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  • Illinoisans react with both hope, dread after Venezuelan president ousted

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    When Ana Gil García heard about the United States’ capture of Venezuela’s president, she felt a sense of cautious optimism.

    But the cofounder of the Illinois Venezuelan Alliance said she knows the future of the country and her son who lives in Caracas hang in the balance. She’s also wary of a foreign government intervening in the South American country. Venezuelans should decide their own destiny, she said.

    “We don’t know what could be the immediate consequences to the country,” Gil said. “What we know is that we cannot accept civilians being killed … we are against any intervention in which civilians will suffer more than what they have already suffered.”

    The Trump administration’s capture of Nicolás Maduro and his wife early Saturday morning brought up complicated emotions for some Venezuelan community leaders. Some groups and elected officials categorically opposed the stunning operation, calling it government overreach. Others, like Gil, said there’s some hope in being rid of a leader most human rights organizations describe as a dictator.

    The U.S. flew Maduro out of Venezuela in an extraordinary military operation that plucked a sitting leader from office. Maduro and his wife arrived in New York to face prosecution by the Justice Department after a grand jury indicted them on narco-terrorism conspiracy charges.

    President Donald Trump insisted the U.S. government would run the country at least temporarily and would tap Venezuela’s vast oil reserves to sell “large amounts” to other countries. The legal authority for the operation was not immediately clear, though the Trump administration described it — and earlier deadly strikes on boats in the Caribbean Sea — as necessary to stem the flow of dangerous drugs.

    Gov. JB Pritzker, however, called it an “unconstitutional military action” in a statement, and said Trump is putting troops in danger with “no long-term strategy.”

    “The American people deserve a President focused on making their lives more affordable,” he said.

    Meanwhile, hundreds gathered downtown Saturday evening to protest the operation. Carrying signs that said, “No War on Venezuela,” and chanting, “No war, no coup, Donald Trump shame on you,” protesters criticized American “forever wars.” They also said it’s immoral for the government to profit from Venezuelan oil.

    “Every single time the United States attacks another country, regardless of what the political color of that regime in power, the people of those countries suffer immeasurably,” activist Andy Thayer said.

    “However impoverished they were before, they were greatly more impoverished afterwards,” he added.

    Demonstrators gather for a protest against the U.S. military strike in Venezuela, at Chicago’s Federal Plaza, Jan. 3, 2026. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

    In addition to Pritzker, several local elected officials condemned the action. U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth called it “reckless and unconstitutional,” while Mayor Brandon Johnson said it “violates international law” and “dangerously escalates the possibility of full-scale war.”

    “As we have said for the past two years, the dehumanization of migrants from Venezuela, and of immigrants generally, by the Far Right has laid the groundwork for military action in Central and South America,” Johnson said in a statement.

    About 50,000 Venezuelan migrants have arrived in Chicago over the last several years as they fled political turmoil and extreme poverty in their home country. The Supreme Court last year allowed the Trump administration to strip legal protections for thousands of these migrants, some of whom were arrested in recent immigration enforcement operations.

    Gil said, if anything, she hopes the military action helps people understand why swaths of immigrants fled Venezuela for better opportunities in the United States.

    “When we left the country, we didn’t leave because we wanted to,” Gil said. “The people were forced to.”

    Several Republicans had a more favorable reaction to the operation. Adam Kinzinger, a former congressman from Illinois, for example, said Maduro was never a “legitimate president” and that removing him without a massive military occupation is “how it should be done.”

    “This was the right call,” he said on social media. “May Maduro face justice and the people of Venezuela be free.”

    Luciana Díaz, the CEO of Panas en Chicago, a nonprofit that supports Venezuelan migrants, also said in a statement that they’re “deeply hopeful and encouraged for our community and for our country, after 28 years of dictatorship that forced thousands of Venezuelans many of whom are now asylum-seekers to rebuild their lives in cities like Chicago.”

    “We have witnessed firsthand the human impact of this prolonged crisis. We trust that this moment will mark the beginning of a transition toward democracy, justice and the reunification of Venezuelan families,” Díaz said.

    “God is with us. We continue to wait for a peaceful and genuine transition,” she added.

    The Associated Press contributed reporting.

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    Rebecca Johnson, Hope Moses

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  • Personal history fuels firefighting family to fund scholarship at Moraine Valley Community College

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    Growing up in a single-parent household, Daniel Brand discovered early in life how crucial an education can be for families of lesser means.

    As a longtime firefighter, he also knows how tough it is to find qualified candidates to fill the demand for emergency responder positions.

    So he started the Brand Family Firefighter Scholarship for $1,000 to assist Moraine Valley Community College students attending the school’s Fire Academy and Emergency Medical Services Program.

    “During my childhood and as a young adult myself, my brother Bill, and especially my mom, didn’t have the financial means to further our education past high school,” said Brand, who now handles OSHA compliance and logistics for the Crestwood Fire Department. “Events that occur have lasting effects on a child, so I want to take the opportunity to give a little extra to that person who wants to serve his or her community as a firefighter.

    “Currently many fire departments are having trouble filling open positions, so I hope this helps get someone through the finish line and into a career in the fire service.”

    Brand has a strong link to the profession through his family.

    His cousin, the late Ed Brand, was a battalion chief for the Oak Lawn Fire Department. Another cousin, the late James Drozdz, was a firefighter in Crestwood and Palos Heights before becoming a state police officer and eventually states attorney for Hancock County. Brand’s brother-in-law is on the Oak Forest Fire Department and his father-in-law, Phil Knor, was a firefighter for more than 20 years.

    Also, Brand and his mother both attended the college in Palos Hills, so the scholarship at MVCC was a perfect fit.

    He is one of a handful of recent donors to have established scholarships to help Moraine Valley students get started in the trades. Each has their own personal story about how education and scholarships helped them or their loved ones get where they are today.

    The Adam Bartuzi Trades Career Programs Scholarship established by the Zopf, McNamara and Bartuzi families offers $500 to a student in memory of Adam Bartuzi Sr. After he died, son Adam Bartuzi Jr. nearly dropped his college plans until his uncle Peter Bartuzzi signed up for classes at Moraine Valley too.

    Moraine Valley Community College students Peter Bartuzi and Adam Bartuzi Jr. display their scholarship awards. After being assisted in getting an education at the school the family established a scholarship in memory of Adam Bartuzi Sr., who also was a student at the school. (Moraine Valley Community College)

    “When Peter and Adam Jr. saw how scholarships were changing their classmates’ lives, and theirs. Peter talked to his large family and asked if everyone could chip in to create a scholarship in honor of Adam Sr., who strongly believed in education and was always taking classes even as an adult,” explained Patti Mehallick, director of Alumni and Annual Programs at the MVCC Foundation. “Adam Sr. was a tradesman, so they focused on the scholarship funds helping students pursuing HVAC, automotive repair, welding and electrical.”

    Mehallick, who is also an adjunct business instructor, said she benefited from a scholarship when she started college in Maryland or she might not be where she is today.

    “We have so many students who have big dreams but not the funds, and our donors and our foundation supply the funds for tuition fees and books so they are able to attend classes,” she said. “Community college students are different — they’re also working, may have kids — so any support we can give them to keep them in school, it gives them the drive that someone cares about me and I can do this.”

    Moraine Valley Community College Fire Academy students show off their certificates during a graduation ceremony at the school in Palos Hills. Several new scholarships at the school are aimed to increase access to training in trades such as firefighting. (Moraine Valley Community College)
    Moraine Valley Community College Fire Academy students show off their certificates during a graduation ceremony at the school in Palos Hills. Several new scholarships at the school are aimed to increase access to training in trades such as firefighting. (Moraine Valley Community College)

    The other recently established scholarships at Moraine Valley Community College are the L.A. Schraffenberger Health Sciences Endowed Scholarship for $1,000; the Patricia J. McNamara Scholarship for $1,000 for students in the Nursing Program who are 24 or older and returning to school after being away for five or more years; the Patrick “Irish” Collier Scholarship in memory of Pat Collier, a long-time EMS Program instructor; and the Sullivan Paramedic Scholarship for students in the paramedic program.

    Janice Neumann is a freelance reporter for the Daily Southtown.

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    Janice Neumann

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  • 9th Congressional District candidate Bruce Leon dropping out of Democratic primary after AIPAC pressure

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    A candidate in the crowded Democratic primary to replace retiring U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky said Tuesday he plans to drop out of the race following a pressure campaign from AIPAC, an influential but controversial pro-Israel lobbying organization.

    The development appears to be a boon to state Sen. Laura Fine, another Democratic candidate who supports Israel and seems to have received the interest group’s tacit backing.

    Bruce Leon, an Orthodox Jew and a staunch supporter of Israel, said the American Israel Public Affairs Committee pressured him for months to drop out of the 9th Congressional District race to consolidate support for Fine, who has more widespread backing and has been endorsed by dozens of Democratic leaders in the district. AIPAC’s push was previously reported by the outlet Evanston Now.

