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Energy Storage Can Minimize Price Spikes

Thursday, Nov 7, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Each month, families and businesses pay a capacity charge through their energy bill. It’s essentially an insurance policy that pays energy resources (or “capacity”) to be available for when the grid needs them most. Grid operators project a possible shortage of capacity in the coming years, which means the charge for this insurance policy will rise next year for many Illinoisans.

Batteries, or energy storage, are currently the best solution to minimize this price spike—but building them at the pace we need will require legislation. The added benefit is the ability to store cheap electricity for use when demand peaks during the day—lowering energy bills and making the grid more reliable.

Learn more about legislation that builds urgently needed energy storage here.

Paid for by Counterspark.

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Nov 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* MJ Biz Daily

A group of seven independent marijuana social equity transporters in Illinois filed a civil rights complaint against the state’s Department of Agriculture alleging that the office discriminated against them when it issued licenses to medical cannabis cultivation centers.

In a complaint filed in the 7th Judicial Circuit Court of Sangamon County – independent transporter licensees who don’t old other cannabis business license types – say they were supposed to be prioritized when Illinois launched its adult-use marijuana program in 2020 with the goal of creating diversity, equity and inclusion in the industry, said Amber Lengacher, founder and CEO of Colorado-based Purple Circle and a consultant who has been working with the plaintiffs on a pro bono basis.

But the Illinois Department of Agriculture issued licenses to established MMJ businesses that controlled at least 95% of the state’s $1.5 billion adult-use market in fiscal year 2023, Lengacher said.

By issuing transporter licenses to the established businesses, the Illinois agriculture department eliminated any reason those companies had to use third-party transporters.

* Background is here. Southwest Regional News

Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza has called on the Village of Orland Park to address its financial reporting delays. […]

The village has yet to submit its 2022 and 2023 audits. Pekau attributed the delays to changes in auditors and finance directors. […]

Pekau described the village’s audit as “clean” and accused Mendoza of selectively targeting Orland Park while many other governments remain delinquent in their reporting.

“Over 200 municipalities have not completed their 2023 audit, yet she decides to single out Orland Park to damage our residents. These actions are capricious and unacceptable,” Pekau said.

*** Statehouse News ***

* The Hill |Illinois governor on Trump win: ‘You come for my people, you come through me: Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker (D) held a press conference Thursday to discuss the aftermath of the election, issuing a warning that if anyone tries to “come for my people,” they will have to “come through me.” “People have often said that I’m a happy warrior, and I’ve always taken seriously my role as a happy warrior on behalf of this state. Even today, when I’m struggling with many of the difficult questions this election poses, my optimism for the future remains undiminished,” Pritzker said.

* WJBC | Gov. Pritzker declines to discuss future political plans after Presidential election: As Gov. JB Pritzker and other Democrats try to figure out what went wrong Election Day, he is trying to reassure Illinoisans who depend on his policies. “Casting a vote is making a wish for the future,” the governor said in Chicago Thursday, not hiding his surprise nor disappointment at Donald Trump’s victory. “Sometimes you live to see that wish fulfilled, and sometimes you must accept that your vote is a down payment on a house that you may wait a long time to finally live in.”

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s |Terry Duffy’s contract extended at CME Group through 2026:CME also said Chief Operating Officer Julie Holzrichter was stepping down to serve as an adviser to the company. Suzanne Sprague will succeed Holzrichter as COO and retain her role as global head of clearing. “We are very fortunate to have built such a strong, capable management team that will ensure a seamless transition as our company continues to move forward,” Duffy said in a statement.

* Sun-Times | Comcast credits for defunct NBC Sports Chicago could be good sign for Chicago Sports Network:No, the new home of the White Sox, Bulls and Blackhawks won’t appear where the defunct NBC Sports Chicago did on Xfinity systems just yet. But monthly credits are coming! “We are automatically applying a monthly credit to customers’ Regional Sports Network [RSN] fees because NBC Sports Chicago is no longer available,” a Comcast spokesperson said. “Customers are receiving emails and bill messages to inform them that no action is needed to get this credit.”

* Block Club | Jewish Students Punched, Pushed At DePaul In Possible Hate Crime, School Says:The two were injured but declined treatment, police said. They had been “visibly showing their support for Israel,” according to a letter from DePaul University President Robert L. Manuel. The attackers ran north afterward, officials said. One wore a white T-shirt with khaki pants, and the other wore a black hooded jacket and black pants. Both wore black masks.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald |Buffalo Grove pulling out of 20-year-old boundary agreement with Lincolnshire:When Buffalo Grove and Lincolnshire came to terms on a boundary agreement in 2005, they settled future territorial disputes over undeveloped land. Now Buffalo Grove officials say the agreement has served its purpose. The village board voted Monday to send notice to Lincolnshire allowing the agreement, which was set to expire this year, to terminate.

* Tribune | Glencoe voters approve home rule; Kenilworth, Northfield reject measure:Glencoe voters have said yes to two separate referendum questions in the Nov. 5 election, while Kenilworth and Northfield residents did not approve measures regarding their communities, according to unofficial results from the Cook County Clerk’s office. In Glencoe, nearly 63% of voters approved a switch to a home rule form of government, according to unofficial results. Any Illinois community with a population greater than 25,000 automatically receives home rule status. Communities such as Glencoe with population lower than 25,000 must ask residents for permission to adopt it.

* Daily Herald | Parents back Bartlett principal who was placed on leave:Parents at Centennial Elementary School in Bartlett are urging Elgin Area Unit District 46 school board members to bring their principal back. Last month, Matthew Palcer was placed on administrative leave, effective Oct. 28. In a brief statement last month, U-46 officials said Bill Doran, a retired principal from Algonquin-based Community Unit District 300, would provide “additional support at Centennial until further notice.” District officials have not indicated why Palcer, who has been the principal for more than three years, was placed on leave or how long he will remain on leave.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Four Central IL school referendums fail to pass in election:Four school referendums, Champaign County safety tax, and the tax levy for the Strides Shelter all failed. One thing these all had in common — besides one school proposal — is they would have increased taxes. It seems voters were feeling the economic strain, and it shaped the way they cast their ballot.

* WCIA | Springfield signs off on new coal supplier for power plan:At its meeting Tuesday night, Springfield City Council approved a contract with Foresight Coal Sales for $86,625,000. The contract will be set for four years.The coal will come from the company’s mine in Hillsboro. There will be a different contract written for the costs of hauling coal from Hillsboro to Springfield.

* Havest Public Media |Welcome to Morton, Illinois — the bite-sized town that produces a whole lot of canned pumpkin:On a cool and breezy fall morning, John Ackerman surveys a pumpkin field dotted by various shades of orange, white and yellow. He’s checking to see which are ready for picking. While the growing season started out a little too wet, it’s going to be a good harvest. “Normally, pumpkins like it relatively dry,” Ackerman said. “I’ve been amazed at how great this year was for pumpkins.”

*** National ***

* AP | CDC calls for expanded testing for bird flu after blood tests reveal more farmworker infections: Farmworkers in close contact with infected animals should be tested and offered treatment even if they show no symptoms, said Dr. Nirav Shah, principal director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The new guidance comes after blood tests for 115 farmworkers in Michigan and Colorado showed that eight workers — or 7% — had antibodies that indicated previous infection with the virus known as Type A H5N1 influenza.

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Uber’s Local Partnership = Stress-Free Travel For Paratransit Riders

Thursday, Nov 7, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The Pace Rideshare Access Program subsidizes Uber trips, leaving riders with a co-pay of just $2.

The impact: “This program has been a godsend for me. It offers flexibility, independence, freedom and the ability to maintain a beautiful life on so many levels,” says one rider.

CTA: See how it works.

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Pritzker points to down-ballot races as bright side for Democrats

Thursday, Nov 7, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* More from the governor’s Q and A today

In Illinois, in terms of [Donald Trump’s] margin, if you look just below that and all the way down the ballot in Illinois, Democrats won every seat in the General Assembly that it already had and and we won in races that I think people didn’t expect. County board races. Taking control of the McLean County Board, for example. Coroner’s races. Literally, if you look, people clearly bifurcated, you know, and made decisions different down the ballot than they did at the top of the ballot. And so I’m proud of that.

I think that’s a result of the policies that Democrats have had in Illinois and the approval of the voters about those. It’s a result of organizing the Democratic Party of Illinois, which was not organized a couple of years ago, right? It was almost moribund, if you go back two and a half years. And so a lot has been done to rebuild the scaffolding and the infrastructure of the party.

And remember that Republicans in Illinois were projecting that they would win five seats in the General Assembly, and, you know, they didn’t. And there were a lot of competitive races all across the state and Democrats fared very well.

The House Democrats were also predicting a four-five seat pickup. It’s still too early to make any declarations about either side picking up a seat (or two, in the Democrats’ case).

More on the McLean County Board races is here.

* The ILGOP reacted to Pritzker’s press conference this afternoon…

Pritzker Does Damage Control Amid Republican Shift in Illinois

CHICAGO — JB Pritzker might as well have announced his 2028 campaign for the Presidency in his deceptive media availability this morning. Kamala Harris had the worst showing of a candidate in Illinois in more than 30 years, and Democrats in the legislature did not grow their advantage despite outspending Republicans by millions personally supplied by the Governor.

Earlier this week, Pritzker touted sending hundreds of volunteers to swing states - states that subsequently rejected Pritzker-style government that has made Illinois one of the most fled states in the nation.

