Capitol Fax.com - Your Illinois News Radar
SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax      Advertise Here      About     Exclusive Subscriber Content     Updated Posts    Contact Rich Miller
CapitolFax.com
To subscribe to Capitol Fax, click here.
Here’s something you don’t see every day: Senate President, House Speaker vie for same party slot

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Austin Weekly News

The July 31 announcement that long-time 7th District Congressman Danny K. Davis was not running for re-election has changed the local political dynamics in more ways than one.

Don Harmon, State Senate President and Democratic Oak Park Township Committeeman, said Sunday that he will be circulating nominating petitions for the party office of 7th District State Central Committeeman, an office Davis has held since 1998.

Meanwhile, Harmon’s counterpart in the Illinois General Assembly, House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch has started actively campaigning for the post and has secured an endorsement from Davis and 18 other political figures, including River Forest Village President Cathy Adduci and State Rep. LaShawn Ford. […]

For 15 years, Harmon has eyed a seat on the powerful Democratic State Central Committee. Twice in the time period — in 2009 and in 2022 — Harmon has stepped back after Davis chose to run for re-election, saying he would not oppose Davis.

  12 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign update

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

  Comments Off      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Governor Pritzker was asked today whether he’s financially supporting the Texas Democrats in Illinois

Pritzker: I know that you’re all interested in whether I’m writing checks… Let me be clear, I have stood with the Texas House Democrats. We have been in consultation for weeks and weeks. This possibility was always something that we feared. And I made it clear to them that we do everything that we could logistically and otherwise to try to support them.

I have not written a check or supported them financially, though I am not reticent to do that, but I have not done that. But lots and lots of people around the country have.

* Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson walked back a comment he made yesterday


Transcript

I’m glad that folks are standing up to authoritarianism and standing up to the tyrannical style of government that this president has put forward. In fact, I’m grateful that this governor is demonstrating leadership in this moment.

* The Illinois Gaming Board

The Illinois Gaming Board (IGB) adopted new rules that expand existing restrictions on advertising, marketing and promotions for licensed casino, video gaming, and sports wagering operators including a ban on advertising on college campuses and new requirements to protect the public, especially young people and problem gamblers. […]

While previous IGB rules placed restrictions on advertising and promotional content which included prohibitions against false or misleading claims and other restrictions, the new rules go farther to ensure advertisements are not placed in locations where they are likely to be seen by underage or vulnerable populations. The expanded rules also require operators to maintain advertising records and include prominent, responsible gaming messages in advertising, marketing and promotions. […]

The rules feature requirements for Illinois operators including:

    - Prohibition from having advertisements or promotions published, aired, broadcast, displayed, or distributed on any college or university campus, or college or university media outlets such as college or university newspapers and radio or television broadcasts, or any sports venues used primarily for college and university events.
    - Prohibition from depicting college or university students, colleges or universities, or college or university settings.
    - Retention of copies of all advertising and marketing materials including a log of when and how those materials have been published, aired, displayed, or distributed.
    - Allowing patrons the option to unsubscribe or opt out of advertising, marketing or promotional materials. Additionally, operators should comply with any patron request to unsubscribe or opt out of receiving materials as soon as practicable.
    - Prohibition on entering into agreements with third parties to conduct advertising or marketing on behalf of, or to the benefit of, the Illinois operator when compensation is dependent upon, or related to, the volume or outcome of wagers.
    - Include problem gambling text as determined by the Illinois Department of Human Services in all advertising and marketing materials.

* Former State Rep. Dan Caulkins is running for Macon County Board. Press Release…

Former State Representative Dan Caulkins (R-Decatur) is formally announcing his candidacy for the 2-year term on the Macon County Board in District 2.

“The Macon County Board is ground zero for the proposed rapid growth of solar generator fields as well as the possible siting of a data center,” Caulkins said. “My experience serving on both the Energy and Public Utilities committees as a State Representative will be helpful as we navigate these issues.”

Caulkins brings a strong record of public service, having served 4 years on the Decatur City Council and 6 years as a State Representative. He is a small business owner.

As a State Legislator, Caulkins opposed measures in Springfield stripping county governments of local control of wind and solar farms. He fought for property tax reforms and opposed tax increases.

“I have always stood up for taxpayers,” Caulkins said. “As a fiscal conservative and defendant of our Constitutional rights, I will always be an advocate for common-sense policies that prioritize taxpayers, and I am looking forward to continuing to serve as a member of the County Board.”

*** Statewide ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Billions in profits, millions in unpaid claims: Medicaid insurers leave Illinois providers struggling, patients losing care: The five MCOs currently overseeing Illinois’ Medicaid system were awarded state contracts in 2018. The state will soon begin accepting proposals for new contracts, set to take effect Jan 1, 2027. For providers like Stone, the upcoming shake-up raises urgent questions: Will the next round of contracts fix the system’s failures? Or will the same issues persist, leaving providers — and their patients — fighting for care? For now, Stone refuses to turn patients away. “We weren’t going to make them suffer,” she said. “I’m gonna fight.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* John Curran | Illinois Democrats’ delivery tax is a short-term cash grab paid by those who can least afford it: Data from Colorado, the only state that has enacted a broad delivery tax — 28 cents per motor vehicle order, a far cry from Illinois’ $1.50 — validates their concerns. A survey of Colorado residents highlighted the tax’s disproportionate impact on people with disabilities and low-income households. The share of the tax relative to income was over four times higher for households earning less than $25,000 per year compared with those earning $200,000 or more. The tax increased take-out prices across the board, leading to more than hundreds of thousands of fewer delivery orders, millions in lost revenue for local businesses, and revenue and job losses for restaurant and delivery workers. The increased prices and reduced sales are especially burdensome for small businesses that already operate on razor-thin margins.

* WAND | New law will allow Illinois municipalities, fire districts to charge lift assist fees for congregate care facilities: Every Illinois municipality and fire protection district will soon have the ability to charge fees for lift assist services to help deter non-emergency lift assist calls and recover associated costs. Many home rule governments already charge people fees when first responders are called to help lift someone, but other communities have struggled with the cost.

* Shaw Local | Measure led by State Sen. Joyce that expands hunting permits to landowners signed into law: House Bill 2340 allows landowner deer, turkey and hunting permits to be issued without charge to Illinois landowners who own at least 20 acres in a county where there are positively identified chronic wasting disease cases in the deer herd, resident tenants of at least 20 acres of commercial agricultural land where they will hunt or an owner, shareholder or partner of a business that owns at least 20 acres of land.

* NPR Illinois | Behind the headlines with the reporter covering Illinois’ most powerful stories: Hannah Meisel is the Statehouse and Chicago Reporter at Capitol News Illinois. She is a graduate of the UIS Public Affairs Reporting program and previously worked at NPR Illinois as the Statehouse Editor. She spoke with Community Voices about her journey through journalism, her approach to reporting on government and politics, and her experience covering the Michael Madigan trial. She also shared thoughts on how reporters can improve their coverage and discussed the future of citizen journalism.

*** Chicago ***

* Mayor Brandon Johnson’s senior advisor Jason Lee has been a City of Chicago employee since May 2023, but cast a Texas ballot in the 2024 November election


* Block Club Chicago | Mayor Says COPA Should Investigate If Police Assisted ICE With Immigration Raid: The Mayor’s Office has now said that agency should be the Civilian Office of Police Accountability, the Police Department watchdog that investigates police violence and misconduct. The office conducted an internal review to make that determination, releasing the results to Block Club Monday. The controversy stems from a June 4 raid in which federal agents detained at least 10 people who had been told to check in to a monitoring program at 2245 S. Michigan Ave., officials and immigrant advocacy groups said. A crowd gathered, with people protesting the detainments and trying to protect immigrants, and Chicago police arrived.

* Block Club Chicago | Logan Square’s Massive Milwaukee Avenue Traffic Overhaul Project Is Halfway Over: “I know overall this project was almost over a decade coming, from concept all the way to delivery, but the end is near,” said Omer A. Rehman, vice president at Engineering Services Group Engineering Services Group, which is working on the Milwaukee Avenue Streetscape Project under the Chicago Department of Transportation. “So about a year from now, we’ll be gone, the cones will be gone, there will be no traffic, no dust, none of that. But we need another year.”

* Block Club | The Payoff Of Investment In Pullman: $1.5 Billion In Economic Impact, Study Finds: Research firm Anderson Economic Group analyzed population, socioeconomic, housing, employment and occupation data from 2010-2023 to see how the Far South Side community benefited from the nonprofit’s work. Researchers estimated the net economic impact of the Chicago Neighborhood Initiatives’ development to be nearly $1.5 billion, with 47 percent of those investments staying in Pullman. The study also found that the nonprofit’s investments created over 7,800 jobs, with 4,571 in Pullman, and helped boost the number of Pullman residents earning degrees in higher education.

* WBEZ | Lidiya Yankovskaya, formerly of Chicago Opera Theater, joins growing list of classical musicians leaving U.S.: Among the ranks of classical musicians leaving the United States, there will soon be another name: Lidiya Yankovskaya, the former Chicago Opera Theater music director who is a familiar presence on the Chicago Symphony Orchestra podium. Around the time Yankovskaya conducts the CSO and violinist Ray Chen at Ravinia on Saturday — her debut at the prestigious summer festival — her things will be halfway across the Atlantic, en route to London, where Yankovskaya is moving with her family.

* The Triibe | Review: Some lyrics and songs hit different when the crowd is mostly white: For example, on Saturday, notable rapper BossMan Dlow used the N-word repeatedly during his afternoon set on the Lakeshore stage. I was happy to see him perform; his songs “Phil Jackson” and “Finesse” are in my regular rotation. But his set reminded me of Bernarr’s courageous and socially-aware choice to take the N-word out of his set. It was an eerie feeling watching an artist repeatedly say the N-word while I stood in a crowd of young white boys who proudly slung around the N-word while reciting the lyrics.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Batavia data center gets nod as residents worry about it ‘gobbling up’ energy reserves: Because the data center’s water usage will vary greatly depending on the type of cooling systems employed, the water utility access was removed from the agreement, to be negotiated further and approved in a separate master service agreement. Once a service agreement for water is approved, the development will go on to the design review phase for permitting of construction plans for the facility. […] “This data center is gobbling up the Batavia’s substation reserve margin,” Russo said. “It isn’t a question of whether the substation will need to be upgraded. … The question is when will we need it. This data center will need to pay its share of that cost.” City Administrator Laura Newman said the city has incorporated penalties in past agreements when making an up-front investment, but considering developers will be funding the improvements and $500 million in the building, they are not likely to terminate operations.

* Shaw Local | Joliet to partner with Pace on VanGo program: The city of Joliet plans to make Gateway Center parking spaces available for the Pace VanGo program. VanGo provides vehicles at bus stations that allow public transit riders to travel the extra distance to get to work after taking the bus to a depot.

* NBC Chicago | The Illinois Tollway plans to explore dynamic pricing. Here’s what it could mean for drivers: The tollway’s 20-year strategic plan, which was approved by its board of directors late last month, includes a directive to explore what’s referred to as dynamic pricing. Under this pricing method, which is also called congestion pricing, tolls are continually adjusted according to traffic conditions to maintain a free-flowing level of traffic, according to the Federal Highway Administration.

* Daily Herald | After nearly seven decades in Arlington Heights, Persin & Robbin moves to Deer Park: Founded in 1958 by Irv Robbin and Ben Persin, the shop began as a small storefront operation in downtown Arlington Heights.“I love Arlington Heights, and I love the village. They were wonderful to me and my family for 67 years,” Robbin said. However, the new store at 783 W. Lake-Cook Road, which is nearly double the 4,800 square feet of the old one, demands his full attention.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | League of Women Voters to study McLean County election authorities: Elections in McLean County are administered by two separate entities, depending on where a voter lives. Most ballots are administered and counted by the McLean County clerk’s office. Those living within Bloomington city limits have their own election authority: the Bloomington Election Commission. In a statement, the League said this structure creates “known voter and candidate confusion.” They plan to interview experts and stakeholders, reporting their findings at their January 2026 membership meeting.

* WGLT | ISU to digest U.S. attorney general’s message on unlawful DEI: In an email to the ISU campus Friday, University President Aondover Tarhule said university lawyers and the Institutional Resiliency Steering Team are working to digest and understand the obligations the memo lays out and ensure compliance while respecting ISU’s core values. “I recognize the anxiety and confusion some of you may be feeling about the impact of the changing federal landscape on higher education,” said Tarhule. “I suggest that we view this as an opportunity to strengthen our resiliency as an institution.”

* Capitol City Now | City vacancies as communications director, planner join state: Two high-profile city employees, the communications director and the planner, have departed the Municipal Building. […] Sources say both Pritchard and Williams have taken jobs in Illinois state government. In a text message Sunday evening, the mayor said of Williams, “She took a position that is a step up for her from the city. She has asked me to not tell where until her start date of Aug 11, and I told her I would honor her request.”

* The Telegraph | Steel arrives for $500 million Wieland brass mill project in East Alton: The German-based company operates the former Olin Brass Mill. The new $500 million structure is being built on the front portion of the plant’s property and is expected to create 80 new permanent jobs after it is built.

* WCIA | Emails show 5-hour delay in notification of Mattoon’s ‘do not drink’ order; city says why: The emails showed that the City of Mattoon got back positive test results just after 4 p.m. — around five hours before they issued the second order. WCIA talked to City Manager Kyle Gill to see why it took this long to be shared. “When we got that at 4:07 p.m., we had a meeting put together,” said Gill, “It did not say ‘issue the do not drink order’ in that email,” Gill said. “But we got together, we started talking. We had some questions.” This included questions like, “Could this be a wrong measurement?” And whether they needed to reinstate the order.

* WAND | What to know about the new security measures at the Illinois State Fair: New this year are metal detectors and bag checks at all Grandstand entrances. No backpacks, duffle bags or bags/purses larger than 14″x8″ are allowed into the Grandstand.

* Journal Courier | Bessie the Lumberjack can’t quite carve out mini butter cow contest win: “Bessie the Lumberjack” was on a roll, but couldn’t carve out another first-place finish for Pam Martin of Alexander in the Illinois Times’ annual Miniature Butter Cow Contest. The contest, started after the pandemic led to the cancellation of the 2020 Illinois State Fair, asks people to create miniature butter cow sculptures to be displayed in the Illinois State Fair’s Dairy Building, just across the viewing area from the fair’s official — and much larger — butter cow sculpture.

*** National ***

* CNN | Texas House again fails to move forward on redistricting after Democrats flee state: Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton announced that he would seek court rulings against state House Democrats who fled the state and don’t return by Friday, “ensuring that their seats are declared vacant.” “Any lawmaker who has not been arrested and returned or fails to appear by the Speaker’s deadline will be subject to aggressive legal action by Attorney General Paxton,” according to the statement from the attorney general.

* Reuters | Trump administration formally axes Elon Musk’s ‘five things’ email: While many federal agencies had already phased out compliance with the weekly email, the move signals the Trump administration is turning the page on one of Musk’s most unpopular initiatives following a falling out between the two men in early June.

  8 Comments      


Final ‘ComEd Four’ defendant Jay Doherty sentenced to 1 year in Madigan bribery case

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Tribune

On Tuesday, more than two years after his conviction in the “ComEd Four” bribery trial, [Jay Doherty] is finally set to learn his fate for his role in an elaborate scheme to funnel do-nothing subcontractor payments to associates of then-Speaker Michael Madigan in a bid to help ComEd’s legislative agenda in Springfield.

Doherty is the last of the four defendants to be sentenced in the landmark case, which has dragged on amid the death of the trial judge, fights at the U.S. Supreme Court and a review by the Trump administration of a law used by prosecutors to convict the four of cooking ComEd’s books.