    The final straw for Leon came this week, after AIPAC successfully pressured leaders within his own Orthodox Jewish community to also push him to the sidelines, Leon told the Tribune.

    “AIPAC has been breathing down the rabbis’ necks,” Leon, who said he previously donated thousands of dollars annually to the organization, said this week.

    The North Side and north suburban 9th District seat has long been held in Congress by Jewish representatives. Before Schakowsky, who is Jewish, was elected in 1998, the district was represented by the late Democratic U.S. Rep. Sidney Yates, who was also Jewish, for nearly five decades. However, changing demographics, redistricting and next year’s open primary could cause that to change.

    State Sen. Laura Fine, left, participates in an Illinois 9th Congressional District candidate forum at Oakton College on Oct. 21, 2025, in Skokie. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

    AIPAC has sent fundraising messages in support of Fine, and she has received tens of thousands of dollars from AIPAC-aligned donors.

    Yet Fine this week continued to say she hadn’t sought the controversial group’s endorsement.

    Asked repeatedly Monday whether her campaign had been in contact with AIPAC and how she felt about the organization, Fine didn’t answer directly.

    “I’m a proud Jewish woman who supports Israel, and I’m the co-chair of the Jewish Caucus in the Illinois Senate. So it’s no surprise to me that people are putting us together, because I’m a pro-Israel, Jewish woman,” she said.

    Fine added that she believes people support her based on her legislative record, which includes measures to improve health care affordability.

    Asked whether she would acknowledge the political maneuvers from AIPAC that appeared to be to her benefit, Fine said: “I have no idea, because I have no control over what they do.”

    AIPAC’s fundraising arm is the largest pro-Israel political action committee in the country and one of the most powerful for any issue in the country. AIPAC pushes its allies in Congress to support Israel’s interests, including through continued military assistance that has come under scrutiny during Israel’s attacks on Palestinians in Gaza following the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks on Israel by Hamas.

    AIPAC has also been criticized by progressive Democrats who point out that Republican donors have helped fund AIPAC’s efforts to elect allies of Israel.

    The organization fears a win in the competitive congressional district Democratic primary by either Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss or commentator Kat Abughazaleh, two progressives in the race who have been more critical of Israel’s government, Leon said.

    Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss participates in an Illinois 9th Congressional District candidate forum at Oakton College on Oct. 21, 2025, in Skokie. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss participates in an Illinois 9th Congressional District candidate forum at Oakton College on Oct. 21, 2025, in Skokie. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

    This week, a “rabbinical edict was communicated to Leon” from top local Orthodox Jewish leaders asking that he drop out of the race “due to community security concerns highlighted by two weeks of lobbying by high level leaders in AIPAC,” according to an email from Leon’s campaign.

    Antisemitic violence has been an ongoing concern for Jewish leaders, particularly since the Oct. 7 attack. Leon said he believed AIPAC connected the concern about antisemitic violence to the Democratic primary, suggesting to the Orthodox leaders that a win by a candidate who isn’t aligned with AIPAC’s interests could incite an increase in antisemitism.

    AIPAC has also said that a progressive win in the relatively early Illinois primary could trigger a domino effect and more wins for progressive candidates in primaries throughout 2026, Leon said.

    Representatives of AIPAC did not respond to requests for comment.

    Biss, who is Jewish and whose mother grew up in Israel, has been endorsed by J-Street, a more liberal pro-Israel group than AIPAC. Abughazaleh, a 26-year-old political commentator who rose to prominence through social media, is Palestinian and has been critical of Israel’s attacks on Palestinians.

    Kat Abughazaleh participates in an Illinois 9th Congressional District candidate forum at Oakton College on Oct. 21, 2025, in Skokie. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune) whistle
    Kat Abughazaleh participates in an Illinois 9th Congressional District candidate forum at Oakton College on Oct. 21, 2025, in Skokie. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune) whistle

    With more than a dozen other candidates in the race across the Democratic political spectrum, even a relatively small coalition could win the nomination in the deep-blue district.

    In Fine, AIPAC may see “an opportunity to push back against what was a formidable opponent in Jan Schakowsky,” who represented the district for decades, said Joshua Shanes, a longtime resident of the north suburbs who is now a professor of Jewish history at the University of California-Davis. Schakowsky described herself as a supporter of Israel but at times criticized its government.

    Steve Sheffey, a former district resident who now writes a newsletter called the “Pro-Israel Political Update,” believes consolidating pro-Israel support around Fine would be a mistake. Sheffey — who identifies as progressive and supports Biss — said he thinks Biss “is fantastic on Israel,” distinguishing Israel itself and its current government.

    “They should not get involved in this race,” Sheffey said of AIPAC. “There are so many races in this country that should matter much more to them.”

    Leon said he did not feel it was an option to fight the group of local rabbis who were pushing him out, as he didn’t want to cause a split in his community. He plans to announce an endorsement with a “coalition” on Monday, he said.

    “I’m not a rebel here,” Leon said. “Maybe a little bit of a martyr, but not a rebel.”

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    Olivia Olander

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  • Winter Storm Packing Snow and Strong Winds to Descend on Great Lakes and Northeast

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    A wild winter storm was expected to bring strong winds, heavy snow and frigid temperatures to the Great Lakes and Northeast on Tuesday, a day after a bomb cyclone barreled across the northern U.S. and left tens thousands of customers without power.

    The storm that hit parts of the Plains and Great Lakes on Monday brought sharply colder air, strong winds and a mix of snow, ice and rain that led to treacherous travel. Forecasters said it intensified quickly enough to meet the criteria of a bomb cyclone, a system that strengthens rapidly as pressure drops.

    Nationwide, more than 153,000 customers were without power early Tuesday, more than a third of them in Michigan, according to Poweroutage.us.

    As Monday’s storm moved into Canada, the National Weather Service predicted more inclement weather conditions for the Eastern U.S, including quick bursts of heavy snow and gusty winds known as snow squalls.

    New York Gov. Kathy Hochul warned that whiteout conditions were expected Tuesday in parts of the state, including the Syracuse-metro area.

    “If you’re in an impacted area, please avoid all unnecessary travel,” she said in a post on the social media platform X,

    Snow piled up quickly in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula on Monday, where as much as 2 feet (60 centimeters) fell in some areas, according to the National Weather Service. Meteorologist Ryan Metzger said additional snow was expected in the coming days, although totals would be far lighter.

    Waves on Lake Superior that were expected to reach 20 feet (6 meters) Monday sent all but one cargo ship into harbors for shelter, according to MarineTraffic.com. Weather forecasting on the lakes has improved greatly since the Edmund Fitzgerald sank in 1975 after waves were predicted at up to 16 feet (4.8 meters).

    The fierce winds on Lake Erie sent water surging toward the basin’s eastern end near Buffalo, New York, while lowering water on the western side in Michigan to expose normally submerged lakebed — even the wreck of a car and a snowmobile.

    Kevin Aldrich, 33, a maintenance worker from Monroe, Michigan, said he has never seen the lake recede so much and was surprised on Monday to spot the remnants of old piers dating back to the 1830s. He posted photos on social media of wooden pilings sticking up several feet from the muck.

    “Where those are at would typically be probably 12 feet deep,” he said. “We can usually drive our boat over them.”

    Dangerous wind chills plunged as low as minus 30 F (minus 34 C) across parts of North Dakota and Minnesota on Monday. And in northeast West Virginia, rare, nearly hurricane-force winds were recorded on a mountain near Dolly Sods, according to the National Weather Service.

    In Iowa, after blizzard conditions eased by Monday morning, high winds continued blowing fallen snow across roadways, keeping more than 200 miles (320 kilometers) of Interstate 35 closed. State troopers reported dozens of crashes during the storm, including one that killed a person.

    On the West Coast, the National Weather Service warned that moderate to strong Santa Ana winds were expected in parts of Southern California through Tuesday, raising concerns about downed trees in areas where soils have been saturated by recent storms. Two more storms were forecast later this week, with rain on New Year’s Day potentially soaking the Rose Parade in Pasadena for the first time in about two decades.

    Associated Press writers Julie Walker in New York; Corey Williams in Detroit; Margery Beck in Omaha, Nebraska; Susan Haigh in Norwich, Connecticut; and Becky Bohrer in Juneau, Alaska, contributed.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

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    Associated Press

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  • Close to 1,000 people gather to mourn, celebrate Park Forest Officer Tim Jones

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    Amid the ceremonial trappings that befit someone hailed as a fallen hero, the life of Park Forest police Officer Tim Jones was celebrated Saturday before a crowd of close to 1,000 people, including police officers from an estimated 30 police departments in the Chicago area.

    Pomp and circumstance were not forgotten as the arrival of police officers was ushered in with a salute by the Chicago Police Department’s Bagpipes & Drums of the Emerald Society.

    Park Forest firefighters process past Detective Tim Jones’ casket before his celebration of life, service Saturday at Tinley Park High School. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)

    The event was held at Tinley Park High School, the school from which Jones graduated in 2009.