Republicans have established the party of hard working Americans, while Democrats have become the party of wealthy elites. It’s only fitting that they turn to another wealthy elite in 2028.

Governor Pritzker should do us all a favor and start his campaign now. We’ll be just fine without him.

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Trump won Cook County Jail’s precinct by two points (Updated)

Thursday, Nov 7, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Interesting

Trump won the 19th Precinct in the 24th Ward 594-572 (49%-47%), with 47 people voting for RFK, Jr. Four years ago, Joe Biden won that precinct with 96 percent of the vote, to Trump’s 3.

Chuy Garcia won it 767-255 with another 139 for Ed Hershey, the Working Class Party candidate.

The Democratic Cook County State’s Attorney candidate Eileen O’Neill Burke beat Republican Bob Fioretti 680-319 (61%-28%), with 124 people voting for Andrew Charles Kopinski, the Libertarian.

The statewide non-binding referendum for a tax on annual income over a million dollars to be used for property tax relief passed 68 percent to 32 percent.

And the Assisted Reproductive Healthcare Advisory Question passed 87 percent to 13 percent.

…Adding… Just a note to clarify that the jail doesn’t comprise the entire precinct. Some could get that impression from the headline.

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Government can’t fix everything

Thursday, Nov 7, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* More from Gov. Pritzker’s Q and A today

Q: Is there anything you can do to help all the Black Hawks and Bulls fans who pay millions to Comcast and aren’t getting anything for their money because they can’t watch, you know, sports at night? Is there something, you know, the state could do to help these consumers?

Pritzker: I haven’t been asked to be involved in that by any of the parties that you’re referring to, and so I don’t know if there are, you know… they should make themselves known if that’s the case. But the fact is that private businesses, other than the normal things that government can do to support private businesses, which we do, you know, want to be able to manage their own futures together. I also would like to be able to access these things more easily [chuckles], but it’s very difficult…

One thing they could do for now is buy a TV antenna.

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Governor Pritzker on a third term, veto session, budget forecast, federal grants

Thursday, Nov 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Gov. Pritzker was asked today about what’s next for him politically

Mary Ann Ahern: What’s next for you? Third term? Run for president? What’s the plan?

Governor Pritzker: As you know, the work that I do now as governor is work that I love doing. And there is in the wake of the Tuesday election, I think back to my first days in office, my first two years in office, where Donald Trump was president and we had to defend Illinois against an awful lot of policies that the Trump administration was imposing, that we needed to make sure we were addressing.

And so I think that work is going to continue. And I don’t have anything to announce today, but I promise you, Mary Ann, you’ll be among the first to know if I have something to announce about running for reelection, and I have no plans for anything else.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

* The governor was asked about his veto session agenda

Tribune Reporter Jeremy Gorner: Are there any state laws on the books now that you think warrant some kind of review to see as a precaution, to see if they need to be strengthened, that perhaps could be taken up in veto session or lame duck in light of any possible federal action the Trump administration may take against them.

Governor Pritzker: Thank you for asking the question, It’s an extraordinarily relevant question. As you can imagine in months past and indeed, over years past, we’ve thought a lot about what happens if the administration in Washington changes. If the tone changes, would that have a negative effect on Illinois? And how do we shore up and make sure we’re protecting people here? So we’ve done a lot of work on that, and I think you’ve seen that in some of the bills that were passed in the last session and the session before. And even over the summer as we thought about what more needs to be done.

Yesterday, I had a meeting with my senior staff to talk about exactly this. Indeed, I talked to some other governors around the country about the things that they’re looking at doing. And so we’re gathering, I would call it, a list of things that we may need to address, maybe not during a veto session, but maybe [it] can be done in the new year.

There is time to do that, but, but suffice to say that we have a lot of work that that we’re looking at doing, but I feel like a lot of that work has been done over the last five and a half years to protect the people of Illinois from something terrible happening at the federal level or some attack on Illinois residents.

Gorner: Any specific topic areas?

Pritzker: You can imagine what all the- health care, reproductive rights, you can go down the list of, you know, there are areas where I think you can imagine the people who woke up on Wednesday morning and saw the results they didn’t already see them on Tuesday night. And there are many people whose lives and livelihoods are at risk, and there are many people who cried at the result because they know what impact it may have on their families. So think about that.

* Background is here if you need it. Regarding the budget…

Reporter: I want to ask about the GOMB report from last week, the office saying that there could be a $3 billion deficit without some changes. How are you thinking about filling that and is income tax, or other kind of personal tax on the table for this upcoming year?

Governor: The General Assembly and I have balanced the budget every year. When I came into office the projections were that everything was going to go south immediately and we wouldn’t be able to recover from it. We balanced the budget every year. Indeed, we ran surpluses.

So we’re going to balance the budget again. This is a forecast that’s made every year, looking five years forward, assuming no changes in any laws. Forget about revenue, It’s just generally no changes in law, no changes in efficiencies, etc. It’s a kind of a flat projection forecast and it’s been wrong every year. I guess you might say or, you know, we’ve defeated it, you know, every year and so. So I think we’re going to submit abudget to the General Assembly. I know I’m going to submit a budget to the General Assembly in February, like I have every year over the past six years, and it’ll be balanced.

* On to federal grants

Reporter: What should state do if Trump withholds federal funding for police grants, he goes through the mass deportations?

Pritzker: To the extent that these things are nonpartisan grants that are decided by independent groups within the agencies, which happens for most grants. It would be illegal for the Trump administration to stop those grants from flowing, and so we would take action if we saw that happen. trying to think about any other grant related stuff-

Reporter: He claims that he would survive legal challenges.

Pritzker: I don’t know what to say, except that that it would be illegal if he did it and and I presume that the courts would find it so. We certainly would take action and work with our attorney general to do so.

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Madigan corruption trial roundup: Jury views undercover videos

Thursday, Nov 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

Federal jurors Wednesday heard Michael J. Madigan’s allies talking on secret FBI recordings about an “old-fashioned patronage system,” the need to keep Madigan “happy” in Springfield and how it’s unwise to “put anything in writing” because “all that can do is hurt ya.”

All told, prosecutors spent their day playing more than a dozen recordings in the corruption trial of Madigan, Illinois’ former longtime House speaker. Former ComEd executive Fidel Marquez, who wore a wire for the FBI in 2019, continued to occupy the witness stand.

Jurors saw their first undercover video recordings since testimony began. Included were some of the most prominent recordings from 2023’s ComEd bribery trial, and Marquez’s testimony mirrored the comments he delivered then.

Jurors saw grainy video of Madigan ally Michael McClain meeting inside Saputo’s restaurant, a well-known Springfield haunt where “Higher and Higher” by Jackie Wilson could be heard in the background. They also saw then-City Club President Jay Doherty hold up four fingers to signal that former 13th Ward Ald. Frank Olivo was being paid $4,000 a month by ComEd.

* Capitol News Illinois

Earlier in their conversation, McClain affirmed Marquez’s concern that Dominguez may view Doherty’s contract through the lens of his former job as a federal prosecutor and start asking questions. In that case, McClain said, Marquez should explain how valuable the subcontractors were to Madigan’s political organization, adding that the arrangement was a “favor.”

McClain also explained that by using Doherty’s contract to pay the Madigan allies, ComEd had insulation from any federal tax investigation “if the IRS ever comes in and says, ‘Who are these guys and what do they do?’”

“It’s Doherty’s contract, so Doherty’s the one that has to – has to prove that,” he said.

McClain then offered to talk to Dominguez himself. After initially declining the help because the matter was internal to ComEd and McClain’s involvement might be seen as “inappropriate,” Marquez invited McClain to a meeting with Dominguez and Hooker in early March 2019.

* Courthouse News

In another February 2019 meeting Marquez recorded with McClain and Hooker, Marquez floated the possibility that Dominguez, a former federal prosecutor, would reject the arrangement ComEd reached with Doherty and Madigan’s Chicago associates.

Hooker warned that Madigan — whom Marquez referred to as “our friend” in the video — may not be so supportive of the energy company’s work in Springfield if that was the case.

“You’re not going to do it? You’re not going to do something for me, I don’t have to do anything for you,” Hooker imagined the then-speaker might think.

As it turned out, the worry was unfounded. Marquez and McClain spoke with Dominguez in early March 2019, and when Marquez breached the issue, Dominguez was amenable to maintaining the arrangement with Doherty and the Chicago subcontractors. He said lobbyists often seem like they’re doing nothing until “the magic moment,” and agreed with Marquez that in that moment they may be worth “a hundred times” what they’re being paid.

* Tribune

The meeting recorded by Marquez in Doherty’s downtown office took place a little over a month after he’d agreed to cooperate with the FBI. As a pretense for the discussion, Marquez said he needed guidance on what to tell incoming ComEd CEO Joseph Dominguez about the off-the-books subcontractor arrangement.

Doherty, who on the video appears pink-faced and jovial, explained to Marquez repeatedly that the subcontractors — who included precinct captains Ray Nice and Ed Moody and former 23rd Ward Ald. Michael Zalewski — did basically nothing. He rarely even communicated with them, he said.

“They keep their mouth shut,” he said. “But do they, do they do anything for me on a day-to-day basis? No.”

But, Doherty said, it was important to keep the arrangement going in order to maintain good relations with Madigan, Doherty said on the video.