Last month, former ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggiore and lobbyist Michael McClain, who was one of Madigan’s closest confidants, were each sentenced to 2-year prison terms. Ex-ComEd executive John Hooker, meanwhile, was given a year and a half behind bars.

Prosecutors have asked U.S. District Judge Manish Shah to give Doherty 15 months in prison, arguing in a recent court filing that he was “integral” to the scheme because “he understood the reason for it (to provide monetary benefits to Madigan allies) and the benefits to ComEd from it, and allowed it to exist under his own contract with ComEd.”

* The Tribune’s Jason Meisner…


* US Attorney Sarah Streicker sticks with the 15 month prison sentence recommendation for Doherty. Jon Seidel


* Doherty to Judge Shah


* Judge Manish Shah: “This secret relationship between Mr. Madigan and ComEd … it wouldn’t have been a secret without you”


* Doherty’s sentence

Doherty is due in prison Sept. 30.

  17 Comments      


SB 328: Protects Working People & Helps Fight Trump’s Predatory MAGA Agenda

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The same front groups, associations and companies that are backing Trump’s predatory MAGA agenda of raising prices, slashing Medicaid, and gutting the Environmental Protection Agency, Food & Drug Administration, and Occupational Safety and Health Administration are also against SB 328.

They wrongly believe our state can’t be pro-worker and pro-business, and want Illinois to turn its back on people who have shared their stories about big corporations that have poisoned them or their loved ones:

“My father was a U.S. Army veteran, a hardworking engineer, and a devoted father to three sons. He should not have suffered from a preventable disease — and our family should not have to navigate legal roadblocks just to pursue accountability.”

— Son of union member who died from lung disease caused by asbestos

SB 328 is good legislation and another way to show that Illinois will always stand up for working families and the most vulnerable.

For more information about SB 328, click here.

  Comments Off      


Tarver: No state takeover needed

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* As I’ve told you before, the only people who believe that a state takeover of the Chicago Public Schools is likely and desirable are Civic Federation President Joe Ferguson and members of the Chicago Tribune editorial board.

This isn’t 1980

In January 1980, Gov. Jim Thompson hammered out a deal with the city, the Chicago Teachers Union and CPS to have the state essentially take over financial decision-making for Chicago’s public schools. The state was able to borrow on the schools’ behalf and collected new property taxes to finance the debt. The School Finance Authority, created to oversee CPS’ finances, assumed control of CPS budgets and contracting.

State legislators aren’t keen on the idea of being directly responsible for Chicago property tax levies - to say the least.

* More importantly, what the state takeover cheerleaders are ignoring or downplaying is that CPS is now on track to have a fully elected school board after the 2026 elections. And considering the Chicago Teachers Union’s popularity plummet and the union’s many losses during the first round of voting last year, it’s no longer automatically assumed that the union will control an elected majority.

So, why would state legislators, after years of trying to elect that school board, force a state takeover now? It just doesn’t make any sense.

* And Rep. Curtis Tarver, who introduced a state takeover bill last spring, has issued a statement saying he’s finally come to the conclusion that the idea is a non-starter. Politico

State Rep. Curtis Tarver sees “little appetite” for reinstating the School Finance Authority for funding and reforming Chicago Public Schools. After holding a hearing on the issue, Tarver issued a statement, saying, “I understand there is little appetite, including myself, for a full takeover of CPS. Instead, we must work together on a realistic, collaborative path forward that pairs new investment with clear, student-centered reforms.”

* Full statement

Last Thursday’s House Education Committee hearing—prompted by House Bill 4017, which would reinstate the School Finance Authority—was intended to spark a thoughtful conversation about how best to fund and reform Chicago Public Schools. While reinstating the Authority signaled a willingness to explore state oversight, I understand there is little appetite, including myself, for a full takeover of CPS. Instead, we must work together on a realistic, collaborative path forward that pairs new investment with clear, student-centered reforms.

While a certain organization has only recently highlighted the proposed surcharge to fully fund education, I introduced this initiative in 2019. There has been no engagement or even acknowledgement of this concept until last week’s hearing. Rather than focusing on past (seemingly intentional) oversights, I welcome constructive dialogue with all stakeholders to refine and advance a plan that would provide per-pupil funding across every Illinois district. That is the only realistic path forward in Springfield. A Chicago only solution does not have support. This was what I attempted to convey but a nearly three (3) hour hearing’s substantive conversation was hijacked by an organization for its patently false, borderline risible, tactless social media posts and emails.

My position could not be clearer: I care about all students and all children. I want every child to have the promise of the future through access to a quality education, no matter their zip code

HB 4017

    ● No State Takeover Needed: I recognize that most stakeholders prefer local governance. My focus is on partnering with CPS and the City of Chicago—rather than supplanting them—to design reforms tied to any additional funding. We also cannot ignore the fact that there was a request for a fully elected school board. The current hybrid model was only requested due to the result of a municipal election. Furthermore, the hybrid model is no different than the past with mayoral control. The board allows for the majority of board members to be appointed by the mayor.
    ● Statewide Standard: Every other Illinois district follows a legislated equity-based funding formula that guarantees resources flow to the classrooms that need them most.
    ● CPS Today: Without a binding formula, CPS can—and has—allocated funds unevenly, risking a “blank check” scenario that fails to prioritize our highest-need students.
    ● My Ask: Before any new state dollars are released, CPS should agree to adopt a clear, outcome-driven funding formula aligned with statewide equity principles. This will reinforce transparency and direct support to literacy programs, teacher staffing, and wrap-around services in predominantly Black and low-income schools.

Funding and Reform

To build trust and ensure accountability, I agree with Board Member Ellen Rosenfeld’s proposition of a joint working group of state, city, and CPS representatives. Ideally, I would ask that this group would:

1. Map a Multi-Year Funding Roadmap

    ○ Set incremental appropriation targets for the next three fiscal years.
    ○ Align each tranche of new funding with specific reform milestones.

2. End Early-Childhood Testing & Remap Boundaries

    ○ Phase out pre-K and kindergarten entrance exams, which unfairly bar children before they even begin school. In other words, stop testing four (4) year olds for the handful of selective enrollment schools. Especially, when CPS refuses to provide any information about the contents of the test. It is far too subjective and unfair.
    ○ Complete a neighborhood boundary review— “remapping” —so every child can attend a quality campus nearby without testing barriers. This was CPS’ own resolution from 2005 that it has failed to do. Reviewing school boundaries is an extensive process that allows for maximum public input. Undertaking this would help to ensure resources are provided where they are needed most.

3. Adopt an Equity-Based Funding Formula

    ○ Require CPS to implement a formula that ties dollars to measurable student needs—mirroring models used statewide—and report quarterly on progress to the General Assembly.

4. Publish Transparent Budget Reports

    ○ Provide detailed line-item budgets at the school and district levels, publicly available and updated on a quarterly basis rather than annually.

Opportunity for Partnership

My intent is not to cast blame, but to learn from past missteps so we never again leave critical needs unaddressed. I value CPS educators and city leaders as indispensable partners. By coupling new investments with these commonsense reforms, we will ensure that every additional state dollar truly reaches the classroom and advances student outcomes.

My Commitment Going Forward

I remain steadfast in my support for increased state funding of Chicago Public Schools—so long as it’s paired with genuine collaboration, accountability, and a laser focus on closing the achievement gaps that disproportionately affect Black and low-income students. I look forward to convening with the Mayor’s office, CPS administration, parents, and community leaders to finalize this partnership framework. I will not waste time with anyone who is not singularly focused on the children and their education.

* Meanwhile, from the Sun-Times

Chicago is facing a $1.12 billion budget shortfall for 2026. The CTA, Metra and Pace face a $770 million mass transit funding shortfall. And the most immediate financial crisis is confronting Chicago Public Schools, which must find a way to erase a $734 million budget shortfall by the end of the month.

Matt Fabian, a partner at Municipal Market Analytics, said the converging crises raise “the odds for the state to help out.”

“Ultimately, the city’s budget situation is going to have to be fixed by the city and the state. And so the state, having just made it worse — even if it’s required under law — raises the potential for the state to help out the city at least in the near term,” Fabian said. “The state has the ability to raise taxes if it needs to. It can design new taxes. It could increase the income tax. It could find ways to extract more money.”

All school districts in the state were warned not to put their federal pandemic money into their ongoing operating budgets. CPS ignored the advice, which is a huge part of its current mess (along with agreeing to a union contract that it clearly cannot afford).

A Chicago municipal bailout would be unheard of, and next to impossible. Also, municipalities have received a ton of money from other sources in this budget.

Only the transit funding issue has wide, theoretical legislative support,

  4 Comments      


Roundup: Texas Dems skedaddle to Illinois to block Trump-backed redistricting (Updated)

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* First, some background from AP

Texas Democrats on Monday prevented their state’s House of Representatives from moving forward, at least for now, with a redrawn congressional map sought by President Donald Trump to shore up Republicans’ 2026 midterm prospects as his political standing falters.

After dozens of Democrats left the state, the Republican-dominated House was unable to establish the quorum of lawmakers required to do business. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has made threats about removing members who are absent from their seats. Democrats counter that Abbott is using “smoke and mirrors” to assert legal authority he does not have.

The Republican-dominated House quickly issued civil arrest warrants for absent Democrats and Abbott ordered state troopers to help find and arrest them, but lawmakers physically outside Texas are beyond the jurisdiction of state authorities. […]

The impasse centers on Trump’s effort to get five more GOP-leaning congressional seats in Texas, at Democrats’ expense, before the midterms. That would bolster his party’s chances of preserving its U.S. House majority, something Republicans were unable to do in the 2018 midterms during Trump’s first presidency. Republicans currently hold 25 of Texas’ 38 seats. That’s nearly a 2-to-1 advantage and already a wider partisan gap than the 2024 presidential results: Trump won 56.1% of Texas ballots, while Democrat Kamala Harris received 42.5%. […]

The Texas House is scheduled to convene again Tuesday afternoon.

* River Bender

Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul on Monday issued a statement asserting there is no legal basis for the arrest of Texas lawmakers who have fled to Illinois.

Raoul said Texas law enforcement officers lack authority to detain Texas legislators in Illinois based on civil arrest warrants issued by the Texas House. “In Illinois, the rule of law matters, and law enforcement must have a legitimate legal basis to arrest someone,” Raoul said. “Texas law enforcement officers have no authority to hunt down and make arrests of Texas legislators in Illinois based on a civil arrest warrant issued by the Texas House. The Texas House may have managed to issue civil arrest warrants without having a quorum, but those civil warrants carry no weight in Illinois.”

* Texas Dems held a press conference with Gov. Pritzker, DNC Chair Ken Martin and Illinois Democrats in the suburbs this morning

Reporter: There are three Republicans in the state delegation here in Illinois, you can’t undo what is happening in Texas if that is successful with five Republicans being added there, what’s the extent of the pushback that you could have here in Illinois…

Pritzker: Look number one, we’re very happy to host these heroes and stand up with them, for them. Here in the state of Illinois, it is possible to redistrict, it’s not something that I want to do. It’s not something that any of us want to have to do. We’re hoping that this will be successful, that the fact that there’s no quorum in Texas will be successful. But once again, we’re fighting for democracy. There are no rules anymore, apparently, and so we’re going to have to play by the set of rules that are being set out in front of us. Which, frankly, none of us believes is the right way to operate. And what Congressman Green said is right. This is unconstitutional. This is about standing up for people’s voting rights and standing up for Black and brown people who are going to be iced out by what Donald Trump and Greg Abbott are trying to do. So here in Illinois, we’ll do everything that we can to support that endeavor.

[From Rich: Nominating petitions are already circulating starting today. Remapping would throw a huge monkey wrench into the state process, undoubtedly forcing a delayed primary. It would also require an almost immediate special session. And that means Chicago teachers and transit activists would demand special session action on their priorities. I just don’t see it happening.]

* WGN

Illinois republicans were quick to claim hypocrisy.

“Gov. Pritzker broke his promise to Illinois voters not once but twice for signing one of the most gerrymandered maps in the nation,” said state senate minority leader John Curran (R-Downers Grove). […]

Pritzker, who once campaigned promising to support efforts to take the mapping pen out of politicians’ hands, eventually supported the maps produced by his fellow democrats.

The governor now claims democratic dominance in state elections has little to do with districts being drawn in their favor.

“The fact we are very good in Illinois about delivering for the people of Illinois and the people of Illinois react to that and vote for our candidates is very different than cheating mid-decade and re-writing the rules because their cult leader Donald Trump tells them to do it,” Pritzker said in response to reporters’ questions.

[From Rich: The governor did break his promise on the remap, but only on state maps. He wasn’t asked about federal maps. Also, the new Texas map is being blasted for allegedly violating the Voting Rights Act. Illinois’ congressional maps did not face that challenge.]

* Daily Herald

About 30 Texas Democrats, including House Minority Leader Gene Wu, sought sanctuary in Illinois on Sunday. They landed at O’Hare International Airport then immediately headed to the DuPage Democratic office by car and charter bus for the news conference, [DuPage County Democratic Party Chair Reid McCollum] said.

McCollum believes Pritzker’s staff considered the office because of the success the organization has had turning DuPage County Democratic.

“This was an opportunity to highlight the Democratic success in the area,” he said.

While he wouldn’t give specifics, McCollum acknowledged the Texans are staying in the West suburbs.

* CNN

Democratic Texas State Rep. Lulu Flores said that she and several other members of the Texas delegation who traveled to Illinois “plan to stay as long as it takes” in an effort to stall the aggressive Republican redistricting push back home.

“You just heard that the special session lasts til August 19. That’s the very least time that we expect to be out here,” Flores said in an interview on CNN.

Flores said that she hoped efforts by Democratic governors in states such as California, New York and Illinois to pursue their own redistricting plans in response to the developments in Texas would ultimately dissuade Republicans.

…Adding… The Illinois Freedom Caucus…

The Illinois Freedom Caucus says it is time for Governor Pritzker to stop the media stunts and send the Texas Democratic lawmakers hiding in Illinois back to Texas.

In an effort to prevent a quorum in the Texas Legislature and delay important votes, Texas Democratic lawmakers are hiding out in Illinois at the invitation of Gov. JB Pritzker. The Illinois Freedom Caucus is calling on Pritzker to stop the kabuki theater and focus on the problems facing Illinois residents instead.

“Our offices are flooded with phone calls about rising utility bills – bills that have gone up thanks to JB Pritzker’s radical green energy policies. The unemployment rate in Illinois is one of the highest in the nation. And Illinois now has the highest property taxes in the country. We have serious problems in our state and what is our Governor doing about it? Not a thing. All he is doing is trying to bolster his fledgling presidential campaign by harboring truant, derelict legislators from Texas who refuse to do the job they were elected to do. JB Pritzker seems to have an obsession with aiding and abetting fugitives, whether they be criminal illegals or truant Democratic lawmakers.

The idea that these legislators would seek refuge in Illinois because of “partisan” legislative redistricting is the very definition of irony given that Illinois’ own maps look like a 3-year-old drew them in crayon. The faux outrage must be called out. If JB Pritzker and these fugitive lawmakers really cared about their constituents, they would go home and get back to work.”

* More…

    * The Hill | 5 things to know on Texas’s political showdown: This isn’t the first time Texas Democrats, who have long been a minority in the state chambers, have turned to this strategy to try to stall a particularly controversial plan state Republicans were proposing. They fled in 2003 when Republicans were pursuing an earlier middecade redistricting plan and again in 2021 to try to stop a bill to implement new voting restrictions. In both cases, the proposals were delayed but ultimately passed. The quorum break comes in the middle of a 30-day special session called by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R), after President Trump put pressure on Texas to redraw lines and boost GOP numbers. Democrats could try to run out the clock on the current session but couldn’t keep Abbott from calling another.

