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Wisconsin Audit of Donald Trump Win Finds Not a Single Voting Machine Error

An audit of the November election won by President Donald Trump in swing-state Wisconsin found that not a single vote was counted incorrectly, altered or missed by tabulating machines.

250 Jobs Charged With Implementing Court-Ordered Police Reforms Are Empty, Chicago Officials Say

Mayor Brandon Johnson acknowledged that the reform effort, which began in earnest when the consent decree took effect six years ago, remains a work in progress.

Week in Review: Trump Scolds Ukrainian President Zelenskyy; City Council Passes $830M Bond Deal

How the congressional budget plan could cut health care for Illinois residents. And video captures a close call at Midway Airport.

Pritzker, Democratic Congressional Members Sound Alarm Over Potential Medicaid Cuts for Nearly 770,000 Illinoisans

Cuts to Medicaid would especially impact the most vulnerable in communities, such as low-income individuals and people with disabilities, according to state Democratic congressional members.

Jury Finds Illinois Landlord Guilty of Murder, Hate Crime in 2023 Attack on Palestinian American Boy

Jurors deliberated less than 90 minutes over the crime that renewed fears of anti-Muslim discrimination in the Chicago area’s large and established Palestinian community.

Illinois Lawmakers Grill Mass Transit Leaders as Clock Ticks Toward Funding ‘Cliff’

Metra, the Chicago Transit Authority and Pace, along with the Regional Transportation Authority, which oversees some aspects of the Chicago area’s transit systems, collectively face a $771 million funding shortfall in 2026 as federal pandemic dollars run out.

Photographing Chicago’s West Side is a Labor of Love for Artist-in-Residence at Legler Library

“I make the work so people feel seen and cared about and have a voice,” Kenn Cook Jr. said. “That’s what the work is — I just amplify the voice of people who live here and give them a chance to tell their own story, not letting that story be written for them.”

Brandon Johnson Picks Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa to Lead Chicago Parks

“I loved being the alderman of the 35th Ward,” Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa, 36, said. “But you can’t turn down a job like this when you love Chicago as much as I do.”

Trump Shouts at Zelenskyy as He and Vance Berate Ukrainian Leader as ‘Disrespectful’

The last 10 minutes of the nearly 45-minute engagement devolved into a tense back and forth between Trump, Vice President JD Vance and Zelenskyy — who had urged skepticism about Russia’s commitment to diplomacy, citing Moscow’s years of broken commitments on the global stage.

Pritzker Cutting Health Care Program for Noncitizens As Report Reveals Costs Far Exceeded Estimates

Gov. JB Pritzker’s recently unveiled 2026 budget proposal includes a controversial cut. It proposes to get rid of two programs that allow immigrants without legal status to receive healthcare coverage.

Economic Blackout: Will a 24-Hour Boycott Make a Difference?

NEW YORK (AP) — A grassroots organization is encouraging U.S.

Chicago Tonight: Latino Voices, Feb. 27, 2025 - Full Show

Parents push back on the potential closures of some charter schools. Some undocumented immigrants are at risk of losing their health care coverage. And the leader of the Chicago Park District is stepping down.

Chicago Park District CEO Rosa Escareño Announces Resignation

After a career in city government spanning 35 years and five mayoral administrations, Rosa Escareño, general superintendent and CEO of the Chicago Park District, announced her resignation Wednesday.

‘It’s Really Heartbreaking’: Undocumented Parents Share Their Experiences Amid Fears of Mass Deportations

Many undocumented families describe their lives as living in the shadows since President Donald Trump returned to the White House. Mixed-status families who have called Chicago home for decades are feeling the impact of Trump’s promise to carry out the largest deportation operation in U.S. history.

Chicago School Board Approves Resolution That Aims to Save 5 Acero Charter Schools

The 21-member board at its monthly meeting Thursday voted to amend language in a revised resolution that would now aim to save five Acero schools: Cisneros, Casas, Fuentes, Tamayo and Santiago.