He’s baaaaack / Challenging time / Quizzes / Last call

He’s baaaaack. Greg Bovino, President Trump’s ousted Border Patrol commander who led shock troops through Chicago and the Twin Cities, is running for president.
 Bovino’s campaign website smacks of, in Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch’s words, “Nazi chic” (gift link).
 The Senate’s sending the House a bill that would fund a $70 billion immigration crackdown—but that, over some objections, wouldn’t permanently kill Trump’s $1.776 billion slush fund for his supporters.
 Writing for The New York Times (gift link), Pulitzer winner M. Gessen calls a White House web page demonizing immigrants “grotesque and terrifying.”
 Block Club: Broadview protesters are picking up the pieces after their traumatizing—but ultimately victorious—legal battle.

Pulte pullout. Trump’s backing down from his choice of federal housing finance regulator Bill Pulte as “permanent” head of national intelligence.
 Wonkette’s Evan Hurst says Trump admitted yesterday that he picked Pulte only “because he is clinging to hallucinatory beliefs that Pulte can find THE TRUTH about the RIGGED ELECTIONS.”

Trump. The president’s name’s being removed from Washington’s Kennedy Center …
 … and Trump seems resigned to that.
 USA Today’s Chicago-based columnist Rex Huppke hails “the faintest signs of embryonic spines” in Congress.
 Variety: “Trump makes it official: The ‘Freedom 250’ concerts are canceled—to be replaced with ‘the Greatest Rally EVER!,’ starring him and (surprise) Lee Greenwood.”
 Historian Heather Cox Richardson: “The wheels are wobbling on the Trump administration bus.”
 Former Labor Secretary Robert Reich suggests the reasons “why Trump keeps f*cking up” include his rejection of negative feedback.
 Recapping a “timeline of how our democracy was taken from us,” columnist and former U.S. Rep. Marie Newman concludes, “We will turn this around. It’s just a damn big boat!”
 Law professor and former federal prosecutor Joyce Vance marks four years of her Civil Discourse email newsletter: “We have more work to do than we did four years ago. … But I know who is walking it with me, and that makes all the difference.”

Challenging time. Half of the candidates who’ve filed to run for Chicago’s first fully elected school board face formal complaints about their petitions …
 … but the Chicago Teachers Union says it didn’t file any.

Shooter at large. Police were on the lookout for a gunman who shot and killed an Amazon employee Thursday outside the company’s complex in Melrose Park.
 Federal agents have joined the investigation of an explosion that killed one person and shut the Eisenhower Expressway for more than eight hours yesterday.

‘Remember their names.’ Columnist Mary Geddry calls out “the men who gathered in the Oval Office … to announce $700 million in emergency funding for the coal industry.”
 Quartz: Amazon workers are asking Seattle to exercise similar caution.

So close … Your Chicago Public Square columnist racked up a near-perfect 7/8 correct on this week’s news quiz from The Conversation’s quizmaster, past Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions winner Fritz Holznagel.
 It was 4/5 correct here on City Cast’s Chicago-centric news quiz.
 See if you can top your columnist’s 9/10 on Axios’ quiz about Chicago’s summer annoyances (email address may be required).
 But hail this weekend’s Chicago Blues Festival.
 If you’re planning a summer vacation, Pulitzer winner Dave Barry says his latest column “will not help at all.”

60 Minutes delivered to Trump ‘on a gold platter.’ When CBS’ neutered show returns to the airwaves this fall, viewers can expect what 60 Minutes alumnus Dan Rather predicts “will be a diminished, Trump-approved version,” thanks to “big business in bed with big politics to monopolize news for their benefit.”
Columnist Jeff Tiedrich celebrates scandal-scarred Hunter Biden’s social media zingers: “You know what Hunter Biden can do that MAGA can’t? Laugh at himself.”

‘Part of the price of my avgolemono soup is going to pay rent to the Trump Organization.’ Sun-Times columnist Neil Steinberg weighs the prospect of visiting a La Grange restaurant’s new outpost in Chicago’s Trump Tower.
 The online petition to rename the tower’s street Obama Avenue had, as of this morning, gathered more than 15,000 signatures.
 Lyz Lenz’s Dingus of the Week is the Ultimate Fighting Championship ring installed on the White House lawn: “Your country is now MonocratoMania. Which is like WrestleMania, but with smaller dick energy.”

A Square public service announcement
Chicago’s American Writers Museum invites you to a free weekend celebration, the American Writers Festival—featuring appearances by mystery writer Sara Paretsky, author and veteran broadcast journalist Bill Kurtis and 2026 Pulitzer winner Daniel Kraus.
 Full schedule here.

