‘Hanging by a thread’ / ‘Overturn this’ / Not deep enough?

‘Hanging by a thread.’ After Politico’s revelation that Maine Democratic Senate candidate Graham Platner allegedly raped a woman, it says his campaign’s future is looking grim.
 Platner’s endorsements are dropping like flies.
 Of Platner’s assertion that he’s “taking the time to reflect,” NOTUS says, “Generally, that kind of reflection ends with dropping out.”
 Columnist and former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich—a self-described “enthusiastic proponent of young progressives who are now taking on establishment Democrats”—says “Platner must exit, now.”
 Former AP D.C. bureau chief Ron Fournier says Platner’s “toast—and perhaps so are Democrats’ prospects for defeating Republican Sen. Susan Collins—because Maine Democrats refused to acknowledge the obvious: Platner never was a worthy candidate.”
 Law professor Joyce Vance: “A candidate who has sexually abused women … should be out. He’s not fit. It doesn’t matter if it’s a Brett Kavanaugh seeking confirmation to become a Supreme Court justice. Or an Eric Swalwell who’s a representative in the House.”
 Abortion, Every Day columnist Jessica Valenti: “If Democrats weren’t so obsessed with chasing ‘moderate’ male voters, we wouldn’t be in this mess.”
 Statistician and FiveThirtyEight founder Nate Silver: “Platner has given Democrats far too many reasons to cut their losses.”

 His staff has said nothing since pronouncing last week that he was “continuing his recovery” in a hospital.

‘Overturn this.’ Belgium—and its soccer fans—are mocking President Trump’s World Cup meddling after its team knocked the U.S. out of the competition.
 Historian Heather Cox Richardson: “The president of the United States pressuring the president of FIFA to change the rules for his favored player perfectly represents the way Trump thinks about the rule of law in the United States.”
 The Onion, last week: “Report: That’s Enough Soccer For Now.” (Cartoon: Jack Ohman.)

‘Brazen abuse of authority.’ A New York man who emailed a critical note to the former head of ICE—calling him “a monstrous human being” who “will never know peace”—is suing the government on First Amendment grounds after federal agents visited his home with a warning.
 Columnist Heather Delaney Reese: Trump’s post-midnight social media spree after America’s 250th birthday fireworks “was disturbing, even for him—100 posts in one day!

AI safety law. Gov. Pritzker’s signed a bill requiring artificial intelligence companies to devise plans against “catastrophic risk.”
 It makes Illinois the first state to require AI labs get those plans audited by third parties.
 House Speaker Chris Welch: “These decisions are too consequential to be left to a federal government that can’t even meet people’s basic needs.”
 Tech watchdog Cory Doctorow says U.S. state governments can beat Big Tech: “When states fine U.S. companies and order their breakup, it’s a lot harder for those companies to flout those orders.”
 Microsoft’s cutting 4,800 jobs.

Not deep enough? The Chicago region’s Deep Tunnel network of underground tunnels and reservoirs is, for the first time, close to full after this weekend’s heavy rains—meaning that even a little more rain carries the risk of region-wide flooding.
 Three children who died in a boat that capsized in Friday’s storms at Lake Geneva have been identified as residents of Batavia and Wheaton—ages 6, 7 and 10.
 Axios Chicago offers a guide to dealing with storm damage.
 To make up for that fog-ruined Independence Day fireworks show, Navy Pier’s offering free rides on its Ferris wheel Wednesday nights through Labor Day.
 Columnist Eric Zorn sees objections to the sensible heat-wave advice “turn up your thermostat” as “just part of the bizarre Red Scare quality to Republican rhetoric these days.”

‘A beacon of Black accomplishment.’ The Sun-Times reports the death at 99 of George E. Johnson, who founded Johnson Products Co.—with hair care products designed for Black consumers.
 A friend celebrates Johnson’s wider contributions to Black culture: “Without George Johnson … there would not have been a Soul Train or a Soul Train Music Awards.”
 The Tribune (gift link): “Emmett Till would’ve been 85 this year. A Bronzeville exhibit reflects on his legacy.”
 Chicago’s celebrated Jesse White Tumblers take the spotlight tonight on NBC’s America’s Got Talent.