    * Tribune | Texas Democrats who left state prevent vote, for now, on Trump’s efforts to add GOP House seats: “This is not just rigging the system in Texas,” Pritzker said Sunday. “It’s about rigging the system against the rights of all Americans for years to come.” U.S. Rep. Marc Veasey of Texas urged other Democratic governors to join Pritzker, Newsom and Hochul. Democrats, Veasey said, have too often “shown up to a gun fight with good intentions, no knives.” But “that era is over,” Veasey declared Monday from Illinois. “We are not going to unilaterally disarm.”

    * WBEZ | Texas Democrats ready to stay in Illinois ‘as long as it takes’ to fight GOP congressional maps: At a news conference at the IBEW Local 701 headquarters in Warrenville, U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi called the situation a “man-made catastrophe for democracy” while standing alongside some of the 40 Texas Democrats taking refuge in Illinois. He also said it was a chance for Democrats to show constituents they are willing to stand up against Republican incursions into political norms, after criticisms of responses by Democrats to recent power grabs from Trump and state Republicans. “We have to recognize we’re at this crossroads,” Krishnamoorthi told the Sun-Times on Monday night. “Democrats can either play nice, or we can say if they go down that path, two can play at that game.”

  26 Comments      


Hexaware: Your Globally Local IT Services Partner

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

As a global IT services company rooted in communities around the world, Hexaware combines deep industry expertise with cutting-edge solutions to boost productivity, create new opportunities, and strengthen economies everywhere. Our Corporate Video showcases our transparent, action-oriented approach—from local community initiatives to enterprise-scale programs—designed to deliver real results you can see and measure.

  Comments Off      


CPS gets larger share of state dollars but still $1.6B short of adequacy (Updated)

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and here for some background. The Illinois State Board of Education on Friday

​The Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) today released annual allocations for Evidence-Based Funding (EBF) for Fiscal Year 2026, reflecting continued and historic commitment to equitable school funding. Under Governor JB Pritzker, the state has increased EBF by $2.1 billion, bringing the total annual investment to $8.9 billion.

The General Assembly appropriated an additional $307 million for EBF in FY 2026. Of that amount, $5.2 million is specifically earmarked to support new alternative schools that serve students with specialized needs. The remaining $301.8 million is designated for distribution through EBF tiers, with 99% of the new funds going to the state’s highest-need districts. […]

Nine years of investments in EBF have raised the funding floor, accomplishing the main goal of EBF, which is to focus increases in state funding toward districts with the greatest need. The number of fully funded districts, those at or above 90% adequacy, has grown from 194 in FY 2018 to 313 in FY 2026. The formula considers enrollment, student demographics, local funding capacity, and 34 cost factors outlined in statute to ensure funding is responsive and equitable.

Every school district will receive at least the same amount of funding as last year through the Base Minimum Funding, with the additional FY 2026 EBF Tier appropriation of $301.8 million distributed equitably based on district need. This year’s increase in EBF investment reflects a pause in funding for the Property Tax Relief Grant, which is typically allocated $50 million.

While the FY 2026 investment reinforces Illinois’ strong trajectory toward equity, this year’s data reflects a slight dip in the average Percentage of Adequacy across Illinois school districts due to changing economic conditions. A 41.3% drop in Corporate Personal Property Replacement Tax (CPPRT) revenue, combined with rising education costs, resulted in a modest decline in the average funding adequacy for districts below 90%, from 77.1% in FY 2025 to 76.6% in FY 2026. Still, that average remains nearly 10 percentage points higher than in FY 2018, when it was just 67.1%.

* Chalkbeat Chicago

Chicago Public Schools will receive an additional $76 million from the state this fiscal year for a total of $1.9 billion, according to new data released by the state on Friday.

The new figures indicate Chicago had a significant drop in local tax revenue and an increase in the number of English learners, giving it higher priority for additional state dollars. The new calculations also show that CPS is less adequately funded under the state’s formula than it was last year and will now need about $1.6 billion to reach adequate funding.

* WBEZ’s Sarah Karp

CPS is one of more than 300 under-funded districts that is getting a smaller percentage of what it needs compared to just a year ago. State law calls for all schools to be funded to at least 90% of adequacy by 2027, but the Center on Tax and Budget Accountability says that at the current rate the state is funding education, it will take until at least 2034 to reach that level.

For CPS, the percent toward adequacy dropped from 79% to 73%. Statewide, the average percent toward adequacy decreased slightly — by about half a percentage point — to 76.6%. The state points to a significant decrease in revenue from a state tax on corporations, as well as “rising education costs,” such as inflation and cost-of-living raises, for the drop in adequacy. […]

Meanwhile, CPS is grappling with a $734 million budget deficit and has not approved a budget for the coming school year. By law, a balanced budget must be presented next week so that required hearings can take place before the budget is approved at the end of August.

In terms of adequacy levels, the state has once again categorized CPS in Tier 1 — among the districts furthest from adequacy — a position the district shed just two years ago. But the upside of being in this category is that it gets more of the state’s pot of money for education. As a result, CPS will get $76 million more this year than it got last year.

* More from Chalkbeat Chicago

The state’s second largest district serving almost 34,000 students, Elgin’s U-46, dropped from Tier 1 to Tier 2 and will receive less than last year due to a decline in average student enrollment and students from low-income households. The district will receive an additional $4.8 million, almost $14 million less than it received last year in new money.

Rockford School District 205, the state’s third largest district serving about 26,418 students, is expected to receive an additional $19.7 million in state dollars — $9.5 million more than last year. The district has seen an increase in average student enrollment, English learners, and a significant decrease in local property tax revenues.


…Adding…
The Chicago Teachers Union last week…

You can’t make this up.

The state that withholds money from our district held a hearing yesterday to find out why the district is in financial trouble.
State representative Curtis Tarver, who represents Chicago students and their families, called a hearing on CPS school finance to reiterate why he and his colleagues have no solutions or any political will to fund CPS and stabilize successful programs like sustainable community schools.

Here are the facts: While our students go without librarians, art teachers, and basic supplies, Illinois’ wealthiest 5 percent are getting handed $8 billion in Trump tax cuts from his recent budget bill. Add in the $10 billion in tax breaks already baked into Gov. Pritzker’s budget for tech corporations and the ultra-rich, and you’re looking at $18 billion in giveaways to those who need it least.

That’s enough to eliminate CPS’s entire $1.2 billion funding gap 15 times over.

Reminder: It is 2025, not 2012, and we are no longer debating already failed arguments on retirement security versus smaller class sizes. Working families deserve both.

* Related…

    * WBEZ | CPS must present a plan to close its deficit within 9 days: What are the options?: Since taking over in June, interim Chicago Public Schools CEO and Supt. Macquline King has been laser-focused on coming up with a plan to close the school district’s $734 million budget deficit. King and her team now have less than two weeks to present a budget in time for legally required hearings and a vote at the Aug. 28 Board of Education meeting.

    * Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago Public Schools cuts 480 janitor positions as it ends all private custodial contracts: The move, which comes as the district is working to close a $734 million deficit, sparked an immediate rebuke and demand for reconsideration from the two unions representing school custodians. Starting Sept. 30, CPS will oversee 2,100 full-time custodians and end seven contracts with private custodial companies. The change will mean cutting about 1,250 private custodians and ending a longstanding practice of contracting with private companies to help clean schools.

    * ABC Chicago | IL lawmakers want Chicago Public Schools fully funded, don’t feel all funding should come from state: But while many Thursday acknowledged the state legislature will need to step in, there is also a realization that none of this will happen before the 2026 budget is voted on. There was also pushback by the very legislator who’s proposed the millionaires tax. “There’s no votes outside the city of Chicago to just send the city of Chicago money without sending money to the rest of the state,” said state Rep. Curtis Tarver, assistant majority leader and a Democrat representing Chicago.

    * Chalkbeat Chicago | Illinois lawmakers offer no quick solutions for CPS during district finances hearing: “I’m hopeful that we can move past the rhetoric, the talking points and unrealistic demands, and get down to business about how we can do better by CPS and its students,” said Illinois Democrat Rep. Ann Williams, who represents neighborhoods on the North Side of Chicago and chairs the House Executive Committee. Illinois has increased funding for K-12 schools across the state by more than $2 billion under a funding formula created eight years ago, of which $1.1 billion has gone to CPS. The state set a goal to “adequately” fund all school districts by 2027, but they’re projected to miss that deadline. According to the state’s formula last year, Chicago schools need almost $1.2 billion to be considered adequately funded.

  37 Comments      


Open thread

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please.

  12 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Rep. Darin LaHood won’t run for Illinois governor, he says. NBC Chicago

    - Republican Rep. Darin LaHood announced Monday that he will not run for governor in Illinois, and will instead seek reelection to Congress.
    - If LaHood had decided to run, he would have been the highest profile Republican to throw their hat in the ring during the current election cycle.
    - DuPage County Sheriff James Mendrick has announced a run for the office, along with suburban businessman Joseph Severino.
    - Today marks the first day for candidates in Illinois to begin circulating petitions for the 2026 primary election in the state.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | They’re here. They’re queer. They’re farming. New generation of LGBTQ farmers more visible and vocal: Scheider and Alem never thought they would be able to own a farm — the financial hurdles were just too great. But Schneider had a knack for the work, and was drawn to the idea of running their own business. The couple both took a business class after Schneider’s apprenticeship — and then took the leap to farming at Windy City’s incubator farm in Bronzeville. Their farm, Otter Oaks, is named for Schneider’s grandfather’s ranch.

* Austin Weekly News | Dem party role contested as Davis retires, Welch and Harmon vie for seat : Don Harmon, State Senate President and Democratic Oak Park Township Committeeman, said Sunday that he will be circulating nominating petitions for the party office of 7th District State Central Committeeman, an office Davis has held since 1998. Meanwhile, Harmon’s counterpart in the Illinois General Assembly, House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch has started actively campaigning for the post and has secured an endorsement from Davis and 18 other political figures, including River Forest Village President Cathy Adduci and State Rep. LaShawn Ford.

* Sun-Times | Chicago immigration judges fired by Trump White House call for transparency about their terminations: Jennifer Peyton, a former assistant chief immigration judge in Chicago, said she has watched more than 100 judicial colleagues be abruptly terminated, transferred or resign this year. Peyton and Carla Espinoza are among a group of dozens of judges who have been terminated without explanation since President Donald Trump took office in January. Both women spoke out Monday about what they called a lack of transparency and due process — adding they’re concerned about a staggering 3.5 million backlog in immigration cases. “Since January 2025, immigration courts… are no longer honoring or offering due process like it did when I was appointed in September 2016. The court system has been systematically and intentionally destroyed, defunded and politicized by this administration,” Peyton said at a Chicago press conference alongside Sen. Dick Durbin. “I don’t know why this has happened, but I fear for our country and for justice.”

*** Statewide ***

* WBEZ | Police use of force is declining, according to University of Illinois study: Researchers with the school’s Cline Center for Advanced Social Research compiled data to track and identify the use of lethal force by officers throughout the country. They found that from 2021 to 2023 the number of such incidents fell by 24 percent nationally. The drop was about the same in Illinois. The report includes any incident in which police used a firearm, including those with nonfatal outcomes, as well as any other use of force that resulted in a death. But it doesn’t draw conclusions as to why the decrease is occurring.

* Shaw Local | Girls flag football surges in Illinois as hundreds more take the field in year two: Last fall, hundreds of first-year players from 156 schools competed in the inaugural season of girls flag football in Illinois – up from the 22 in 2021, when Crystal Lake’s Gustavo Silva, the Chicago Bears’ director of football development, kicked off a pilot program in Chicago. More than 200 schools are expected to have teams this fall, IHSA assistant executive director Tracie Henry said. Silva’s big goal for the 2026-27 school year is 300.

*** Statehouse News ***

* FYI



* Daily Herald | Arlington Heights trustee launches bid for state Senate seat: Arlington Heights Trustee Carina Santa Maria is running for the state Senate seat held by Mark Walker, who isn’t seeking reelection next year. Santa Maria, elected to the village board last April, is the first Democratic candidate to declare her candidacy for the 27th District opening since Walker’s announcement last Tuesday. She filed paperwork Thursday with the Illinois State Board of Elections that formally amends her candidate political committee in order to seek the General Assembly office. The committee is chaired by Wheeling Township Supervisor Maria Zeller Brauer, while Arlington Heights Memorial Library board Trustee Darnell McClaney serves as treasurer.

* WaPo | Inside Texas Democrats’ plan to seek refuge with Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker: Soon his staff was talking daily with Texas Democrats. And early this week, he stood next to state lawmakers as they explained their escape to Chicago, assembled in front of a “JB” backdrop advertising Pritzker’s reelection campaign. “This is a righteous act of courage,” Pritzker said. “When you show people that you have the will to fight, well, they can muster the will to fight, too.”

* WAND | Illinois to start tracking firefighter cause of death in 2026: The Associated Firefighters of Illinois asked lawmakers to require the State Fire Marshal’s office to track and record the manner of death for firefighters across the state. Sponsors said it is important to evaluate the types of death these first responders are experiencing, whether it is suicide or various types of cancer.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Are ghost buses all but gone? Canceled CTA buses will now be noted on tracker apps: The CTA began publicly sharing the data on canceled buses earlier this spring. But it wasn’t until recently that the phone app Transit began showing canceled buses to CTA riders — marking them with a line through their scheduled time. It is currently the only application that has incorporated CTA’s new data. The Ventra app, Google Maps and Apple Maps don’t show canceled buses yet — but they will soon, according to the CTA.

* Crain’s | In downtown Chicago’s condo market, the hits keep coming: Last week was rough on the downtown condo market, with nine different examples popping up to show that the price declines of the fraught early 2020s aren’t over. Several condos sold for prices below what they went for 15 years ago or more. Sellers on a high floor in a showcase tower put their condo on the market at $1.2 million off what they paid for it in 2022. And one North Michigan Avenue’s million-dollar sale price was below what it went for in 2019, 2011 and 2009.

* AP | In ‘Sinners’ and his music, Buddy Guy is keeping the blues alive. It hasn’t been easy.: For the eight-time Grammy Award-winning musician, those recognitions aren’t priority. The longevity of the music that made his life is his primary concern. “Like I promised B.B. King, Muddy Waters and all of them,” he tells The Associated Press over the phone, “I do the best I can to keep the blues alive.” Which he does with the Chicago blues venue Buddy Guy’s Legends, which the artist opened in 1989.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | ‘We will hide them at our own legal peril’: DuPage Democratic leader pledges to protect Texan lawmakers: “This was an opportunity to highlight the Democratic success in the area,” he said. While he wouldn’t give specifics, McCollum acknowledged the Texans are staying in the West suburbs. […] If the Texas Democrats are trying to run out the clock on the session, McCollum said they’re welcome to stay in DuPage County for the duration. “I will dig a bunker and stock it,” McCollum said. “We will hide them at our own legal peril, until hell freezes over if need be.”

* Crain’s | Northwestern’s president is appearing again before Congress. Here’s what to know: Unlike in a typical congressional hearing, the appearance will be closed to the media and the public, though it will be transcribed, according to a spokesperson for the committee. No information was available on whether the transcription will be released. Details on how many committee members will take part in the interview and if it will include both House Democrats and Republicans, in a similar fashion to a regular committee hearing, were also unavailable.

