committee passed the measure unanimously. HB 2371 needs a concurrence vote in the House to be passed and then sent to the governor.

* SB2804 from Sen Michael Halpin

Amends the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act. Provides that, on and after January 1, 2027, a video streaming service that serves consumers residing in the State shall not transmit the audio of commercial advertisements louder than the video content the advertisements accompany, consistent with the regulations adopted by the Federal Communications Commission under the Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation Act for television broadcast stations, cable operators, and other multichannel video programming distributors.

* More…

    * Sen. Graciela Guzmán | Illinois families can’t keep paying the bill for climate change damages: The Climate Superfund proposal would change that. Major fossil fuel producers would contribute to a state fund based on how much pollution they produced in the past. Those dollars would go directly to work that communities can see and use, including stronger stormwater systems, a more reliable power grid, cooling in schools and public buildings, and protection for infrastructure along Lake Michigan’s shoreline. Because the contributions are tied to past production, not current sales, they cannot simply be tacked onto families’ utility bills. Energy prices are set in global markets, not by what one state decides to do.

    * Axios | Illinois considers glitter ban over microplastics concerns: “Microplastics in personal care products are manufactured at a size that easily enters our waterways and our environment,” state Rep. Kimberly DuBuclet (D-Chicago), the author of the bill, said in a statement. DuBuclet used to be a commissioner for Chicago’s water department. […] The bill would prohibit the sale of glitter-based personal care products like makeup and hair products, but would not regulate glitter sold for celebrations.

    * NBC Chicago | Illinois lawmakers introduce bill to expand voter registration for high schoolers: Rev. Jesse Jackson, Sr., is a trailblazer, pioneer and icon who fights for voter rights and democracy, and a new bill seeks to honor his legacy in a unique way. House Bill 4339 is known as the Jesse Jackson, Sr., Young Voter Empowerment Law, and if passed it would require Illinois high schools to provide students with opportunities to register to vote. Participation on the part of students is voluntary, and the bill explicitly prevents partisan organizations from getting involved, making it a neutral and student-centered experience.

  6 Comments      


Big Tax-Exempt Hospitals Are Turning Patient Discounts Into Corporate Profits

Tuesday, Feb 3, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Across Illinois, large hospital systems and corporate PBMs are profiting from a program meant to help patients. The 340B program allows hospitals to buy medications at steep discounts, but those savings aren’t passed on to patients in need.

Instead, large hospitals charge patients full price for 340B-discounted drugs, keep the difference, and share the cash with for-profit chain pharmacies and PBMs.

What began as a safety-net program has become a profit stream. No transparency. No oversight. Just higher costs for working families.

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Oppo dump!

Tuesday, Feb 3, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’m not sure who commissioned this Democratic US Senate poll, but I have my suspicions since one of these topics (post offices) was used in a debate. Anyway, I can’t vouch for many of these accusations, but it’s definitely worth noting because this is likely where we are heading…












The “happiness and joy” comment is here. The stuff about her cutting out on the 2019 session is here.

To the newbies: Polls like this one are standard. Campaigns need to know if their attacks will work and if their opponents’ anticipated onslaughts will succeed. They’re important to us because they give us an idea about where the race might go.

I shouldn’t have to explain this, but campaign season always brings out the novice experts.

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Keep Insurance Affordable

Tuesday, Feb 3, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The Illinois General Assembly is considering legislation (HB 3799, SA 2 &3) that would make homeowners insurance unaffordable for many Illinoisans.

The proposal would destabilize a healthy, competitive market, creating a regulatory framework that is more extreme than what exists in any other state. This will increase premiums and reduce competition.

Our robust insurance market has kept homeowners’ rates middle-of-the-pack nationally, even though Illinois has more hail damage claims than any other state except Texas.

To protect affordability and consumer choice, lawmakers should VOTE NO.

For more information, visit www.KeepInsuranceAffordable.org

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Feb 3, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Child care funding freeze could worsen shortage in Illinois, providers say. Capitol News Illinois

    - If the courts allow the Trump administration’s freeze on federal child care funding to happen, a Springfield provider said she’ll likely have to close her 30-year business.
    - The Trump administration froze $10 billion in child care funding for Illinois and four other Democratic-led states in early January. The freeze has been blocked twice, and the most recent block expires on Feb. 6.
    - The administration said it was because of suspicions about fraud but provided no details or proof. But the five blue states targeted in the freeze say it’s a political move, that they already protect against fraud, and the administration intentionally gave them “an impossible task on an impossible timeline.”

* Related stories…

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

Sponsored by the Association of Safety-Net Community Hospitals:

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Safety-net hospitals are the backbone of Chicago’s Black and Brown communities. They provide emergency and lifesaving care for families who rely on them. They also support thousands of good, local healthcare jobs, serving as economic anchors in neighborhoods that have faced decades of disinvestment.

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The so-called Safety Net Moonshot would close or shrink hospitals in Black and Brown communities, cutting access to care and putting thousands of healthcare workers at risk. Fewer hospitals means longer wait times, overcrowded emergency rooms, reduced services, and worse health outcomes for vulnerable patients.

This is not reform. It is a sell-off of community healthcare, driven by outsiders – not by the needs of patients, workers, or neighborhoods.

Save safety-net hospitals. Protect our care, our jobs, and our communities.

************************************************

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Illinois joins World Health Organization network, after Trump administration withdraws from group: The Illinois Department of Public Health this week officially joined the World Health Organization’s Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network (GOARN), which provides resources and information intended to help control outbreaks and public health emergencies around the world. California announced that it was the first state to join the network late last month. Illinois’ decision to join GOARN follows the U.S. resigning from the World Health Organization late last month, citing the organization’s “mishandling of the COVID-19 pandemic,” a “failure to adopt urgently needed reforms” and “unfairly onerous payments” from the U.S., among other things, in an order signed by Trump a year ago initiating the withdrawal.

* Subscribers know more. Crain’s | Pritzker draws a line on pensions ahead of tight budget: Two weeks before he’s scheduled to present his next budget, Gov. JB Pritzker is laying down a marker that keeping the state’s sprawling pension burden in check is a top priority. In a policy paper released late Monday, Pritzker repeated his proposal from two years ago that lawmakers commit to 100% funding the pensions owed to state workers by 2048. Under a 1994 pension fix, the state committed to getting 90% funded by 2045. He also laid out several other ways to put a dent in future pension costs.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Politico: Bumped: Cook County Circuit Court has dismissed an appeal by incumbent Omar Aquino, upholding the Illinois State Board of Elections’ decision to remove him from the ballot for Democratic State Central Committeeman in the 3rd District. The ballot challenge by Kirk Ortiz found Aquino failed to properly serve the board as required under election law. Ortiz is now unopposed and will assume the role of committeeman.

From Isabel: We told subscribers Friday that Rep. Aquino planned to appeal to the state appellate court, which he did yesterday. So it’s not accurate to say Ortiz is guaranteed to win the seat.

* Lake County News-Sun | First-generation Americans face off in state House D52 primary: Erin Chan Ding of South Barrington and Maria Peterson of North Barrington are competing in the March 17 Democratic primary for their party’s nomination to represent the 52nd District in the Illinois House of Representatives. Both Peterson and Ding share similar views on issues like affordability, education and property taxes, but they have one major disagreement — who is the best candidate to unseat state Rep. Martin McLaughlin, R-Barrington Hills, in the Nov. 3 general election.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | Historic Roseland Church, Once On Verge Of Demolition, To Become Black-Women-Led Medical Center: “It’s phenomenal,” said Arlene Echols, a Pullman resident who regularly attended hearings regarding Reformation Lutheran Church and advocated for more than a year for the church to be saved from demolition. Onyx has locations in South Shore and South Chicago where patients can receive primary care, sexual health services, addiction medication, post-sexual assault and gynecological care, pap smears and infusions for those with cancer, sickle cell anemia and other conditions.

* Tribune | Illinois appeals court to review order sealing video in Krystal Rivera shooting:
Such a ruling from the court would not necessarily mean video footage is released, as agencies that keep the records could deny public records requests on other grounds. In its response, filed last week, the state’s attorney’s office made it clear that: “Vacating the order does not compel disclosure.” But a decision in favor of undoing the order would remove at least one obstacle to public disclosure of information around the June 5 slaying of Rivera at the hands of her partner, Carlos Baker.