“To keep Mike Madigan happy, I think it’s worth it,” he said. “I don’t think I’d tinker with that.”

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It’s just a bill

Thursday, Nov 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WTTW

There’s no constitutional prohibition against someone with a felony record running for or serving as president of the United States.

But in Illinois, anyone with a felony conviction is barred from holding local elected office.

State Rep. La Shawn Ford (D-Chicago) is pressing for Illinois to lift the restriction, so Betts-Gaston and others with felony convictions can run to serve in an elected municipal role. […]

Ford is pressing for Illinois to lift the restriction (via House Bill 5904) so Betts-Gaston and others with felony convictions have the opportunity to run to serve in an elected municipal role.

Ford said his effort is not meant to undo a 2023 law (HB351 / Public Act 10 3-0562) that deems individuals ineligible to hold state office if they commit a felony or “infamous crime” like bribery while serving as a public official.

* Rep. Sonya Harper filed HB5903 yesterday

Amends the Illinois Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act. Provides that, notwithstanding any other provision of law, a food, food ingredient, dietary supplement, cosmetic, or other consumer product shall not be considered adulterated solely because it contains hemp, hemp-derived cannabinoids, including, but not limited to, Delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), Delta-8 THC, tetrahydrocannabinolic acid (THCa), or any hemp product, provided that the hemp used in the product complies with the definition of “hemp” as specified in federal law. Amends the Industrial Hemp Act. Conforms several provisions in the Act to federal regulations under the Domestic Hemp Production Program, including (i) definitions, (ii) requirements for the application for a license to cultivate hemp, and (iii) rulemaking requirements for the Department of Agriculture. Provides that the Department of Agriculture shall adopt rules for the distribution and retail sale of hemp products under conditions in specified provisions of the Act. Provides that hemp products that contain cannabinoids, that are intended for human consumption, and that are designated for retail sale within Illinois (i) must meet specified requirements, including federal requirements and rules adopted by the Department of Public Health, and (ii) must be distributed or sold in a container that includes specified information. Provides that hemp products that are intended for inhalation or ingestion and contain detectable amounts of hemp cannabinoids may not be sold in this State to a person who is under 21 years of age. Provides that hemp products distributed or sold in violation of specified provisions in the Act shall be considered adulterated or misbranded pursuant to the Illinois Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act and all other applicable State laws. Defines terms. Makes technical changes.

* Center Square

Legislation to address Illinois’ Tier II pension benefits to conform with Social Security limits has been discussed for months. State Sen. Robert Martwick, D-Chicago, told the Better Government Association that’s a tall order to tackle.

“Well it’s like, ‘oh, we can get it done.’ There’s an election in November. ‘OK, so after the election,’ well no, then we’ll be at veto and you can’t really do it while you’re there so we’ll get past veto and then we’ll start working on it,” Martwick said Oct. 15. “‘Oh wait, that next week is Thanksgiving and then it’s Thanksgiving to Christmas and we can work on it after Christmas before New Year’s.’ We’re supposed to be in lame duck in early January. So, there’s not a lot of time.” […]

One thing that could come up are changes to oversight of the film tax credit, Illinois Film Office Deputy Director Peter Hawley told the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules.

“We saw some potential bad actors taking advantage of the program so we put this rule in place,” Hawley told JCAR Oct. 1. “Our rule included caps on above the line salary and caps to related party transactions.”

* HB5896 from Rep. Curtis Tarver

Amends the State Finance Act. Provides that, beginning in 2025, the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget shall, at the time set forth for the submission of the State budget under the State Budget Law, provide to the Chairperson and the Minority Spokesperson of each of the appropriations committees of the House of Representatives and the Senate, as well as to the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability, a report of (i) all full fiscal year transfers made among line-item appropriations under a specified provision of the Act in the previous fiscal year and during the current fiscal year to date, and (ii) all projected full fiscal year transfers to be made among line-item appropriations under that provision for the remainder of the current fiscal year and the next fiscal year, based on estimates prepared by the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget. Provides that the report shall include a detailed summary of estimates upon which projected line-item transfers are based. Effective immediately.

* The Tribunelast week

Armed with signs of blown-up checks of billionaire investments in Chicago’s upcoming school board elections, aldermen, congressmen and parents gathered outside the Illinois Network of Charter Schools office Monday morning to denounce large donations made by out-of-state billionaires and introduce a proposal for campaign finance reform.

Legislators fought for years to draft legislation to create an elected school board, but “there were many things that were sort of left on the table,” said state Sen. Robert Martwick. He called for legislative hearings to look at “different models of campaign finance reform.”

“We owe it as legislators … to fine-tune this to make sure that the people of Chicago get what they bargained for and that the process is not corrupted by outside donors,” Martwick said.

But finance experts say any proposed campaign finance reform legislation wouldn’t affect the school board election, in the short or long term. Illinois has a unique rule that funding caps can be lifted when campaign contributions — through self-contributions or independent expenditures — add up to more than $100,000 during an election cycle.

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Open thread

Thursday, Nov 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Nov 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Political operative charged with sending sexually explicit images to 2nd legislator. WGN

    - Timothy Pawula was charged in May with sending obscene and harassing messages to a rival of his boss, then State Rep. Tim Ozinga.
    -State Rep. Bob Rita (D-Blue Island) tells WGN Investigates he received fabricated graphic images that were made to appear as though he was in a sexually explicit situation with an elected official in Tinley Park.
    - Rita said he believes he was targeted by Pawula because of his opposition to a proposed race track and casino in Tinley Park.
    - Pawula is due in court on the new charges on Thursday.

Governor Pritzker will hold a press availability at 10:00 am. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Daily Egyptian | Late results show tie for States Attorney race: Jackson County election results released early Wednesday morning show state’s attorney candidates Joseph Cervantez and Marsha Cascio-Hale tied with exactly 10,805 votes each. […] Cascio-Hale said she was proud of her campaign’s accomplishments, watching Cervantez’s lead shrink but not willing to draw any conclusions at her results watch party.

* Shaw Local | More than 1,600 mail-in ballots uncounted in counties that take in Briel-Bishop state rep. race: The race for state Rep. Lance Yednock’s seat is not over. Democrat Amy “Murri” Briel holds a lead over challenger Liz Bishop with as many as 1,700 mail-in ballots yet to be counted. Briel held a 505-vote lead after all precincts were counted in La Salle, Bureau and DeKalb counties in the race to fill Yednock’s seat in the Illinois House. Briel has 23,459 votes, and Republican challenger Bishop has 22,954 votes in unofficial results.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Sun-Times | Trump’s win doesn’t help Illinois Republicans’ numbers in Springfield — but GOP touts ‘massive strides’: The national red wave that sent former President Donald Trump back to the White House didn’t help Illinois Republicans gain significant ground — if any — in Democratic-controlled Springfield on election night. But a day after the polls closed, state GOP leaders on Wednesday celebrated “major strides” illustrated by Trump’s stronger showing in Illinois, which they say portends a turn of fortune for a party still relegated to superminority status in the General Assembly.

* Sun-Times | Immigrant advocates and Illinois legislators process Trump’s election – plan for resistance: State Sen. Celina Villanueva woke up Wednesday with the same painful feeling she had eight years ago when Donald J. Trump was first elected — a deep worry for the immigrant communities feeling stressed that Trump has been reelected to a second term. She has a message of hope and resistance for the people feeling vulnerable at the prospect of a new Trump administration that has promised mass deportations of undocumented immigrants. “In 2016, we thought that we were all going to be gone — and we’re still here,” Villanueva said.

*** Statewide ***

* WAND | Election 2024: Illinois could see voter turnout reach 68%, miss 2020 record of 73%: The Illinois State Board of Elections expects to see a final voter turnout of 68% for the 2024 presidential election. A significant amount of Illinoisans chose to vote early rather than wait in line on Election Day. Illinois broke a record in 2020 with 73% of registered voters casting ballots. While state leaders say it’s unlikely we’ll see that number this year, there is a lot of optimism from early voting.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Aldermen rip Mayor Brandon Johnson’s 2025 property tax hike proposal as budget hearings kick off: Desperate to avoid hitting Chicago home and business owners with a $300 million property tax increase, aldermen pelted the mayor’s finance team Wednesday with questions about alternatives to plug the 2025 budget hole. Their pitches on the opening day of budget hearings ran the gamut from furlough days for city workers to cutting middle managers or halting programs funded with federal American Rescue Plan Act dollars.

* Crain’s | City Council fights Johnson on property tax hike as budget negotiations begin: The administration also decided to play prevent-defense on an option floated by a few Johnson allies to reduce the property tax by canceling, or chipping away at, a proposed $272 million advance pension payment. The amount is above the $2.9 billion required by state statute to gradually climb the ramp to adequately funding the city’s four beleaguered pension funds. The total increase to the city’s property tax levy will be $345 million, Budget Director Annette Guzman told the committee. Every year the city receives an increase to the levy through new properties coming online, accounting for the extra $45 million above the $300 million increase to the base levy.

* Block Club | Here’s How Your Neighborhood Voted In The 2024 Presidential Election (MAP): Chicago, long a stronghold for Democrats and the host site of the Democratic National Convention, remained largely blue in the election, with Harris claiming about 77 percent of the vote, according to early results. Joe Biden won 82 percent in 2020 when he was elected president. There were pockets of the city that leaned Republican in 2024 and, overall, Trump got about 22 percent of Chicago’s vote, according to early results.