‘The audience didn’t leave. They stopped coming on purpose.’ News consultant and veteran Chicago TV executive Jill Manuel says Reuters’ 2026 Digital News Report “confirms what local TV has been afraid to say out loud.”
 Maybe Republicans’ regulatory threats are chilling ABC’s The View: Since the FCC launched its witch hunt in February, Semafor reports the show “hasn’t featured a single political candidate running in a competitive midterm race.”
 Mark Jacob at Stop the Presses: “The former MSNBC … has found its footing as a major pro-democracy voice. … While other networks and The New York Times clutch their pearls and say Trump is ‘testing norms,’ MS NOW is calling out corruption and authoritarianism. It calls lies ‘lies.’

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‘Disgusting images’ / History under fire / It’s that time

‘Disgusting images.’ Columnist Nina Burleigh bemoans photos from Washington on Independence Day: “Hundreds of self-anonymized white men in matching beige khakis, navy shirts, wearing white gaiters to hide their faces, marching with Confederate flags, in front of the U.S. Capitol, beating drums and chanting about reclaiming America.”
A Reuters picture of a black woman surrounded by members of the white supremacist Patriot Front group on a D.C. train has gone viral.
Hope for America proprietor Heather Delaney Reese: President Trump’s silence as 400 white supremacists marched through Washington constituted approval.
The Sun-Times’ Neil Steinberg: “I feel kinda sorry for … haters who are so insecure about themselves they feel they can’t compete.” (Image by ChatGPT. Dialogue, direction and editing by Jan Kodner.)
Columnist and former Illinois U.S. Rep. Adam Kinzinger: “Every generation of Americans has faced a version of this fight, and every generation that chose to engage rather than despair has won it.”
Declaring “independence from the rest of the world,” an Onion 4th of July editorial asserts that “all tangible connection between ourselves and the remainder of the earth is and ought to be totally dissolved, such that forever after we do not have to exist in a reality where other countries do.”

At it again. Trump’s published another racist post with a doctored photo of the Obamas on a graffiti-blasted Air Force One.
And he’s inserted his presidential nose into World Cup refereeing.
Poynter’s Tom Jones details reporters’ uncovering of Trump’s “unprecedented” meddling.

Oh, it was unforgettable enough. NOTUS documents the fiasco that was Trump’s “Great American State Fair”—a thing he’d promoted as “the most unforgettable birthday party any country has ever had.”
Law prof Joyce Vance on the weekend in the capital: “Dysfunction was on brand, almost predictable.”
Columnist and former Illinois U.S. Rep. Marie Newman on Trump’s efforts to slap the “communist” label on Democrats: “Spoiler: He’s terrified.”

‘If your credit card is connected … they can find out who you are, they can track where you got on or off.’ The American Prospect sounds an alarm about a company doing business with ICE contractor Palantir—and also running the payment systems for public transit agencies in Chicago and other big cities.
Wired: ICE’s internal watchdog is now investigating online critics.” (If you hit one of those shortsighted and antidemocratic paywalls, open that link in an incognito browser window.)
The AP: A new Louisiana holding facility could accelerate the Trump administration’s deportation of kids.

‘A serious crisis demands serious management.’ Former Better Government Association chief Andy Shaw says Mayor Johnson’s call for a standalone city department dedicated to reducing gun violence is not that.
Weekend shootings left at least four dead and 20 hurt in Chicago.
Separate shootings minutes apart in Gary left a 10-year-old Chicago boy dead and seven others injured.
A plane landing at Midway Saturday night was hit by a firework.
At least three deaths now have been linked to Chicago’s weekend heat wave.

History under fire. A White House report released over the weekend condemns the Smithsonian Institution’s leadership for “extreme political activism.”
Block Club: The Trump administration’s shuttering of the National Archives and Records Administration’s outpost here means that transcripts from the Trial of the Chicago 7, maritime records for the Great Lakes region and documents on tribal nations will wind up … somewhere else.

Data center down. Ahead of one suburb’s plan to vote on transformation of a patch of farmland into property for a power- and water-hungry AI services center, the developer’s withdrawn the request.
The Sun-Times surveys how—or whether—Illinois’ Congress members are using AI.
Columnist Jeff Tiedrich wants to know “What … is going on with Glitch McConnell? Is he like, y’know … dead?

You coulda bet on it. Public Notice and Popular Information have teamed up to expose fishy business as CNN and CNBC push the prediction market gambling platform Kalshi on viewers without telling them the whole story.
As a lawsuit against Kalshi plays out in Michigan, the company’s begun blocking Michiganders’ sports bets.

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