* Daily Herald | Car-tastic: The Chicago Auto Show is back with 2,000 tires to kick: For truck afficionados, Ford’s revealing a revamped Maverick Lobo. The street truck is sporty and “something young buyers might be able to afford, and it would be fun to own,” Appel said. Morand can’t wait to see the latest Kia Telluride SUV. “We’re really excited because it’s going to be the first time that many folks will be able to see it,” she said. As a mom with busy kids, “it’s a great vehicle, it’s large, it’s safe, it’s sharp … and it can fit a lot of equipment in there from dance to sporting.”

* Block Club | Buddy Guy Says He’s ‘Just Trying To Keep The Blues Alive’ After 9th Grammy Win: The 18-track album dropped in July and took home the win for Best Traditional Blues Album at the 68th Grammy Awards ceremony, marking Guy’s fourth time winning the category. The win comes more than a decade after Guy was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Grammys in 2015. Guy last won a Grammy for Best Traditional Blues Album in 2019.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Harvey City Council deadlocks, fails to select acting mayor following death of Christopher Clark: Both 1st Ward Ald. Shirley Drewenski and 5th Ward Ald. Dominique Randle-El were nominated for acting mayor, but the City Council split down the middle. Drewenski was supported by 6th Ward Ald. Tyrone Rogers and 3rd Ward Ald. Telanee Smith, while Randle-El was supported by 2nd Ward Ald. Colby Chapman and 4th Ward Ald. Tracy Key. Neither had the four votes necessary for majority approval of the six-member council.

* Tribune | Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle’s security team fleet to get upgrade: Preckwinkle’s executive protection detail is budgeted to cost up to $1.5 million in 2026 for the “salaries, benefits, duty-related personnel expenses and other necessary non-personnel expenses of seven members,” according to Forest Preserves of Cook County documents. The district has handled her detail since 2019. That’s up from $1.3 million in 2025. The 2026 budget included up to $130,000 to buy a new Ford Expedition to replace a 2019 model SUV in her seven-vehicle security fleet.

* Tribune | Cook County state’s attorney’s office reviewing legality of mayor’s immigration executive order: But the announcement quickly led to a back-and-forth between Johnson and Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke, who posted on the social media platform X that her office “did not receive the Executive Order until it was released to the public. We do not provide legal approval of any matter until we’ve reviewed it.” In response, Johnson’s office said the mayor’s team received feedback on some of the order’s language from Burke’s policy chief, Yvette Loizon. But Burke’s office fired back again, saying it “never received draft or final language from the Mayor’s office.”

* Unraveled | Cook County State’s Attorney has “taken no action whatsoever” against feds, new lawsuit alleges: The lawsuit points to several examples of potentially unlawful acts committed by federal agents where Burke’s office has taken no action, such as a warrantless raid on a South Shore apartments building, the killing of Silverio Villegas González in Franklin Park, and the shooting of Marimar Martinez in Chicago. Burke’s failure to investigate individual agents’ deeds is either because she is “absent” or lacks the resources to do so, according to the petition. […] Attorney Sheryl Weikal filed the lawsuit against Burke in the Circuit Court of Cook County on Friday.

* Daily Herald | ‘Land saved’: The Conservation Foundation steps in to help preserve property once eyed for warehouses: The Conservation Foundation, with the help of two benefactors, purchased the 122 acres last year for $6 million, effectively taking the land between Carpentersville and West Dundee off the market for development. When the banner first went up, drivers expressed their support. “They were rolling down their windows saying good job, thank you and honking their horns,” recalled Brook McDonald, president and CEO of The Conservation Foundation. “It really felt good to hear them say that.”

* Aurora Beacon-News | Presentation in Batavia focuses on links between quilts and the Underground Railroad: Martin’s presentation included 12 replica hand-sewn quilts that she said were made by her mother who was regarded as a master quilter. She said that an 1865 Martin family Bible recorded the secret messaging system in quilts. “I’ve been doing presentations for 10 years. My mother, a historian, Dr. Clarice Boswell, created this presentation and performed this presentation for 16 years and then she gave it to me when I retired from teaching,” Martin said before the event began. “I recreated it and changed a few things and made a PowerPoint presentation. It’s the story diving into our family history, dating back six generations.”

*** Downstate ***

* WMBD | 5-5 vote continues Peoria City legal challenge with Boyd Gaming: The Peoria City Council chamber was so quiet you could hear electronic static as a 5-5 vote meant the defeat of a settlement with Boyd Gaming and the likely continuation of Peoria’s legal challenge to a proposed land-based casino in East Peoria. “I’m disappointed with this decision,” said Mayor Rita Ali. “Boyd is not coming to Peoria.” The mayor added that continuing the legal fight against Boyd’s development of the Par-A-Dice Casino Hotel could leave the city with “literally nothing.”

* Tribune | U. of I. Republicans club faces backlash for post supporting ICE: ‘Only traitors help invaders’: The illustration was later deleted from the post, as first reported by the Daily Illini. But it prompted a complaint to the university’s Title VI Office, and drew a slew of criticism from U. of I. students online, who argue that it glorified the deaths of Pretti and Good as well as the unrest engulfing Minnesota. “My first initial reaction was just disgust, horror and nausea,” said sophomore Rylee Graves, 19, a member of Illini Democrats. “For them to say that that post was not violent or they weren’t condoning violence is a lie, and they know exactly what they’re doing.” […] Illini Republicans wrote in an email to the Tribune that the image was removed “to prevent misinterpretation while we review concerns,” but it was “not an admission of wrongdoing.” They declined a request for an interview.

* SJ-R | ‘It’s unfair.’ Crash victim speaks out against retired officer’s sentencing: A Springfield woman involved in a serious collision near Lake Springfield on Sept. 5, 2024, with a drunk driver who was a retired Springfield Police sergeant said those officers needed to be held more accountable for their actions. Chelsey Farley was angry “but not surprised” at a 90-day jail sentence for Michael Egan, who caused the crash and by state statute faced up to 12 years in prison.

* WCIA | Vermilion Co. tiny home project eyes fall of 2026 for construction: “In May this was all still Hope’s crazy idea,” Garrett said. “What was once an idea is actually now a real legal entity.” Garrett said her foundation is now recognized by the state, and she’s applying to get her non-profit 501(c)3 status approved. She hopes to rent out the houses between $300-400 per month, after building them with grant money.

* WCIA | U of I College of Education providing mental health service to the community: They are launching a healing, training and research clinic offering free mental health services. The program matches people in the community with graduate students who are training to  become clinicians. […] “The students learn how to do counseling. They learn all the theory. They learn all the research. And then they got to learn how to do it because you’re sitting with real people” Lydia Khuri, clinical professor, said.

*** National ***

* NYT | Trump Had Unusual Call With F.B.I. Agents After Election Center Search: Behind closed doors, Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, met with some of the same F.B.I. agents, members of the bureau’s field office in Atlanta, which is conducting the election inquiry, three people with knowledge of the meeting said. They could not say why Ms. Gabbard, who also appeared on site at the search, was there, but her continued presence has raised eyebrows given that her role overseeing the nation’s intelligence agencies does not include on-site involvement in criminal investigative work. What occurred during the meeting was even further outside the bounds of normal law enforcement procedure. Ms. Gabbard used her cellphone to call Mr. Trump, who did not initially pick up but called back shortly after, the people said.

* WIRED | The Tech Elites in the Epstein Files: But Musk himself now shows up in the DOJ’s Epstein files well over 1,000 times, including direct correspondence between the two. In 2012 Epstein emailed Musk to ask, “Is there any one at Solar City that my guys can talk to about electriying the caribean island? or the new mexico ranch.” (SolarCity was a solar installation company founded by two of Musk’s cousins, with Musk as chairman and largest shareholder; Tesla acquired it in 2016.) Musk appeared willing to help, forwarding the email to his cousin Peter.

* WaPo | Inside Musk’s bet to hook users that turned Grok into a porn generator: The biggest AI companies have typically placed strict limits around creating or editing AI images and videos, to prevent users from making child sexual abuse material or fake content about celebrities. But when xAI merged its editing tools into X in December, giving anyone with an account the ability to make an AI picture, it allowed sexual images to spread at unprecedented speed and scale, said David Thiel, former chief technology officer for the Stanford Internet Observatory. Grok “is just completely unlike how any other image altering [AI] service works,” he said.