    Jones, 34, died Dec. 3, nearly 10 years after he was critically wounded in deadly confrontation with an angry home invader March 19, 2016. Officers accompanying Jones killed the intruder.

    Park Forest officials, clergy, relatives and friends all took part in Saturday’s observance.

    “This day we celebrate his life” said Park Forest Mayor Joe Woods. “He gave so much with so little urging. We celebrate this superhero who gave everything. Tim did not lose his life. He gave it to an entire community.”

    Former Mayor John Ostenburg said Jones was “a true hometown hero.”

    “The shooting galvanized the community,” former Park Forest village manager Tom Mick told the crowd. “He became known by his first name alone.”

    “He carried himself with quiet strength,” said Park Forest police Chief Brian Rzyski.

    At the time of the shooting, Tim’s father, William Jones, was the Country Club Hills police chief and the person who pinned the badge on his son when he was sworn into office.

    The badge No. 204 became a link between the community and its police. Three days after the shooting at a fundraiser at a Matteson restaurant to defray family expenses, hundreds of people over a four-hour period purchased both food and a blue T-shirt emblazoned with his number. A police car with his badge number on it became part of the village’s fleet.

    Police officers from various departments process past Detective Tim Jones' casket as part of an honorary walk-through during his celebration of life, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025, at Tinley Park High School in Tinley Park. Jones passed on December 3rd and community members and first responders flocked to the gymnasium to celebrate his life. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
    Police officers from various departments process past Park Forest Detective Tim Jones’ casket as part of an honorary walk-through before his celebration of life. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
    Coloring sheets of Park Forest Detective Tim Jones hang on the walls during a celebration of life for Park Forest Detective Tim Jones, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025, at Tinley Park High School in Tinley Park. Jones passed on December 3rd and community members and first responders flocked to the gymnasium to celebrate his life. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
    Coloring sheets of Park Forest police Detective Tim Jones hang on the walls of Tinley Park High School during a celebration of life service Saturday for the officer, who died Dec. 3. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)

    Village officials never seemed to forget Jones. In 2021, he was given the rank of detective and a Tim Jones honorary street sign was placed on Forest Boulevard adjacent to the police station. His Police Department desk and his locker will remain a permanent symbol of his sacrifice.

    Following the 2016 shooting, Jones was airlifted to the Level One trauma unit in Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, where he was met by more than 200 police officers of all ranks and from dozens of departments, lining the halls in a silent tribute.

    Doctors told Jones’ father there was almost no hope for any recovery. One told Tim Jones’ father the odds of winning the Power Ball were better than of him living one more day.

    Illinois State Police Officers takes their seats after participating in an honorary walk-through during a celebration of life for Park Forest Detective Tim Jones, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025, at Tinley Park High School in Tinley Park. Jones passed on December 3rd and community members and first responders flocked to the gymnasium to celebrate his life. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
    Illinois State Police officers take their seats Saturday after participating in an honorary walk-through before a celebration of life for Park Forest Detective Tim Jones at Tinley Park High School in Tinley Park. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)

    Tinley Park High School had posters paying tribute to Jones, and large placards with his picture proclaiming “real heroes don’t need a cape” were given to attendees.

    After his death, 75 people were helped through organ donation, it was reported in the program.

    Jerry Shnay is a freelance columnist for the Daily Southtown.

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    Jerry Shnay

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  • Popular TikToker Tea Tyme Arrested After Allegedly Fatally Striking Pedestrian While Livestreaming & Driving (VIDEO)

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    Social media star Tynesha McCarty-Wroten, better known online as Tea Tyme, is facing serious legal trouble after authorities say she allegedly struck and killed a pedestrian while livestreaming her drive through a Chicago suburb in November. Now, the shocking incident has left the internet buzzing, with many questioning the role of livestreaming in real-time tragedies.

    RELATED: Livestreams Gone Wrong: Social Media Calls Out Dangerous Trend After Fatal Crash | TSR Investigates

    TikTok Livestream Leads To Arrest In Fatal Hit-And-Run

    According to the Zion Police Department, Tynesha McCarty-Wroten was arrested on Tuesday, Dec. 23, in connection with the death of 59-year-old Darren Lucas, who was walking home from his grocery store shift in Zion, Illinois, on Nov. 3. Authorities say numerous tips from the public led investigators to a TikTok video showing McCarty-Wroten livestreaming at the time of the crash. Forensic analysis confirmed the video’s timestamp matched the time of the fatal incident.

    Video Shows Moment Tea Tyme Allegedly Struck Victim

    The viral screen recording allegedly captures McCarty-Wroten speaking into her phone just before a loud thump. According to the video, “F—, f—, f— … I just hit somebody,the driver reportedly says, as a passenger asks what happened. The TikTok account associated with the video was later made private, and the user biography, noting Zion, Illinois, was deleted.

    Furthermore, the Lake County State Attorney’s Office has charged McCarty-Wroten with reckless homicide and aggravated use of an electronic communication device. Police said she was arrested almost immediately after a warrant was issued. It was even noted that she had been seen attempting to leave her home with packed bags. Additionally, authorities confirmed an 8-year-old minor was in the vehicle at the time of the crash.

    Tragic Crash Sparks Livestream Accountability Debate

    Details of the case reveal that Lucas was crossing an intersection when McCarty-Wroten’s vehicle struck him. Despite her claims to police that she thought she had a green light, investigators allege the car ran a red light near the speed limit and made no attempt to slow or avoid the impact. First responders rushed Lucas to Vista Medical Center, where doctors pronounced him dead.

    The controversy surrounding Tea Tyme didn’t end there. Reports say she hosted another livestream just days after Lucas’ death, asking followers for donations to take a “mental leave” from content creation, sparking widespread outrage across social media and adding fuel to the ongoing debate about responsibility and accountability in the age of live-streamed content.

    RELATED: Oop! TikTok Influencer Brenay Kennard Must Pay $1.75M After Husband’s Ex‑Wife Wins Affair Lawsuit

    What Do You Think Roomies?

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    Desjah

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  • Emmanuel Episcopal brings world class musicians to La Grange for ‘Messiah’ performance

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    About 250 people became the chorus last week as La Grange’s Emmanuel Episcopal Church brought to life George Frederic Handel’s “Messiah” at the church on Kensington Avenue, backing four soloists in the rendition of the Christmas classic.

    Mary Hopper, emeritus professor of Choral Music at Wheaton College, conducted the performance.

    “This is great and such a great experience,” Hopper said before the performance. “People really enjoyed singing last year and I enjoyed that.”

    Hopper described Handel’s most famous work as one that resonates with the American people.

    “It’s the story of Christmas and the story of the Gospel,” she said. “It’s got music that’s familiar, probably the most familiar piece of classical music that anybody has.”

    During her 43 years at Wheaton College, Hopper directed the Women’s Chorale and the Men’s Glee Club. She has toured nationally and internationally.

    Since 2018, Hopper has been director of the Hinsdale Chorale, several of whose members were dispersed through the crowd at Emmanuel Episcopal for the performance, singing along to the choruses.

    The oratorio, written in only 24 days by the German-born master, is considered among the most recognizable pieces of English language music.

    The Messiah was first performed in Ireland in 1741, and quickly became a favorite of music-lovers of the era. While it originally was considered appropriate for the Easter Holiday, over the years “Messiah” has become a Christmas staple.

    Oratorios are typically large-scale music works for orchestra and voices, focusing on religious themes; “Messiah” is no exception, with lyrics taken from scripture.

    Chicago-based soprano Olivia Doig, who has performed in venues throughout the Midwest, also returned after performing in last year’s rendition in La Grange.

    “Last year I was eight months pregnant and this year I’m not,” Doig said after the performance, “But my children are here this year.”

    Doig is a veteran of venues like the Chicago Opera Theater, Ohio Light Opera, and the Haymarket Opera. She is currently a guest lecturer in voice studies at Wheaton College.

    Other performers included mezzo soprano Janet Mensen Reynolds, who retired after 26 years in the chorus of the Chicago Lyric Opera, made her concert debut at Carnegie Hall, and currently has a private voice studio of 25 students. Baritone Ryan Cox has been a professional member of the Grant Park Chorus and the Chicago Symphony Chorus, and was the baritone soloist in the 2010 recording of Grant Park’s Pulitzer Project. Lyric Opera tenor Joseph Fosselman has been with the Opera since 1992 and has performed many solo roles in Lyric productions.

    The Kaia String Quartet, dedicated to bringing the music of Latin America to the public, provided the instrumentation for the performance. The group has performed at many Chicago-area venues, including the Chicago Jazz Fest, the Studebaker Theatre, the Morton Arboretum, the Chicago Latino Music Festival, and Chamber Music on the Fox.

    But some artists were first-timers for Emmanuel Episcopal Church’s new tradition.

    Harpsichordist Kathy Christian has served on the music faculty of North Central College in Naperville for 26 years. She is the organist and pianist for the First Congregational Church of Western Springs, as well as the accompanist for Hinsdale Chorale.

    Organist Bobby Nguyen, a native of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, is the organist at the First United Church of Oak Park. He began his piano studies at Ho Chi Minh Conservatory of Music, continued his education at North Park University and ultimately studied organ at the Juilliard School.

    “At first when Mary contacted me a few months ago, I was a bit worried,” Nguyen said. “The Messiah is a pretty big piece and when I showed up here everything was very casual feeling, a friendly atmosphere, so I said, ‘oh, I can do this.’”

    Dan Mottl, junior warden at Emmanuel Episcopal Church, said bringing the performance back this year was an easy choice.

    “We were pretty confident because of the response from last year,” he said before the performance. “We had a good turnout, the excitement was building and people were saying ‘I hope you do this every year. It was planned to be an annual event and it looks like it’s catching on.”

    Mottl talked about bringing together different artists who normally didn’t work together.

    “We assembled them from all over the neighborhood, some were from La Grange, some from Wheaton, some from Chicago,” he said. “So we assembled the best singers and best musicians that we knew. The Kaia String Quartet was wonderful. So we brought all these people together.

    “Of course Mary Hopper was the key. She knew a lot of the people, but this is independent from anything she had worked on before.”

    After the show, Mottl said “everything was great. It’s probably better than last year.”

    Audience members came away impressed and inspired.

    La Grange resident Nanci Davidson, a member of Emmanuel Episcopal Choir, was also part of the effort to bring the Messiah to the church last year.

    “Oh my gosh this is the best community event this church could be doing,” Nanci said. “It brings everyone together at a very tumultuous time — depending on how you sit — and it sets you off in this wonderful, joyous mood in the holidays.”

    Western Springs resident Janet Helin agreed.

    “It’s just such a thrill,” she said. “Especially when you think of all those who would like to sing it, and especially the text that came up in our sermon this morning. Handel composed this in 24 days. It’s hard to even conceive of this whole thing.”

    Hank Beckman is a freelance reporter for Pioneer Press. 

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    Hank Beckman

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  • Clarendon Hills police join Hinsdale and other departments for social worker services

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    Police departments from Clarendon Hills, Hinsdale, Burr Ridge and Willowbrook have formed a team that will enable them to provide additional services by sharing a social worker from Northeast DuPage Family and Youth Services.

    The Hinsdale, Burr Ridge and Willowbrook departments put the Police Social Work Program in place for fiscal year 2025, said Clarendon Hills police Chief Ed Leinweber. He said he and acting village manager Paul Dalen were approached in September by Hinsdale police Chief Brian King about getting involved in the program.

    The cost now is just over $23,000 for a year for each of the four departments. Clarendon Hills becomes part of the local group Jan. 1.

    Leinweber said each department will have the social worker in-house one day per week for 10 hours.

    “The social worker also has the flexibility to respond to one of the other towns, should there be an active critical incident where their services could be utilized,” he said, adding that the social worker would provided services to children, adolescents, adults and families of all backgrounds.

    Leinweber said the social worker would focus on mental health incident follow-up, on-site response to mental health incidents, case management, short-term counseling to achieve crisis stabilization, suicide & mental health assessments, assistance with DCFS calls, homelessness, food insecurity and other basic needs, 24/7 on-call coverage for social service emergencies, ”walk-in” services for residents during designated office hours, domestic violence counseling, safety planning and resource assistance, outreach and training for residents and village officials and community meetings and events.

    “Many police departments are moving toward having a social worker on staff, either on a part-time or full-time capacity,” Leinweber said. “There has been a lot of interest nationwide to have social workers work with police departments in responding to calls involving mental health crisis and domestic violence.  Mental health crisis and domestic violence calls are two of the more common calls for service received by police departments.”

    Leinweber said police and village officials believe partnering with Northeast DuPage Family and Youth Services will further strengthen the commitment to promoting the mental health and social needs of the Clarendon Hills community.

    “We look forward to working with NEDFYS and our neighboring villages in an effort to provide the best police service possible,” he said.

    Chuck Fieldman is a freelance reporter for Pioneer Press.

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  • Trump admin sues Illinois Gov. Pritzker over laws shielding migrants from courthouse arrests

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    The U.S. Justice Department filed a lawsuit against Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker over new laws that aim to protect migrants from arrest at key locations, including courthouses, hospitals and day cares.

    The lawsuit was filed on Monday, arguing that the new protective measures prohibiting immigration agents from detaining migrants going about daily business at specific locations are unconstitutional and “threaten the safety of federal officers,” the DOJ said in a statement.

    The governor signed laws earlier this month that ban civil arrests at and around courthouses across the state. The measures also require hospitals, day care centers and public universities to have procedures in place for addressing civil immigration operations and protecting personal information.

    The laws, which took effect immediately, also provide legal steps for people whose constitutional rights were violated during the federal immigration raids in the Chicago area, including $10,000 in damages for a person unlawfully arrested while attempting to attend a court proceeding.

    PRITZKER SIGNS BILL TO FURTHER SHIELD ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS IN ILLINOIS FROM DEPORTATIONS

    The Trump administration filed a lawsuit against Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker over new laws that aim to protect migrants from arrest at key locations. (Getty Images)

    Pritzker, a Democrat, has led the fight against the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown in Illinois, particularly over the indiscriminate and sometimes violent nature in which they are detained.

    But the governor’s office reaffirmed that he is not against arresting illegal migrants who commit violent crimes.

    “However, the Trump administration’s masked agents are not targeting the ‘worst of the worst’ — they are harassing and detaining law-abiding U.S. citizens and Black and brown people at daycares, hospitals and courthouses,” spokesperson Jillian Kaehler said in a statement.

    Earlier this year, the federal government reversed a Biden administration policy prohibiting immigration arrests in sensitive locations such as hospitals, schools and churches.

    The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s “Operation Midway Blitz,” which began in September in the Chicago area but appears to have since largely wound down for now, led to more than 4,000 arrests. But data on people arrested from early September through mid-October showed only 15% had criminal records, with the vast majority of offenses being traffic violations, misdemeanors or nonviolent felonies.

    JB Pritzker holds a press conference

    Gov. JB Pritzker has led the fight against the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown in Illinois. (Kamil Krazaczynski/AFP via Getty Images)

    Immigration and legal advocates have praised the new laws protecting migrants in Illinois, saying many immigrants were avoiding courthouses, hospitals and schools out of fear of arrest amid the president’s mass deportation agenda.

    The laws are “a brave choice” in opposing ICE and U.S. Customs and Border Protection, according to Lawrence Benito, executive director of the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights.

    “Our collective resistance to ICE and CBP’s violent attacks on our communities goes beyond community-led rapid response — it includes legislative solutions as well,” he said.

    The DOJ claims Pritzker and state Attorney General Kwame Raoul, also a Democrat, violated the U.S. Constitution’s Supremacy Clause, which establishes that federal law is the “supreme Law of the Land.”

    ILLINOIS LAWMAKERS PASS BILL BANNING ICE IMMIGRATION ARRESTS NEAR COURTHOUSES

    U.S. Border Patrol Commander Gregory Bovino exits the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse in Chicago after a court appearance.

    Border Patrol Commander Gregory Bovino leaves the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse in Chicago. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

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    Raoul and his staff are reviewing the DOJ’s complaint.

    “This new law reflects our belief that no one is above the law, regardless of their position or authority,” Pritzker’s office said. “Unlike the Trump administration, Illinois is protecting constitutional rights in our state.”

    The lawsuit is part of an initiative by U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi to block state and local laws the DOJ argues impede federal immigration operations, as other states have also made efforts to protect migrants against federal raids at sensitive locations.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Supreme Court rules against Trump, bars National Guard deployment in Chicago

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    The Supreme Court ruled against President Trump on Tuesday and said he did not have legal authority to deploy the National Guard in Chicago to protect federal immigration agents.

    Acting on a 6-3 vote, the justices denied Trump’s appeal and upheld orders from a federal district judge and the U.S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals that said the president had exaggerated the threat and overstepped his authority.

    The decision is a major defeat for Trump and his broad claim that he had the power to deploy militia troops in U.S. cities.

    In an unsigned order, the court said the Militia Act allows the president to deploy the National Guard only if the regular U.S. armed forces were unable to quell violence.

    The law dating to 1903 says the president may call up and deploy the National Guard if he faces the threat of an invasion or a rebellion or is “unable with the regular forces to execute the laws of the United States.”

    That phrase turned out to be crucial.

    Trump’s lawyers assumed it referred to the police and federal agents. But after taking a close look, the justices concluded it referred to the regular U.S. military, not civilian law enforcement or the National Guard.

    “To call the Guard into active federal service under the [Militia Act], the President must be ‘unable’ with the regular military ‘to execute the laws of the United States,’” the court said in Trump vs. Illinois.

    That standard will rarely be met, the court added.

    “Under the Posse Comitatus Act, the military is prohibited from execut[ing] the laws except in cases and under circumstances expressly authorized by the Constitution or Act of Congress,” the court said. “So before the President can federalize the Guard … he likely must have statutory or constitutional authority to execute the laws with the regular military and must be ‘unable’ with those forces to perform that function.

    “At this preliminary stage, the Government has failed to identify a source of authority that would allow the military to execute the laws in Illinois,” the court said.

    Although the court was acting on an emergency appeal, its decision is a significant defeat for Trump and is not likely to be reversed on appeal. Often, the court issues one-sentence emergency orders. But in this case, the justices wrote a three-page opinion to spell out the law and limit the president’s authority.

    Justice Amy Coney Barrett, who oversees appeals from Illinois, and Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. cast the deciding votes. Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh agreed with the outcome, but said he preferred a narrow and more limited ruling.

    Conservative Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel A. Alito Jr. and Neil M. Gorsuch dissented.

    Alito, in dissent, said the “court fails to explain why the President’s inherent constitutional authority to protect federal officers and property is not sufficient to justify the use of National Guard members in the relevant area for precisely that purpose.”

    California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta filed a brief in the Chicago case that warned of the danger of the president using the military in American cities.

    “Today, Americans can breathe a huge sigh of relief,” Bonta said Tuesday. “While this is not necessarily the end of the road, it is a significant, deeply gratifying step in the right direction. We plan to ask the lower courts to reach the same result in our cases — and we are hopeful they will do so quickly.”

    The U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals had allowed the deployments in Los Angeles and Portland, Ore., after ruling that judges must defer to the president.

    But U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer ruled Dec. 10 that the federalized National Guard troops in Los Angeles must be returned to Newsom’s control.

    Trump’s lawyers had not claimed in their appeal that the president had the authority to deploy the military for ordinary law enforcement in the city. Instead, they said the Guard troops would be deployed “to protect federal officers and federal property.”

    The two sides in the Chicago case, like in Portland, told dramatically different stories about the circumstances leading to Trump’s order.

    Democratic officials in Illinois said small groups of protesters objected to the aggressive enforcement tactics used by federal immigration agents. They said police were able to contain the protests, clear the entrances and prevent violence.

    By contrast, administration officials described repeated instances of disruption, confrontation and violence in Chicago. They said immigration agents were harassed and blocked from doing their jobs, and they needed the protection the National Guard could supply.

    Trump Solicitor Gen. D. John Sauer said the president had the authority to deploy the Guard if agents could not enforce the immigration laws.

    “Confronted with intolerable risks of harm to federal agents and coordinated, violent opposition to the enforcement of federal law,” Trump called up the National Guard “to defend federal personnel, property, and functions in the face of ongoing violence,” Sauer told the court in an emergency appeal filed in mid-October.

    Illinois state lawyers disputed the administration’s account.

    “The evidence shows that federal facilities in Illinois remain open, the individuals who have violated the law by attacking federal authorities have been arrested, and enforcement of immigration law in Illinois has only increased in recent weeks,” state Solicitor Gen. Jane Elinor Notz said in response to the administration’s appeal.

    The Constitution gives Congress the power “to provide for calling forth the militia to execute the laws of the union, suppress insurrections and repel invasions.”

    But on Oct. 29, the justices asked both sides to explain what the law meant when it referred to the “regular forces.”

    Until then, both sides had assumed it referred to federal agents and police, not the standing U.S. armed forces.

    A few days before, Georgetown law professor and former Justice Department lawyer Martin Lederman had filed a friend-of-the-court brief asserting that the “regular forces” cited in the 1903 law were the standing U.S. Army.

    His brief prompted the court to ask both sides to explain their view of the disputed provision.

    Trump’s lawyers stuck to their position. They said the law referred to the “civilian forces that regularly execute the laws,” not the standing army.

    If those civilians cannot enforce the law, “there is a strong tradition in this country of favoring the use” of the National Guard, not the standing military, to quell domestic disturbances, they said.

    State attorneys for Illinois said the “regular forces” are the “full-time, professional military.” And they said the president could not “even plausibly argue” that the U.S. Guard members were needed to enforce the law in Chicago.

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  • Harvey approaches 2 months with no City Council meetings, despite mass layoffs and financial crisis

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    The last Harvey City Council meeting was at the end of October, when residents accused the administration of lacking transparency in the midst of a major financial crisis.

    Since then, every one of the City Council’s regular biweekly meetings has been canceled.

    Harvey ordinarily has City Council meetings on the second and fourth Monday of each month, for a total of 24 scheduled meetings a year. The most recent scheduled meeting, which was canceled, would have been Monday, and would have been the last meeting of the year.

    A spokesperson for Mayor Christopher Clark said it was not unusual for the final meeting in December to be canceled due to Christmas, despite it being listed on the city’s website.

    Fourth Ward Ald. Tracy Key said in the past, the city had scheduled around Christmas so that end-of-year conversations could still be held.

    “Even with Christmastime, which always falls at the end, sometimes we would have it like the week before,” Key said.

    Clark said in a statement that given the city’s state of fiscal crisis, not holding meetings was the financially responsible course of action.

    “Canceling meetings in this moment is about responsible leadership, not disengagement,” Clark said. “The City of Harvey is currently navigating staffing shortages and financial constraints, and we are being mindful of how public tax dollars are used. When there is nothing new to report, it is in the city’s best interests to focus our time and funds on the work towards stabilizing finances and bringing our employees back to work. We cannot afford to waste any public resources.”

    However, critics of Clark have said that the move feels like avoidance.

    At a special City Council meeting Oct. 16, outside the normal schedule, Clark led the audience through an hour-and-a-half long presentation about the city’s debilitating financial struggles, which he said were largely the result of corruption and mismanagement by the administration of the previous mayor, Eric Kellogg.

    Under Kellogg, the city diverted water payments owed to the city of Chicago and failed to make required payments to the fire and police pension funds, he said. Compounding problems are Harvey’s high tax rates and correspondingly low collection rates, the third lowest in Cook County.

    Due to the financial hole that Harvey had been left in, Clark said, its only solution was to petition the state for financially distressed status, and to partially shut down city functions until help arrived. Harvey’s City Council voted unanimously to declare Harvey in financial distress under the Illinois Financially Distressed City Law, which would allow for the state to step in to oversee Harvey’s finances.

    Key said he believes that, especially with the state of uncertainty brought on by the declaration, the city should be required to have at least the 24 regular City Council meetings.

    “If not, it’s taking away the residents’ rights to be able to speak and be informed,” Key said. “I’m kind of disturbed with that.”

    There has been no visible movement from the state regarding the city’s declaration of financial distress.

    In the week following the declaration, Harvey laid off 40% of its city staff, including major cuts to the Fire Department and Police Department. A later round of layoffs brought the Fire Department well below half strength.

    Following those developments, there was only one more Harvey City Council meeting, Oct. 27. The last meeting before the hiatus was rancorous, with a resident being escorted out by police from the preceding Finance Committee meeting before the City Council even convened.

    At that meeting, Clark and a majority of the City Council voted to approve bill lists for the city and approved the sale of a set of city-owned properties to an entity called Turlington Homes for redevelopment, over objections from Key and 2nd Ward Ald. Colby Chapman.

    Turlington Homes was established as a business Oct. 2. Its website remains empty. The resolution approving the sale said that the city was “willing to assist the developer by selling the Redevelopment Property at a discounted sale price,” though a price was not specified.

    “You didn’t even say how much you sold our land for,” Chapman said. “It’s ours, because if the city owns it, then it’s mine too, it’s everyone’s who lives in the city. We own it.”

    During public comment at that meeting, several residents strongly criticized Clark and the members of City Council for approving expenses as normal when the city was in crisis, and for approving the sale to Turlington Homes with no discussion or debate.

    Subsequently, every City Council meeting has been quietly canceled with no agenda posted and, Chapman said, a lack of communication to City Council members. Each of the scheduled meetings appears on the city website, but never occurs.

    “I’ve called, I’ve emailed, and I have yet to receive any responses on anything,” Chapman said.

    The lack of meetings also means that no bills have come before the City Council for approval since the meeting at the end of October, when invoices from July 18 to Oct. 21 were approved.

    Chapman said the lack of meetings and public information makes it hard for Harvey residents to see a future for the city.

    “If individuals are seeing increased property taxes, financial distress being called in our city, what is holding them to have a belief that there’s a quality of life, a path forward for Harvey?” Chapman said.

    The next scheduled meeting is set for Jan. 12, next year.

    elewis@chicagotribune.com

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  • Aldermen pass 2026 spending plan including debt sale over Mayor Brandon Johnson’s opposition

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    The budget counterproposal crafted by opponents of Mayor Brandon Johnson won a critical first vote before the full City Council on Friday, setting the mayor up to soon concede their remarkable weekslong fight — or issue Chicago’s first mayoral veto of a budget in decades.

    Aldermen voted 29-19 to approve the revenue piece of an alternative 2026 spending plan that does not include Johnson’s corporate head tax. That’s shy of the 34-vote threshold needed to override a potential mayoral veto, however, leaving the door open for the City Hall standoff to escalate further still.

    And with under two weeks until an end-of-year deadline to approve a budget, all factions agree Chicago is inching too close for comfort to a government shutdown.

    When the moment came, aldermen debated for mere moments before quickly passing the plan.

    “The city of Chicago’s financial position is at a critical juncture, and I think we have emerged today with the budget plan that protects programs which are vital to those,” said Ald. Pat Dowell, Johnson’s handpicked budget chair who played a critical role in the effort that out-muscled him.

    The $16.6 billion aldermanic package contains a debt sale measure that Johnson called Thursday “morally bankrupt” and a “red line.” His budget team warned such a novel proposal should not be counted on to raise any money at all, on top of attacking other components of the alternative budget that they argue is unbalanced and would require midyear amendments next year.

    Whether the plan requires a veto, in Johnson’s eyes, is the question of the hour.

    “I don’t want people to take this as some sort of tool that is being taken lightly,” he told reporters on Thursday. “It needs to be used when necessary, and I will find that tool necessary if there is something that is presented in front of me that doesn’t hold to our values as a city.”

    Johnson advisers said Friday the mayor had still not made up his mind on a veto. He will not reveal his decision until after the full budget package faces a vote likely to occur on Saturday.

    The mayor introduced a revised budget plan of his own Friday that would replace the debt sale plan with his proposal to reinstate a corporate head tax. In the plan, the city would make a full advanced pension payment Johnson had earlier proposed halving, not legalize video gambling terminals and count on slot machines being placed at a Midway Airport lounge.

    The historic rebuke of the freshman mayor drew condemnation from his leftist council allies who accused their colleagues of siding with rich corporations and billionaires over working-class Chicagoans. But even the progressives were not united with Johnson, who first introduced his own $16.6 billion package in October but failed to make the case that his pitch to reinstate the city’s head tax, among other new revenue measures, was Chicago’s best hope to stand up to President Donald Trump.

    Check back for updates.

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  • Border Patrol Commander, Agents Reappear in Force in Chicago Immigrant Communities

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    CHICAGO, Dec 16 (Reuters) – U.S. Border Patrol agents returned ‌to ​Chicago in force on Tuesday after ‌a month-long slowdown, renewing a conflict with opponents of the agency’s methods, according ​to a Reuters witness, local officials and community advocates.

    State Representative Lilian Jimenez said that she had learned that Border Patrol ‍agents were conducting raids in the ​suburb of Cicero and in Little Village, a Chicago Mexican-American enclave. 

    “It just seems very cruel to come in ​and snatch people ⁠off the streets and just destroy their families right before the holidays,” Jimenez said. 

    Enlace Chicago, a community center in Little Village, said it was among the targets. A representative said about a dozen agents arrived at the center, which locked its doors and did not let anyone inside.

    Reuters witnessed Border Patrol roving commander ‌Gregory Bovino in a convoy of agents conducting raids in Chicago on Tuesday. 

    President Donald Trump, a Republican, ​has targeted ‌Democratic-led U.S. cities for immigration ‍enforcement this year, ⁠including Chicago, Los Angeles and Washington, D.C. 

    Trump says the actions are necessary because the cities limit cooperation with federal immigration enforcement. Democratic opponents have criticized operations for sweeping in non-criminals, families and U.S. citizens.

    Border Patrol, under Bovino’s direction, led a campaign in Chicago to arrest those who allegedly broke immigration laws starting in September. That campaign resulted in pushback from residents and federal courts over his agency’s tactics. Agents deployed tear gas in residential areas, shot pepper balls at clergy and ​journalists, and pointed firearms at bystanders. 

    Bovino moved on to Charlotte and New Orleans in mid-November, but after shorter campaigns in those cities, agents appeared on Tuesday to be revisiting Chicago, a Democratic stronghold and America’s third-largest city.

    U.S. Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said the enforcement operations in Chicago had not stopped and aimed to find and deport “the worst of the worst” criminal offenders.

    “As we said a month ago, we aren’t leaving Chicago and operations are ongoing,” she said.

    Illinois Governor JB Pritzker said during the signing of a transit bill on Tuesday that his office was not given any notice of the agents’ arrival.

    “We don’t know how long they’ll stay. It appears ​they’re here for at least a couple of days, if not longer,” Pritzker said.

    Pritzker encouraged Illinois residents to “do as you have” in recent months by blowing whistles when they spot immigration agents, recording interactions and posting them online. 

    He said the state has a “population that knows how to react when ​their community is being invaded.”

    (Reporting by Renee Hickman; Additional reporting by Jim Vondruska and Ted Hesson; Editing by Emily Schmall and Lisa Shumaker)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Illinois Becomes 12th State to Provide Medical Aid in Dying for the Terminally Ill

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    SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) — Illinois residents with terminal illnesses may choose to end their lives on their own terms under a law Gov. JB Pritzker signed Friday.

    The Medical Aid in Dying act takes effect in September 2026 to give the Illinois Department of Public Health and other medical participants time to develop “stringent processes and protections” for implementing the provision, according to the Democratic governor’s office.

    It is also known as “Deb’s Law,” honoring Deb Robertson, a lifelong resident of the state living with a rare terminal illness who has pushed for the measure’s approval and testified to the suffering of people and their families wanting the chance to decide for themselves how and when their lives should end.

    Pritzker said he has been moved by stories of patients suffering from terminal illness and their devotion to “freedom and choice at the end of life in the midst of personal heartbreak.”

    “This legislation will be thoughtfully implemented so that physicians can consult patients on making deeply personal decisions with authority, autonomy, and empathy,” Pritzker said after singing the measure in Chicago.

    Eleven other states and the District of Columbia offer medical aid in dying, according to the advocacy group, Death With Dignity. Delaware was the latest, and its provision takes effect Jan. 1, 2026. Seven other states are considering allowing it.

    In Illinois, patients 18 and older with physician-confirmed mental capacity to make medical decisions may request end-of-life medication if they have an illness that could be fatal within six months, as verified by two doctors; as well as have received information about all end-of-life care options, such as hospice or palliative care. Additionally, both oral and written requests for the medication must come from the patient, not a surrogate or proxy.

    Sponsoring Sen. Linda Holmes, a suburban Chicago Democrat, said both her parents died of cancer.

    “I’ll never forget the helpless feeling of watching them suffer when there was nothing I could do to help them,” Holmes said. “Every adult patient of sound mind should have this as one more option in their end-of-life care in the event their suffering becomes unbearable.”

    The Illinois House approved the measure 63-42 in late May at the end of the legislative spring session. The Senate didn’t take it up until October, when it was approved 30-27. In both chambers, there were prominent Democratic “no” votes.

    The Catholic Conference of Illinois, representing the state’s six Catholic dioceses, issued a statement disparaging Pritzker’s action, saying the law puts Illinois “on a dangerous and heartbreaking path.”

    “Rather than investing in real end-of-life support such as palliative and hospice care, pain management, and family-centered accompaniment, our state has chosen to normalize killing oneself,” the Catholic bishops said. “This law ignores the very real failures in access to quality care that drive vulnerable people to despair.”

    The conference also derided the idea that Illinois has legalized suicide for some while attempting to prevent it in others, particularly teenagers, among whom suicide is the second-leading cause of death. That sentiment was echoed by the nonpartisan advocacy and lobbyist group Patients Rights Action Fund.

    “Assisted suicide plunges Illinoisans with disabilities and other vulnerable people into conversations about death, instead of the care and support they deserve from their medical teams,” said Matt Valliere, the group’s president and CEO.

    Deb Robertson, the retired social worker from suburban Chicago who gave a name to the law, thanked Pritzker for signing the law providing “the full range of end-of-life options.”

    Robertson added, “The end for me could be near, but I’m pleased to have been able to play some role in ensuring that terminally ill Illinois residents have access to medical aid in dying.”

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

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  • Cook County in Illinois establishes permanent guaranteed income program

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    The second-largest county in the United States has established a permanent guaranteed basic income program after the success of a previous pilot version.

    The Cook County Board of Commissioners unanimously approved $7.5 million for a permanent guaranteed basic income program last week. Chicago, the largest city in the Midwest and third-largest in the country, is the county seat for Cook County.

    Cook County made headlines as it established the guaranteed basic income program after many local governments across the country launched pilot versions. 

    The Cook County Board of Commissioners approved $7.5 million for a permanent guaranteed basic income program last week. (Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

    CHICAGO HOMEOWNERS DEMAND ANSWERS AS PROPERTY TAX BILLS RISE: ‘DIVESTMENT IN THIS COMMUNITY’

    Guaranteed basic income programs have become a trend across the U.S. in recent years with more than 100 pilots launched since 2018. Mayors for Guaranteed Income grew into a coalition of 150 mayors pushing pilot programs, offering low-income participants up to $1,000 a month with no strings attached. The group has pushed pilot programs that have been adopted by municipalities across the country

    The Cook County program was launched in 2022 with the aid of federal COVID-19 relief funds.

    Once the largest publicly funded program in the nation receiving $42 million in federal funding from the American Rescue Plan Act, the Cook County Promise Guaranteed Income Pilot provided monthly payments of $500 to 3,250 households for two years, with no strings attached.

    Economic Security Illinois Director Sarah Saheb described Cook County’s guaranteed basic income pilot as a “historic success” and said that when the federal government was “stepping back from its responsibilities to working families, Cook County is leading the way to ensure people can afford basic necessities.”

    The commissioners told Fox News Digital that the decision to extend the program into permanence was based on findings from a survey on the county’s pilot program.

    ILLINOIS LAWMAKERS PASS BILL BANNING ICE IMMIGRATION ARRESTS NEAR COURTHOUSES

    Close up of hands holding cash

    Guaranteed basic income programs have become a trend across the U.S. in recent years with more than 100 GBI pilots launched since 2018. (iStock)

    The findings released by the commission in April showed that three-quarters of participants reported feeling more financially secure and 94% of participants used the funds to address financial emergencies during challenging times. Majorities also reported the program improved their mental health and lowered their stress levels.

    The commission learned from the survey that participants mainly used the funds for essential needs such as food, rent, utilities, and transportation.

    Illinois Policy Institute (IPI), a think tank that tracks public policy decisions in the state, told Fox News Digital that “Cook County is making its guaranteed income pilot permanent and committing millions to a failed strategy already shown to leave people with less work experience and lower earnings.”

    POLICE SAY THEY’RE ‘TIRED’ OF DEM CITIES SPENDING BILLIONS ON ILLEGAL ALIENS OVER COPS: LAW ENFORCEMENT GROUP

    “That should alarm anyone who wants real, long-term progress for low-income residents. A recent pilot program in northern Illinois, including Cook County, decreased workforce participation and lower individual income (before transfers),” said Josh Bandoch, head of policy for the IPI.

    Democrats in the Illinois legislature are trying to advance an "Illinois Guaranteed Income Fund" through the Department of Human Services. 

    Democrats in the Illinois legislature are trying to advance an “Illinois Guaranteed Income Fund” through the Department of Human Services.  (iStock)

    In response to IPI, the commission told Fox News Digital that “outcomes and impacts vary depending heavily on program design: amount of cash, frequency/duration of payments, eligibility criteria (income-based, place-based, etc.), and local cost of living.”

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    “Cook County is partnering closely with the Inclusive Economy Lab at the University of Chicago to conduct a comprehensive evaluation of the Promise Pilot. We will then design our next program in a thoughtful way that considers short- and long-term outcomes,” the commission said.

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  • Toy inventor Burt Meyer, who dreamed up Lite-Brite and Rock ’Em Sock ’Em Robots, dies age 99

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    Burt Meyer, who invented toys like Rock ’Em Sock ’Em Robots, Lite-Brite and MouseTrap in the 1960s that delighted generations of children, has died. He was 99.

    Meyer’s creations arrived in the postwar boom, when plastic molding and mass production transformed how American kids played. That shift opened the door for more dynamic toys, and Meyer seized the moment with designs that would stay on shelves for decades.

    Meyer died on Oct. 30, said Rebecca Mathis, executive director at King-Bruwaert House, a retirement community in Burr Ridge, Illinois, where he lived.

    Meyer succeeded by straddling two often conflicting worlds, carrying a boundless childlike imagination alongside a pragmatic understanding of machines.

    The idea for Lite-Brite came in 1966 when Meyer was walking in Manhattan with Marvin Glass, who owned one of the largest toy design companies at the time, and the two men passed a window display featuring hundreds of colored lights. Engineers at the company doubted that electic lights could be safely adapted for children, according to Tim Walsh, who interviewed Meyer for his 2005 book “Timeless Toys.”

    Meyer, an employee at Marvin Glass & Associates, insisted it could.

    “There’s billions of ideas out there,” Walsh wrote, “but executing them into a final creative solution is often the hard part.”

    Meyer came up with a small backlit box and black paper sheets that allowed kids to create illuminated patterns. Lite-Brite was a hit, earning spots on Time Magazine’s list of 100 greatest toys and in the Strong National Museum of Play’s hall of fame. New versions are still being sold.

    Meyer had a similar role with a design team that reimagined a bulky boxing arcade game for home use. The original concept stalled in development after a featherweight boxer died from a brain injury, making any toy that invoked the tragedy unmarketable, company leaders thought.

    Meyer revisited the idea with a simple shift. “This is too good to pass up,” he recalled saying in a 2010 interview. “Let’s take it away from humanity, let’s make it robots. And we won’t have them fall over, we’ll have something funny happen.”

    The result was Rock ’Em Sock ’Em Robots, a small game where players control the fighters’ fists by pressing buttons on joysticks. A player wins by hitting the jaw of the opposing robot, theatrically popping up the spring-loaded head.

    The toy remained recognizable to later generations, appearing in the film “Toy Story 2,” and the toy company Mattel announced plans in 2021 for a live action movie adaptation.

    Meyer launched his own firm, Meyer/Glass Design, in the mid-1980s. The company developed numerous best-sellers including Gooey Louie, where children picked boogers our of Louie’s nose, and the Pretty Pretty Princess board game. His son, Steve Meyer, ran the business until 2006, according to The New York Times.

    Born in 1926 as Burton Carpenter Meyer, he enlisted in the Navy and served for two years as an aircraft mechanic. After retiring from toy making, he moved to Downers Grove, a suburb of Chicago, where he built small planes and could be seen deftly steering them aloft from a nearby private airfield well into his 80s.

    In interviews, Meyer often drew parallels between aerospace engineering and toy design, saying both required ingenutity and teamwork.

    “When you’re flying the airplane, use every resource that you have in there. That’s why we were able to turn out so many successful products,” Meyer said, crediting his success to the highly collaborative environment at Marvin Glass & Associates.

    Meyer’s car had a vanity plate that said TOYKING, and by most accounts, he was. In a 2010 interview, he said he was still delighted by telling people what he did for a living, and having them respond: “Oh, I played with that!”

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  • Civil Rights Leader Jesse Jackson Leaves Hospital After Treatment for Neurological Disorder

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    SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) — The Rev. Jesse Jackson has been released from a Chicago hospital where he was treated for a rare neurological disorder, his son said Tuesday.

    The 84-year-old civil rights leader was discharged Monday from Northwestern Memorial Hospital, his son and family spokesperson Yusef Jackson said.

    In 2013, Jackson, who now receives round-the-clock care at home, was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. The diagnosis was changed last April to progressive supranuclear palsy, or PSP, a neurodegenerative disorder which can have similar symptoms to Parkinson’s.

    Yusef Jackson thanked “the countless friends and supporters who have reached out, visited and prayed for our father,” as well as the medical and security staff at Northwestern Memorial Hospital.

    “We humbly ask for your continued prayers throughout this precious time,” Yusef Jackson said.

    A protégé of the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., the two-time presidential candidate and internationally known founder of the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition was hospitalized Nov. 14.

    Visitors included former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, fellow civil rights leader the Rev. Al Sharpton and television court arbitrator Judge Greg Mathis.

    After announcing his Parkinson’s diagnosis in 2017, Jackson continued to work and make public appearances, including at the 2024 Democratic National Convention in Chicago. In 2023, he stepped down as leader of Rainbow/PUSH, which he began as Operation PUSH in 1971, but continued going to the office regularly until a few months ago.

    His family says that Jackson uses a wheelchair, struggles to keep his eyes open and is unable to speak. Relatives, including his sons, Illinois U.S. Rep. Jonathan Jackson and Jesse Jackson Jr., a former Illinois congressman seeking reelection, have been caring for him in shifts.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Nov. 2025

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  • New limits for a rent algorithm that prosecutors say let landlords drive up prices

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    Landlords could no longer rely on rent-pricing software to quietly track each other’s moves and push rents higher using confidential data, under a settlement between RealPage Inc. and federal prosecutors to end what critics said was illegal “algorithmic collusion.”

    The deal announced Monday by the Department of Justice follows a yearlong federal antitrust lawsuit, launched during the Biden administration, against the Texas-based software company. RealPage would not have to pay any damages or admit any wrongdoing. The settlement must still be approved by a judge.

    RealPage software provides daily recommendations to help landlords and their employees nationwide price their available apartments. The landlords do not have to follow the suggestions, but critics argue that because the software has access to a vast trove of confidential data, it helps RealPage’s clients charge the highest possible rent.

    “RealPage was replacing competition with coordination, and renters paid the price,” said DOJ antitrust chief Gail Slater, who emphasized that the settlement avoided a costly, time-consuming trial.

    Under the terms of the proposed settlement, RealPage can no longer use that real-time data to determine price recommendations. Instead, the only nonpublic data that can be used to train the software’s algorithm must be at least one year old.

    “What does this mean for you and your family?” Slater said in a video statement. “It means more real competition in local housing markets. It means rents set by the market, not by a secret algorithm.”

    RealPage attorney Stephen Weissman said the company is pleased the DOJ worked with them to settle the matter.