* Sun-Times | Prohibition finally ends in small pocket of Lincoln Square as voters overturn 117-year-old alcohol ban: Nearly 85% of the votes cast (285 of 336) on the referendum in the 9th precinct of the 47th ward voted “No” on the question of whether to keep the prohibition of liquor sales in Tuesday’s general election. The ban, which had been in place since 1907, impacted a small patch of the North Side neighborhood. It was bounded by Lincoln Avenue to the west, Sunnyside Avenue to the north, Damen Avenue to the east and Montrose Avenue to the south.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Injustice Watch | Powerful Cook County judge referred to judicial misconduct board over residency conflicts: Embattled Cook County Judge E. Kenneth Wright was referred to a state disciplinary board on Wednesday by the chief judge after an Injustice Watch investigation found he took inappropriate homestead and senior tax exemptions on a house he owned in Will County. Wright, 83, will retain his powerful position as presiding judge of Cook County’s first municipal district while the Illinois Judicial Inquiry Board investigates. Meanwhile, Wright faces another challenge from voters in Tuesday’s judicial retention vote. As of Wednesday his vote total only narrowly exceeds the threshold of 60%, with thousands of votes left to count.

* WGN | ‘Just like Trump’: Henyard predicts landslide mayoral victory as trustees reject police chief pick during village board meeting: Trustees also said the village is so low on funds that some departments can’t even afford office supplies, like printer paper. Trustees agreed to return three luxury SUVs leased for Henyard’s use, which WGN Investigates revealed cost residents more than $374,000, but Henyard vowed to veto the decision.

* Daily Herald | How to spend $304.5 million?: Lake County forest preserves, Mundelein High School preparing for big to-do lists: Forest preserves use is 30% higher than before the pandemic and residents have come to enjoy the benefits of natural areas and were inclined to invest in nature, supporters said. “People have deepened their connection,” said Rebekah Snyder, director of community engagement and partnerships. The bang for the buck also was palatable, with the owner of a home valued at $300,000 paying an extra $33 per year at most.

* Naperville Sun | Referendum results show trust in Indian Prairie School District 204, superintendent says: Unofficial results from DuPage and Will counties show voters in Tuesday’s general election were widely in favor of Indian Prairie School District 204’s proposal to sell $420 million in bonds to improve its facilities, and district Superintendent Adrian Talley said these results show voters’ trust and belief in the school system. “It reflects that they believe in us and what we are doing, and believe that we are good stewards of the funding that they give us,” he told The Beacon-News on Wednesday.

*** Downstate ***

* WAND | Illinois State Board of Elections provides insight on issues with Champaign County election: The board said an outage reported by Platinum Technology, a voter registration system vendor, kept officials from distributing ballots in Champaign County. Platinum Technology is used in 27 other counties in the state. However, the polling set-up in Champaign County was unique, said Matt Dietrich with the Illinois State Board of Elections. “Rather than having pre-printed ballots that are handed out, Champaign county was relying on a system where every voter comes and checks in, the ballot is printed specifically for them, for their precinct, and then they voted. What happened was, the voter registration data that they needed to generate those ballots, was locked up because of problems with their vendor.”

* WCIA | ‘I’ll give it a B’: Champaign Co. Clerk reflects, apologizes and plans for next Election Day: Another headache was the network outage with their third-party “Platinum” service in the morning. “I apologize, because although I don’t have any control over the server and that situation, it is my decision to go with a particular vendor,” Ammons said. “As we move forward, we will re-evaluate some of those things, so I take responsibility for that.”

* WAND | Piatt county votes in favor of mental health referendum: The Executive Director of the Piatt County Mental Health Center, Tony Kirkman, told WAND News in October, this will help address the treatment shortage in Piatt County, “In Piatt County, we have roughly 16,000 individuals and we only have about 8 or 9 licensed professionals in the county. So, for many, many years, there was a treatment shortage and we’re now trying to protect what we already have here in place.”

* WCIA | Resigned Shelby County Board members win election for old seats: According to unofficial results posted on the Shelby County Clerk’s website, former Shelby County Board Chair Robert Orman and Vice Chair Mark Bennett won their races for their seats. They beat Guy Michael Anderson and James Caputo respectively. Orman and Bennett resigned in October. In their resignations, they criticized the board for not following the rules and policies.

*** National ***


* AP | USDA bans school lunch fees for low-income families: School districts currently work with processing companies to offer cashless payment systems for families. But the companies can charge “processing fees” for each transaction. By law, students who are eligible for reduced price meals cannot be charged more than 30 cents for breakfast and 40 cents for lunch. With processing fees, however, families can end up paying 10 times that amount. Processing companies charge as much as $3.25 or 4% to 5% per transaction, according to a recent report from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Thursday, Nov 7, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Thursday, Nov 7, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Thursday, Nov 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Thursday, Nov 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Pritzker, Stratton, Think Big, Giannoulias respond to national election results

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Pritzker…

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker has released the following statement on the results of the 2024 Presidential election:

“Today, I stand with the millions of Americans who voted for our Democratic values in this election. It is clear now that, nationally, a majority of those who came to the polls chose a different path, and President-elect Trump and Vice President-elect Vance won the election. I want to thank Vice President Kamala Harris, Governor Tim Walz, their team, and the hundreds of thousands of volunteers who put their heart and soul into the campaign.

“This morning, our most vulnerable communities woke up to new uncertainty about their future, scared that their rights will no longer be protected, and unsure whether this nation still stands with them. To women whose healthcare is under even greater threat, to our Black, Brown and AAPI communities, our LGBTQ friends and their families, immigrants and first-generation Americans, our most vulnerable Americans and those with disabilities, to all who have been made to feel unsafe and unwelcome by the Trump campaign and its allies - know that Illinois is your ally. You will always be welcome here.

“In 2017, I sought public office in large part because of the threat Donald Trump and his allies posed to Illinois, and as governor, I have helped enshrine into state law protections that uphold our common Illinois values. That work will continue, and it remains my north star. I will always strive to do what is best for the people of Illinois. When that means working with the next presidential administration that is what I will do, and when that means standing up to it, I believe my record is clear on where I’ll be.”

* Lt. Gov. Stratton…

“I am immensely proud of the campaign Vice President Kamala Harris launched only a few months ago for President of the United States. She is a highly qualified and dedicated public servant, and it was my honor to campaign for her throughout Illinois and in battleground states, sharing her vision of a joyful, brighter future for America.

“Needless to say, I am not only grieving the outcome, but my heart also aches for so many of our constituents who are terrified about what the future holds for them. The fear and heartbreak now washing over our country are signs that our souls are still alive. I’m especially energized by the hard work done by the Democratic Party of Illinois in engaging volunteers and activating voters. This is what democracy looks like and it is a testament to the infrastructure we are building in our state to continue the good work of preserving our freedoms, uplifting working families, and protecting the values we hold so dear.

“To every Illinoisan who is mourning the outcome of this election, do not try to wash away your pain; let it transform into the motivation we need to realize an America that does not idolize hate but uplifts its people. Today we mourn; tomorrow, we show up again. Because as Madam Vice President said, “The fight for our country is always worth it.”

* Christina Amestoy at the governor’s Think Big America, which was active in 10 states where abortion rights were on the ballot. They won in 7. Click here for background…

“Last night, in red, blue, and purple states, Americans rejected efforts to rip away women’s rights and affirmed that abortion access must be protected. Think Big America and its founder Gov. JB Pritzker are proud to have supported the successful efforts in Arizona, Maryland, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, and New York to ensure that millions of women can freely exercise their fundamental right to reproductive freedom.

“But our work is far from over. Abortion bans are still in effect in too many states - including Florida where an overwhelming majority of voters supported restoring access - and women’s rights are about to face unprecedented attacks under Donald Trump and his MAGA allies. We know the fight for reproductive freedom is just beginning and we will not stop until abortion access is guaranteed for every woman, regardless of zip code.”

* Secretary Giannoulias…


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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol City Now

It will be a couple of weeks before all the votes in Sangamon County are accounted for. That leaves a couple of close county races in a holding pattern. […]

“We still have work to do,” said Sangamon County Clerk Don Gray. “Any mail-in ballots postmarked by Nov. 5 along with any provisional ballots, will be qualified and added to the final result on Nov. 19.” This additional period allows time for mail-in ballots to arrive and for provisional ballots cast at polling places to be verified.

Currently, there are about 3,510 mail-in ballots that could still come in, though not all will necessarily count. Time will actually tell how many will be received and how many will be qualified. To be valid, the ballots must meet postmark and receipt requirements. Gray said all verified votes will be added on Nov. 19.

The election authority has until Nov. 26 to compile reports so the election can be certified and official results provided to the State Board of Elections. At that point, Gray said, candidates in close races will have a five-day window to request a discovery recount if the margin is less than 5%.

* WICS

Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias announced a series of REAL ID enrollment “pop-up” events at central Illinois airports throughout the month of November, encouraging residents to “Get Real” prior to the federal deadline.