* Reason | The NRA and NORML Unite To Oppose the Federal Gun Ban for Marijuana Users: The NRA likewise notes that “the combination of intoxicants and firearms is a problem that has persisted since the eighteenth century.” But historically, legislators addressed that problem with laws aimed at inherently dangerous conduct rather than broad bans on gun possession by people who consume intoxicants. Those laws, the NRA notes, “did not disarm individuals when they were sober simply because they chose to become intoxicated when not carrying or shooting firearms.” When gun laws address a longstanding problem, the Supreme Court said in Bruen, the lack of a “distinctly similar” historical analog is especially telling. But although “the nation has long faced the social problem of armed drunks,” the NRA says, “there is no ‘distinctly similar’ historical law that justifies [Section 922(g)(3)] as it applies to marijuana.”

* CBS | Google to pay $68 million over allegations its voice assistant eavesdropped on users: While Google stated that its voice assistant would only register people’s speech when consumers uttered an activation phrase, such as “Hey Google,” the consumers claimed that their devices recorded them even without using such language. Some claimants alleged the Google devices recorded private conversations about financial issues, personal decisions and employment. If the settlement is approved, Google will place $68 million in a fund that will pay all consumer claims, as well as court-approved attorneys’ fees and other costs.

  3 Comments      


Good morning!

Tuesday, Feb 3, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Mavis Staples

A lot of people get love wrong

This is an open thread.

  7 Comments      


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

Tuesday, Feb 3, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Feb 3, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Tuesday, Feb 3, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Feb 2, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Law360

An Illinois state judge has decided to give class treatment to claims that Apple Inc. illegally mishandled biometric voice data the technology giant obtained from residents who’ve used Siri on its devices.

Resolving the plaintiffs’ Biometric Information Privacy Act claims on a classwide basis “is the most efficient and fair way to proceed” in their case, and “is consistent with the policy goals underlying the class action mechanism,” Judge Michael Mullen of Cook County Circuit Court said in his order Thursday.

Class certification is appropriate because it will allow the court in one fell swoop to address several common questions, including whether the voice feature vectors that help Apple identify an individual using its Siri digital assistant constitute the type of voiceprints that should be subject to the Biometric Information Privacy Act’s informed-consent requirements, Judge Mullen said.

The ruling certifies a class of all Illinois residents who have used Apple’s Siri function and had their voiceprints or identifiable biometric feature vectors computed from their voice signals or raw audio collected and stored from Sept. 14, 2014, to the present. Evidence in the case demonstrates that about 3 million class members fall under that definition, class attorney David Golub of Silver Golub & Teitell LLP told Law360 on Friday.

* The Triibe

Yet another “Operation: Midway Blitz” case has been thrown out of federal court. Oak Park attorney Scott Sakiyama received a petty citation in October for allegedly impeding Border Patrol agents. Magistrate Judge Heather McShain dismissed the case last month.

Court documents Sakiyama gave to The TRiiBE specifically show his citation was dismissed at the request of the U.S. Attorney’s Office on Jan. 12. Sakiyama said he received news of the dismissal notice from his own attorney after sending federal prosecutors “a couple of videos that we had.”

A source in the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Chicago separately corroborated that a prosecutor recommended dismissing Sakiyama’s citation after reviewing video footage his attorney provided. The TRiiBE has not received or reviewed the footage. […]

The citation is also contradicted by video footage shared to Facebook from the day of his arrest. That footage shows Sakiyama being pulled out of the driver’s side of his car, which is stopped behind the agents’ vehicle, not in front of it.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Election ’26: 4 Democrats seeking to replace Mendoza as Illinois comptroller: Mendoza herself has been an outspoken supporter of boosting the “rainy day” fund and has continued to advocate for ways to increase its size. The fund’s $2.4 billion balance only funds about two weeks of state operations, and lawmakers suspended the monthly transfer to the fund this year to free up money for other priorities in a tight budget year. “To continue to put money away for a rainy day when we’re in the middle of a tsunami, that’s not when we should be putting money away for a rainy day,” Villa said, adding “there’s no way to prioritize that in this budget.”

* Capitol City Now | Amazon has donated 1,000 of the devices to Illinois survivors of domestic violence: “I would like to thank Amazon for giving 1,000 survivors in Illinois an added layer of security,” Raoul said at an announcement in Chicago. “These Ring cameras are for peace of mind to survivors who want to know who is on the other side of the door before opening it. The ability to monitor their homes when they are not there allows survivors to know whether a predator is waiting for them.” […] “For nearly fifty years, the (Illinois Coalition against Domestic Violence) has served as the statewide leader in domestic violence advocacy and awareness,” said the coalition’s president and CEO, Carrie Boyd. “With domestic violence homicides having increased by approximately 140 percent in the last several years, while other violent crimes have decreased, this public safety measure is needed now more than ever.”

* ABC Chicago | 1K Ring cameras donated for Illinois domestic violence survivors as part of new initiative: “We launched a pilot program, with free devices and subscriptions, and just two weeks later learned that a survivor was quickly able to activate her safety plan, where she received a motion alert that alerted her that her abuser was approaching her home, with a weapon,” said Raquel Medrano, with Amazon Public Policy.

* Sen. Graciela Guzman | Illinois families can’t keep paying the bill for climate change damages: Across Illinois, people are making hard decisions about what they can afford and what they cannot. A public works director weighs whether to repave a street or replace a storm drain after another heavy rain. A homeowner opens the mail and braces for an insurance premium increase that pushes a family budget over the edge. These moments are becoming more common, and they point to a system in which families and local governments carry most of the cost of a changing climate, while the companies that helped drive this damage continue to post profits. That is why I am introducing the Climate Change Superfund Act in the Illinois Senate.

* Windy City Times | Equality Illinois leader at 2026 gala: Organization “built to face” political challenges: Equality Illinois’s new CEO, Channyn Lynne Parker, gave the keynote at the rights-advocacy’s 2026 annual gala the evening of Jan. 31, where she asserted that the event, which according to estimates hosted about 1,500 attendees, was “not just a gala—it is a sanctuary.” Parker praised both Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson and Illinois Governor JB Pritzker, both of whom were in attendance that evening at the Hilton Chicago, 720 S. Michigan Ave. Both politicians, she said, made clear that “dignity is not conditional” in the state.

*** Chicago ***

* ABC Chicago | New program offers volunteer opportunities for SNAP recipients amid new requirements: The non-profit launched “Snap Together Volunteers,” which offers accessible volunteer opportunities for seniors at the Nourish Chicago Pantry, located at 2102 W Ogden Avenue. This program is designed specifically for older adults, aged 55 to 64, who need qualifying volunteer hours.

* Fox Chicago | Fight over multi-billion dollar quantum computer campus on South Side not over: With their sights now set on the November general election, they rallied on Wednesday, calling on the community to support a new ballot initiative that lets voters consider whether the microelectronics park currently under construction on the site of the former U.S. Steel plant should be relocated in favor of grocery stores, affordable housing units, and youth centers.

* Bond Buyer | Chicago Transit Authority plans return to market with $575M deal: Wells Fargo Securities will price for the Chicago Transit Authority $575 million of first and second lien sales tax receipts bonds on Thursday, Feb. 5.

* Sun-Times | Accused fake cop beats third impersonation case after defending himself in Cook County trial: Ellis was arrested twice in the 1990s for felony police impersonation and convicted of both offenses, along with arson in 1997. Ellis’ latest legal saga began in March 2018 when Chicago cops pulled over his car on the South Side for having an expired temporary license plate. When he opened his wallet to give them his driver’s license, the officers spotted a laminated identification card from the Pembroke Township Police Department. The officers couldn’t find any evidence of a Pembroke Township police department, so they arrested Ellis on a felony charge of impersonating a cop.

* Tribune | Chicago Sky owner Michael Alter sued by minority partner for allegedly ‘self-dealing’ to devalue other shares: Minority owner Steven Rogers, an Englewood native and entrepreneur who was an early investor in the team, alleges in the suit that Alter abused his financial control of the Sky’s operations to “self-deal” stakes to boost his own shares while decreasing those of minority partners. “Alter’s actions breached his fiduciary duty to the minority investors … and unfairly deprived them of the value of their investments,” the lawsuit said.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Harvey Council to hold special meeting Monday to appoint acting mayor after Christopher Clark death : Shirley Drewens is the current mayor pro temp. The town of Harvey has been dealing with a financial crisis. It’s in debt by more than $150 million and has been forced to lay off many city workers, including more than half of the fire department employees. It is a stressful time for the city’s elected leaders, who have appealed to the federal and state governments for help.