* Tribune | Cuts ripple across Northwestern, as faculty warn of dire situation: “Let’s say they unfreeze the funds. The damage is done,” said Guillermo Oliver, a professor in the Division of Nephrology and Hypertension. “Let’s be clear, this is not going to be, ‘OK, back to business.’” Northwestern never received formal notification of the funding freeze in April, which came amid several federal probes into allegations of antisemitism. The Evanston-based university has been spending about $10 million a week to keep research afloat, faculty told the Tribune in June.

* Daily Southtown | Harvey police: House party shooting that injured 4-year-old part of long-standing conflict between ‘bad actors’: At a news conference Monday in front of the Harvey police station, police Chief Cameron Biddings provided more details about the shooting, and said the violence was part of a longstanding conflict between “individuals with a long and disruptive history within our city.” “We now know who the bad actors are. These are not random acts of violence or anonymous individuals,” Biddings said. “We are very familiar with them, and frankly, they have caused harm within our community for far too long.” Biddings said police have increased patrols in the area and are looking at “pursuing charges where applicable.”

* Aurora Beacon-News | Paramount Theatre cancels its Bold subscription series due to Aurora funding cut: Aurora has seen political change in recent weeks. Former mayor Richard Irvin, who had staked much of the city’s future on downtown Aurora becoming a long-term hub for arts and entertainment, was defeated by John Laesch, who is now in office and has said Aurora now faces a gap between revenue and expenses. As the Tribune has reported, Laesch already has canceled plans for the proposed construction of new 4,000-seat music venue to be known as the City of Lights Center, and has said at a public meeting both that the city faced a “significant hole” between revenue and expenses and that the city’s subsidy of the existing historic theater was “too much.”

* Daily Herald | Lake County forest preserve to sell land for Fort Sheridan National Cemetery expansion: Three pending moves by the Lake County Forest Preserve District will allow for the expansion of the Fort Sheridan National Cemetery, create a new preserve in far northeastern Lake County and enlarge another near Round Lake. The district for several years has been discussing a deal with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, which wants to expand the cemetery near Lake Bluff with columbaria structures for the interment of cremated remains.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | ISU, IWU and Heartland international student enrollment is down, following national trend: In a statement, ISU said it estimated the entering class of international students will be about a third smaller. Though their overall numbers are small, Heartland and IWU entering classes both will be down around 17% compared with last year. Last year’s IWU international student cohort was above the post-pandemic average, said a spokesperson. ISU said it’s expecting about 100 new international students to show up for classes, though it won’t have a precise count until after the 10th day of classes. That number is equivalent to roughly 17% of last year’s total international student enrollment.

* WCIA | New DMV+ in Champaign making visits faster: This is the first DMV+ outside of Springfield and Chicago to open, and it’s a decision that’s been in the works since 2023. “It essentially started as soon as we took office and we knew that we wanted to create some more efficiencies, we knew we wanted to bring more services,” Giannoulias said. Customers at the DMV can now get certified copies of business records, can file items for LLCs, and get documents needed for things like adoption or international business. Before Monday, that could only be accomplished in Springfield or Chicago.

* WGLT | Bloomington mobile home park residents reach settlement over tenants’ rights lawsuit: The agreements between the tenants and Oak Wood Properties include the amendment of the model lease and community rules to conform with Illinois law, according to PSLS. They will also disclose rent increase projections and notice of tenants’ rights, PSLS said. The disclosure of rights informs tenants that signing a new lease is not a requirement to stay in the park, they cannot be evicted for choosing to not sign a new lease, tenants can automatically renew a lease and can only be given a new proposal at the time, PSLS said. It also will tell tenants they can only be charged fees itemized in the lease and any past notices in conflict are null and void, according to PSLS.

* WJBD | Marion County Fair Board President Pleased with Fair Week: Marion County Fair Board President Doug Telford says it was a good fair week even with the extremely hot start. Telford reviewed the week as the fair came to a close on Saturday night. “We started extremely hot, but I will brag on the Marion county fair board. The fair board members, we all pulled together. We pulled through the heat and we made sure to have every show ready for the grandstands. The community come out and supported us through the heat. Unfortunately, that’s all we had was a lot of hot air the first few nights. It turned off and got cooler towards the end of the week. The community come out again for us. It’s been a good week all and all.”

*** National ***

* WaPo | U.S. visa bonds would charge some foreign travelers $15,000 deposits: The State Department plans to start running a pilot program this month that would require some foreign travelers to pay up to $15,000 for a reimbursable visa bond that deters them from staying in the U.S. longer than they’re allowed for business or tourism. Some details are outlined in a public notice that appeared Monday on the Federal Register, but many are still unclear, including which countries would be targeted by the program.

* The Hill | RFK Jr. ‘reviewing’ ouster of preventive task force members : The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force is composed of medical experts who serve four-year terms on a volunteer basis. They are appointed by the HHS secretary and are supposed to be shielded from political influence. The task force reviews reams of scientific evidence to make recommendations on services such as cancer screenings, HIV prevention medications and more. It makes its recommendations using a grading scale, and ObamaCare requires insurers to cover services the task force recommends with a “grade” of A or B at no cost to patients.

  10 Comments      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  Comment      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Aug 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WGN political reporter Tahman Bradley


Transcript…

Mayor Johnson: There should be no reason why we don’t do everything in our power to ensure that Illinois shows up for Illinoisans. In fact, as much as I appreciate Illinois helping out people from Texas, the South Side and the West Side could use that same level of energy.

* Meanwhile, from the Washington Post

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) is threatening to try to remove Democratic lawmakers from office for fleeing the state and claiming they could be charged with crimes, escalating tensions overnight in a showdown over redrawing congressional lines ahead of the midterm elections.

Most of the Democrats in the Texas state House exited the state Sunday — many of whom arrived here in Chicago in the evening — to prevent Republicans from overhauling the state’s map to give themselves five more safe GOP seats. Abbott’s response underscores the Republicans’ commitment to passing their plan and the challenges Democrats face in stopping him.

“This truancy ends now. The derelict Democrat House members must return to Texas and be in attendance when the House reconvenes at 3:00 PM [Central time] on Monday,” Abbott said in a letter to Democrats released late Sunday. […]

Abbott, who also launched a $750,000 digital ad campaign Sunday against Democrats, cited a 2021 opinion from state Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) in his letter to contend that courts could determine that Democrats had abandoned their duties and given up their jobs. That would allow Abbott to call special elections to replace them, he said.

* More from Politico

Abbott’s options to compel those Democrats — whose departure to Illinois and other states is preventing the state Legislature from conducting any business — to return and vote are more constrained and legally uncertain than he let on. And they may take significant time to resolve in court. […]

Importantly, breaking quorum is not a crime. However, if the absentee Democratic lawmakers remained in Texas, Abbott could order state troopers to haul them to the Capitol. That’s why they fled for the friendlier confines of Illinois and other blue states, where Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker and other allies have vowed to shelter them from Texas’ demands to bring them back.

Federal laws allow states to demand the return, or “extradition,” of criminal fugitives from other states. But because breaking quorum is not illegal, Abbott can’t seek help from the courts to compel the Democrats’ return.

Instead, Abbott threatened to take another action against the absentee lawmakers: Ask Texas courts to remove them from office altogether. State law permits a Texas district court to determine whether a public official has “abandoned” his or her office, declaring it vacant — enabling the governor to set new elections to fill the empty seats.

“Come and take it,” dared state Rep. Gene Wu, the Texas House Democratic Caucus leader, in an appearance Monday morning on CNN. Wu declared Abbott’s threat to be “all bluster.”

*** Statewide ***

* Bloomberg | Home Depot Face Scans Accused of Violating Illinois Privacy Law: Home Depot Inc. was hit with a new lawsuit alleging the retailer violated Illinois’ Biometric Information Privacy Act by failing to ask for permission to collect facial scans at self checkout kiosks and not providing a public retention schedule that aligns with the law’s limits.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Aquifer protection, Chicago pension boost among more than 100 new laws: After the state moved to regulate carbon sequestration last year, advocates called on lawmakers to codify protections for the Mahomet Aquifer — a measure which Pritzker signed last week. The aquifer is the sole source of drinking water for more than a dozen counties in Central Illinois, including communities in and around Peoria and Champaign. Supporters of carbon sequestration technology, which sees carbon dioxide pollution buried deep underground, say that the process wouldn’t affect any drinking water because the carbon dioxide is hundreds or thousands of feet below where water sits.

*** Chicago ***

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago Public Schools cuts 480 janitor positions as it ends all private custodial contracts: Chicago Public Schools will cut 480 custodian jobs, end all private custodial contracts, and directly oversee the work of keeping schools clean. The move, which comes as the district is working to close a $734 million deficit, sparked an immediate rebuke and demand for reconsideration from the two unions representing school custodians. Starting Sept. 30, CPS will oversee 2,100 full-time custodians and end seven contracts with private custodial companies. The change will mean cutting about 1,250 private custodians and ending a longstanding practice of contracting with private companies to help clean schools.

* WTTW | ‘It Is an Investment in Our Future’: CPS Announces 16 New Sustainable Community Schools: Launched in 2018, CPS based its SCS model around engaging academic curriculum, high-quality teaching, wrap-around supports, restorative justice discipline, parent engagement and inclusive school leadership. By the end of the 2024-25 academic year, 20 Chicago schools were classified as sustainable community schools, but after Monday’s announcement, that total has jumped up to 36. Interim CPS CEO Macquline King called that expansion a “significant step forward in our investment in education.”

* Block Club | New Life Coming To CHA-Owned Pullman Row House That’s Been Vacant For 2 Decades: The announcement comes more than a year after Block Club Chicago reported that the home in the 10500 block of South Corliss Avenue was unused and deteriorating — one of hundreds of CHA homes sitting empty as the city struggles with an affordable housing shortage. The Corliss property, which is more than 150 years old, is part of the South Side neighborhood’s rich labor history. The area is a city, state and national landmark. The CHA has owned the Corliss row house since 1983.

* ABC Chicago | Alleged Chicago squatters move out of home after Illinois Rep. La Shawn Ford pays for U-Haul: The new law won’t go into effect until Jan. 1. So, Ford says he had to get creative to convince the alleged squatter to leave. He says he talked to the woman at length, and ultimately got her to agree to move out. Ford paid for a U-Haul truck, and 24 hours later the alleged squatter and her family were gone.

* WBEZ | Loop’s famed Sol LeWitt sculpture needs total rebuild, feds say: A celebrated sculpture by artist Sol LeWitt was removed from the facade of a Downtown federal building because it deteriorated and needs a complete rebuild, according to the U.S. General Services Administration. But the fabrication work has not been approved or funded, a GSA spokesperson said. While the agency said it’s working with LeWitt’s estate on the sculpture’s conservation, the late artist’s wife said she hasn’t heard from the GSA about the artwork in “years.”

* Tribune | They’re here. They’re queer. They’re farming. New generation of LGBTQ farmers more visible and vocal: Laid off by a bar during the COVID pandemic, Jarvi Schneider turned to the internet for job leads. The Chicago Botanic Garden was offering a training program for would-be farmers that included paid, hands-on experience, and Schneider signed up. That led to a business class and four years growing vegetables at a shared plot in Bronzeville. Now Schneider, who is transgender and uses they/them pronouns, is taking the next step with their spouse, Soraya Alem. The couple is leasing a 43-acre farm in McHenry County, with the intention to buy.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Press Release | “From the Mail Room to the Board Room” – Will County Metra Appointee has Deep Ties to Agency: Will County Executive Jennifer Bertino-Tarrant has appointed local labor leader and lifelong Will County resident Brian Shanahan to serve on the Metra Board of Directors, bringing a wealth of railroad, transit, and economic development experience to the transit agency’s leadership team. “Serving on the Metra Board of Directors is a tremendous honor and a culmination of a lifelong commitment to regional transit,” said Director Shanahan. “Transit is absolutely pivotal for both residents to have access to opportunities and for stable, long-term, good-paying career opportunities. My goal on the board will be to promote interconnectivity and create the level of transit access that Will County residents deserve.”

* Block Club | Bridgeport’s Sausage Queen Moves To The Burbs As Family Meat Empire Grows: Nicole Makowski, the fourth-generation owner of Makowski’s Real Sausage, is moving the business to Lansing after 90 years on the South Side to meet increased production needs. But she “will always be the sausage queen of Chicago.”

* Daily Herald | Naperville 203 contract talks continue; both sides pledge teachers will be in classrooms Aug. 14: Within a week, the district sent two notices to families regarding ongoing negotiations with the Naperville Unit Education Association. In the first, sent July 24, the district advised families that the union had submitted a “posting” notice, requiring both sides to publicly post their latest offers through the Illinois Education Labor Relations Board. In a second letter sent July 30, the district sent a notice confirming that teachers will be in the classroom on the first day of school.

* Daily Herald | Carpentersville hopes special taxing district lure developers: illage trustees recently annexed two parcels, totaling 100 acres, along Randall Road north of Huntley Road. The village intends to include both in a tax increment financing district covering approximately 150 acres. In a TIF district, property tax disbursements to local governments are frozen at current levels. As development increases property values, the extra tax revenue that would have gone to taxing bodies such as schools and parks instead to go a special village fund to pay for improvements within the TIF’s boundaries.

* Daily Herald | How marina purchase will help keep the Chain O’ Lakes flowing: Its mission is to improve and maintain 7,100 acres of the Fox River and Chain for recreation; restore environmental quality; control flooding; promote tourism; and preserve and enhance the system for residents and visitors. A key move that checks several of those boxes, waterway officials say, was the $2.4 million purchase of Bauske Boat Basin marina, strategically located on a channel between Nippersink and Pistakee lakes.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Festival along Fox River gives North Aurora a chance to celebrate: An annual event dating back to 1990, the festival has continued to offer music, food and entertainment as well as community interaction including a village-wide garage sale, activities at the local library and more. The two-day event kicked off formally at 5 p.m. Friday with food and beer tents, face painting and balloon art, inflatables for kids to play on, a petting zoo and live music. Saturday offered a fishing derby at Willow Lake Park and a softball tournament at Fearn Park, followed by a Touch-A-Truck opportunity and plenty of food and entertainment.

* Daily Herald | Maury Ettleson, Elmhurst car dealer whose catchy commercials made him a star, has died at 93: The tagline he proclaimed with his business partner Nick Celozzi was tailor-made for their Chicago accents: “Celozzi-Ettleson Chevrolet …. Where you always save more money!” Wearing suits and waving handfuls of cash, the pair implored Chicagoans to visit their dealership at York and Roosevelt roads in Elmhurst.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | Workers at metro-east Boeing plant among thousands on strike: Three Boeing defense plants, including those at a manufacturing plant at MidAmerica Airport in Mascoutah, face a strike as 3,200 hourly machinists walked off their jobs. Members of the International Association of Machinists voted to strike at about noon Monday. “3,200 highly-skilled IAM Union members at Boeing went on strike at midnight because enough is enough,” the union wrote on X. IAM Midwest Territory General Vice President Sam Cicinelli on Sunday urged a new contract for the workers.

* Illinois Times | Repeat Offender: Friends and family say custody is where he belongs : Crystal Page has been advocating for justice for her younger brother, 14-year-old Harold “H.P.” Page III, since Gansbauer shot and killed him in 1993. This case gave Gansbauer his first conviction for a violent crime, but not his last. […] Illinois’ armed habitual criminal statute is designed to penalize repeat felony offenders for unlawful possession of weapons. Conviction under this charge requires the state to prove the accused unlawfully possessed a firearm and has been convicted of two or more qualifying past felony offenses. Gansbauer has at least two qualifying convictions, including unlawful possession of a weapon in 2016 and aggravated robbery in 2021. To avoid the new weapons charge, Gansbauer’s lawyer will have to prove that Gansbauer did not receive, sell, possess or transfer a firearm. Those harmed by Gansbauer in past cases are hoping the state will finally take his record seriously, five criminal charges and three convictions later.

* River Bender | Illinois State Fair Announces Free Randy Houser Grandstand Concert On Aug. 11, 2025: With an inimitable voice, Houser has become one of country music’s most celebrated vocalists. His chart-topping album How Country Feels delivered smash hits including “Runnin’ Outta Moonlight,” “Goodnight Kiss,” and CMA Song of the Year nominee “Like A Cowboy.” Houser has since added more No. 1 hits to his catalog, including “We Went,” and continues to wow audiences with his powerhouse vocals. His sixth studio album, Note To Self, further cemented his reputation as a standout in country music, while his latest single, “Country Back,” is already making waves. Beyond music, Houser has showcased his talent on the big screen, appearing in Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon and Dennis Quaid’s The Hill.

* WICS | Traffic pattern changes for Illinois State Fair: Starting at 5 a.m. on Thursday, August 7, traffic around the fairgrounds will be redirected to flow one way counterclockwise. Additionally, both eastbound and westbound turn lanes from Veterans Parkway to Eighth Street will be closed. Temporary signs will be installed to guide motorists through the new traffic patterns. Normal traffic flow is set to resume by 6 a.m. on Monday, August 18.

* WICS | Illinois State Fair trams return with expanded service and new stops: Two trams will operate daily on a dedicated route throughout the fair’s 11-day run, providing free rides for all attendees with handicap accessibility. The trams will run continuously each day, with maps of the routes displayed on the fairgrounds. Stops include Happy Hollow at the Handicap Ramp to Illinois Building/Senior Center, Campground/Arena entrance, 4-H Road at the 4-H Master Gardeners, entrance to Conservation World, Goat Barn at Grandstand Avenue, South End of the Half-Mile Track near Gate 4, ISF Security Office near the Fire Station, and the Hobbies Arts & Crafts building.

* WGLT | Bloomington Public Library creates 2025 time capsule to be opened in 2050: Another time capsule was discovered at Bloomington Public Library during a renovation period and was the inspiration behind starting a second one. The first time capsule was made in 1977 when the library was first built, according to library director Jeanne Hamilton. “We thought that was a really fun experience to open and see what they thought was important then,” Hamilton said. Hamilton said the 1977 time capsule was found buried inside a wall in 2022 when the $25 million expansion and renovation began. Hamilton credited Illinois State University archivist April Anderson-Zorn for helping to advise them on how to examine the 1977 time capsule.

* WCIA | Mattoon’s AMC plans to close this week: “AMC routinely reviews the theatres in our circuit, as well as opportunities outside of our circuit, and makes decisions based on what will best strengthen the Company going forward,” AMC said in a statement sent to WCIA. AMC Decatur 10 and AMC Champaign 13 will remain open.

* WSIL | Safety inspection to close Mississippi River bridge at Cairo: The bridge, which connects Alexander County, Illinois, to Mississippi County, Missouri, will be closed from 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. daily, starting Monday, Aug. 11, through Friday, Aug. 15, and again from Monday, Aug. 18, through Friday, Aug. 22. These closures are necessary for the annual safety inspection of the structure.

* WCIA | Discolored water in Gibson City caused by contractors’ ‘unauthorized use’ of hydrants: Officials posted on Facebook that the discoloration is the result of unauthorized use of fire hydrants by contractors. Water was pulled from the city system in bulk without authorization from the city. “This activity has disturbed the water system, and we are actively working to address the issue and prevent it from happening again,” officials wrote.

*** National ***

* On Data and Democracy | The Mothership Vortex: An Investigation Into the Firm at the Heart of the Democratic Spam Machine: The digital deluge is a familiar annoyance for anyone on a Democratic fundraising list. It’s a relentless cacophony of bizarre texts and emails, each one more urgent than the last, promising that your immediate $15 donation is the only thing standing between democracy and the abyss. The main rationale offered for this fundraising frenzy is that it’s a necessary evil—that the tactics, while unpleasant, are brutally effective at raising the money needed to win. But an analysis of the official FEC filings tells a very different story. The fundraising model is not a brutally effective tool for the party; it is a financial vortex that consumes the vast majority of every dollar it raises.

* Restaurant Business | Washington, D.C. reinstates the tip credit: “We appreciate Mayor (Muriel) Bowser and the D.C. Council acting to mitigate the real-life challenges tip credit elimination was presenting to tipped workers and restaurant owners in the District,” Mike Whatley, VP of state affairs and grassroots advocacy for the National Restaurant Association, said in a statement. He said that the compromise “will provide meaningful relief for operators and preserve a model that is supported by tipped employees.” D.C. officials have sounded regret on the tip credit elimination in recent months, worried about the impact its elimination would have on the city’s restaurant scene.

* NPR | Why a NASA satellite that scientists and farmers rely on may be destroyed on purpose: The data the two missions collect is widely used, including by scientists, oil and gas companies and farmers who need detailed information about carbon dioxide and crop health. They are the only two federal satellite missions that were designed and built specifically to monitor planet-warming greenhouse gases. It is unclear why the Trump administration seeks to end the missions. The equipment in space is state of the art and is expected to function for many more years, according to scientists who worked on the missions. An official review by NASA in 2023 found that “the data are of exceptionally high quality” and recommended continuing the mission for at least three years.

* CBS | Plastic causing “disease and death from infancy to old age” that costs $1.5 trillion a year, report warns: The new review of existing evidence, which was carried out by leading health researchers and doctors, was published one day ahead of fresh talks in Geneva aiming at getting the world’s first treaty on plastic pollution. The experts called for the delegates from nearly 180 nations expected to attend the gathering to finally agree on a treaty after previous failed attempts. Comparing plastic to air and lead pollution, the report said the impact on health of plastic pollution could be mitigated by laws and policies.

* Electrek | Tesla withheld data, lied, and misdirected police and plaintiffs to avoid blame in Autopilot crash: Within about three minutes of the crash, the Model S uploaded a “collision snapshot”—video, CAN‑bus streams, EDR data, etc.—to Tesla’s servers, the “Mothership”, and received an acknowledgement. The vehicle then deleted its local copy, resulting in Tesla being the only entity having access What ensued were years of battle to get Tesla to acknowledge that this collision snapshot exists and is relevant to the case. The police repeatedly attempted to obtain the data from the collision snapshot, but Tesla led the authorities and the plaintiffs on a lengthy journey of deception and misdirection that spanned years.

* The Telegraph | Tesla hands Elon Musk $29bn to stop him from leaving: The entrepreneur is the company’s largest shareholder, with a 12.7pc stake, but Mr Musk has said he would be “uncomfortable” leading Tesla without a holding of around 25pc. He warned that he was vulnerable to being kicked out of the company by activist investors. During an investor call last month, he said: “I think my control over Tesla should be enough to ensure that it goes in a good direction, but not so much control that I can’t be thrown out if I go crazy.” In a letter to shareholders on Monday, Tesla said: “Retaining Elon is more important than ever before.

* CBS | Kristi Noem says “Alligator Alcatraz” to be model for ICE state-run detention centers: “The locations we’re looking at are right by airport runways that will help give us an efficiency that we’ve never had before,” Noem said, adding that she’s appealed directly to governors and state leaders nationwide to gauge their interest in contributing to the Trump administration’s program to detain and deport more unauthorized migrants. “Most of them are interested,” Noem said, adding that in states that support President Trump’s mission of securing the southern border, “many of them have facilities that may be empty or underutilized.”

  24 Comments      


Rate Holly Kim’s campaign launch video

Monday, Aug 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* As expected, Holly Kim has announced her bid for state comptroller. Press release…

Today, Lake County Treasurer Holly Kim officially launched her campaign for Illinois State Comptroller at a Teamsters Hall Local 301 with dozens of supporters, including elected officials, friends and family to show strong, early support for her candidacy.

“Susana Mendoza the current comptroller has done an amazing job paying down the bill backing, with the nine credit upgrades and she is graciously not running for reelection. It matters who picks up that baton and runs with it,” Holly Kim said during her announcement speech.

With the official announcement, a new video highlighting her record of fiscal responsibility, community-focused leadership, and readiness to build on the progress made under outgoing Comptroller Susana Mendoza. Watch the launch video here: https://youtu.be/eJkbEdJ7RJU

In the video, Kim outlines her priorities and makes the case for why she’s ready to serve. “People across Illinois trust me to do the work, because I show up and deliver. And I’d be proud to make history as the first Asian American executive state officer in Illinois.”

Along with the video, a long list of over 50 notable to local elected officials have already committed to Holly Kim for Illinois State Comptroller, including US Senator Andy Kim (D-NJ), State Representatives Rita Mayfield and Sharon Chung, Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss, and Cook County Commissioner Josina Morita, to name a few of her 50+ endorsements. You can find the growing list of her endorsements at www.voteforhollykim.com/endorsements.

A two-term elected countywide executive, Kim has led the Lake County Treasurer’s Office through a period of modernization and reform where she introduced eBilling and expanded access to affordable banking options for working families. Kim also brings public, private, and nonprofit sector experience to the race. She serves as a Commissioner for the Illinois Comptroller’s Bank On Initiative, and previously held elected and appointed leadership roles as a Village Trustee, Township Director, and nonprofit board member.

A proud daughter of Korean immigrants, Kim was raised in Chicago’s Koreatown, where she was shaped by the strong work ethic and fiscal responsibility of her father, a small business owner. His example laid the foundation for her commitment to public service and sound financial stewardship. Her campaign for Comptroller emphasizes transparency, modernization, and fiscal stewardship that puts people first. To learn more about Holly Kim and her campaign, visit www.voteforhollykim.com.

* Video

  35 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign updates (Updated)

Monday, Aug 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

  Comments Off      


As Illinois towns debate grocery tax, new poll shows grocery prices stressing out Americans

Monday, Aug 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* AP

The vast majority of U.S. adults are at least somewhat stressed about the cost of groceries, a new poll finds, as prices continue to rise and concerns about the impact of President Donald Trump’s tariffs remain widespread.

About half of all Americans say the cost of groceries is a “major” source of stress in their life right now, while 33% say it’s a “minor” source of stress, according to the poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. Only 14% say it’s not a source of stress, underscoring the pervasive anxiety most Americans continue to feel about the cost of everyday essentials.

Other financial stressors — like the cost of housing or the amount of money in their bank accounts — are also broadly felt, but they weigh more heavily on younger Americans, who are less likely than older adults to have significant savings or own property. […]

According to the poll, 64% of the lowest-income Americans — those who have a household income of less than $30,000 a year — say the cost of groceries is a “major” stressor. That’s compared with about 4 in 10 Americans who have a household income of $100,000 or more.

But even within that higher-income group, only about 2 in 10 say grocery costs aren’t a worry at all.

* Tribune

The end of the state’s 1% tax on groceries has Glenview elected officials considering ways to make up the anticipated shortfall.

The statewide tax is scheduled to end on Jan. 1, 2026 following action taken by the Illinois General Assembly in 2024. While the tax is collected by the state, revenues from it are later returned to the municipalities where the tax was charged.

The village of Glenview stands to lose approximately $2.7 million next year when the grocery tax ends, elected officials were told in a memo from village staff shared during a July 15 board meeting.

Staff presented the Village Board with four options to make up for the loss, but trustees did not reach a consensus for direction

* BND

Residents may eventually see some relief from their grocery tax, but that change may not arrive for three years.

The city will continue collecting a 1% grocery tax, but city officials will be required to revisit whether the tax is necessary by April 30, 2028.

* Shaw Local

The village of Prairie Grove opted to continue a 1% grocery tax as the statewide tax ends at the start of next year – but there won’t be any effect for now, as the village does not have any grocery stores.

Many municipalities have made the move to a local 1% grocery tax after Gov. JB Pritzker and state lawmakers voted to remove the statewide tax last year. The tax, although implemented by the state, funded local municipalities. The Prairie Grove Village Board unanimously adopted the ordinance Tuesday.

Although the village will impose the tax, it will not be in use because there are no grocery stores currently in Prairie Grove. Village Administrator Michael Freese said adopting the ordinance allows them to implement the tax if a grocery store were ever to come to the village.

  7 Comments      


SB 328 Puts Illinois’s Economy At Risk

Monday, Aug 4, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

In the final hours of the state’s legislative session, SB 328 was quietly introduced and passed giving lawmakers and the public little time to review and debate this legislation.

Now, it’s sitting on the Governor’s desk. If signed, it will allow trial lawyers to drag companies into Illinois courts for lawsuits that have nothing to do with Illinois. Businesses could be sued here simply for being registered in the state — even if the alleged harm occurred elsewhere. And it puts jobs and our state’s economy at risk.

Even New York Gov. Kathy Hochul vetoed a nearly identical bill twice, calling it a “massive expansion” of jurisdiction that would deter job creation and burden the courts.

Governor Pritzker has a choice: Veto the legislation to protect Illinois jobs and businesses — or signal to employers that Illinois is open season for out-of-state lawsuits.

Learn more and make your voice heard:



  Comments Off      


Caption contest!

Monday, Aug 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* An airplane is circling the Statehouse Complex while towing a banner that reads “Mess With Texas.” Not a great pic, don’t know who paid for it, but here you go…

…Adding… This one is a bit more clear…

  11 Comments      


As Republican Day approaches, statewide GOP candidates are hard to find

Monday, Aug 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Rick Pearson

So far, no major GOP candidates have emerged for U.S. Senate or most of the statewide offices. Democrats Gov. JB Pritzker, Attorney General Kwame Raoul, Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias and Treasurer Mike Frerichs are all seeking reelection. […]

On Sunday, Richard Porter, an attorney and former Republican national committeeman from Illinois, used social media to announce he would not seek the GOP nomination for Durbin’s U.S. Senate seat. […]

Republican Day at the Illinois State Fair on Aug. 14 may prove to be an important event for the party, depending upon whether potential candidates use the day to announce a decision to run. […]

“I’ve never, ever seen it where it’s going to be questionable whether or not the Republicans have a full (statewide) slate,” [Pat Brady, a former state GOP chair] said. “I haven’t heard anybody for comptroller, haven’t heard anybody for secretary of state, haven’t heard anybody for treasurer. Nobody’s even leaking their name to get attention.”

* Don Tracy told Brenden Moore he might run for governor

Former Illinois Republican Party Chairman Don Tracy is considering a run for governor in 2026, he confirmed to Lee Enterprises.

“I’m taking a hard look at it,” Tracy said in a brief phone interview Monday afternoon, adding that he had been “making some calls” and that “several people” have encouraged him to jump into the race.

Tracy, 75, said that he would make a decision before the Illinois State Fair, which kicks off Aug. 7 in Springfield. Candidates can begin circulating nominating petitions for the March 17, 2026 primary election on August 5.

* The daunting task of winning statewide in Illinois is surely keeping people away. They have to find a way to eliminate the historic 10-15 percentage point Democratic advantage.

And the retirements, exodus and/or deaths of longtime wealthy Republican contributors/bundlers is also hurting. The gobs of money spent by Bruce Rauner and Ken Griffin masked the problem for a few years. But when those two split for Florida, few if any were left to raise and contribute the amount of cash needed.

* A simple luck of the draw is also playing a role. Only a few Republican state Senators are currently serving four-year terms, including Jason Plummer, Li Arellano and Terri Bryant. The Senate’s staggered 2-4-4 terms are set by lottery.

Plummer has personal money, but he hasn’t yet shown an interest in another statewide race, even though he’s grown considerably since he ran for lt. governor in 2012.

Arellano just got here. Bryant, I think, would be a solid candidate. But that’s a lot of work just to lose.

* Some far-right types are taking the usual route of blaming the state party. There’s some truth to that. But maybe those folks ought to step up to the plate themselves.

* Anyway, your thoughts just ten days ahead of Republican Day?

  37 Comments      


It’s a law

Monday, Aug 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

Illinois public school students could soon receive free mental health screenings each year.

Gov. JB Pritzker signed Senate Bill 1560 Thursday, which would require the State Board of Education and a children’s behavioral health team within the governor’s office to develop procedures and make mental health materials available to school districts. The board will provide those materials to schools beginning in September 2026.

The tests would be provided to schools at no cost beginning in the 2027-28 school year, so long as the state has approved funding to develop screenings. Parents would be able to opt their children out of the screenings, which would be made available once a year to students in third grade through high school. […]

The new policy would allow schools to focus on preventing mental health issues rather than only implementing plans that react to a student’s problem.

House Republicans opposed the bill, arguing it won’t be as effective as the governor believes and that it creates confidentiality problems.

“Universal mental health screenings are going to get us nothing except possibly finding things, finding reasons for denial of coverage of insurance,” Rep. Steve Reick, R-Woodstock, told reporters at a news conference Thursday.

* Crain’s

Gov. JB Pritzker signed a bill into law that would boost retirement payouts to Chicago police and firefighters.

The change increases pension benefits for so-called Tier 2 police and firefighters, whose current pension plan is not as generous as those of more senior staffers, by changing how their pay is calculated at retirement — including raising the salary cap — and increases the annual cost-of-living adjustment for pensioners.

The legislation is designed to bring public safety pensions in Chicago into line with police and firefighters elsewhere in the state, which is controversial because it’s expected to add another $750 million to the city’s pension costs at a time when its finances are under serious strain.

The change is expected to cost $60 million in the coming year alone. The $60 million tab will be added to a 2026 budget shortfall that last year was projected to be $1.2 billion. An updated forecast will be released at the end of the month, but Johnson officials expect the gap to remain over $1 billion.

* Center Square

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed 124 bills Friday impacting everything from Chicago police and fire pensions to the use of artificial intelligence for mental health therapy. […]

Senate Bill 213 creates more transparency by requiring state agencies to report on advertising expenditures annually, beginning Jan. 1.

Carbon sequestration in the Mahomet Aquifer is banned beginning Jan. 1, and with Senate Bill 1723, the Mahomet Aquifer Advisory Study Commission is created.

Senate Bill 1793 creates a religious exemption to allow cremated remains to be scattered in Illinois rivers beginning Jan. 1.

* Sen. Robert Peters

Community violence prevention programs save lives, but to be effective, they need long-term support and flexibility. Thanks to a new law from State Senator Robert Peters, efforts to curb firearm violence in the state are holding strong by giving organizations more time to access critical resources and improving the way the state coordinates its response. […]

Peters’ law makes several updates to Illinois’ approach to violence prevention. First, it allows the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention to submit its annual report on an ongoing basis, rather than being locked into a rigid deadline, guaranteeing lawmakers and communities receive the most relevant data. It also extends the filing deadline for non-Medicaid-certified Reimagine Public Safety Act grantees that provide behavioral health services, giving them additional time to obtain certification. Additionally, it delays the awarding of grants by one year, giving applicants time to establish services that are vital for long-term success.

For frontline organizations working to prevent violence, the law allows more stability and a stronger foundation to continue their life-saving work. By removing unnecessary hurdles and making sure support reaches the communities that need it most, Peters’ law ensures Illinois’ most vulnerable neighborhoods have the resources to reduce violence and build safer futures. […]

Senate Bill 2280 was signed into law Friday. It goes into effect Jan. 1, 2026.

* Sen. Paul Faraci

State Senator Paul Faraci has solidified efforts to protect the Mahomet Aquifer – a vital sole-source aquifer supplying clean drinking water to approximately 800,000 people across 15 counties in East Central Illinois – with the signing of Senate Bill 1723 into law. […]

The law will prohibit carbon sequestration over, under or through the Mahomet Aquifer, enforcing sustainable practices and preventing harmful activities. This is crucial for residents of Central Illinois, as the aquifer is the only source of clean drinking water for at least half of the population it serves – meaning those residents would have no alternative should the aquifer become contaminated.

This initiative builds on the foundational work of the late State Senator Scott Bennett, whose dedication to protecting the Mahomet Aquifer laid the groundwork for continued advocacy and legislative action. Senator Bennett was a tireless champion for the people of Central Illinois, consistently prioritizing public health and environmental stewardship. Faraci’s legislation is a continuation of Bennett’s vision to ensure future generations have access to clean, safe water. […]

Senate Bill 1723 was signed into law on Friday. It goes into effect Jan. 1.

* NBC Chicago

Two new gun laws were signed by Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker this week, bringing changes to things like gun storage and tracing. […]

One of the bills, HB 1373, requires local law enforcement in Illinois to participate in the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) eTrace platform.

It also requires firearm tracing in all cases where a gun is recovered at the scene of a crime, or if a gun is believed to be associated with a crime. […]

Senate Bill 0008, will strengthen laws around gun storage in the state.

According to the Pritzker administration, SB 0008 will impose civil penalties associated with failing to properly secure firearms within a home where minors reside. The bill also requires reporting a lost or stolen firearm within 48 hours instead of 72, and also adds a potential penalty of revocation of a FOID card for failure to comply with the law on two or more occasions.

* WAND

Gov. JB Pritzker signed a bill into law Friday to require seat belts for all new school buses.

The new law mandates that any school buses manufactured in Illinois have three-point seat belts starting in 2031.

Sponsors said this change is solely about student safety, as lawmakers on both sides of the aisle want children to come and go from school safely.

“This is really the standard for every new bus today that is being manufactured,” said Rep. Bob Morgan (D-Highland Park). “So, this really should not be any difficulty for school districts. In fact, school districts might not have a choice as we go in this direction, that manufacturers are already including this in every bus that’s being manufactured.”

* Sen. Rachel Ventura

To support ongoing efforts aimed at protecting and revitalizing local landscapes and ecosystems, State Senator Rachel Ventura and State Representative Anna Moeller partnered on House Bill 2726 to give the Illinois Department of Natural Resources more authority to implement conservation tactics to create new rewilding strategies statewide. […]

House Bill 2726 grants the Illinois Department of Natural Resources more power to implement rewilding as a conservation strategy. This can include the restoration of land to its natural state, the reintroduction of native species — particularly apex predators and keystone species — and the restoration of ecological processes as defined by state-specific baselines.

“Rewilding” means to restore an area of land to its natural uncultivated state. This term is used especially with reference to the reintroduction of species of wild animals that have been driven out of an area or exterminated by human interference. […]

Under current law, IDNR currently has no statutory authority to take measures that are necessary for the implementation of rewilding as a conservation strategy in Illinois. With the new law’s signage, Illinois is the first state to explicitly pass legislation on rewilding, advancing efforts to preserve and protect species.

House Bill 2726 was signed into law Friday and goes into effect Jan. 1, 2026.

* WICS

The use of therapy dogs to assist individuals dealing with PTSD and anxiety is on the rise across the nation, with over 50,000 therapy dogs currently in service.

In Illinois, a new law aims to further increase the availability of these supportive animals during times of crisis.

State Senator Mary Edly-Allen has championed Senate Bill 1491, which mandates the Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board to develop a training course and certification program specifically for therapy dog teams that specialize in crisis and emergency response.

The legislation, signed into law on Friday, is designed to expand the number of Crisis Intervention Therapy dogs. This expansion will ensure that officers can readily respond to events or request a visit from a therapy dog team when needed.

* Sen. Doris Turner…

Insurance companies will no longer be able to solicit nursing home residents under a new law championed by State Senator Doris Turner.

“Local nursing home residents had reached out saying they were being solicited to buy new insurance policies or change their current plans,” said Turner (D-Springfield). “We can’t let seniors be the target of deceptive practices by insurance companies.”

House Bill 1865 makes it illegal to solicit a resident of a nursing home or long-term care facility, or someone over the age of 65 to purchase accident and health insurance unless the insurance company waits 48 hours before making any insurance-related changes and the individual is given the ability to opt out.

Turner’s law also makes it illegal for a nursing home or long-term care facility to make substantive changes likely to be disruptive to a resident, or move a resident’s place of living, without prior approval from a guardian if the resident suffers from dementia or a medical condition that reduces their capacity to make informed decisions.

* WAND

Gov. JB Pritzker signed a proposal Friday to give nursing mothers more break time to feed their babies.

Illinois employers are currently required to provide reasonable time to nursing mothers during the work day, but that time is not required to be paid.

The new law clarifies that employee time pumping breastmilk has to be paid, and that employees should not be required to use paid leave during breaks.

The legislation passed out of the House on an 82-27 vote. It passed out of the Senate on a 50-3 vote.

  24 Comments      


An almost unsaid upside to the SAFE-T Act

Monday, Aug 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Something that’s almost never discussed about the SAFE-T Act is how tough it is on alleged domestic violence perpetrators compared to the old cash bail system. It’s why numerous groups which serve domestic violence survivors staunchly supported the law change. Kudos to the Herald-News for this story

The pretrial provision of the SAFE-T Act could have kept a man in jail and potentially prevented the escalation that led to a Joliet woman’s murder, according to an advocate for domestic violence victims.

On July 28, a Will County jury found Willie Banks, 48, guilty of the 2023 first-degree murder of Alicia Cole, 40, of Joliet. Banks broke into her residence on Dec. 13, 2023, and shot her multiple times with a gun, according to prosecutors.

By the time Banks was charged with Cole’s murder, he was out on bond and facing almost 20 charges across three Will County cases that named Cole as the victim. […]

The Herald-News contacted Will County State’s Attorney James Glasgow’s Office to ask if Glasgow believes the SAFE-T Act would’ve been more effective in keeping Banks in jail and away from Cole.

A representative of Glasgow’s office said they have “no comment at this time” until after Banks’ sentencing on Oct. 7.

Glasgow and numerous other prosecutors in Illinois opposed cashless bail in lawsuits that led to an appeal before the Illinois Supreme Court. Glasgow’s lawsuit argued that cashless bail would cripple his ability to prosecute cases.

  16 Comments      


Catching up with the federal candidates

Monday, Aug 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Starting off with the 9th Congressional District. Evanston Roundtable

So far, more than a dozen people, ranging from prominent Illinois Democrats to up-and-coming progressives, have entered the packed contest to represent Illinois’ 9th Congressional District. […]

U.S. Rep. Ro Khanna (CA-17th District), a prominent voice in the Congressional Progressive Caucus who co-chaired Sen. Bernie Sanders’ 2020 run for president, announced he’s supporting [Kat Abughazaleh,] marking her first endorsement from a sitting member of Congress.

Khanna wrote in a statement on Monday that he looks forward to working with Abughazeleh, “who represents the absolute best that the Democratic Party has to offer.” He added that Abughazaleh shares his vision for a multiracial, populist party that appeals more to the working class.

Meanwhile, U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) endorsed [Mayor Daniel Biss] on July 17, giving him a big backer among congressional progressives as well. Biss also got early support from U.S. Rep. Sean Casten (D-6th District), who represents parts of southwestern Chicago. And on Monday, he received new endorsements from Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas and Lake County Treasurer Holly Kim.

* Evanston Now

Starting on Tuesday, over 15 candidates across both the Democratic and Republican parties can begin gaining the signatures required to be on the primary ballots next March. […]

The seat is widely considered an extremely safe Democratic seat, with Schakowsky receiving at least 66% of the vote in every election since her first win in 1998. The winner of the Democratic primary is almost certain to also win the general election in November 2026.

Over a dozen Democrats have filed to run for the seat, including big names like Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss, State Sens. Laura Fine and Mike Simmons, State Rep. Hoan Huynh, Skokie School Board member Bushra Amiwala and content creator Kat Abughazalegh. […]

Two Republican candidates filed to run for the seat, including Mark Su from Chicago and Rocio Cleveland from Island Lake. Those candidates need 540 signatures to make the Republican primary ballot.

* ICYMI! The Chicago Tribune

Danny Davis, the 83-year-old dean of Illinois’ U.S. House delegation and a voice for progressive politics for decades, announced Thursday that he will not seek election to a 16th term representing his downtown and West Side district — the latest move in a generational change sweeping the state’s and nation’s political scene.

Davis also announced his endorsement of veteran state Rep. La Shawn Ford in a budding primary contest to succeed him for the Democratic nomination in March. Ford had announced his congressional bid in May but said he would not run if Davis had sought another term. With his announcement Thursday that he wasn’t running for reelection, Davis will serve as chairman of Ford’s campaign.

“I just decided that this would be a good time, this would be a great time to try and usher in and help bring in new leadership,” Davis said at a news conference held outside his congressional district office on Chicago’s West Side. “Because when you’re on the verge of leaving, it’s hard to do the kind of planning you’d like to do.”

Davis’ decision to retire at the end of his current term in January 2027 creates the fourth open-seat congressional contest for Illinois Democrats next year.

* Tina Sfondeles and Mitchell Armentrout at the Sun-Times have more on who’s running for Davis’ seat

City Treasurer Melissa Conyears Ervin, who came in second to Davis in last year’s Democratic primary, also announced her bid for [7th Congressional District] Thursday. In a video announcement, Conyears Ervin said she’s running “so working people have someone on their side.” […]

Conyears Ervin last year led fundraising in the race with more than $619,000, and she also boasted about her progressive credentials in that race when she won the endorsement of the Chicago Teachers Union. Conyears Ervin last year was fined $70,000 by the Chicago Board of Ethics following findings that she misused government resources. During her congressional campaign, she maintained the allegations “misrepresented” her office, and she has denied wrongdoing. […]

Former Cook County Commissioner Richard Boykin, former U.S. Marine John McCombs, businessman Jason Friedman, pastor Je’Rico Brown, Forest Park Mayor Rory Hoskins, Kamaria Kali and Danica Leigh have also announced runs.

Former Ald. Walter Burnett Jr. and state Rep. Kam Buckner are also exploring runs, as is Anthony Driver Jr., executive director of the SEIU Illinois State Council and president of the Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability.

Friedman, the son of prolific River North developer Albert Friedman, has raised more than $1 million since he launched his campaign in mid-April. He called Davis “a trailblazer and champion for our communities and families across Illinois.”

* Politico

Anthony Driver Jr., director of the SEIU Illinois State Council and noted public safety advocate, has officially launched his campaign for the IL-07 congressional seat now held by Rep. Danny Davis. Here’s his launch video. […]

His resume: Driver previously worked for SEIU Healthcare in advocating for the $15 minimum wage that the city approved. He also helped establish the Chicago Police Department’s first civilian oversight board.

* Tribune

As the three leading contenders for U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin’s seat look to separate themselves for Democratic voters, one of them, U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly, has secured an endorsement from a group representing an issue that has united the left for years: gun violence prevention.

“What we need are more lawmakers like her who are not only going to vote the right way, but contextualize this issue,” said Kris Brown, president of the gun violence prevention organization Brady, whose political action committee will announce its endorsement of Kelly on Wednesday.

The endorsement comes as Kelly looks to position herself as the most experienced candidate for the Senate seat, having served in Congress since 2013 after voters elected her following a campaign that focused on gun violence. Her congressional career has been built in large part on her advocacy for gun control legislation.

“She connects the dots in a very material way because she’s a subject matter expert,” Brown said of Kelly, who represents parts of the South Side and south suburbs. “What we want are leaders who are capable of connecting all these dots and who will lobby their colleagues and bring others along.”

* More from Politico

Congresswoman Robin Kelly, one of several Democrats running to replace retiring Sen. Dick Durbin, stood out last week with a statement that she supported the Senate vote to block weapons sales to Israel. […]

It was a moment of clarity for Kelly, while her top Democratic opponents — Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton and Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi — stayed mostly quiet on the issue.

In her statement, Kelly said she would have voted with Durbin and Duckworth. “I have supported Israel, but in this moment, I cannot in good conscience defend starving young children and prolonging the suffering of innocent families.”

* KSDK

Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi stepped onto the factory floor of a local trade school this week to deliver a message aimed squarely at working-class voters in downstate Illinois.

“I believe strongly in organized labor,” Krishnamoorthi said moments before a campaign stop at the United Association’s Plumbers and Pipefitters Local 553 Training Program, where apprentices learn to operate the machinery used at the Wood River Refinery. […]

Krishnamoorthi said he came to southern Illinois to better understand the region’s economic challenges.

“We’re not addressing the economic pain points that bedevil people right now,” he said. “There’s an affordability crisis.”

“I think we pay way too much for pharmaceuticals,” he said. “Medicare Part D is a disaster. It’s a nightmare. Why? Because the federal government is handcuffed from being able to negotiate the price of prescription drugs.”

* More…

    * Forest Park Review | Marine turned stand-up comic launches campaign for Congress: John McCombs hasn’t spent much of any time around the political punchbowl — he’s been out on the road working on punchlines. McCombs, a Joliet native and Marine Corps veteran turned Chicago stand-up comedian, has filed to run to represent Illinois’ 7th District in the U.S. House of Representatives. McCombs has never run for any public office before, but he’s starting big running for a seat held by Rep. Danny Davis for three decades.

    * WTVO | Lt. Gov. Stratton hears concerns from residents in Rockford ahead of Senate bid: “What I hear is that people are looking for a fighter, and I want to bring that fight, and I want to do it, informed by these conversations,” Stratton continued. Stratton plans to visit Naperville, Decatur and Metro East areas next.

    * WSIU | Raja Krishnamoorthi campaigns in Carbondale: Raja Krishnamoorthi is running for the democratic nomination to fill seat of retiring Senator Dick Durban in next year’s midterm elections. He traveled to Carbondale Tuesday to introduce himself and meet supporters from southern Illinois. WSIU’s Brian Sapp attended the event hosted by former Lt. Governor Sheila Simon.

    * Journal Courier | Senate candidate Krishnamoorthi visits Springfield, rural areas: U.S. House Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, another Democrat who has thrown his hat into the ring for Sen. Dick Durbin’s seat, said he wants to appeal to rural communities. Krishnamoorthi, who grew up in Peoria, answered questions Thursday about rural interests after a listening session in downtown Springfield. About a dozen people showed up.

  6 Comments      


Tariffs Impact Everyone

Monday, Aug 4, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The increased costs associated with tariffs impact all of us, affecting millions of people. This includes backyard entertainment such as patio sets, swimming pools, spas, and barbeque grills, because retailers of all kinds across Illinois import many of the goods they sell. Tariffs have created more uncertainty for retailers than many have ever experienced. The Illinois Retail Merchants Association has found that while retailers are trying to hold-off on price increases, it’s impossible to absorb the extra expenses for numerous business owners who function on very small margins – which forces consumers to pay more.

Retailers like Bob Jones of American Sale with locations throughout Chicagoland enrich our economy and strengthen our communities, even during the uncertainty of increased tariff expenses. IRMA is showcasing some of the many retailers who continue to make Illinois work.

  Comments Off      


How it went down

Monday, Aug 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My last weekly syndicated newspaper column was published before our break, so it’s a bit dated by now...

According to the 2020 Census, Cook County is 40% white, 26% Latino, 22% Black and 8% Asian. Chicago is 21% of the state’s population.

But the statewide ticket recently endorsed by the Cook County Democratic Party is overwhelmingly made up of white Chicagoans (JB Pritzker, Alexi Giannoulias, Mike Frerichs and Margaret Croke), with two Black Chicagoans (Lt. Gov. candidate Christian Mitchell and Kwame Raoul) and no Latinos or Asian Americans.

Outgoing Latina Comptroller Susana Mendoza did not endorse a replacement, and it seems unlikely she would’ve endorsed the only Latina who tossed her hat into the ring, Sen. Karina Villa, D-West Chicago. Villa is unabashedly progressive, while Mendoza is a far more conservative Democrat.

Villa’s progressive views may have cost her the party slating, which Rep. Margaret Croke, D-Chicago, obtained by a super-slim margin.

One contributing issue was Villa’s co-sponsorship of a bill — Senate Bill 2462 — to repeal the state ban on investing pension funds into companies that are boycotting Israel. Perhaps to quell any speculation, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle asked Villa during a party meeting if she had ever said that Israel didn’t have the right to exist. Villa “adamantly denied it,” said one top source.

Villa did not win the support of conservative-to-moderate Latino committeepersons like Alds. Gil Villegas (36th), Ray Lopez (15th) and Silvana Tabares (23rd).

Some Black committeepersons, except for state senators, also went with Croke, partly because they wanted to move away from progressive politics (quite a few were with Paul Vallas in the last mayoral election, you may recall). Others were with her because she’s a House colleague. Others obviously thought she had the best chance to win and could help them raise funds.

The bottom line, though, is that the worst-kept secret of the past several months is that Croke would run for comptroller if the incumbent Mendoza decided to step aside in favor of a probable run for mayor. Croke, therefore, had a big head start over Villa and Lake County Treasurer Holly Kim.

Croke, an ally of Pritzker, and a favorite of Pritzker’s top staff, was able to line up powerful backers and gathered some expert advice. More importantly, though, she did the work, and as microscopically narrow as her victory was, a win is a win.

Unlike Croke, Villa and Kim kinda came out of nowhere. And Villa reported a paltry $12,000 in her campaign account at the end of June. Kim reported just $44,000. That’s not the sort of presentation you want to make to a bunch of folks who hardly knew you even existed until Friday. Croke had $262,000 in the bank, but it’s assumed she has access to much, much more.

Senate President Don Harmon pointed to the potential of an all-Chicago, white-dominated statewide ticket to argue for either his member Villa’s slating or for an open primary. It didn’t work. Mayor Brandon Johnson has severely damaged the local progressive brand, and Latino voters and their leaders aren’t tied to identity politics if it conflicts with their own (or their constituents’) ideologies. Not to mention that Villa lives in DuPage County and has no local base and didn’t give herself time to make inroads.

No word at this writing on whether Villa or Kim will move ahead with campaigns. Also, Rep. Stephanie Kifowit, D-Oswego, has told some people she’s interested in running for comptroller.

Meanwhile, the Cook County Democrats’ decision not to slate anyone for U.S. Senate was a big win for U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi. He has such a huge monetary advantage in this race ($21 million cash on hand) that avoiding the threat of the party backing another candidate means he can continue flooding the ad zone without worrying about a coordinated effort to defeat him in the party’s most influential county. Frankly, a slating might have made him look “too inevitable.”

Was this a loss for Pritzker, who has endorsed Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton? Yes, at least on the surface.

But I’ve had the impression from the beginning that, while Pritzker is definitely supporting her, Stratton has to go out and prove herself.

Her quarterly campaign contribution report didn’t impress anyone, and that had to weigh against Stratton during slating.

Right now, all three candidates, including U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly, are running cautious, generic Democratic campaigns, with few differences between them. The person with the most money will always win that race.

We’re expecting an announcement today from Holly Kim.

  7 Comments      


Open thread

Monday, Aug 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  12 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Aug 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Texas Democrats flee to Illinois to block Trump-backed GOP redistricting plan. Sun-Times

    - Forty Texas House Democrats fled to Illinois to block a GOP-led mid-decade redistricting plan that would add five Republican districts and bolster the party’s narrow U.S. House majority.
    - At a Sunday night news conference in Carol Stream, Gov. JB Pritzker appeared with the Texas Democrats, denounced Donald Trump as a “cult leader” and “would-be dictator,” and defended Democrats exploring their own redistricting options.
    - The rare mid-decade redistricting plan comes amid pressure from Trump to draw new maps to protect the GOP’s narrow 219-212 majority in the U.S. House of Representatives.

* Related stories…

…Adding… Senate Republican Leader John Curran…

Illinois Senate Republican Leader John Curran (R-Downers Grove) released the following statement on Governor Pritzker’s broken promises on fair maps:

“Texas Democratic legislators walking out to come to the most rigged state in the country at the invitation of a governor who broke his promise to voters not once, but twice, to create the most gerrymandered maps in the nation is the height of hypocrisy.

“Governor Pritzker and his legislative allies have already rigged Illinois with a 14-3 Congressional map that is shameless in its attempt to remove choice from voters. They should be focused on strengthening democracy here in our state with fair maps instead of chasing national headlines by intervening in other states.”                 

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | ‘Dehumanizing’: Inside the Broadview ICE facility where immigrants sleep on cold concrete: The west suburban processing center is designed to hold people for no more than 12 hours before transferring them to a formal immigration detention facility. It has no beds, let alone any covers, Chavez said. They were not offered showers or hot food. No toothbrushes or feminine products. And certainly, Chavez recalled, those detained had no answers from immigration authorities about what would happen next. An investigation by the Chicago Tribune found that immigration detainees such as Chavez have been held for days at the processing center, a two-story building that is designed as a temporary way station until detainees can be transferred to jails out of state. For busier periods in June, data shows the typical detainee was held two or three days — far longer than the five or so hours typical in years past.

* Tribune | As political petition passing begins, Illinois Democrats have flood of candidates; Republicans have a trickle: On Sunday, Richard Porter, an attorney and former Republican national committeeman from Illinois, used social media to announce he would not seek the GOP nomination for Durbin’s U.S. Senate seat. “After close consultations with my family and friends, I have decided not to pursue this opportunity,” Porter wrote in a Facebook post. “I intend to stay involved in the effort to turn around Illinois.”

*** Statewide ***

* WAND | Ryne Sandberg, Mickey Mantle baseball cards, gold Hermes bracelet offered up at state fair I-CASH auction Preview: Potential bidders are invited to attend the auction preview from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday August 5 at the Illinois State Treasurer’s Office in the Marine Bank Building, 1 East Old State Capitol Plaza, in Springfield. At the preview, attendees will get a sneak peek at items that will be auctioned live at 11 a.m. on Saturday August 16 at the Lincoln Stage on the Illinois State Fairgrounds.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Crain’s | Illinois co-leads states’ lawsuit against Trump transgender care crackdown: Raoul and the attorneys general of California, Connecticut, Massachusetts and New York are co-leading the multistate lawsuit filed today, arguing the administration has overstepped its authority by using threats of criminal prosecution and federal investigations to pressure health care providers, Raoul’s office said in a press release. Those actions have already seen a number of Illinois health care providers, including at least four Chicago health systems, pull back on the care they offer to patients under the age of 18 or 19.

* WGLT | State Rep. Dennis Tipsword reverses reelection plan, will run for Woodford County sheriff: “While it’s been a high honor to serve the people in the 105th District in every way, my heart is in law enforcement,” said Tipsword. “With Sheriff Smith’s decision to not seek reelection, I’m compelled to step up and run for sheriff next year.” Tipsword is in his 31st year in law enforcement and 18th year in the Woodford County Sheriff’s Office. He’s been deputy sheriff for 11 years.

* Streetsblog Chicago | No harm in asking: Illinois Senate President Harmon answers questions about the likelihood of a summer vote on a transit funding bill: Last week, I interviewed HB 3438 sponsor Sen. Ram Villivalam for an update on efforts to fill the budget gap. When I asked if the summer vote is definitely going to happen, he replied, “That’s above my pay grade. Obviously, that’s a decision by [Governor JB Pritzker] and the Senate President [Don Harmon] and the House Speaker [Emanuel “Chris” Welch].” Since then, I’ve been working on getting the answer from the horses’ mouths. Today I spoke with Oak Park-based Senate President Harmon, who shed some light on what’s going on

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | To plug $1B gap, Team Johnson totes up a list of politically risky tax moves: The 26 tax ideas under review — sourced from aldermen and civic groups — come with revenue estimates but long odds: Many have been rejected by Johnson, lack Council support, or require state approval. In virtual briefings today, members of Johnson’s finance team sought to distance themselves from some of the proposals, according to aldermen on the calls, but nonetheless went over a list that reads like a menu of difficult decisions fraught with political peril if ordered. While many of the proposals are unlikely to move forward, Johnson and the City Council have so far relied on tweaking existing taxes and fees — avoiding deeper reforms amid broad resistance to raising property taxes, which remain the city’s most reliable source of long-term revenue.

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson, facing a yawning budget deficit, could be in for a fight with corporate tax proposals: Facing a more than $1 billion deficit and having disavowed a property tax hike, Johnson last week said he would consider the return of a per-employee “head tax” on businesses or a much bolder payroll expense tax. Either would be a major shot across the bow of the city’s corporate class. He told reporters Tuesday his administration would take a serious look at how “individuals with means, particularly our billionaires and the ultra-rich who have benefited from a growing economy, can put more skin in the game” by contributing to the city’s violence reduction and affordable housing efforts. Johnson and his allies described both business taxes as just two of the numerous options the mayor is considering that might eventually be included in his budget proposal this fall.

* Tribune | Growing calls of ‘no confidence’ in CPD commander tied to wrongful murder conviction: And now at least two CPD district councils plan to hold symbolic no-confidence votes in John Foster, commander of Area 5 detectives, who oversees the investigations into the most serious crimes across the Northwest Side. The confrontation unfolded Monday evening during a public meeting at Kosciuszko Park, attended by Foster and other Police Department officials. During the public comment portion of the meeting, more than a half dozen people invoked Foster’s ties to the prosecution of Kevin Jackson, a man wrongfully convicted in a 2001 murder in West Englewood.

* WBEZ | CPS must present a plan to close its deficit within 9 days: What are the options?: After hearing ideas and proposed solutions from nearly 700 parents, teachers and community members at meetings in July, King warned: “There are no easy answers here, and it’s clear that there are difficult decisions that will need to be made.” The deficit is the result of several factors: the end of federal pandemic relief money after CPS used it for a hiring spree over several years, rising transportation and building maintenance costs, and expensive annual debt and pension payments that are the legacy of state underfunding.

* Tribune | Black Panther Party’s Illinois history recognized with heritage trail: The trail will serve as an educational tool, Wills wrote in a pamphlet, showing the breadth of the inaugural 13 Chicago sites where the black and gold markers will be placed. While the trail continues to be built, the inaugural expanse of markers placed into sidewalks or affixed to buildings runs from Peoria through Chicago to Rockford. The designated locales are where Illinois party members helped their communities back in the day — from the Spurgeon “Jake” Winters Free People’s Medical Care Center at 3850 W. 16th St. to structures where refuge and meetings were conducted, such as the Church of the Holy Covenant at 925 W. Diversey Parkway.

* ABC Chicago | Mayor Brandon Johnson, CPS, CTU to announce expansion of sustainable community school program: The additional 16 sustainable community schools will be in the Austin, Belmont Cragin and Englewood communities. According to CPS and CTU, Sustainable Community Schools integrate the needs of the school, students, and the community. They are meant to expand services beyond academic needs. That includes, extending the time a school building is open, offering families GED and ESL courses, health and wellness programming and connecting the school with community resources.

* Tribune | Last chance to apply for $250 million Bally’s Chicago IPO ends Monday: Bally’s Chicago will close its online portal Monday at noon, ending the opportunity for potential investors to indicate interest in the offering and perhaps own a piece of the city’s first casino. All investment accounts must be funded before Tuesday at 4 p.m., with Bally’s Chicago allocating shares in the IPO by Thursday, according to an email sent to potential investors.

* Sun-Times | Local priest accused of child sex abuse more than 40 years ago, archdiocese says: The Rev. Ronald Kondziolka, who has served in parishes and as a hospital chaplain throughout the Chicago area for decades, allegedly abused a child more than 40 years ago while working at St. Brendan’s Catholic Church. The now closed church once stood at Marquette Road and Racine Avenue in the Englewood neighborhood. Cardinal Blase Cupich alerted the parishes and health care centers where Kondziolka worked in a letter Saturday. The letter offers no details on the allegations or an exact time frame for when the alleged abuse happened. Cupich said Kondziolka “strenuously” denies the allegations.

* Chicago Mag | Housing’s Split Personality: It’s been a tale of two housing markets in the Chicago area of late. “Under $1 million, especially for first-time buyers, the market has been on fire. More than likely, you’re going to have to pay over asking,” says Eugene Fu, an agent with @properties Christie’s International Real Estate. But at the upper end, $2 million and above, purchasers are finding more leverage: “That market is softer. Those buyers generally have more choices and room to negotiate.” The biggest driver of this dichotomy? Millennials looking for starter homes. “In any of the neighborhoods that cater to them, we expect really intense competition for a property,” says Fu. “But homes around Michigan Avenue that are historically targeted toward empty nesters — those people aren’t buying in Chicago right now. They’re going straight to Florida or Arizona.”

* Sun-Times | Chicago hosts wheelchair world series featuring players who will ‘make a mark on this world’: As the Chicago Junior Wheelchair Cubs came up short in their quest to win their league world series, coach Dan Ferreira had a question for his team, which include players who have overcome a wide range of physical disabilities. “Is this as good as you’re ever going to be?” Ferreira asked the team members, some of whom were born with conditions like Osteogenesis imperfecta and others, including now 11-year-old Highland Park parade shooting victim Cooper Roberts, who were thrust into adaptive sports in the last few years. “Define what excellence means for yourself in this life,” the coach continued. “You’re gonna be grown one day, and you’re gonna make a mark on this world.”

* Sun-Times | Piping plover Ferris killed by hawk; Bean and El spotted alive, volunteer group says: Ferris, one of three Great Lakes Piping Plover chicks that Chicagoans helped name in July, was attacked by a Red-tailed Hawk on Saturday, volunteer group Chicago Piping Plovers said. Siblings El and Bean were spotted Sunday at 63rd Street Beach.

* Block Club Chicago | Chicago Performer’s Terrible Portraits Have Become A Hit: ‘I Have No Plan To Get Better’: “I was at a house party in college and a friend saw some pen and paper and suggested drawing each other,” Reno said. “We put five minutes on the clock and she turned hers around and it was pretty good. I turned mine around and she was visibly upset. So I thought, ‘Well, I’m a terrible artist. And I have no intention to get better.’” The joke turned into a weekly occurrence for Reno when he quit his nine-to-five job that he said didn’t align with his values. A week later, he stumbled upon photos from the party and decided to try out drawing as a performance art.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Lurie Children’s Hospital outpatient center adding to suburban ‘medtail’ redevelopment trend: The first phase of the Lurie Children’s Hospital outpatient center in Schaumburg is reaching completion with the expected opening of its Ambulatory Infusion Center on Aug. 18. Other services are expected to go live in early October, making the new 75,000-square-foot facility at 1895 Arbor Glen Blvd., near the northwest corner of Roselle Road and Hillcrest Boulevard, fully operational, company officials said. It will be the second major addition to the health care landscape in Schaumburg within the month, following the first phase of services at Duly Health and Care’s new 100,000-square-foot medical facility opening Monday at 1325 N. Meacham Road.

* Daily Southtown | Predominately Black Matteson names first African American police, fire chiefs: ikal Elamin, previously police chief in Chicago Heights, was sworn in as police chief last month and Derek Bryant, who had been fire chief in suburban Broadview, was sworn in as fire chief. Nearly 80% of Matteson’s population is African American, and Mayor Sheila Chalmers-Currin said their appointments reflect Matteson’s “continued commitment to excellence in public safety.” The chiefs were sworn in at the Village Board’s July 21 meeting.

* Tribune | Plainfield landlord convicted of killing 6-year-old Palestinian American boy dies in custody, sheriff says: The Plainfield man convicted of killing a Palestinian American boy in an October 2023 hate crime has died in state prison just weeks after his sentencing, the Will County sheriff’s office said Saturday. Joseph Czuba, 73, died Thursday while in the custody of the Illinois Department of Corrections, said Kevin Hedemark, sheriff’s office spokesperson. Hedemark said he couldn’t confirm Czuba’s cause of death. An IDOC spokesperson didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

* Daily Herald | Kane County Auditor Penny Wegman announces bid for treasurer: Wegman, a Democrat, was elected to her second term as auditor last year. She will seek her party’s nomination in the March 17 primary election. If she wins the primary, she will appear on the Nov. 5, 2026, general election ballot. In a news release, Wegman pledged “to bring her proven record of fiscal responsibility, transparency and innovation to the treasurer’s office.”

* Tribune | Illinois Gaming Board revokes license of Cicero video gambling operator, alleging mob ties: The board revoked the license of Firebird Enterprise Inc., owned by Jeffrey Bertucci, which operates the restaurant at 5647 W. Ogden Ave. The video gambling machines were disabled Friday, a day after the ruling, a board spokesperson said. The board rejected the finding of Administrative Law Judge Michael Coveny, who recommended that Bertucci should be allowed to continue operating, despite admitting in court to prior illegal gambling. Bertucci has never been convicted of a state gambling charge, but in 2000, he was arrested on a charge of illegally operating a coin-operated amusement device, the board stated in its ruling.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Construction begins on first residential lots at controversial Crown development in Sugar Grove: The project faced public opposition, however, both before and after the village gave it the green light. In April, a non-binding referendum question was passed by voters asking the village to reverse its decision on the project. In the same election, former village president Jennifer Konen and an incumbent village trustee — both of whom voted in favor of the Crown project — were voted out. Still underway is a lawsuit against Sugar Grove by Kaneland School District 302, which is challenging the tax increment financing district planned for the development project.

*** Downstate ***

* E&E News | Carbon storage site that leaked set to restart injections: For more than 10 months, the carbon dioxide injection well at Archer-Daniels-Midland’s storage site in Illinois has gone unused after testing showed evidence of a potential fluid leak. That pause, however, could be nearing its end. The agribusiness company — which typically sends 2,000 metric tons of CO2 underground per day at the site in Decatur, Illinois — anticipates resuming injection later this summer.

* WCIA | Springfield attorney fined for using AI, citing ‘nonexistent’ cases: A Springfield attorney is being fined and could face additional penalties after admitting to using artificial intelligence in briefs where he cited eight “nonexistent” cases — a situation that may be the first of its kind in the Illinois Appellate Court. […] An opinion filed on July 21, 2025 by Carla Bender in the Fourth District Appellate Court states that following an in-depth review of the briefs, the court recognized that Panichi cited eight “apparently nonexistent” cases in the respondent’s opening and reply briefs. In one instance, he provided a direct quote from one of these cases.

* WCIA | Lake Mattoon in the clear; swimming, boating allowed at ‘own risk’: A popular summer spot in Coles County was closed for almost three weeks because of a toxic algae bloom. Now, it’s back open and community members took the chance to go boating, fishing and even wakeboarding. On Sunday, boats were coming and going all afternoon on Lake Mattoon. It’s a spot that means so much to so many, and now that the lake is open again, a sense of normalcy has returned.

* WGLT | Appeals court sends ISU scuffle over union membership back to labor board: In January, the IELRB issued a ruling that five “food court/snack bar supervisors” should be added to the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, Council 31 [AFSCME] bargaining unit. The university appealed, saying under the law “supervisors” are not supposed to be eligible. The case hinges on what supervision means. Relevant questions include how much authority these particular “managers on duty” have over other workers, how much time in a workday supervisory activity happens, and whether the preponderance of the job includes supervision or is much like the duties of other workers making sandwiches, and stocking shelves and coolers. Another question is whether there’s a difference under the law between supervising student workers and supervising snack bar attendants.

* BND | O’Fallon may get relief from 1% grocery tax. But when?: The city will continue collecting a 1% grocery tax, but city officials will be required to revisit whether the tax is necessary by April 30, 2028. Citing his belief that the city’s revenue will continue to grow—with large developments expected in the next few years—Alderman Todd Roach proposed a “sunset” provision to the tax. The amendment, requiring a council vote on the tax’s future, passed in an 11-3 decision.

* WAND | New DPS policies target students and visitors smelling of marijuana, other ‘distracting’ odors: Ahead of the new school year, Decatur Public Schools updated its district policies to emphasize banning marijuana and other “offensive” odors in its facilities. A DPS flyer said that students who come to school smelling like marijuana or other “distracting” odors will be instructed to call home for a change of clothes, or be picked up to change.

* WSIL | John A. Logan College to break ground for new CTE center in Carterville: Funded partially by a $4.2 million grant from the U.S. Economic Development Administration, the $14.1 million project promises to significantly impact southern Illinois’ workforce. The new center will offer a modern welding lab and classroom while upgrading the Automotive, Auto Body, and HVAC programs with state-of-the-art tools. Dr. Kirk Overstreet, President of John A. Logan College, expressed excitement about the facility’s potential. “This facility will completely transform and modernize our Career and Technical teaching and training abilities,” Overstreet said. “It will bring state-of-the-art tools and training opportunities, providing a well-trained and well-educated community and fostering new economic growth for our industry partners in southern Illinois.”

* WSIL | Sesser receives $588K for community watermain upgrade: The grant comes from the Community Infrastructure Fund (CIF), which aids infrastructure projects to build safer communities across the Delta region. The DRA collaborated with the Office of the Governor of Illinois and local development districts to secure this funding. “We extend our sincere gratitude to DRA Federal Co-Chairman Dr. Corey Wiggins, Gov. J.B. Pritzker, our congressional delegation, the Greater Egypt Planning Commission, Brown and Roberts Engineering, City Staff, and our Governor’s DRA Representative Brandi Bradley for their dedication and support,” said Mayor Ashmore in an online post.

* WGLT | Connect Transit hopes to expand its rural on-demand service to neighboring counties: It’s been a month since Connect Transit launched its new rural on-demand service called Connect Go in McLean County. It replaces the service formerly run by Show Bus, only the new service no longer runs regular routes. Connect Transit Managing Director David Braun said the first week saw about 20 riders, and after a few glitches with its software and radio communications the service grew to about 40 riders by the third week. He expects that number to grow further over time as reliability improves.

*** National ***

* KFF Health News | Deep Staff Cuts at a Little-Known Federal Agency Pose Trouble for Droves of Local Health Programs: A little-known federal agency that sends more than $12 billion annually to support community health centers, addiction treatment services, and workforce initiatives for America’s neediest people has been hobbled by the Trump administration’s staffing purges. The cuts are “just a little astonishing,” said Carole Johnson, who previously led the Health Resources and Services Administration. She left the agency in January with the administration change and has described the sweeping staff cuts as a “big threat” to the agency’s ability to distribute billions of dollars in grants to hospitals, clinics, nonprofits, and other organizations nationwide.

* NPR | Corporation for Public Broadcasting says it’s shutting down: The Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the conduit for federal funds to NPR and PBS, announced on Friday that it is beginning to wind down its operations given President Trump has signed a law clawing back $1.1 billion in funding for public broadcasting through fiscal year 2027. The announcement follows a largely party-line vote last month that approved the cuts to public broadcasting as part of a $9 billion rescissions package requested by the White House that also included cuts to foreign aid. While public media officials had held a glimmer of hope that lawmakers would restore some of the money for the following budget year, the Senate Appropriations Committee declined to do that on Thursday.

* NYT | What’s It Like to Deal With Brutal U.S. Tariffs? Ask Malaysia: Officials in Malaysia, who had been trying to work out a trade deal, had said they were ready to work with the Trump administration to stop companies from passing off Chinese-made goods as their own. But they learned on Friday they would be hit with a base tariff of 19 percent. An additional 40 percent would be added for any goods deemed to have originated in China. Those are set to take effect this week. The country finds itself caught squarely between the United States and China.

  16 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Monday, Aug 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

  Comments Off      


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

Monday, Aug 4, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

  Comments Off      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Aug 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Monday, Aug 4, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  Comment      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Roundup: Pentagon plans military deployment in Chicago after Trump threat
* Reader comments closed for the weekend
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Numbers dump! Raja poll claims 20-point lead
* President says Chicago is 'probably next' after DC (Updated x4)
* Maybe it's time the state did something about this problem
* Roundup: RTA shifts $74M from Metra, Pace to CTA to buy time before transit cliff
* Catching up with the federal candidates (Updated)
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* Open thread
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - More news
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Live coverage
* Yesterday's stories

Support CapitolFax.com
Visit our advertisers...

...............

...............

...............

...............

...............

...............


Loading


Main Menu
Home
Illinois
YouTube
Pundit rankings
Obama
Subscriber Content
Durbin
Burris
Blagojevich Trial
Advertising
Updated Posts
Polls

Archives
August 2025
July 2025
June 2025
May 2025
April 2025
March 2025
February 2025
January 2025
December 2024
November 2024
October 2024
September 2024
August 2024
July 2024
June 2024
May 2024
April 2024
March 2024
February 2024
January 2024
December 2023
November 2023
October 2023
September 2023
August 2023
July 2023
June 2023
May 2023
April 2023
March 2023
February 2023
January 2023
December 2022
November 2022
October 2022
September 2022
August 2022
July 2022
June 2022
May 2022
April 2022
March 2022
February 2022
January 2022
December 2021
November 2021
October 2021
September 2021
August 2021
July 2021
June 2021
May 2021
April 2021
March 2021
February 2021
January 2021
December 2020
November 2020
October 2020
September 2020
August 2020
July 2020
June 2020
May 2020
April 2020
March 2020
February 2020
January 2020
December 2019
November 2019
October 2019
September 2019
August 2019
July 2019
June 2019
May 2019
April 2019
March 2019
February 2019
January 2019
December 2018
November 2018
October 2018
September 2018
August 2018
July 2018
June 2018
May 2018
April 2018
March 2018
February 2018
January 2018
December 2017
November 2017
October 2017
September 2017
August 2017
July 2017
June 2017
May 2017
April 2017
March 2017
February 2017
January 2017
December 2016
November 2016
October 2016
September 2016
August 2016
July 2016
June 2016
May 2016
April 2016
March 2016
February 2016
January 2016
December 2015
November 2015
October 2015
September 2015
August 2015
July 2015
June 2015
May 2015
April 2015
March 2015
February 2015
January 2015
December 2014
November 2014
October 2014
September 2014
August 2014
July 2014
June 2014
May 2014
April 2014
March 2014
February 2014
January 2014
December 2013
November 2013
October 2013
September 2013
August 2013
July 2013
June 2013
May 2013
April 2013
March 2013
February 2013
January 2013
December 2012
November 2012
October 2012
September 2012
August 2012
July 2012
June 2012
May 2012
April 2012
March 2012
February 2012
January 2012
December 2011
November 2011
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
April 2005
March 2005
February 2005
January 2005
December 2004
November 2004
October 2004

Blog*Spot Archives
November 2005
October 2005
September 2005
August 2005
July 2005
June 2005
May 2005

Syndication

RSS Feed 2.0
Comments RSS 2.0




Hosted by MCS SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax Advertise Here Mobile Version Contact Rich Miller