Chicago Public Square returns in force Monday. We’ll take a break Thursday to join this year’s Northwestern Medill Local News Summit …
■ … followed Friday by a fresh news quiz.
■ Through the weekend, you’ll find breaking news and perspective updates on the Square Bluesky account.
■ Now, the news for today:
SALT vs. ICE. The Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights is celebrating Gov. Pritzker’s signature on a law reflecting its Safety and Action for Liberation Together agenda to melt the Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s offensive here.
■ The package Pritzker signed outlaws warrantless arrests of people at or on the way to courthouses and directs schools and hospitals to implement procedures to keep law enforcement and immigration agents at bay.
■ It also expands the right to sue federal agents who violate civil rights.
■ Republicans are making noises about a court challenge.
■ The Trace: Immigration raids disrupted a program designed to protect Chicago kids.
■ Capitol Fax: Trump’s administration is ordering Illinois to devise a transit safety plan that’s actually in the state’s new transit bill.
‘Before you visit America, hand over your Instagram.’ Journalist Terry Moran—fired by ABC (June link) after he called Trump a “world-class hater”—mourns a Trump administration proposal that, before tourists and students from countries like Britain, France, Germany and South Korea can visit America, they’ll have to surrender as much as five years of their social media history (New York Times gift link).
■ Investigative journalist Ken Klippenstein is gobsmacked at traditional news organizations’ failure to jump on “a story so creepy it seemed to write itself: A blacklist, a ‘cash reward system’ for public ‘cooperators,’ and a supercharged FBI tip line where anyone and everyone can tattle on their neighbors for ‘anti-American’ thoughts and activities.”
■ A federal judge is ordering Trump to call off his National Guard deployment in Los Angeles.
■ Liz Dye at Public Notice: That Trump’s interim U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey Alina Habba is history is a credit to “judges who did their damn jobs.”
‘A Trump endorsement is … more like a kiss of death.’ That’s law professor Joyce Vance on Eileen Higgins’ victory in the Miami mayor’s race—becoming the first woman ever and the first Democrat in almost 30 years to lead that city.
■ Columnist Jeff Tiedrich—rarely a source of cheer—declares this “a Good News Wednesday.”
■ The Bulwark’s Bill Kristol: “Voters got us into this mess. They’re getting us out.”
■ Former Better Government Association CEO Andy Shaw sees hope in voters’ new attention to “the cynical cartographic gerrymandering contortions that have polluted our politics for decades.”
Trump’s ‘filthy’ rant. In a speech purportedly aimed at emphasizing his efforts (hah) to fight inflation, the president went off the rails to complain about immigration: “Why is it we only take people from shithole countries … hellholes like Afghanistan, Haiti, Somalia? … Filthy, dirty, disgusting, ridden with crime.”
■ Reporter Aaron Parnas: Republican alarm’s on the rise after that “affordability” speech misfire. (Cartoon: Jack Ohman—who’s offering new and old subscribers cool perks that would make great holiday gifts.)
■ The AP: “Trump once denied using this slur about Haiti and African nations. Now he boasts about it.”
■ Evan Hurst at Wonkette, poring through Trump’s diarrhetic social media posts overnight, declares one “actually the most insane thing he’s ever posted.”
‘Declare a state of emergency. And … help us figure out how to survive it.’ Press Watch columnist Dan Froomkin appeals to The New York Times.
■ Poynter’s Tom Jones ponders the question “What should journalists do when President Trump attacks them?”
‘If my company’s got that kinda green, I’m sure they can afford to uncancel one of their best shows.’ Count Stephen Colbert among those (at least pretending to be) surprised by CBS parent Paramount’s hostile bid to take over Warner Bros. Discovery.
■ David Dayen at The American Prospect: “Why is Warner Bros. for sale at all? Its product has never been more critically or financially successful.”
■ Law prof Tim Wu in the Times (gift link): “Both plans to buy Warner Bros. are illegal.”
■ Law prof Tim Wu in the Times (gift link): “Both plans to buy Warner Bros. are illegal.”
■ The Onion: “Study Finds Young People Now Watch More YouTube Content Than Zoetropes Of Galloping Horses.”
Downward bound. Chicago’s headed to the season’s first “dangerously cold” subzero weekend.
■ Colbert on the cold’s arrival in New York: “The kind of weather today that makes you wish you were someplace tropical—like on a boat in the Caribbean, but … not near Venezuela.”
■ Planning holiday travel? The climate-focused one5c newsletter helps you figure out what’s best for the planet—plane, train or automobile?
■ Or sticking close to home? Wired’s Adrienne So hails “the world’s safest bike helmet.”
Careful before you call. ZDNET: “Google AI Overview and Perplexity Comet are being tricked into suggesting scam support numbers.”
■ Historian Heather Cox Richardson: When data-focused journalist G. Elliott Morris “asked ChatGPT to fact-check an article for him … the chatbot couldn’t get its head around modern America.”
Correction. The most-tapped item in yesterday’s Chicago Public Square misidentified Pulitzer winner Gene Weingarten.