* Daily Herald | St. Charles plastics plant remains open after being bought by German firm, saving jobs: But when 86 workers were listed by Microplastics Inc. in St. Charles, a last-minute reprieve for “a majority” of them is exactly what happened. And it came from Dippoldiswalde, Germany. After months of expecting the manufacturing plant to close down for good, the German-based company MATEtronix acquired Microplastics Inc., rehiring a majority of the same employees and keeping the equipment in St. Charles.

* Daily Southtown | Mokena village officials updating website, not logo, administrator says: The mockup presented in November was part of an informal discussion about the village’s larger project to redesign its website and revamp village operations, he said. Tomasoski said village officials started rethinking village operations in late 2023, early 2024 when a new wave of staff members were hired after several retirements. The influx of staff was a big change from when he started in 2015, he said, when the newest hire had been there for 15 years and some staff members had a tenure of more than 30 years. Naturally, he said, the new staff members prompted new ideas and processes.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | All this snow hasn’t done much to reduce drought in Central Illinois: State climatologist Trent Ford with the Illinois State Water Survey said the last six months are the driest August-to-January period on record for the Twin Cities at 7.1 inches of precipitation, according to climate records dating back to 1893. The only drier six-month period came during the Dust Bowl period, stretching from December 1933 to May 1934.

* WIFR | Public comment wanted on proposal for transportation funds in Rockford: Region 1 Planning Council is the federally-designated Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) for the Rockford Urban and Metropolitan Area. The organization has established a preliminary plan for projects to receive federal funding through Surface Transportation Block Grant, Transportation Alternative Program and Carbon Reduction Program.

* WGLT | Union opposes Unit 5’s move to reject teacher resignation: Kathryn Monti submitted her resignation to the Unit 5 school board to take a new teaching job elsewhere. The school board rejected the resignation, saying Monti resigned mid-year with insufficient notice, and referred the case to the state superintendent for a possible license suspension of up to one year. A request to Unit 5 for the date of Monti’s resignation was not immediately returned. Monti has already left the district.

* WCIA | Movie filmed in Central IL comes to the big screen in Savoy: “Moses to Black,” was showing in theaters in Savoy, and the movie was filmed all across Champaign County. In Champaign, Urbana and Rantoul with Flyover Film Studios, at least 100 people were there to see the film, and members of the Champaign County Film Office were there as well. A Q&A was held discussing the benefits of showing large film projects in Champaign.

*** National ***

* AP | What to know about the partial government shutdown: The partial government shutdown is vastly different from the record closure in the fall. That is mostly because this shutdown, which started Saturday, does not include the whole of government and may not last long, even as it now drags into the new week. The House had hoped to pass funding legislation quickly when lawmakers return Monday evening, and that would have ended the shutdown. But House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., now says he is hoping to have the package considered “at least by Tuesday” as he scrambles to round up votes and Democrats hold out for deeper changes to immigration enforcement.

  4 Comments      


Catching up with the congressionals

Monday, Feb 2, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Federal candidates had until Saturday night to file their fourth-quarter 2025 paperwork. Evanston Now’s Matthew Eadie on the numbers out of the 9th Congressional District

A barrage of out-of-state donors supercharged State Sen. Laura Fine’s congressional campaign in the final quarter of 2025, giving the Glenview legislator more money in the bank entering 2026 than any of her competitors.

Financial disclosures filed Saturday night show that out-of-state support accounted for over 90% of the $1.26 million Fine raised in the final three months of 2025. […]

Biss reported raising about $658,000 in the final three months of the year, entering 2026 with just over $1.37 million in his war chest. His contributions last quarter came largely from inside Illinois, over 70%, according to an Evanston Now analysis of his donors. […]

In a statement, Fine’s campaign sidestepped questions about her out-of-state donors, instead suggesting Biss’ end-of-year fundraising shows he “struggles to raise money.”

“He is relying on hundreds of thousands of dollars in out-of-state money from independent expenditures to highlight a barely-there record that he keeps changing,” a spokesperson from Fine’s campaign told Evanston Now, saying her campaign is gaining momentum, citing her list of local endorsements.

* The Biss campaign’s response to Sen. Fine’s fundraising haul…

Recently released campaign finance reports show that state Sen. Laura Fine’s congressional campaign raised more money in the fourth quarter of 2025 from donors who previously gave to Donald Trump ($53,350) than from donors living in Illinois’ 9th Congressional District ($32,795). Since launching her campaign, Fine has taken in nearly $60,000 from Trump donors, who have collectively given more than $200,000 to Trump’s political committees (link).

“Laura Fine’s fundraising tells you everything you need to know about whose side she’s on,” said Biss for Congress Campaign Manager George Lundgren. “Fine raised more money from donors who backed Donald Trump than from people who actually live in the 9th District last quarter, and those same donors have poured hundreds of thousands of dollars into Trump’s political operation. With Chicagoland and our democracy under attack, voters deserve a representative who will fight for us, not for Trump donors looking for another ally in Washington.”

* Sen. Mike Simmons also took a swing at Sen. Fine…

New Federal Election Commission reports show that Laura Fine’s congressional campaign is being funded by some of the country’s most prolific Republican megadonors. These major donors to Fine’s campaign are some of the country’s largest donors to Senator Ted Cruz, Republican Speaker Mike Johnson, the Republican National Committee, National Republican Congressional Committee, and the National Republican Senatorial Committee.

“There will always be powerful interests trying to buy elections,” Illinois State Senator Mike Simmons said. “The real question is who is willing to take their money. I’m running because our communities deserve representation that answers to voters, not Republican donors or special interest groups. You can’t take on Republicans if they are the ones funding your campaign. Neighborhoods like the one I grew up in are never going to see real progress if we elect Democrats who accept contributions from Republican megadonors.”

This latest FEC report comes after Matthew Eadie’s article in Evanston Now detailed how AIPAC has been soliciting donations from across the country to support Fine’s campaign. The conservative special interest group has been backing candidates nationally that refuse to condemn Benjamin Netanyahu and have called for continued unconditional military aid to Israel. The Intercept reported that Fine even had a private fundraiser in Los Angeles hosted by AIPAC Board President Michael Tuchin.

Simmons has built his campaign around rejecting corporate PAC and AIPAC money and fighting for working families, immigrants, and communities too often ignored by politicians funded by wealthy insiders.

“This race presents a choice,” Simmons added. “You can have a candidate supported by Republican megadonors and special interests, or you can have someone who is accountable to the people who live here.”

* More fundraising numbers from the Daily Northwestern

Abughazaleh reported a yearly total of $2.7 million, Biss raised $1.98 million and Fine raised $1.92 million, while Andrew collected $1.21 million and Huynh’s haul totaled just over $1 million. […]

According to FEC filings, Fine ended the year with the most cash on hand, with over $1.43 million — just ahead of Biss’ $1.37 million, followed by Andrew with $961,000, Abughazaleh with $810,000 and Huynh with $737,000. […]

In a statement to The Daily, a spokesperson from Amiwala’s campaign wrote she had completed her 270th meet and greet in the district and has one of the “strongest in-district donor bases and grassroots operations.”

“We’ve been thoughtful and responsible with every dollar because this is a people-powered campaign, backed by neighbors across IL-09,” the spokesperson wrote.

* In the 7th CD, Melissa Conyears-Ervin reported raising $112,000…

The Melissa Conyears-Ervin for Congress campaign for the 7th Congressional District kicked into high gear at the start of 2026 with a strong cash position of $215,000 on hand and an announcement she raised $112,000 in the first four weeks of the year.

Now, her campaign announced the addition of a new member of her growing coalition: the proud professionals of the Chicago Teachers Union. Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin released a statement at the beginning of Black History month about the final six week stretch of the campaign.

* In the 2nd CD, Sen. Robert Peters goes after Donna Miller. Press release…

The vast majority of the funds Donna Miller raised for her congressional campaign in Illinois’ 2nd District in the fourth quarter of 2025 came from donors who have a history of giving to Donald Trump or the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), according to her quarterly filing with the Federal Election Commission posted Saturday night.

Miller, a Cook County Commissioner, reported raising $39,000.00 from Trump donors in the fourth quarter. A full listing of those donors is available here.

She also reported raising at least $875,350.92 in the fourth quarter (83% of her total) from donors who have given to AIPAC or its affiliated super PAC, the United Democracy Project, since 2023. A full listing of those donors is available here.

This represents a massive spike in fundraising for Miller, who prior to this quarter, had reported raising only $242.494.02. During the previous quarter, Miller reported only $250 from a single Trump donor, and $750 from a single AIPAC donor.

“Donna Miller should be honest with the voters of the 2nd Congressional District about who is funding her campaign–and why,” said Robert Peters campaign manager Matthew Fisch. “Right wing forces have apparently decided that Donna Miller is their best investment in this race. That should be a red flag for every voter as Trump wreaks havoc on our communities.”

State Sen. Robert Peters has raised $903,000 from more than 30,000 individual grassroots donors overall since entering the race in May 2025. He is supported by Sen. Bernie Sanders, Rep. Delia Ramirez, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle, the Congressional Progressive Caucus PAC and more.

* On Friday, 2nd CD candidate Jesse Jackson Jr. claimed a fire destroyed campaign paraphernalia


Jackson’s opponent Sen. Willie Preston called for an investigation into his claim. Press release…

Illinois Sen. Willie Preston called for a full investigation late Saturday after fellow 2nd District Congressional candidate Jesse Jackson Jr. made claims that a Joliet printing plant explosion destroyed Jackson yard signs, mail and other materials.

The Joliet explosion at Union Signs occurred Thursday.

Yesterday, Jesse Jackson Jr., the former representative who was jailed for stealing campaign funds, claimed on Instagram that several of his signs and other campaign materials were “casualties” of the explosion.

Preston, chair of the Illinois Senate Black Legislative Caucus, is calling on state and federal authorities to investigate the Jackson explosion claims to ensure no broader wrongdoing.

* More…

    * Press Release | National committee to preserve social security and Medicare endorses Melissa Bean for congress: Today, the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare PAC (NCPSSM-PAC) endorsed Melissa Bean in the race for Illinois’ 8th Congressional District seat. […] “Our nation needs Melissa’s leadership, vision and determination to fight for working families and older Americans. We are proud to support her campaign because we know that she understands and supports the critical roles that Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid play in the retirement and health security of our nation’s older citizens and their families. Melissa is well-prepared to serve the needs of seniors and will make the preservation and improvement of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid a priority in Congress.”

    * Daily Herald | Candidate’s supporters come together to knit, crochet for people in need: People filled Democratic 9th District hopeful Kat Abughazaleh’s office in Chicago’s Rogers Park neighborhood to knit and crochet hats, gloves and scarves. The items subsequently were given away to people in need of warm gear during the cold snap. “It has been so cold, we gave them away right away,” campaign spokesperson Ramiro Sarmiento said. Abughazaleh, of Chicago, has been known to knit during candidate forums and other public events. But the former journalist and internet personality wasn’t at the gathering.

  21 Comments      


SDG warns Pritzker over ‘tax break handout to school-choice billionaires’

Monday, Feb 2, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. From that link is this Tribune story

Illinois could soon opt into the first federal school voucher program — an initiative long-championed by private school advocates and religious conservatives — but Gov. JB Pritzker has yet to weigh in.

Under the program, part of the Republican One Big Beautiful Bill Act, donors can get a dollar-for-dollar tax credit of up to $1,700 for giving to scholarship-granting nonprofits. Those scholarships can go to private school tuition, transportation and other education-related expenses. […]

“We will evaluate the issue through a lens focused on affordability for working families and what best supports Illinois students, families, and public schools,” according to the statement [from Gov. Pritzker’s office].

In a July email, however, Pritzker’s office criticized the program, noting that it could “potentially (reduce) state and federal funding for public schools.” […]

“It’s a federal tax credit, so it doesn’t take any state or local resources,” [Andrew Broy, the president of the Illinois Network of Charter Schools] said.

* CTU/IFT press release…

A statement by the Chicago Teachers Union and Illinois Federation of Teachers President Stacy Davis Gates on Trump’s School Voucher Tax Scheme and pending decision by Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker on opting Illinois in:

“When Donald Trump slipped a school voucher giveaway into his so-called One Big Beautiful Bill, it was never about kids. It was a tax break handout to school-choice billionaires and a backdoor scheme to privatize public education. Then and now, we—as parents, educators, and Illinoisans who understand what’s at stake—have been clear: private school vouchers are a scam designed to undermine public education. This $1,700 federal tax credit isn’t about opportunity; it rewards the ultra-wealthy while draining resources from the educational communities that serve the vast majority of our children.

Here in Illinois, voters were clear, and the General Assembly honored that mandate by overwhelmingly rejecting school vouchers. That is why it is both troubling and confusing that Governor J.B. Pritzker would even consider opting Illinois into Trump’s federal voucher tax scheme. At a moment when the governor and general assembly still owe more than $5 billion to our public schools, any wavering on this issue breaks faith with Illinois families and the values they have repeatedly affirmed at the ballot box.

Illinois should not send public dollars to private schools with no transparency, no public oversight, and no real commitment to equity—schools that routinely exclude or push out Black students, students with disabilities, and English-language learners. We already rejected this failed experiment when Bruce Rauner and his allies tried to force voucher schemes on our state–but the Illinois Police Institute always forgets that part.

Trump repackaging the same idea at the federal level doesn’t change the facts: vouchers siphon resources from the students with the greatest needs and redirect them to the wealthiest families, hollowing out public institutions in the process.

You cannot say you support equity while starving the institutions that make equity possible. You cannot celebrate Black History Month on one hand while undermining Black students, Black families, Black working people, and their communities with the other. Allowing private school voucher schemes to take root in Illinois, in any form, would be a betrayal of our responsibility to young people and the public schools where their futures are built.”

Emphasis added.

Also, note the “Illinois Police Institute” reference.

  38 Comments      


Roundup: Illinois Accountability Commission hears expert testimony on ICE, CBP misconduct

Monday, Feb 2, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* On Friday, five subject matter experts testified before the Illinois Accountability Commission at its second meeting. The panel was created by Gov. JB Pritzker via executive order in October. Author and journalist Garrett Graff on his testimony

I was called as the commission’s expert witness on the history of problems, corruption, and training within CBP and ICE — a story I’ve covered for more than a dozen years, as regular readers of this newsletter know. To prepare, I spent the last week re-reading and re-familiarizing myself with DHS scandals and waves of corruption and mismanagement — and found myself horrified anew. […]

I also totaled up some new numbers to get at the scale of the problem:

Criminality is so rampant inside CBP that it has seen one of its own agents or officers arrested every 24 to 36 hours since 2005. CBP’s misconduct scandal is so long-running that today it would be old enough to drink.

In total, according to CBP’s own discipline reports, over the 20 years from 2005 to 2024 — the last year numbers are available — at least 4,913 CBP officers and Border Patrol agents have been arrested themselves, some multiple times. (In 2018 alone, a single CBP employee was arrested five times.) To put that number in perspective:

    • The population of CBP agents and officers who have been arrested would make it roughly the nation’s fourth largest police department — equal to the size of the entire Philadelphia police.

    • Indeed, for much of the 2010s and likely before and since, it appears the crime rate of CBP agents and offices was higher PER CAPITA than the crime rate of undocumented immigrants in the United States.

* Capitol News Illinois

Ahead of the commission’s second public hearing Friday, Pritzker asked the commission to expand its review to include major Trump officials, including the now-ousted Customs and Border Patrol “commander at large” Gregory Bovino, White House “border czar” Tom Homan, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem, and Stephen Miller, Trump’s deputy chief of staff for policy.

“For too long, Gregory Bovino and his rogue federal agents have terrorized communities in Illinois and across the country, violated our people’s constitutional rights, and unleashed violence at every turn,” Pritzker said. “Bovino packing his bags cannot detract from our mission (of) accountability.”

In addition to eight named officials, Pritzker’s request applied to additional “deputies, subordinates and officials across the Trump hierarchy who may have played a role in the federal deployments.”

The commission agreed to take up that mandate, with Commission Chair and former U.S. District Court Judge Rubén Castillo signaling that the commission may recommend disciplinary action or prosecution related to the shootings of Silverio Villegas González, a father of two killed by ICE agents in Franklin Park in September and of teaching assistant Marimar Martinez, shot five times by a Border Patrol agent in October.

* Center Square

[Deborah Fleischaker, who previously served in the US Department of Homeland Security for 14 years and as ICE’s chief of staff and assistant director for regulatory affairs,] said immigration enforcement has shifted from rule bound to outcome driven.

“Leadership communicates desired headlines, and officers are expected to lead the news instead of delivering public safety results,” Fleischaker said.

Fleischaker said public safety is not enhanced when immigration enforcement is driven by quotas and involves rapid hiring and shortened training.

“Such enforcement does not enhance public safety. It erodes trust, discourages cooperation with law enforcement, redirects other law enforcement activities, robs officers of their discretion and ultimately makes communities less safe,” Fleischaker said.