Last call. You know how you can always support Square for whatever you think it’s worth? This week, you can underwrite this service for half what you think it’s worth! Might you normally pitch in $100/year? This week, make it $50! Might you otherwise toss $5/month into the tip jar? Hey, cut that to $2.50!*
And any contribution, in any amount, gets you $5 off a Square T-shirt or hoodie—in a bunch of new colors.**

Thanks. Mike Braden made this edition better.

* Offer not valid for those who’d normally pitch in less than $2—because there’s a $1 minimum.
** Also, even though this started as a joke, there is this: You get the perks associated with various levels of continuing support for half price.

Signs of a spine / ‘The optics are horrible’ / Watch your mailbox

Signs of a spine. The fourth try proved a charm as the U.S. House—with four Republicans joining Democrats—for the first time OK’d a war powers resolution that would kill President Trump’s war on Iran.
Predictably, Trump took to social media this morning to label those Republicans “bad” and “unpatriotic.”
But columnist and former Labor Secretary Robert Reich sees a sign that Trump’s clout “is whooshing away. … Something important has changed.”
Heads Up News proprietor Dan Froomkin takes cues from Hungary in outlining how to “put Trumpism fully behind us.”

Not dead yet. Popular Information: Contrary to claims from acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, Donald Trump’s “anti-weaponization fund” isn’t off the table.
Lawyer/columnist Robert Hubbell calls that “a sign that Trump no longer cares about Republican prospects for the midterms or 2028.”
USA Today’s Chicago-based columnist Rex Huppke: The president’s choice of “soul-sold Trump toady” Bill Pulte to head the national intelligence operation “is a bad, bad choice that could put Americans in danger.”
Unearthed video shows Pulte getting a lewd award.
The Bulwark:A ‘degenerate’ buffoon” now heads U.S. intelligence.

Trump health questions. Add ex-Vice President Dick Cheney’s old doctor to those calling for the president’s doctor to face reporters and address the president’s long disappearances from the public eye …
 … although columnist Jeff Tiedrich notes that the president’s handlers yesterday “finally let him out of his spider hole so he could hold an Oval Bordello dog-and-pony show.”

California cliffhangers. The vote-counting continued today from Tuesday’s primary, with declarations of winners likely days—or weeks away.
A congressman unseen for three months won renomination in New Jersey’s Republican primary …
 … prompting The Daily Show’s Ronnie Chieng to pronounce him maybe “the greatest politician of all time.”

‘The optics are horrible.’ Poynter’s Tom Jones writes: “Just when you thought the CBS News soap opera couldn’t get any more dramatic …”
The AP recaps “A dizzying week of public airing of dirty laundry”—including remarks to staff from news chief Bari Weiss and fired 60 Minutes’ anchor Scott Pelley’s response.
Jimmy Kimmel last night branded Weiss and company “Trump suck-ups” …
 … but Weiss’ handpicked CBS Evening News anchor, Tony Dokoupil, last night saluted Pelley as “a journalist who valued truth at all costs.”
Columnist Neil Steinberg’s not all that sympathetic: “What was he expecting? His new boss to blink, smack his forehead and say, ‘My God Scott, you’re absolutely right! We are being vile corporate asshats.’”
Columnist Eric Zorn offers the memo CBS execs should have written instead of firing Pelley.

Watch your mailbox. Postcards going out offer longtime Comcast and Xfinity customers a piece of a $117.5 million settlement over a major data breach.
The deadline for filing is Sept. 14.
Tech watchdog Kim Komando: Using your phone to pay is safer than tapping or swiping.
Still relying on Microsoft Office 2019? Not for long.
TidBITS advises iPhone owners to jump on a new software update: “A bug that blocks charging precisely when you need it most is worth squashing with alacrity.”

‘401 North Obama.’ The campaign to rename Wabash Avenue—home to Trump Tower in Chicago—in honor of Barack Obama has a new website …
 … and, as of early this morning, more than 13,000 signatures.
Columnist Susan Berger toured the Obama Presidential Center in Hyde Park: “The contrast to today is so drastic, I cried.”
The New York Times’ critic (gift link) sees the center as having two sides: “A lovely park and a forbidding tower.”
The Tribune’s A.D. Quig breaks down what to expect when you visit.

Pellet putdown. Among the many bills Illinois lawmakers passed in a hectic last few hours of this legislative session: One making the state the first in the Great Lakes region to classify plastic pellets as pollutants …
 … and another creating a state-run investment fund for grants to nonprofit organizations.

Clarification. Yesterday’s Square erroneously suggested that thousands of local home listings vanished overnight this week—when in fact that happened last month.
Mike Braden made this edition better.

A Square advertiser

Square up.

🟥 Square on Bluesky: