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Former Chicago Immigration Judges Discuss Trump Administration Firings

In the past week, 17 immigration court judges across the country have been abruptly fired by the Trump administration — including in Chicago.

Chicago’s Top Lawyer on Ethics Reform, the Cost of Police Misconduct Lawsuits

After the convictions of former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan and former Ald. Ed Burke, Chicago politics are falling under renewed scrutiny by those pushing for reform.

Illinois Will Continue Providing LGBTQ+ Youth Support on 988 Suicide Prevention Hotline Amid Federal Cuts

In Illinois, the 988 hotline’s LGBTQ+ youth specialized services program supports more than 1,600 calls and 600 chats or texts per month, according to a news release.

City Inspector General Deborah Witzburg to Leave Post After 1 Term

Chicago’s top city watchdog Deborah Witzburg announced Thursday she will not be seeking another term.

Donald Trump Checked for Lower Leg Swelling and Diagnosed With Condition Common in Older Adults

Press secretary Karoline Leavitt said tests by the White House medical unit showed that Trump has chronic venous insufficiency, which occurs when little valves inside the veins that normally help move blood against gravity gradually lose the ability to work properly.

Pritzker Seeks More Regulatory Authority Over Homeowners Insurance Business

The Bloomington-based State Farm Fire and Casualty Company notified the Illinois Department of Insurance that it was raising premiums for residential property casualty insurance in Illinois by an average 27.2%.

Find Echoes of the Civil War and the Battle of Gettysburg at Chicago’s Rosehill Cemetery

The 8th Illinois Cavalry Regiment engaged in the first action of the Battle of Gettysburg, defending Union positions and delaying the advance of waves of Confederate infantry. Chicago's Rosehill Cemetery has a connection to that history.

Lightfoot Joins Hundreds of Ex-DOJ Employees Condemning Trump Judicial Nominee Emil Bove

“It is intolerable to us that anyone who disgraces the Justice Department would be promoted to one of the highest courts in the land,” the letter states, “as it should be intolerable to anyone committed to maintaining our ordered system of justice.”

Trump Administration Hands Over Medicaid Recipients’ Personal Data, Including Addresses, to ICE

The extraordinary disclosure of millions of such personal health data to deportation officials is the latest escalation in the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown, which has repeatedly tested legal boundaries in its effort to arrest 3,000 people daily.

Pritzker Joins Letter Demanding Release of Federal Education Funding, Including $240M for Illinois

The nearly $6.8 billion in frozen federal funds includes more than $240 million in funds meant for Illinois schools, community colleges and adult education providers and students, according to the governor’s office.

Astronomers Detect Massive Black Hole Collision, With Both Larger Than a Hundred Suns

A collision observed between two black holes, each more massive than a hundred suns, is the largest merger of its kind ever recorded, according to new research. Gravitational waves were predicted by Albert Einstein in 1915 as part of his theory of relativity, but he thought they were too weak to ever be discovered by human technology.

Number of Unhoused Chicagoans Dropped 60% But Remains at All-Time High, Survey Found

In spite of that apparent progress, more people were unhoused in Chicago in January 2025 than at any point since officials began conducting this annual survey in 2005, city officials said.

Urban League Declares a ‘State of Emergency’ for Civil Rights in the US in Response to Donald Trump

The National Urban League’s annual State of Black America report accuses the federal government of being “increasingly determined to sacrifice its founding principles” and “threatening to impose a uniform education system and a homogenous workforce that sidelines anyone who doesn’t fit a narrow, exclusionary mold,” according to a copy obtained by The Associated Press.

Trump’s Defunding of Public Media Will Be ‘Devastating’ for Rural PBS and NPR Stations, Leaders Say

Public television stations will be “forced to make hard decisions in the weeks and months ahead,” PBS CEO Paula Kerger said Thursday, after the Senate voted in the middle of the night to approve a bill that cancels all the federal funding for the network and for NPR.

Senate Passes Trump’s $9 Billion in Spending Cuts to Public Broadcasting, Foreign Aid

The legislation, which now moves to the House, would have a tiny impact on the nation’s rising debt but could have major ramifications for the targeted spending, from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to U.S. food aid programs abroad.