* Tribune

The commission […] also released its preliminary report Friday which laid out issues it would like to address, such as limiting agents’ use of tear gas, pepper spray and masks that conceal their identity. The report said, for example, it would want to improve “existing federal standards for use of crowd control weapons.”

However, it offered little insight into how it would accomplish these goals. The commission is restricted by the state’s limited authority. It has no subpoena power and no direct law enforcement authority. It simply said it would be interested in hearing proposals from the public. […]

“We will have conversations with those in local law enforcement to suggest prosecutions that should be occurring even as we speak. That’s where we’re headed,” Castillo said Friday. He’s previously said “nothing is off the table” as far as recommendations the commission can make to the state.

* More…

    * Sun-Times | Chicagoans continue calls to abolish ICE as worry persists over feds’ spring surge: Chicago communities remain under a “great amount” of mental and emotional distress, even as immigration enforcement has scaled back in the area, Matt Davison, CEO of NAMI Chicago, said Friday during a public hearing of the Illinois Accountability Commission. “The consequences to our city’s mental health right now are hard to overstate,” Davison said. “We tend to slip into talking about these events in the past tense. I would just remind the commission that’s just simply not the case right now for our mental health in its present state.”

    * WAND | IL Accountability Commission highlights aggressive ICE tactics used in Chicago, Minneapolis: “What has become apparent to the public is that these are not just cases of excessive force, but cold-blooded killings of Americans,” said retired Chicago Police Department Commander Cindy Sam. “These federal agents are not just serving law enforcement, they are acting as judge, jury and executioner.”

    * ABC Chicago | IL Accountability Commission on Midway Blitz calls for rogue federal officers to face prosecution: The commission chairman contended that if the fatal shooting of Silverio Villegas-Gonzalez last fall during an ICE traffic stop in Franklin Park had resulted in disciplinary action, then perhaps the pair of deadly shootings this month in Minneapolis might not have happened. “Definitely, it seems we need some changes in state law to encourage local officials to actually prosecute agents who are conducting misdeeds, because it seems like the federal government is not going to do that,” Castillo said.

  Comments Off      


Fun with numbers

Monday, Feb 2, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* You probably saw this development over the weekend. From the Texas Tribune

Democrat and machinist union leader Taylor Rehmet won the special election Saturday to represent a solidly red Texas Senate district that President Donald Trump carried by 17 points in 2024, a stunning upset that injected a fresh and urgent sense of a panic into the GOP from the Texas Capitol to the White House heading into November’s midterm elections.

With ballots tallied from all but a handful of voting centers, Rehmet had 57% of the vote, besting the 43% for his GOP opponent, conservative activist Leigh Wambsganss, who vastly outspent Rehmet as Republicans including Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick mounted a furious funding push in a bid to tilt the election in their favor in the final days.

Patrick, the Senate’s powerful presiding officer, had raised alarm bells about the race and urged Republicans to turn out — as did Trump, who posted three separate get-out-the-vote messages on social media in the 48 hours preceding the election.

This is not a transferable result. It was a low-turnout special election held on a Saturday during unusually miserable winter weather. The Republican candidate had serious flaws. Texas is its own world. Etc.

* But just for snicks, I asked Isabel to look at what would happen here if all Republican-held Illinois state legislative districts that Trump won by as much as 17 points (or that Trump lost) in 2024 flipped to the Dems.

Purely hypothetically, the Illinois House Democrats would pick up 19 seats (for a grand total of 97 out of 118), and the Senate Dems would gain 8 (for a total of 48 out of 59).

Again, this ain’t happening. It’s just a little math exercise. And ten months is an eternity in politics (maybe ten eternities, or forty, or three hundred). Things can always change. But, if there is no radical DC course-correction or a drastic improvement in the economy, you’ll very likely be saying goodbye to a bunch of Statehouse Republican incumbents come November.

* Whatever the case, I’m guessing the Republicans are pretty relieved that the Democrats passed a bill to ban parties from appointing candidates after the primary to vacant legislative ballot slots. Some of those above-mentioned Republican-held districts have no Democratic candidates on the ballot.

  12 Comments      


When the legend contradicts the actual facts, stick with the legend

Monday, Feb 2, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Chicago Tribune covered a Republican gubernatorial candidate forum in Tazewell County

Chicago recorded 416 killings in 2025 — the city’s lowest homicide total in more than a decade — while shootings, defined as incidents in which at least one person was killed or wounded, fell by about one-third compared with 2019, according to department data. […]

“I don’t think crime has gone down,” said Heidner, a real estate and onetime-embattled video gambling operator from Barrington Hills. “People aren’t safe. They’re not safe. They’re getting killed. They’re getting robbed. They’re getting raped.”

“Liars use numbers. Crime has not come down,” said Mendrick, the DuPage County sheriff, who contends the method of calculating crime statistics has changed and that “gangbangers don’t call the police on each other, so none of those are being reported.” He adds that “medical technology” is saving the lives of drug victims, reducing drug-related crime statistics.

Dabrowski, a conservative activist from Wilmette who has made a career offering his opinions based on data, said that “after so many years of so much crime, a lot of people don’t report crimes anymore. … Massive numbers of crimes aren’t reported anymore because the police (don’t) come.”

(Headline derived from this.)

  42 Comments      


Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Monday, Feb 2, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Retail provides one out of every five Illinois jobs, generates the second largest amount of tax revenue for the state, and is the largest source of revenue for local governments. But retail is also so much more, with retailers serving as the trusted contributors to life’s moments, big and small.

We Are Retail and IRMA are dedicated to sharing the stories of retailers like Matt and Sabrina in Rantoul who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

  Comments Off      


The debates produced future ad fodder

Monday, Feb 2, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column was written before news emerged that Gov. JB Pritzker had contributed $5 million to the super PAC supporting Juliana Stratton

The top three Democratic U.S. Senate candidates faced off twice last week.

The first debate wasn’t televised, so the live audience was quite small. The second debate was televised, so the audience was bigger.

However, these debates don’t attract even a smidgen of the audience of presidential debates, when half the country often tunes in.

The object here is to generate video clips for TV ads and social media promotion and to manage conventional news coverage, which can then be used in ads. Like it or not, that’s where most people will be exposed to the debates.

Effectively conveying those messages requires money and creativity. U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, D-Ill., has so far raised and spent the most money. And while he has a substantial lead in the polls, it’s unclear yet if his wide support is paper-thin, meaning he could be taken out with some strong attacks.

Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton really took it to her two opponents during Monday’s debate, which was sponsored by the Chicago Sun-Times, WBEZ and the University of Chicago’s Institute of Politics.

Krishnamoorthi especially seemed caught off guard at Stratton’s aggressiveness, including on his refusal to completely abolish ICE.

Stratton repeatedly dissed the other two candidates for taking corporate PAC money, forcing them to explain their positions.

Voters don’t generally do nuance, so when you’re explaining in campaigns, you’re not winning.

Both pointed in response to Stratton’s backing by a “dark money” super PAC. She didn’t explain, but that committee will actually be reporting its contributors.

Stratton has lately taken Krishnamoorthi to task on a host of issues, including his rather meaningless vote for an antisemitism resolution that, in passing, congratulated immigration enforcement. But she forced him to explain it.

After Krishnamoorthi and U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly, D-Ill., struggled long and hard with a question on whether they agreed with Trump on anything, Stratton said, “I’m not going to the United States Senate to find something to agree with Donald Trump on.”

When asked if they backed him, both Krishnamoorthi and Kelly said they hadn’t made up their minds about reelecting Chuck Schumer as the Democrats’ Senate leader. Stratton said: “No.”

Polls have shown for months that Democratic voters hold their party’s congressional wing in low esteem. This ain’t rocket science.

But by Thursday’s ABC7 debate, the putative front-runner seemed to have regained some of his bearings.

Krishnamoorthi tried to turn the tables on the ICE question, accurately saying that his position of wanting to “abolish Trump’s ICE” is identical to Gov. JB Pritzker’s. The governor is popular enough with his party members to help blunt the ICE attack at a time when polls show strong Democratic support for abolishing the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency.

“I’d be curious if my colleagues agree with this position,” Krishnamoorthi said, gesturing at Stratton, who did not explain herself.

But Krishnamoorthi then upped the ante: “Rick Pearson asked Lt. Gov. Stratton if she were to abolish ICE, where should the duties be transferred? She said, ‘CBP.’ I think that would be a grave mistake. CBP is who employs Greg Bovino. CBP is who actually shot and killed Alex Pretti.”