Effective May 7, 2025, the Department of Homeland Security will require airline passengers to present a REAL ID to board a domestic flight or enter federal buildings such as military bases and federal courts. […]

The REAL ID “pop-up” events will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the following airports:

    Wednesday Nov. 6 at Central Illinois Regional Airport
    3201 Cira Drive, Bloomington, IL 61704
    Thursday Nov. 7 at Quincy Airport
    1645 Highway 104, Quincy, IL 62305
    Thursday Nov. 14 at Peoria International Airport
    6100 West Everett McKinley Dirksen Parkway, Peoria, IL 61607
    Thursday Nov. 21 at Abraham Lincoln Capital Airport
    1200 Capital Airport Drive, Springfield, IL 62707

The events will offer REAL ID applications, driver’s license renewals and vehicle registration renewals. Appointments for the events are not required but can be made by emailing publicengagement@ilsos.gov.

*** Election News ***

* Tribune | With 17 races up for election, Illinois Democrats keep a lock on majority of state’s congressional seats: With Republicans winning back the White House and the U.S. Senate on Tuesday and the final balance of power in the House still unclear, Illinois Democrats successfully defended their 14-3 dominance over the GOP in the state’s congressional delegation. In the state’s most closely watched race, first-term Democratic Rep. Eric Sorensen fended off a challenge from Republican Joe McGraw in the 17th Congressional District, a sprawling territory that spans 14 counties and melds Democratic-leaning areas such as Rockford, the Illinois half of the Quad Cities, Peoria and Bloomington-Normal by running through vast expanses of farmland and ruby-red rural communities.

* Tribune | Illinois advisory questions on ‘millionaire’s tax,’ IVF coverage pass easily: Illinois voters on Tuesday overwhelmingly approved three advisory questions put on the ballot by Democrats, including one asking whether the highest earners should be taxed to fund property tax relief, according to unofficial results from The Associated Press. Former Gov. Pat Quinn, chair of the committee that backs a so-called millionaires’ tax, in a statement Tuesday said the provisions proposed in the referendum question would provide “the largest property tax relief measure in state history.”

* The Telegraph | Amy Elik secures third term in Illinois District 111 race: Unofficial results from Madison County show that Elik received 29,840 votes (61.58%), while Raftopoulos received 18,621 votes (38.42%). “I am incredibly honored and grateful to the people of the 111th district for placing their trust in me once again,” Elik said in a statement. “To every supporter, volunteer, friend, and family member who stood by us — thank you. I’m excited to keep fighting to lower the cost of living, bring fiscal responsibility to state government, and hold the majority accountable. Let’s get to work!”

* Tribune | Niles won’t separate into districts, its trustees will continue to represent the whole town after voters appear to reject districts referendum: Niles voters said “no” to the referendum question that asked, “Shall the Village of Niles be divided into 6 districts with one Trustee elected from each district…?” As of late-evening on election night, 70% of voters responded “No” to the binding referendum, according to unofficial results by the Cook County Clerk’s office from the election Tuesday night.

* Beacon-News | Kane County Forest Preserve District in ‘growth phase’ after voters appear to approve tax hike: Unofficial results on Wednesday showed that 58.59% voted in favor of the tax increase while 41.41% voted against it. Numbers are expected to change somewhat as vote-by-mail and provisional ballots are counted. The property tax increase is expected to be around $10 per $100,000 of home value, which comes to about $3 per month for the average Kane County property owner, according to the district’s webpage on the referendum. From that increase, the district would receive around $6.9 million next year, district staff previously said.

* WCIA | Mahomet-Seymour rejects school district bond proposal: The Mahomet-Seymour community has voted to reject a $112,800,000 bond proposition to pay for the cost of school improvements. It failed with 54% of the community voting to reject the measure. If the measure had passed, the money would have been used to build an elementary school building, to replace the existing Mahomet-Seymour Junior High School building, to repair the Lincoln Trail Elementary School building and to improve school sites.

* Block Club | Voters Say Yes To Free Mental Health Clinics In Englewood, Chatham And Southwest Side: Neighbors in these areas voted on a two-part binding referendum, which, unlike non-binding referendums, requires action. The first question asked if a taxpayer-funded program should be created to offer free mental health services in the Englewood and Greater Chatham area or on the Near Southwest Side. That question asked if neighbors would support funding the programs by raising property taxes up to .025 percent for properties within the area.

*** Madigan Trial ***

* Tribune | ‘Don’t put anything in writing’: Jury views undercover videos in Madigan corruption trial: The videos, taken by then-ComEd Vice President Fidel Marquez over a period of weeks in early 2019, go to the heart of the corruption charges against Madigan and Michael McClain, a former lobbyist who allegedly acted as a conduit between Madigan and ComEd, helping funnel a total of $1.3 million to a handful of the speaker’s loyalists from 2011 to 2019 for little or no work.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Felon charged with killing Chicago Police Officer Enrique Martinez: Darion McMillian, 23, from Harvey, faces felony charges of first-degree murder and attempted murder in the shooting Monday night in the 8000 block of South Ingleside Avenue, Police Supt. Larry Snelling announced Wednesday. McMillian also faces felony counts of burglary, possessing a machine gun and possessing a gun as a felon.

* Crain’s | New UIC center will explore how climate change is hurting Chicago’s neighborhoods: UIC’s Center for Climate & Health Equity will receive $4 million over three years from the National Institutes of Health for the work. The center is one of 21 centers nationwide being funded by NIH’s Climate Change & Health Initiative, UIC said in a press release.

* Laura Washington | Washington Park is a palette of Black life in Chicago. I’ll see you there: It’s a good day for a stroll in Washington Park. That is my park, or so I thought and dreamed when I was just a tyke. You can take that walk in a new book by South Side photographer Rose Blouin, “To Washington Park, With Love.” Released recently by Haymarket Books, it presents Blouin’s massive body of work from the summer of 1987, when she visited the park on Chicago’s South Side every weekend to shoot powerful black-and-white images of its people, places and events.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Crain’s | Metra announces schedule for holiday trains: Metra’s special holiday-themed trains will return beginning on Nov. 30 across six lines. The $5 tickets for the experience go on sale beginning at noon on Nov. 11. The special holiday trains will run on Saturdays. All trains will be decorated for the holidays and feature holiday characters on board.

* Crain’s | Lifeway Foods rejects takeover worth over $280 million: Lifeway Foods, maker of kefir and fermented probiotic products, rejected a takeover offer by the multinational food-products company Danone. The Morton Grove-based company announced that its board of directors rejected the “unsolicited offer” to acquire all remaining shares of the company for $25 per share in a deal worth around $283 million. Danone, a longtime shareholder in Lifeway, owns around 23% of its shares.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | Belleville strengthens ordinance that prohibits homeless people from camping in public: Such camping was formerly prohibited by a one-paragraph section of an ordinance that governs “offenses against public peace and safety.” On Monday night, aldermen voted 16-0 to amend and expand it. The ordinance now includes a more detailed, four-page policy, including a formal process by which officials can remove tents, sleeping bags and other personal property from illegal camps.

* WSIL | Judge found dead with apparent gunshot wound in southern Illinois: According to the coroner, Judge Valentine was found dead at his home in Albion, Illinois, with an apparent gunshot wound. No other details are available right now, and the incident remains under investigation by Illinois State Police.

*** National ***

* Tribune | ‘Join or Die’ review: A documentary about why you should join a club — and why these social bonds are essential to democracy: If you’ve been feeling depleted and disconnected from a world of diminished meaningful in-person interactions, “Join or Die” explores one reason why, as laid out by social scientist Robert Putnam. Collectively, we’re less involved in organized gatherings. There are all kinds of reasons for that, but it’s a fundamental shift that’s affected our quality of life, because the social bonds that result when you join a club or organization are not just a matter of “warm, cuddly feelings,” Putnam says in the film. “In area after area of our community life, our communities don’t work as well when we’re not connected.” And that, he says, has far-reaching effects not only on us as individuals, but on democracy itself.

* Crain’s | Cannabis stocks wilt as Florida legalization fails: Shares in Green Thumb Industries, generally the industry’s best-performing stock, opened at a 52-week low before recovering slightly. The stock was down about 18% in mid-morning trading at $8.64. Verano Holdings and Cresco Labs were hit even harder. Verano shares plunged 24% to $2.44, and Cresco’s stock was down 23% to $1.17 per share.

* AP | Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani has surgery to repair labrum tear in shoulder after World Series injury: The Dodgers say the Japanese two-way player is expected to be ready for spring training in February. Ohtani injured his nonthrowing shoulder while sliding into second base on a stolen base attempt, which resulted in a shoulder dislocation. He returned to play the next three games, helping the Dodgers beat the Yankees in five games to win the championship.

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Voters in Harmon’s and Welch’s townships say they want a statewide independent redistricting commission

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Senate President Don Harmon is the Democratic committeeperson for Oak Park Township, and House Speaker Chris Welch is the Democratic committeeperson for Proviso Township, so this is kinda interesting…

Oak Park & Proviso voters demand Fair Maps

Illinois—This election, voters in Oak Park and Proviso townships showed overwhelming support for ending gerrymandering in Illinois. In both townships, voters weighed in on a non-binding referendum question that asked whether or not they wanted an independent redistricting commission to draw legislative and congressional maps. In Oak Park Township 81% of voters said yes to Fair Maps and in Proviso Township 73% of voters said yes to Fair Maps!

These results follow 74% of voters in Peoria showing their support for Fair Maps in the 2022 General Election.

“Year after year, voters in Illinois continue to reaffirm that we need Fair Maps that are community-based and driven by everyday folks, not by the people that stand to benefit from choosing their voters,” said DuShaun Branch, the community organizing director at CHANGE Illinois.

With the support of local groups, such as the League of Women Voters in Oak Park, and everyday people organizing in the community, the record is clear that Illinoisans want to see power restored to the people as it has been done in other states such as California and Michigan. “This was a truly grassroots, community-led effort that gave residents a voice to send a powerful message to their elected officials that voters are determined to end gerrymandering,” said Branch.

CHANGE Illinois will continue to work to end gerrymandering and empower residents across the state to show their unified support for Fair Maps.

Thoughts?

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More election results: Rep. Schmidt declares victory over Greenwood, HD97 called for Rep. Benton (Updated x2)

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. Daily Line legislative reporter Ben Szalinski

* Results as of 11:20

Rep. Kevin Schmidt GOP
22,670
52.1%

LaToya Greenwood DEM
20,825
47.9%

100% of precincts reporting
77.7% of expected votes counted

Speaker Welch pointed to this district as flippable in August.

* HD 97

Harry Benton wins District 97.

AP race call at 8:29 AM on Nov. 6, 2024.

Rep. Harry Benton DEM
24,571
52.1%

Gabby Shanahan GOP
22,546
47.9%

100% of precincts reporting
92.4% of expected votes counted

I’ll be updating this post throughout the day as races are called.

…Adding… Leader McCombie…

Today, Tony McCombie, Illinois House Republican Leader, released the following statement:

“Election night was a victory for House Republicans. Holding our caucus together is a testament to our grassroots operation—the heart of our team, undeterred by the most partisan gerrymandered map in the nation and exponential spending against us. Illinois voters are exhausted by decades of one-party control. House Republicans remain committed to delivering economic growth, ending corruption and putting Illinois families first.”

* …Adding… More…

    * Capitol News Illinois | Early results show Democrats likely to maintain supermajorities in Illinois General Assembly: Preliminary, unofficial election results show no seats in the state House or Senate have changed party hands, although a few races remained too close to call according to the Associated Press. That means Democrats will maintain supermajorities in each chamber of the General Assembly even as President Donald Trump appears to have vastly outperformed his previous two showings in the state in 2016 and 2020.

    * WBEZ | Jennifer Custer wins in Far Northwest Side District 1 Chicago School Board race: Stay-at-home mom and former educator Jennifer Custer beat veteran educator Michelle N. Pierre by just under 2,000 votes in the race to represent District 1 on the elected school board with 98% of precincts reporting, according to the Associated Press. Pierre conceded on Wednesday. Custer, a former assistant principal and suburban union leader was endorsed by the Chicago Teachers Union, which strongly supports a neighborhood school focus.

    * News-Gazette | Election ‘24:’I can’t believe that we have this issue’: The one thing a combustible election didn’t need got a heaping helping of it just as the first wave of voters showed up to cast their ballots Tuesday morning in Champaign County. Polling place problems — and not the kind involving Trump supporters in MAGA hats that led County Clerk Aaron Ammons to hire outside security to patrol precincts — dominated the discussion of the day, drawing unwelcome attention from USA Today, The Associated Press and other media outlets near and far. It started bright and early, at 6 a.m. That’s when Colleen and Mark Ruebke of rural Urbana went to vote at the Somer Township Building, one of 65 polling places due to open at that time around Champaign County. Only when they showed up, they found it closed, along with the three St. Joseph’s Sterling Frye tried on his way to work in Champaign.

    * BND | Schmidt holds onto 114th State House District. What does that mean for southwest Illinois?: Schmidt has said he thinks voters in District 114 support him not because he’s a Republican but because he represents their interests. “I’ll continue to work hard in Springfield and give the people what they need,” Schmidt said Wednesday. “I’m definitely gonna work on funding for infrastructure as far as the sewage/drainage problem — yesterday we all saw how bad it was in Cahokia Heights and East St. Louis — and fight tax increases.”

    * KHQA | 2024 Illinois Election Results: Reproductive Health Ballot Question: With 73% of the vote, Illinois voters said YES to the ballot question: “Should all medically appropriate assisted reproductive treatments, including, but not limited to, in vitro fertilization, be covered by any health insurance plan in Illinois that provides coverage for pregnancy benefits, without limitation on the number of treatments?”

    * Block Club | Trump Attracted More Voters Than Ever In Chicago Amid Overall Victory: While Kamala Harris won Chicago with about 77 percent of the vote, support for Donald Trump went up by up 6 percentage points in the city compared to 2020. In Chicago, Harris received 652,919 votes, or about 77 percent of the vote, while Trump received 187,137 votes, or about 22 percent of the vote, according to early results.

    * WICS | Planned Parenthood of Illinois respond to 2024 presidential results: “This is a devastating loss. I want to reassure the public that the full spectrum of reproductive health care is still safe and legal in Illinois including abortion, gender-affirming care and birth control. However, we will take our rage, sadness, loss and fear to fuel the next phase of our fight. The fight for reproductive freedom does not end here. The majority of Americans believe that sexual and reproductive health decisions — including abortion — should be made by patients, not politicians. PPIA and our supporters will turn our anger into action and work closely with elected officials at both the state and federal levels to continue making Illinois the strongest haven state for reproductive care possible.”

    * News-Gazette | Danos celebrates likely reelection, failed referendum to eliminate office: Democratic county Auditor George Danos appears headed for re-election to an office that will continue to exist, as a referendum asking voters to eliminate it was losing by a margin of 60 to 40 percent and Danos was ahead of his Republican challenger, Alan Anderson, by 54 to 46 percent. “I was gratified to enjoy the loyalty of rank-and-file Democrats, who also agreed with me on the referenda,” Danos said. “The Champaign County Democratic Central Committee, led by Mike Ingram, has egg on its face: when all the votes are counted I’ll have a sound 55-45 victory, despite their treachery. Their pet referenda went down 2-1 (the tax) and 3-2 (the power grab to eliminate the Auditor).”

    * PJ Star | Ranked choice voting referendum passes in Peoria Township: An advisory referendum asking Peoria Township voters if the state of Illinois should implement ranked-choice voting in statewide elections garnered strong support. According to the Peoria County Election Commission, with 100% of precincts reporting, “Yes” leads “No” by more than 11,000 votes, with 22,536 voting in the affirmative (66.98%) and 11,108 voting to reject it (33.02%).

    * Daily Herald | Mosser wins second term as Kane County state’s attorney: Jamie Mosser defeated her Republican rival Tuesday to secure a second term as Kane County’s top prosecutor. Mosser, a Democrat, had 112,962 votes compared to 99,081 for Andrew Sosnowski, her challenger in the race for state’s attorney, according to unofficial totals.

    * Daily Herald | ‘I’m humbled’: Rinehart wins in race for Lake’s top prosecutor: Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart emerged victorious after a tough election against Republican challenger Mary Cole late Tuesday in his bid for another term as the county’s top lawyer. Democrat Rinehart had about 54% of the vote to Cole’s nearly 46%, according to unofficial tallies.

    * SJ-R | All incumbents on Sangamon County Board returned by voters; Milhiser, Roesch other winners: All seven incumbent Sangamon County Board members in contested races prevailed on Tuesday, including one cliffhanger. State’s Attorney John Milhiser and Circuit Clerk Joe Roesch both easily held on to their seats, while Recorder Josh Langfelder, the only Democrat to hold county-wide office, trails challenger Frank Lesko by 68 votes. Eight county board seats up Tuesday were uncontested.

    * WCIA | Champaign County votes ‘no’ to public safety tax: A proposition to increase the sales tax for safety purposes has been rejected in Champaign County. WCIA previously reported that voters were asked if the tax should be raised a quarter cent for every $100 spent in the county. It failed with 66% of the community voting to reject the measure.

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News coverage roundup: Chicago school board election results (Updated)

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* [Note from Rich: I would disagree that CTU picked up four seats. District 1’s apparent winner Jennifer Custer was, indeed, endorsed by CTU, but she criticized the mayor numerous times and, by extension, the union. She won’t be an automatic CTU vote.] Tribune

Chicago voters have rejected Mayor Brandon Johnson’s education agenda as only four of 10 candidates endorsed by the powerful teacher’s union will hold seats on the city’s new hybrid Board of Education.

Though the races began as sleepy provincial contests, they quickly became a referendum on Johnson and his closely allied Chicago Teachers Union. The new mayor, whose 2023 campaign was bankrolled by the CTU, has struggled to retain control of the nation’s fourth-largest public school district and drawn criticism for plans to take out a high-interest, $300 million loan. […]

CTU spent at least $1.7 million in direct contributions to candidates as of Monday, largely in-kind contributions for field staffing, polling, advertising or voter outreach. In all but two races, the CTU-backed candidate had raised the largest sum. Spending caps were also lifted on nine of the races.

The Illinois Network of Charter Schools Political Action Committee had devoted nearly $2.3 million to either supporting or opposing school board candidates during that same time period. A second pro-school-choice PAC, the Urban Center, had devoted another $770,000.

Districts 1, 9, and 10 have yet to be called. Click here for the up-to-date totals.

…Adding… Jennifer Custer wins in Far Northwest Side District 1

* Sun-Times

Three races didn’t yet have a winner, and two of them remained neck-and-neck — the 1st District on the Northwest Side with a union hopeful with a small lead, the other in the South Side’s 10th District with an independent candidate slightly ahead. Another independent led in the 9th District by a wider margin.

With the union failing in six districts, a school system that has been under mayoral control for 30 years now looks likely to have a caucus of board members for the first time who aren’t in the mayor’s corner. Some of the groups that opposed the CTU in these elections called that a victory against Mayor Brandon Johnson, a former organizer for the union that vaulted him into office last year and remains a strong ally. […]

Candidates who received financial support from anti-CTU corners won in the 3rd, 4th and 8th Districts — Carlos Rivas Jr., Ellen Rosenfeld and Angel Gutierrez, respectively.

CTU-backed Yesenia Lopez won in the 7th District, adding to the wins by Brown and DeBerry. Jennifer Custer, another candidate endorsed by the CTU, held a small lead in the 1st District but hadn’t yet been declared the winner by the AP.

* Chalkbeat Chicago

At a union election watch party Tuesday night, Chicago Teachers Union president Stacy Davis Gates led the crowd in a chant of “Whose Schools? Our schools!”

She framed the election, which the union advocated for well before Johnson’s election as mayor, as a success: While not all union-endorsed candidates prevailed, Johnson, a close CTU ally, still gets to appoint 11 out of 21 members of the new, partly elected board.

“You all created an expansion of democracy in an entire society that’s toying with the idea of fascism,” Davis Gates said.

She decried an influx of large checks, including some from out-of-state billionaires, in support of pro-school choice candidates.

* Sun-Times

A pair of candidates running for spots on the first elected school board in Chicago said they were surprised at the level of political attacks against them during the campaign.

“The amount of attack ads from the Chicago Teachers Union was crazy,” Carlos Rivas, running to represent District 3, said at a Chicago Democrats for Education election party in River North on Tuesday night.

Rivas said some were comparing him to Republican former president Donald Trump, which made no sense.

“I’m a gay Latino man raised in the neighborhood,” he said.

* More…

    * Sun-Times | Ellen Rosenfeld wins in North Side District 4 Chicago School Board race: Chicago Public Schools staffer Ellen Rosenfeld pushed past five other candidates — and fellow CPS parents — to become the Chicago school board’s member from the largely wealthy North Side District 4, according to results from the Associated Press. […] Two groups that Rosenfeld did not coordinate with spent $321,000 supporting her or opposing Zaccor. The groups, Urban Center Action and the Illinois Network of Charter Schools Action, can raise and spend without limits but they can’t coordinate with candidates. They both support charter schools and oppose the teachers union.

    * WBEZ | Che “Rhymefest” Smith leads in South Side District 10 Chicago School Board race: Smith was gracious when reached Tuesday night. He said all the candidates in District 10 were solid and he learned a lot from his competitors. At more than $500,000, Norington-Reaves had, by far, the most in financial support. Some of it was spent on behalf of her campaign and not coordinated with it, and some was given to her campaign fund. She was supported by two anti-Chicago Teachers Union, pro-charter school super PACs — the Illinois Network of Charter Schools and Urban Center Action.

    * Axios | Results: Chicago’s first elected school board: he board is only partially elected for now. Mayor Brandon Johnson will appoint the other 10 members, one from each district, and the board president. The 21-member board will start in January and faces a looming budget gap, a CEO at odds with the mayor and an unsettled teachers union contract.

…Adding… INCS Action…

INCS Action Congratulates Newly Elected CPS Board of Education Members

CHICAGO – INCS Action congratulates the newly elected members of the CPS Board of Education and extends its best wishes as they prepare to take office in January. INCS Action is the political and advocacy arm of the Illinois Network of Charter Schools (INCS), an advocacy organization focused on the improvement of public education by establishing high-quality charter public schools.

The INCS Action-backed members of the Board include:

    District 3: Carlos Rivas
    District 4: Ellen Rosenfeld
    District 8: Angel Gutierrez

In addition to the three INCS Action-endorsed candidates who won outright, three other independent candidates secured victory last night, meaning that six of the nine contested races went to candidates who will center students ahead of adult interests in making policy decisions for our state’s largest school district. One of the winners, Carlos Rivas in District 3, is a graduate of the INCS Action campaign school and fellowship program, a program designed to prepare the next generation of elected officials.

“I’m proud to have this opportunity to serve not only the families of District 3, but across Chicago,” said Carlos Rivas, a charter school educator. He noted that his win, “is an example of a candidate thinking for themselves and not being defined by outside groups.”

“The election of these candidates who center school quality, rather than school type, reflects a new beginning for Chicago’s education agenda,” said INCS Action President Andrew Broy. “Despite CTU’s best efforts, independent candidates prevailed because Chicagoans know students are more important than politics. Now that campaigning is over, we look forward to partnering in good faith with all CPS Board members to advance the interests of our city’s school children.”

These Board members will serve Chicago’s 325,000 students, including 60,000 charter students and their families. Charter students, 96.4% of whom are students of color and 85% of whom receive free or reduced lunch, are just as much a part of CPS as their counterparts in district-operated schools. It is our hope that the Board will continue to value these students as they do any other child in our city, and the charter community stands eager and ready to support the Board’s commitment to educational equity.

INCS Action has proudly been politically active in city and state elections since 2014.

* CPS Parents for Buses…

“All ten victorious school board candidates support the restoration of busing to magnet and selective enrollment students, according to their response to our candidate survey.”

  17 Comments      


Ex-ComEd VP testifies about no-work contracts for Madigan allies

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

One of the feds’ star witnesses told a jury Tuesday that ComEd funneled more than $600,000 to allies of then-Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan over several years as a “favor” so Madigan would be “more positively disposed toward ComEd’s legislative agenda.”

It’s a crucial piece of testimony in Madigan’s federal corruption trial, but one that comes from Fidel Marquez — the longtime ComEd official who struck a deal with prosecutors with the hope of avoiding prison after pleading guilty to bribery conspiracy in 2020.

Marquez delivered his testimony while discussing Jay Doherty, the former City Club president whose contract with ComEd was used to pay Madigan allies like former 13th Ward Ald. Frank Olivo and longtime Madigan campaign worker Raymond Nice.

Marquez told jurors Olivo was paid $4,000 a month, while Nice was paid $5,000 a month — both allegedly for do-nothing jobs. Prosecutors previously told the jury the scheme netted Olivo a total of $368,000 and Nice a total of $415,000. Neither has been criminally charged.

The payments were made between 2011 and 2019.

* Tribune

As a senior executive with Commonwealth Edison, it was Fidel Marquez’s job to know who was working for the utility as lobbyists or consultants and what exactly it was they were doing for the money.

So when a cryptic email was forwarded to him in 2013 from Michael McClain, a longtime associate of House Speaker Michael Madigan, asking that ComEd shift a contract for one of Madigan’s top 13th Ward soldiers that Marquez had never heard of, he had some obvious questions. […]

What he quickly learned from McClain was that ComEd had been quietly paying two Madigan associates, former 13th Ward Ald. Frank Olivo and precinct captain Ray Nice, as “subcontractors” through consultant Jay Doherty, even though neither had done any work for the utility.

Now, McClain wanted a third person, 13th Ward precinct captain Ed Moody, shifted to Doherty’s contract too.

* Capitol News Illinois

During the course of Marquez’s testimony, which could last the rest of the week, the jury will see several videos he recorded of meetings with his colleagues while wearing an FBI wire in the winter and spring of 2019. He quickly agreed to cooperate and have his cell phone wiretapped when agents approached him early one morning in January of that year. The jury will also hear many calls resulting from that wiretap. […]

After the call with McClain, Marquez said he informed Pramaggiore that he was filled in on the matter and that he’d move Moody from McClain’s contract to Doherty’s. But when he asked if he should then reduce McClain’s monthly rate to reflect that he was no longer carrying Moody, Marquez said Pramaggiore told him to leave it “untouched.” […]

Marquez acknowledged turning a blind eye to the no-work contractors as a prerequisite to improving ComEd’s historically beleaguered relationship with Madigan. But he also said he took steps to prevent a possible ethics concern in late 2016, when Moody was appointed to fill a vacancy on the Cook County Board of Commissioners. Moody was moved from Doherty’s contract to another lobbyist’s.

“There may be an occasion where Jay Doherty would have to lobby Ed Moody, who would’ve been paid under his contract,” Marquez said. “So that would’ve created a clear conflict.”

  12 Comments      


Open thread

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Take a deep breath before commenting folks…

  74 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Democrats poised to keep supermajorities intact in Illinois legislature. Tribune

    - Several races remained undecided as ballots continued to be counted late Tuesday.
    - Republican Rep. Amy Grant, who is vying for a fourth term, was in a 50-50 dead heat with Democrat Jackie Williamson of Wheaton with about 99% of the estimated vote total counted, according to unofficial results from The Associated Press.
    - Republican Rep. Martin McLaughlin held a slight edge over Democratic challenger Maria Peterson, a former labor attorney from North Barrington, with 91% of the estimated vote total reporting.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Block Club Chicago | Man Awaiting Trial For Jan. 6 Attack On Capitol Worked As Portage Park Election Judge: Sen. Robert Martwick, who represents District 10 and is up for reelection, said he recognized Ligas when he went to drop off pizzas at the Shabbona Park polling location about 12:30 p.m. Tuesday. “I walked into the polling place, and he was there holding a clipboard, but he wasn’t wearing any credentials,” said Martwick, who faces Republican challenger Jon Luers. “I thought, ‘Who is that guy? Wait a minute, that’s Larry Ligas — isn’t he under an indictment for January 6th?’”

* WTTW | Barbara Taylor Bowman, Founding Mother of Early Childhood Education, Dies at 96: Bowman is known not only for her lifelong work in the field and for co-founding the Erikson Institute, but also as the mother of Valerie Jarrett, an advisor to former President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama. “Her legacy is one of transformation, not only of Erikson but of the entire early childhood education landscape,” said Erikson President Mariana Souto-Manning in a statement. “She didn’t just shape an institution — she helped shape the very foundation of the field. Barbara’s commitment to justice, equity, and the well-being of all children will continue to animate our mission, inspire our work, and guide the field for generations to come.”

* Eye On Illinois | As this election ends, another campaign cycle is already spinning: In two years we’ll be choosing a U.S. Senator, governor, attorney general, secretary of state, comptroller and treasurer. Only six members of the Senate are older than Dick Durbin, who turns 80 this month. Illinoisans only once elected any governor three times. If Durbin and/or Gov. JB Pritzker opt not to seek reelection – or if Pritzker pursues Durbin’s Senate seat – that shakes up the entire Democratic ballot.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WGLT | Sharon Chung defeats Desi Anderson; fellow incumbents win in Illinois House: Democrat Sharon Chung won reelection to a second term in the Illinois General Assembly with a victory over Republican Desi Anderson. Chung, a Democrat from Bloomington, won 53% of the vote. She defeated Anderson by around 3,500 votes, according to unofficial totals compiled by WGLT and WCBU.

* Daily Southtown | Hastings, Joyce lead state Senate races as incumbents lead in House:
In the 19th Senate, unofficial results show, that with 85% of precincts reporting, incumbent Michael Hastings, a Frankfort Democrat, had 59% of the vote to 41% for Republican Samantha Jean Gasca, of New Lenox. Hastings began serving in the Senate in 2013. Gasca was one of three candidates in the Republican primary in March while Hastings was unopposed on the Democratic side.

* KWQC | Bradley Fritts wins Illinois 74th District: Republican Bradley Fritts will serve his second two-year term in the Illinois House of Representatives. Fritts won with a total of 31,350 votes over Democrat challenger David Simpson with 16,934 votes.

*** Ballot Measures ***

* Crain’s | ‘Millionaire tax’ advisory ballot measure appears headed for a win: With ballots still being counted late Tuesday evening, Illinois voters appeared to be overwhelmingly backing an advisory question that could give state lawmakers a tool to push for higher taxes on wealthy residents — a tax that supporters argued would clear the way for property tax relief. With 71% of votes counted as of 11 p.m., the referendum was leading 60.5% to 39.5%, based on 4.2 million total votes cast. Supporters are calling the result a mandate to enact legislation.

* Daily Northwestern | Illinois voters approve advisory measure expanding coverage for IVF treatments: The ballot measure, one of three advisory referenda voters considered in Illinois, won with 72.5% in support and 27.5% in opposition. The Associated Press called the race at 11:39 p.m. The referendum does not have any direct legal effect. However, legislators could consider support for the referendum indexed by tonight’s results when making decisions about assisted reproductive treatments.

* The Daily Northwestern | Election worker protection referendum overwhelmingly favored by voters: Illinois voters voted in overwhelming support of a non-binding advisory referendum to impose civil penalties on candidates who interfere or attempt to interfere with election workers’ duties. With 68% of the votes counted as of 10:30 p.m. Tuesday night, 88.9% of voters were in favor of the referendum, according to data from The Associated Press. The New York Times called the race at about 9 p.m.

* WBEZ | Illinois voters approve an advisory referendum calling for higher taxes on income over $1 million: The tax measure called for imposition of a 3% levy on individual income over $1 million, which state revenue officials say could pump at least $4.5 billion more each year into the state’s treasury to then divert to property tax reduction. […] The measure carried 60% of the vote, with 83% of the estimated vote counted, the Associated Press reported, and the agency called it a win Tuesday night.

* NBC Chicago | 7 Illinois counties vote to explore seceding from state: Iroquois County: With all 37 of the county’s precincts reporting, 72.85% of votes were in favor of the advisory question, with more than 9,000 “yes” votes counted.

*** Chicago ***

* Eater Chicago | Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson Floats a Liquor Tax Increase in His 2025 Budget: The Distilled Spirits Council of the United States, a national lobbying group, has come out against the budget. The council sent out a news release. “The hospitality industry has been relentlessly hit with economic challenges over the last four years starting with the pandemic and followed by supply chain disruptions, staffing shortages, and record inflation,” says Andy Deloney, Distilled Spirits Council’s vice president and head of state public policy.

* Block Club | South Shore Neighbors Vote In Favor Of Housing Protections: About 89 percent of voters in four South Shore precincts showed support for housing protections like property tax relief and affordable housing developments in a non-binding referendum.

* Chicago Mag | In a new exhibition, photographer Mark Ballogg lets us into local artists’ workspaces.: Ballogg brought what he considered an outsider’s eye to the project, despite his own history as a collector of local art and a nearly four-decade career as an architectural photographer. “I have always struggled with calling myself an artist,” he says. “So the project started to become a way for me to suss out my path for myself with my own practice, seeing into the lives of artists and the way they work, and starting to realize that the sky’s the limit and that I can do whatever I decide I want to do.”

* Tribune | Chicago Bears Q&A: What will it take for Matt Eberflus to keep his job? Why wasn’t Shane Waldron demoted?: I don’t believe Eberflus was under a playoffs-or-else mandate when the season began. At 4-4 and coming off consecutive dispiriting road losses, things are trending in the wrong direction. That’s fair to say. But Eberflus’ removal at the end of the season isn’t a fait accompli. A lot of football remains to be played with nine regular-season games, including the entire division slate.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* WTTW | O’Neill Burke Declared Winner in Race to Replace Kim Foxx as Cook County’s Top Prosecutor: The AP declared Burke the winner just before 9 p.m. in one of the most closely watched races on Election Day in Chicago. Burke, a former circuit and appellate level judge who also served as both an assistant state’s attorney and defense attorney, received 65% of votes to defeat Republican former alderperson Bob Fioretti (31%) and Libertarian Andrew Charles Kopinski (4%) with 59% of votes counted, according to unofficial results.

* Daily Herald | Krishnamoorthi declared winner in 8th District reelection bid: AP declared Krishnamoorthi the winner at 8:35 p.m., when an estimated 72% of the vote had been counted. By the time the count reached 91%, Krishnamoorthi was ahead 162,522 votes to 126,448 votes, unofficial results showed. That gave Krishnamoorthi about 56.2% of the total.

* Daily Southtown | Will County incumbent Democrats in countywide races lead with 84% votes counted: Incumbent Jennifer Bertino-Tarrant, a Shorewood Democrat seeking a second term as county executive, had 53% of the unofficial vote while Republican candidate Charles “Chuck” Maher of Naperville had 46% with about 84% of the votes reported. Bertino-Tarrant said she was wanted to continue her work to improve public safety, ensure the county remains the best in the state for job creation and collaborate with the Veterans Assistance Commission to bring a new veterans-centric campus to Joliet.

* WBEZ | Democrat Monica Gordon clinches Cook County clerk seat: In a county where Democratic voters dominate, Monica Gordon easily defeated her GOP and Libertarian rivals Tuesday to become the next Cook County clerk. With more than half of the estimated vote counted, Gordon was headed for a landslide victory, with more than 65%

* Daily Herald | ‘I’m humbled’: Rinehart wins in race for Lake’s top prosecutor: Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart emerged victorious after a tough election against Republican challenger Mary Cole late Tuesday in his bid for another term as the county’s top lawyer. Democrat Rinehart had about 54% of the vote to Cole’s nearly 46%, according to unofficial tallies.

* Crain’s | How this Chicago suburb is riding a retail renaissance: “Schaumburg is lucky because every retailer wants to be there,” said John Melaniphy, president of Melaniphy & Associates, which tallies local retail sales using Illinois Department of Revenue sales tax data. Schaumburg has the third-most retail space of any suburb at 10.7 million square feet and raked in more than $4.2 billion in retail sales in 2023, coming in second behind Naperville, according to data from real estate information company CoStar Group and Melaniphy & Associates.

*** Downstate ***

* PJ Star | Illinois 2024 election results: Ranked choice voting referendum in Peoria Township: According to the Peoria County Election Commission, with over half of all precincts reporting, “Yes” leads “No” by just over 9,000 votes, with 18,449 voting in the affirmative (66%) and 9,397 voting to reject it (34%).

* WSIL | “No Drink Water” order no longer in effect in Vienna: The “No Drink Water” order in the City of Vienna is no longer in effect. The Vienna Police Department posted the update, stating multiple water samples have shown the water is safe to drink. The Illinois EPA sampled the water and approved lifting the order, city officials stated.

  12 Comments      


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

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

  Comments Off      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Nov 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comments Off      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Selected react to budget reconciliation bill passage (Updated x3)
* Reader comments closed for Independence Day
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Some fiscal news
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated)
* RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois
* Groups warn about plan that doesn't appear to be in the works
* SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
* Campaign news: Big Raja money; Benton over-shares; Rashid's large cash pile; Jeffries to speak at IDCCA brunch
* Rep. Hoan Huynh jumps into packed race for Schakowsky’s seat (Updated)
* Roundup: Pritzker taps Christian Mitchell for LG
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition (Updated)
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Live coverage
* Trump admin freezes $240 million in grants for Illinois K-12 schools
* Yesterday's stories

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