    “There has been a great deal of misinformation about how RealPage’s software works and the value it provides for both housing providers and renters,” Weissman said in a statement. “We believe that RealPage’s historical use of aggregated and anonymized nonpublic data, which include rents that are typically lower than advertised rents, has led to lower rents, less vacancies, and more procompetitive effects.”

    However, the deal was slammed by some observers as a missed opportunity to clamp down on alleged algorithmic price-fixing throughout the economy.

    “This case really was the tip of the spear,” said Lee Hepner, senior legal counsel for the American Economic Liberties Project, whose group advocates for government action against business concentration.

    He said the settlement is rife with loopholes and he believes RealPages can keep influencing the rental market even if they can only use public, rather than private, data. He also decried how RealPages does not have to pay any damages, unlike many companies that have paid millions in penalties over their use of the software.

    Over the past few months, more than two dozen property management companies have reached various settlements over their use of RealPage, including Greystar, the nation’s largest landlord, which agreed to pay $50 million to settle a class action lawsuit, and $7 million to settle a separate lawsuit filed by nine states.

    The governors of California and New York signed laws last month to crack down on rent-setting software, and a growing list of cities, including Philadelphia and Seattle, have passed ordinances against the practice.

    Ten states — California, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oregon, Tennessee and Washington — had joined the DOJ’s antitrust lawsuit. Those states were not part of Monday’s settlement, meaning they can continue to pursue the case in court.

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  • US Civil Rights Leader Jesse Jackson Released From Chicago Hospital, Family Says

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    WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. civil rights leader Jesse Jackson was released on Monday from a Chicago hospital where he had been receiving medical care for at least 12 days, according to his family.

    The 84-year-old Baptist minister, social activist, and former U.S. presidential candidate “remains in stable condition” following his discharge from Northwestern Memorial Hospital, his son and family spokesperson, Yusef Jackson, said in a statement issued through the Rainbow PUSH Coalition, a Chicago-based political action organization the elder Jackson founded.

    Jackson’s hospital admission was announced by Rainbow PUSH on November 12, when he was described as being “under observation” for a degenerative neurological disorder called progressive supranuclear palsy, or PSP. Jackson was diagnosed in 2013 with Parkinson’s disease, but his diagnosis was changed in April of this year to PSP, according to Monday’s statement.

    No further details about Jackson’s condition or medical treatment were disclosed. But the family expressed thanks to friends and supporters for their prayers and visits.

    “We bear witness to the fact that prayer works and would also like to thank the professional, caring and amazing medical and security staff at Northwestern Hospital,” Jackson’s son said. “We humbly ask for your continued prayers through this precious time.”

    Jackson has been at the forefront of the U.S. civil rights movement since the 1960s, joining the Southern Christian Leadership Conference as a young protege of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and was present when King was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1968.

    Some two decades later, as an outspoken critic of the Republican President Ronald Reagan, Jackson mounted a Democratic primary bid for the White House in 1984 but finished in third place. He ran for president once more in 1988 but failed again to clinch the party’s nomination, placing second.

    (Reporting by Steve Gorman in Washington; Editing by Michael Perry)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Stores keep prices down in a tough year for turkeys. Other Thanksgiving foods may cost more

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    CHELSEA, Mich. (AP) — Old Brick Farm, where Larry Doll raises chickens, turkeys and ducks, was fortunate this Thanksgiving season.

    Doll’s small farm west of Detroit had no cases of bird flu, despite an ongoing outbreak that killed more than 2 million U.S. turkeys in the last three months alone. He also avoided another disease, avian metapneumovirus, which causes turkeys to lay fewer eggs.

    “I try to keep the operation as clean as possible, and not bringing other animals in from other farms helps mitigate that risk as well,” said Doll, whose farm has been in his family for five generations.

    But Doll still saw the impact as those diseases shrank the U.S. turkey flock to a 40-year low this year. The hatchery where he gets his turkey chicks had fewer available this year. He plans to order another 100 hatchlings soon, even though they won’t arrive until July.

    “If you don’t get your order in early, you’re not going to get it,” he said.

    Thanksgiving costs vary

    The shrinking population is expected to cause wholesale turkey prices to rise 44% this year, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Despite the increase, many stores are offering discounted or even free turkeys to soften the potential blow to Thanksgiving meal budgets. But even if the bird is cheaper than last year, the ingredients to prepare the rest of the holiday feast may not be. Tariffs on imported steel, for example, have increased prices for canned goods.

    As of Nov. 17, a basket of 11 Thanksgiving staples — including a 10-pound frozen turkey, 10 Russet potatoes, a box of stuffing and cans of corn, green beans and cranberry sauce – cost $58.81, or 4.1% more than last year, according to Datasembly, a market research company that surveys weekly prices at 150,000 U.S. stores. That’s higher than the average price increase for food eaten at home, which rose 2.7% in September, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

    Datasembly showed a 2% decline in the retail price of a 10-pound turkey as of Nov. 17. Pricing out Thanksgiving meals isn’t an exact science, and the firm’s tally differed from other estimates.

    The American Farm Bureau Federation, which uses volunteer shoppers in all 50 states to survey prices, reported that Thanksgiving dinner for 10 would cost $55.16 this year, or 5% less than last year. The Wells Fargo Agri-Food Institute, using NielsenIQ data from September, estimated that feeding 10 people on Thursday using store-brand products would cost $80 this year, which is 2% to 3% lower than last year’s estimate.

    Tempting turkey prices

    Grocery chains are also offering deals to attract shoppers. Discount grocer Aldi is advertising a $40 meal for 10 with 21 items. Kroger said shoppers could feed 10 people for under $50 with its menu of store-brand products.

    Earlier this month, President Donald Trump touted Walmart’s Thanksgiving meal basket, which he said was 25% cheaper than last year. But that was because Walmart included a different assortment and fewer products overall this year.

    “We’re seeing some promotions being implemented in an effort to draw customers into the store,” David Ortega, a professor of food economics and policy at Michigan State University, said.

    That’s despite a sharp increase in wholesale turkey prices since August. In the second week of November, frozen 8-16 pound hens were averaging $1.77 per pound, up 81% from the same period last year, according to Mark Jordan, the executive director of Leap Market Analytics, which closely follows the poultry and livestock markets.

    Avian viruses are the main culprit. But another reason for turkey’s higher wholesale prices has been an increase in consumer demand as other meats have gotten more expensive, Jordan said. Beef prices were up 14% in September compared to last year, for example.

    “For a big chunk of the population, they look at steak cuts and say, ‘I can’t or I don’t want to pay $30 a pound,’” Jordan said.

    That’s the case for Paul Nadeau, a retired consultant from Austin, Texas, who plans to smoke a turkey this week. Nadeau said he usually smokes a brisket over Thanksgiving weekend, but the beef brisket he buys would now cost more than $100. Turkey prices are also up at his local H-E-B supermarket, he said, but not by as much.

    “I don’t know of anything that’s down in price since last year except for eggs,” Nadeau said.

    Tariffs and weather

    Trump’s tariffs on imported steel and aluminum are also raising prices. Farok Contractor, a distinguished professor of management and global business at the Rutgers Business School, said customers are paying 10 cents to 40 cents more per can when companies pass on the full cost of tariffs.

    Tariffs may be partly to blame for the increased cost of jellied cranberry sauce, which was up 38% from last year in Datasembly’s survey. But weather was also a factor. U.S. cranberry production is expected to be down 9% this year, hurt by drought conditions in Massachusetts, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

    In Illinois, where most of the country’s canning pumpkins are grown, dry weather actually helped pumpkins avoid diseases that are more prevalent in wet conditions, said Raghela Scavuzzo, an associate director of food systems development at the Illinois Farm Bureau and the executive director of the Illinois Specialty Growers Association. Datasembly found that a 30-ounce can of pumpkin pie mix cost 5% less than last year.

    Frozen turkeys are on display at a Meijer store Friday, Nov. 21, 2025, in Canton Township, Mich. (AP Photo/Mike Householder)

    Frozen turkeys are on display at a Meijer store Friday, Nov. 21, 2025, in Canton Township, Mich. (AP Photo/Mike Householder)

    Cans of pumpkin are on display at a Meijer store Friday, Nov. 21, 2025, in Canton Township, Mich. (AP Photo/Mike Householder) _

    Cans of pumpkin are on display at a Meijer store Friday, Nov. 21, 2025, in Canton Township, Mich. (AP Photo/Mike Householder) _

    Farm to table

    Back at Old Brick Farm, which has been in his family since 1864, Doll walked among his turkeys the week before Thanksgiving, patting their heads as they waddled between their warm barn and an open pasture. In a few days, he planned to deliver them to an Amish butcher.

    Doll sold all 92 turkeys he raised this year, with customers paying $6.50 per pound for what many tell him is the best turkey they’ve ever tasted. He enjoys a little profit, he said, and the good feeling of supplying a holiday meal.

    “I just love it, to think that, you know, not only are we providing them food, but the centerpiece of their Thanksgiving dinner,” he said.

    ___

    Associated Press Video Journalist Mike Householder contributed.

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