I would assume that if Stratton’s numbers start to move up or she directly attacks Krishnamoorthi on ICE, her unwise U.S. Customs and Border Protection comment will come back to haunt her.

Meanwhile, when asked about the Senate confirmation process, Stratton said she will not vote for any nominations made by Trump. Kelly made the same pledge.

Krishnamoorthi, instead, focused only on the appointment of federal judges in Illinois and gave a very D.C.-centric answer involving independent review panels and “blue slips.”

As we saw with ICE, he can learn, but Raja just exudes “congressman.” Kelly has the same affliction, although it’s less pronounced. It’s almost like a nearly incurable disease, and Dem voters at least say they’re looking for something more authentic these days,

Authenticity, however, can be stretched. When asked by ABC7’s Craig Wall, “What specific actions would you take in the Senate to help working families struggling with affordability?” Stratton said she and her spouse “have to sit down and we have to budget every single week.”

“We have to think through, what are we bringing in? What’s going to go out?” Stratton said.

My associate Isabel Miller decided to check the numbers, and Stratton and her spouse make a combined $283,000 a year.

The Stratton campaign was not amused by this observation. “What’s the salary cap for being allowed to budget for weekly expenses?” OK, good point. And it is possible that she may not have a job in a year. But still.

If Raja decides to use it, Stratton’s answer about the border patrol is a potentially fatal error.

Discuss.

  17 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Feb 2, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Pritzker gives $5 million to boost Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton’s Senate bid. Sun-Times

    - The billionaire governor’s contribution, which was anticipated, was made through a pro-Stratton super PAC and already is being used to run TV ads with just weeks to go in the campaign.
    - A spokesperson said the PAC’s fundraising has now exceeded $10 million. It spent $2.2 million, leaving it with $4.03 million in December.
    - he multimillion-dollar bump will help her campaign, but it comes about six months after Krishnamoorthi, the fundraising leader in the race, began airing TV commercials.

* Related stories…

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* Gov. JB Pritzker does not have any public events today.

* At 10:30 am, Attorney General Kwame Raoul will join the Illinois Coalition Against Domestic Violence to announce a new community initiative with Ring, an Amazon company, aimed at providing domestic violence survivors with technology and safety tools. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WGN | New requirements for SNAP benefits go into effect Sunday. What does this mean for SNAP benefit recipients?: Meanwhile, local food pantries have been bracing for a last-minute rush before changes to SNAP take effect Sunday. At Common Pantry in Chicago’s North Center neighborhood, workers were trying to increase their inventory ahead of changes to SNAP, but they said nothing they do will be able to meet the need that’s coming.

* Sun-Times | Chicago bank fails, becoming first in nation to go under in 2026: The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation ordered the River North-based bank’s closure due to concerns over its financial stability. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation was named receiver and brokered the sale of most of the bank’s $261 million in assets to First Independence Bank in Detroit, including all deposits. Customers still have immediate access to their money, and loan customers’ payments are still due.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Medium | Why is the Illinois Democratic Party spreading disinformation about Democratic candidates?: Two such mailers I’ve received are attack ads against Miguel Alvelo-Rivera, who is running for the Illinois State House of Representatives. […] The attack ads claim that “Miguel Alvelo-Rivera and the politicians behind his campaign are pushing their own shortsighted agenda in our community” and juxtapose this claim, and other similar claims, with images of Miguel alongside Donald Trump and Elon Musk — suggesting Alvelo-Rivera is funded by or at least aligned with extremist Republicans. If true, this would be disqualifying for Alvelo-Rivera. So let’s look at what politicians back his campaign – — a relatively standard slate of Democrats, including Congresswoman Delia Ramirez, who has long spoken against Musk and Trump and has put forth legislation to abolish ICE.

* Center Square | Pritzker celebrates expansion of French cheese maker in GOP leader’s district: Pritzker announced that Savencia Cheese USA would add a new production line at its facility in the Stephenson County village of Lena, creating 50 new jobs while retaining 125 existing positions. […] McCombie, R-Savanna, and whose district includes Lena, said creating more jobs is a plus but criticized Pritzker’s policies. “Job growth is always positive, and we can and should be doing more to make it a trend in our state,” McCombie said in a statement to The Center Square.

* CBS Chicago | GOP Illinois gubernatorial candidate Ted Dabrowski breaks down his policies: Ted Dabrowski is running in the Republican primary for Illinois governor. He joins Dana Kozlov to outline his policies on immigration enforcement, property taxes, education funding.

* Journal Courier | Gambling mogul, Republican gubernatorial candidate may visit Jacksonville: Rob Winchester, a long-time lobbyist and previous senior adviser to former U.S. Sen. Mark Kirk, has been hired by Heidner’s campaign to visit central and southern Illinois counties and pitch him as the Republican choice for governor in the upcoming primary. He said Heidner would likely be visiting Morgan County in the middle of February, though it has yet to be finalized.

* Tribune | Illinois advances in bid to move up 2028 Democratic presidential primary date, but hurdles remain: In essence, the Rules and Bylaws Committee chose to advance all 12 states that applied to be one of up to five states in the early, pre-Super Tuesday window of the primary process. […] But Illinois, with a costly Chicago media market that covers the region where most of the state’s voters reside, might struggle with the fairness standard aimed at allowing smaller, lesser-funded candidates a chance to present their case.

*** Chicago ***

* WBEZ | Affordability — or the lack of it — will define Chicago’s housing market this year, experts say: In the greater Chicago region, home sales in 2025 rose slightly by 0.6% year over year, with nearly 89,100 homes sold, according to Illinois Realtors. In 2024, 88,560 homes sold in the region. Meanwhile, home sales across Illinois grew by 4.2%, compared to 2024, when 131,194 homes sold that year. For December, the Chicago metro area saw 6,637 homes sold, down 0.2% from December 2024 sales of 6,650. Across the state, home sales in December were up 2% year over year, with 10,237 homes sold, according to the trade association.

* WTTW | Judge Reverses Order, Says Rahm Emanuel Does Not Have to Testify About CPD’s ‘Code of Silence’: U.S District Court Judge John Tharp said that he reconsidered his decision to allow lawyers for Ebony Tate, her mother, Cynthia Eason, and four children to call Emanuel after lawyers for the city renewed their vigorous objections to having the former mayor and potential presidential candidate testify. Allowing Emanuel to testify would make it impossible for the eight officers named in the lawsuit and the city to get a fair trial and turn it “into a media circus when he has nothing to do with the claims against them,” according to lawyers for the city of Chicago.

* Tribune | Acting CTA chief lays out priorities after dodging fiscal cliff: When asked about riders who remain frustrated by the frequency and reliability of bus and train service — and who are clamoring for more in the wake of last year’s transit funding bill — Leerhsen cautioned that most of the new dollars expected to come in later this year will go toward sustaining current service levels. When it comes to increases in service, she pointed to an announcement she made last fall of planned 24-hour service on the Orange Line to Midway International Airport. Currently, only the CTA’s Blue and Red lines run 24/7.

* WBEZ | Community members warn that Chicago History Museum cuts could impact scholarship of city history: They are also asking the museum to restore hours at the Abakanowicz Research Center, which were limited following a decision to reduce its staffers to part-time status in July. Advocates say reversing that decision will help strengthen the museum’s identity as a prestigious institution that informs visitors from all over the world about the history of Chicago and America.

* Sun-Times | White Sox legend Frank Thomas upset with being left off team’s Black History Month graphic: That’s when the Sox published a social-media graphic celebrating “momentous firsts” to commemorate the start of Black History Month. The graphic included moments such as Ken Williams and Jerry Manuel becoming the first Black general manager/manager duo in major-league history. There was one glaring — and, frankly, irresponsible — omission: Thomas, a two-time MVP and the best hitter in franchise history.

* Sun-Times | Basil Talbott Jr., Chicago Sun-Times political editor, dies at 89: The fair-minded, truth-seeking Chicago Sun-Times political journalist would never indulge in their emoluments, like a free lunch at a fine restaurant. “Basil would have nothing of that. Absolutely nothing. He insisted that what he would tell the public would be what he believed without any editing or constraint because he was in bed or in debt to somebody,” said Ron Grossman, a retired Chicago Tribune columnist and longtime friend of Mr. Talbott.

* Fox Chicago | Chicago Auto Show 2026: Everything you need to know: Chi-Town Alley: The new showcase celebrates Chicago’s automotive communities. The brand-new exhibit will highlight performance cars, custom builds and street-inspired designs.

