Follow the money / ‘They shot my guitar’ / Quizzes / Apology

Follow the money. As you do your ballot homework for Tuesday’s Illinois primary, learn more about who’s buying which candidates:
 WBEZ: Along with pro-Israel funds, tech money is swamping Democratic congressional primaries.
 A lawyer for 7th Congressional District candidate La Shawn Ford is demanding a crypto-currency-funded political action committee stop pounding out TV and print ads attacking Ford—who (surprise!) last year helped pass legislation to regulate parts of that industry.
 Politico sees a path to victory for U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi in the Democratic contest for U.S. Senate because he’s running against two Black women …
 … one of whom Gov. Pritzker dissed yesterday.
 Tribune reporter A.D. Quig* surveys the race for Cook County assessor, which pits “a two-term millionaire running on systemic reform against a dynastic party-backed challenger who says those changes have led to chaos and skyrocketing bills for taxpayers.”
 Injustice Watch profiles a real estate investor who’s “made a fortune taking Cook County homes through tax foreclosure … dogged by allegations of fraud.”

‘These creeps are just saying the quiet parts louder and louder.’ Wonkette’s Evan Hurst mocks tech bro and Palantir CEO Alex Karp, who told CNBC that AI technology will lessen the power of “highly educated, often female voters, who vote mostly Democrat.”
 Jimmy Kimmel breaks down Trump’s campaign stop in Kentucky this week with a supercut, “Real Moments in Presidementia.”
 Columnist Jeff Tiedrich: “Serial sexual predator celebrates women’s history. Hilarity ensues.”
 Columnist Neil Steinberg, who voted early this week: “One way to understand our current administration is this: They’re acting like they will never leave power. Whether they are correct or not depends on the survival of free and fair elections.” (Congrats to cartoonist and Pulitzer winner Jack Ohman, winner of this year’s Herblock Prize for Editorial Cartooning.)
 Lyz Lenz’s Dingus of the Week: “Sentient Monster energy drink” Joe Rogan, who “apparently just learned how to read, because he’s kind of mad at Trump about the war in Iran.”

Ready to vote? As Chicago Public Square reader Kay Ambre did yesterday, while spiffed up in a Square hoodie?
 Then you’ll want to check the Square Voter Guide Guide—stuffed full of analysis, endorsements and research tools for Tuesday’s vote.

‘Trump’s war reaches America’s shores.’ Columnist Robert Hubbell blames terrorists responding to the conflict in Iran for two domestic attacks yesterday:
 An assault on a Detroit-area synagogue by a man who lost four relatives in an Israeli airstrike on Lebanon last week …
 … and a shooter who opened fire in a classroom at Virginia’s Old Dominion University—an ex-Army National Guardsman who pleaded guilty in 2016 to attempting to help the Islamic State.
 Pulitzer-winning cartoonist and columnist David Horsey: “Elect stupid people, you get a stupid war.”

Windy sh_tty. With the Chicago area under a high wind warning through the afternoon, flights were grounded this morning at O’Hare …
 … with both a high in the 60s and snow possible Sunday …
 … as a large swath of the country faces a blizzard, a polar vortex, a heat dome and an atmospheric river—all at once.
 The AP: “Human waste backing up in basements is a gut-churning sign of U.S. infrastructure problems” compounded by “heavy rains made worse by climate change.”

‘They shot my guitar.’ Musician Jocelyn Walsh and former Cook County Board candidate Cat Sharp are off the hook on federal conspiracy charges filed against them for their role in a protest outside the Broadview immigration processing center last October.
 That leaves four others—including congressional candidate Kat Abughazaleh and Oak Park village trustee Brian Straw—still facing charges.
 Block Club: Supporters of a Skokie woman who says she was held by the feds at O’Hare have gone silent after revelations that a German company denied she worked there, and that she’d been previously charged for making false sexual harassment accusations.

