Chicago Public Square’ll take Monday off … for a talk to 7th and 8th graders about the state of the news business. We’ll meet again in your inbox Tuesday.
■ Until then, get your news-and-opinion fix from the Square account on Bluesky.
Mum’s their word. A WBEZ survey of 46 congressional candidates in four key Chicago-area Democratic primaries finds that those getting American Israel Public Affairs Committee cash refused to answer a question about putting strict conditions on U.S. military aid to Israel.
■ The Tribune (gift link) finds the Chicago area’s 8th District contest wide open.
■ Ready to cast your ballot? Check the Chicago Public Square Voter Guide Guide.
‘Not only is it illegal, it could backfire.’ That’s Dan Rather on “Trump’s plan to steal the midterms.”
■ Lawyer Robert Hubbell: “He cannot ban mail ballots or require a national voter ID by executive order. True, he can try. But courts can, will, and already have invalidated Trump’s efforts.”
■ Columnist Steven Beschloss says “we cannot be complacent” in the face of Trump’s “plotting to deny the people’s will.”
The IRS-ICE connection. A federal judge says the Internal Revenue Service broke the law by sharing confidential taxpayer info more than 42,000 times with Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
■ Law Dork Chris Geidner: Federal prison officials face civil contempt, as ICE faces criminal contempt.
■ A federal judge is vowing to end the Trump administration’s noncompliance “one way or another.”
■ Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch (gift link): Border Patrol left a blind, disabled man for dead in frigid Buffalo.
Bill’s up. Updating coverage: It’s ex-President Clinton’s turn to testify to Congress about Donald Trump’s dead sex-offender pal, Jeffrey Epstein.
■ Jimmy Kimmel on yesterday’s interrogation: “Of all the people mixed up in this thing … they drag Hillary Clinton out of the woods to testify under oath, even though there is no evidence that Hillary Clinton has ever met Jeffrey Epstein. But why not harass the woman while you have the chance?”
■ USA Today’s Chicago-based columnist Rex Huppke: “Is it suspicious that the Republican-led House committee wanted this … in a closed setting, even though the Clintons asked for it to be public? SHUT UP, I’M BUSY ENVISIONING HER GETTING LOCKED UP!”
■ The Onion: “DOJ Fails To Redact Thousands Of Secret Epstein Family Recipes.”
‘Panic at CNN.’ With Netflix backing out of the tug-of-war for control of parent Warner Bros. Discover, an insider tells Status (which, sadly, requires your email address up-front) that journalists at the cable news channel are “off the charts” anxious.
■ See how the news broke on CNN …
■ … which would find itself under the same management as withering CBS.
■ Trump-supplicant Paramount’s in position to take over an entertainment empire that also controls Superman, Barbie and Harry Potter.
■ Yet, media watcher Simon Owens notes, it could prove a pyrrhic victory: Netflix is “effectively allowing rich failson David Ellison to overpay for Warner … a move that will saddle one of Netflix’s biggest competitors with enormous debt. … [and] he has to write Netflix a $2.8 billion check just to cover the breakup fee.”
■ Sure enough, Netflix’s stock popped.
■ Jimmy Kimmel is trolling FCC boss Brendan Carr, who’s pressing broadcasters to create patriotic stuff, with a series of subversive “This Day in American History” features.
More WGN-TV layoffs. Among those out: A producer whose October confrontation with immigration agents took on symbolic significance.
■ New research: Podcast listening has passed AM and FM talk-radio listening.
Chicago’s ‘black hole’ for help. A new report from the city’s inspector general finds the 311 system for addressing nonemergency complaints riddled with problems.
■ A Tribune editorial explains why Chicago’s parking and red light ticketing is such a mess.
Jesse Jackson’s long farewell. Cross-country memorial services for the civil rights crusader have begun in Chicago.
■ Axios’ Monica Eng counsels patience and warm clothes if you plan to go today: “I was 350th in line, and it took 65 minutes to get to the front.”
See it now. An iconic Chicago dry cleaner business—which has no landmark protection—featured in film and music video is set to close today after almost 70 years.
■ R.I.P., DePaul Art Museum—shuttering in June.
‘My fellow Americans, we are richer than ever before. Well, you aren’t, but we are.’ McSweeney’s satirizes this week’s State of the Union address …
■ … whose ratings tanked as Stephen Colbert’s increased: “Trump is really dragging down broadcast television. If I were CBS, I’d cancel him.”
■ The Wall Street Journal: Americans are leaving the U.S. in record numbers.
Manosphere’s ‘second thoughts.’ Public Notice columnist Aaron Rupar: “Pod-fluencers … who helped persuade millions of young men to go full MAGA in 2024 are now confronting the realities of Trump’s 2025/26 Retribution Tour.”
■ Scouting USA has reportedly caved—altering its policies to suck up to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.
‘What was shouted? What was the ruling? What went in the doggie bag?’ So The Conversation’s quizmaster, past Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions winner Fritz Holznagel, goads you to take this week’s edition …
■ … on which your Square columnist scored a disappointing 5/8 correct.
■ Lyz Lenz’s Dingus of the Week? Not the Olympic hockey player who complained that “everything is so political” and who then “went to Washington and let the president trot them out like show ponies, which is arguably one of the most political things an athlete can do.”Tech resistance. More than 100 Google employees are urging the company not to let its Gemini AI be put to military use …
■ … paralleling tension at AI rival Anthropic …
■ … which columnist and former Illinois U.S. Rep. Marie Newman says faces a “Sophie’s choice.”
■ 404 Media: “The government just made it harder to see what spy tech it buys.”
■ UMass Boston researchers: “The greatest risk of AI in higher education isn’t cheating—it’s the erosion of learning itself.”
■ Oligarch Watch: “Instagram exposed thousands of teens to unwanted sexual content.”
Final calls. This weekend brings down the curtain on several offers in honor of Square’s ninth anniversary and its 2,000th regular edition:
■ A hoodie or T-shirt (your choice) for those who commit to continued support of as little as $1/week—which is to say $52/year.
■ A limited-edition Square cap for a one-time contribution of $100.
■ A T-shirt if you’ve contributed a total of at least $100 or more over the years (a nickel for each of those 2,000 editions!) and never gotten Square swag. Drop a note to 2000@chicagopublicsquare.com.
■ A chance at a $100 gift card by filling out a survey to help Chicago’s news organizations better understand the public they serve.
■ And please mark your calendars for March 12, this year’s ninth annual National Support Chicago Public Square Day—a great time to sport your Squarewear.
Correction. The link to one of the most-tapped items in Thursday’s Square—that Tribune editorial, “Fix your lousy shopping app, Jewel-Osco!”—was not, as promised, a gift link. Here it is.
■ Meanwhile, a recent Trib editorial cheering Vice President Vance and his wife as they expect a baby inspired one of the paper’s former editors, Mark Jacob, to revisit odd editorials in its past.
Thanks. Mike Braden made this edition better.