* CBS Chicago | Miami Heat build 54-point lead, roll past Chicago Bulls 134-91 with Adebayo, Larsson each scoring 20: The 54-point hole was Chicago’s biggest since a 58-point deficit against Boston on Dec. 8, 2018. The Bulls’ biggest deficits this season were a pair of 41-point games — one against Minnesota on Dec. 29, the other also against Miami on Nov. 21. Kel’el Ware scored 17 points, Andrew Wiggins and Jaime Jaquez Jr. each scored 14 and Davion Mitchell returned from a shoulder injury to score 13 for Miami, which played without guard Norman Powell (personal reasons) and Tyler Herro (ribs). Powell was announced as an NBA All-Star selection shortly after tip-off on Sunday, getting that nod for the first time in his career.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* WGEM | Lawsuit filed against City of Quincy, employee by man who threatened alderman: A lawsuit was filed on Friday against the City of Quincy and City of Quincy employee Thomas Pugh. According to court documents, the lawsuit was filed by Benjamin J. Inman, the man who was recently convicted of threatening an alderman and is charged with possession of child porn. […] Court filings allege that Pugh knowingly cyberstalked and harassed Inman as an employee of the City of Quincy. On Jan. 8, Inman stated twice during proceedings that he could prove that a city employee planted the alleged child porn to frame him.

* NYT | Police Report Backs Activist’s Account in Clash With ICE Agent Near Chicago: Mr. Held told The New York Times last week that he had followed Mr. Saracco in late December after the agent left the Broadview facility, and an altercation occurred. Mr. Saracco, who according to the police report initially denied being a law enforcement agent, told police officers who were called to the scene that Mr. Held “began walking up to his vehicle” and recording him on his phone while he was pumping gas into his car. Mr. Held has said he was standing on the sidewalk recording when Mr. Saracco approached him.

* Daily Herald | Ex-Huntley school board member gave no reason for sudden resignation: When members of Bittman’s slate took control of the board that year, they chose him to be school board president. Laura Murray became vice president but Bittman and Murray lost their leadership spots after a different slate, backed by a group that opposed the direction Bittman’s slate took the board in, took control of the board last year. Paul Troy then became president. Bittman’s departure leaves Murray as the only member of the slate elected in 2023 left on the school board.

* WGN | Sixth water main break within a week affects more than half the residents in south suburban Dixmoor: Village President Fitzgerald Roberts said Sunday night he hoped repairs would be completed by midnight. WGN-TV has been awaiting confirmation from village officials Monday morning on whether the problem has been resolved. Between 800 and 1,000 homes have been impacted, according to officials, which is more than half the village.

* Shaw Local | Megalodome Golf launches $50 million investment fund to build domed golf course in Oswego: Canada-based Megalodome Golf has announced that it has launched a $50 million investment fund to build its nine-hole domed golf course near Route 30 in Oswego. The company made the announcement recently on its website. In September 2024, Oswego village trustees unanimously approved the concept plans of Megalodome Golf.

*** Downstate ***

* The Daily Illini | ‘Fell the enemies:’ Illini Republicans support ICE amid Minnesota killings: In a post that included a stylized graphic of a presumed federal officer holding a gun to someone’s head, Illini Republicans stated that they “stand with ICE” amid the killings of Renee Nicole Good and Alex Pretti in Minnesota. The RSO referred to Pretti and Good, two United States citizens who were both killed by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers in the past month, as “traitors.” As of Sunday, the group removed the graphic but kept the larger post, which garnered more than a thousand comments on their Instagram account.

* 25News Now | Suspect in Peoria County deputy’s shooting has been running from the law since 2024, court records say: “He faces a long recovery, but we are grateful that he is in stable condition,” the sheriff said. Formal charges have not been filed yet against Bell for the deputy’s shooting. He faces several preliminary charges including attempted murder, aggravated battery with a firearm, unlawful possession of a firearm by a felon, armed violence.

* WCIA | Woman robbed by men claiming to be U.S. Marshals in Decatur: Police: Hagemeyer said a female victim reported that two men had been knocking on doors in the hallway of the hotel she was staying in. She peered out the door and saw that they claimed to be U.S. Marshals. She went back into her room, but before she shut the door they forced their way into her hotel room. Hagemeyer said they flashed a badge at her and claimed to have a warrant out for her arrest. The two men dumped her purse out and stole money and her phone. They left on foot after that, Hagemeyer said.

* PJ Star | New details on how much money Peoria could gain from casino settlement: The city of Peoria estimates it could receive about $1.8 million annually as part of a settlement agreement with Boyd Gaming that will see Peoria drop its objections to plans for a new Par-A-Dice Casino. City Manager Patrick Urich told the Journal Star on Sunday that the settlement agreement, which will be voted on by the Peoria City Council on Monday, was being worked on by attorneys as late as Friday afternoon. The special council meeting was announced on Saturday.

* WGLT | After relocating one fire station, Normal will share internal data on response times: Normal IAFF Local 2442 has repeatedly claimed in town hall settings and at town council meetings that closing the College Avenue station would negatively impact response times and urged the council to keep it open after the new eastside station came online. Union members also claim certain populations of the town would be left vulnerable, including children and seniors.

* 25News Now | Thousands gather for Illinois Music Education Conference while boosting Peoria’s economy: More than 2,100 student musicians from over 215 schools across the state, along with about 10,000 family members, filled the civic center to showcase their talents. Since Thursday, students in grades four through 12 performed in concerts, danced, participated in other theatrical activities, while music teachers attended professional development workshops. Organizers said the event also gives a boost to Peoria businesses, pumping dollars into the local economy.

* WBEZ | The quiet, wintry thrill of a freezing Illinois canyon hike: Matthiessen, the lesser known of the two neighboring parks in this area, is named after the industrialist who operated it as a private, 176-acre “Deer Park” in the late 19th century. His crew constructed trails, bridges, stairways and dams that still stand. After his death, the land was bequeathed to the state, which added parcels to make up 2,000 acres today. It doesn’t boast its neighbor’s soaring views of the Illinois River, but the park does have a less trampled feel.

*** National ***

* CBS | Officials in Minnesota allege Bovino used language offensive to Jews on conference call: The call, which was held on Jan. 12, five days after the fatal shooting of Renee Good by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer in Minneapolis, involved multiple federal officials who were trying to coordinate a Saturday meeting to discuss issues related to the massive deployment of federal immigration agents in the area. Bovino was told on the call that Minnesota U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen, an Orthodox Jew, could not attend that meeting because he observes the Sabbath. Bovino allegedly responded with audible frustration that Rosen was not available for the Saturday meeting, sources familiar with the planning call said. One of them recounted that Bovino replied, “Do Orthodox criminals also take off on Saturday?” That source said Bovino also used the phrase “chosen people” in a disparaging manner.

* AP | Fundraising hauls show RNC vastly outpacing Democrats ahead of midterm elections: The Republican National Committee has vastly outpaced Democrats in the crush for cash ahead of the midterm elections, holding a nearly $100 million advantage at the close of 2025, according to year-end filings to the Federal Election Commission. As Democrats have struggled in the Trump era, the RNC tallied $172 million raised in 2025, with $95 million cash on hand at year’s end. In contrast, the Democratic National Committee posted $145 million for the year, with $14 million on hand — and $17 million in debt, to start the new year underwater.

* Fortune | Newly released emails and a Trump-ordered investigation have thrust billionaire LinkedIn cofounder Reid Hoffman into the Epstein firestorm: Bondi has attempted to further connect Hoffman to Epstein in the past. During her contentious Senate Judiciary Committee testimony on October 7, she repeatedly invoked Hoffman’s name when questioned about Epstein and Trump and called him “one of Epstein’s closest confidants.” Hoffman has repeatedly denied any such allegations. On November 14, Hoffman hit back, taking to X to demand “Trump should release all of the Epstein files: every person and every document in the files.” The LinkedIn co-founder accused Trump’s probe of being “nothing more than political persecution and slander” and claimed he was never a client of Epstein’s nor did he engage with him in any capacity other than fundraising.

* AP | From Elon Musk to the former Prince Andrew, a who’s who of powerful men are named in Epstein files: The billionaire Tesla founder turns up at least a few times in Friday’s document release, notably in email exchanges in 2012 and 2013 in which he discussed visiting Epstein’s infamous Caribbean island compound. But it’s not immediately clear if the island visits took place. Spokespersons for Musk’s companies, Tesla and X, didn’t respond to emails seeking comment Friday or Saturday.

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