Well, wasn’t National Support Chicago Public Square Day fun? Good thing, too, because that joy softened the blow of your Square columnist’s sad 3/8 correct on this week’s news quiz from The Conversation’s quizmaster, past Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions winner Fritz Holznagel. Your turn:
 On the other hand: It was a more respectable 9/10 here on Justin Kaufmann’s Axios quiz about Chicago department store history.

‘Millions of us will be tuning in to watch people involved with movies that we have not seen give speeches thanking long lists of people we have never heard of, which is why the Oscars broadcast often does not start and finish in the same fiscal quarter.’ Another Pulitzer winner Dave Barry, who wrote jokes for Steve Martin when Martin hosted the ceremony in 2003, previews Sunday’s ceremony.
 Saturday morning—if all goes according to schedule—the Chicago River goes green.

Triibe tension. Workers at the Chicago-based Black news organization are pushing for recognition of their union.
 Nine months after its founder died, Chicago’s Austin Voice newspaper’s back in print.
 Axios: The White House is outraged over a new hire at CBS News.

Apology. Y’know how we’re always reminding you that you can support Square for as little as $1, just once? At some point in recent weeks, that option fell off the support page.
 It’s back now, and you really can pitch in just a buck …
 … using PayPal if you prefer.

* Who wrote one of your Square columnist’s favorite cover letters ever (2019 link).

‘Incredible, but … to become more frequent’ / You’re being watched / Yay, Costco

This is it. Welcome to the ninth annual National Support Chicago Public Square Day.
Got a Square T-shirt, hoodie or cap? Wear it today and then share a photo on social media …
 … including the Square Flickr account …
 … and encourage curious onlookers to subscribe free at sub.ChicagoPublicSquare.com.
 Let’s kick things off with a note from Square reader and Travel Weekly columnist Arnie Weissmann: “I am in Lesotho to interview the king. … I told him it was Square Day and asked if he would mind taking a photo with me. … He obliged.” (Photo: David Burnett.)

And now the news:

It might seem incredible, but it’s likely going to become more frequent.’ A Northern Illinois University expert tells the Tribune the gargantuan—that’s the technical adjective—hail that assaulted Illinois Tuesday is just a sample of what’s to come as the globe warms.
 A survivor of the accompanying tornadoes recalls: “I was there for a while trying to unbury myself.”

Why kids died. Sources tell The Associated Press that outdated intelligence likely led to the U.S. launching a deadly missile strike that killed more than 165 people—many of them children—at an elementary school in Iran.
 ProPublica: “The U.S. built a blueprint to avoid civilian war casualties. Trump officials scrapped it.”
 Veteran Chicago TV news executive Jennifer Schulze: “Dogged investigative news reporting reveals the U.S. role in the deadly school bombing but you won’t hear much about that from Trump-friendly media.”

Your tax dollars at war. Cost to the U.S. of the conflict’s first six days? More than $11 billion.
 Public Notice columnist David Lurie on the pointlessness of trying to discern the point of Trump’s war: “The evident fact is that the president is nuts” …
 … or, as Jeff Tiedrich puts it, “It’s becoming more apparent with each passing day that … he had no plan beyond ‘we’re gonna bomb the shit out of Iran and they’re gonna surrender the same day.’”

This is not made up.’ Media writer Tom Jones is gobsmacked by the decision to bar news photographers from Pentagon briefings because Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s team found pictures of him “unflattering.”
 The Defense Department’s labeled a Washington Post appeal for tips from within the military as prohibited “solicitation” that could prompt punishment.
 Law professor Joyce Vance: “This is how the First Amendment erodes.”

‘We can’t handle a drone strike. We barely survived the writers’ strike here, OK?’ Jimmy Kimmel’s on edge after the FBI warned of possible retaliatory attacks by Iran on California.
 Columnist and lawyer Robert Hubbell: “You would think that, during a war that has provoked one of the largest state sponsors of terrorism, the president and his party would want the Department of Homeland Security fully funded. You would be wrong!

‘There’s an event near you.’ Heads-Up News columnist Dan Froomkin encourages you to prep for what could be the biggest anti-Trump protest yet: March 28’s next No Kings Day.
 Search the map here.

You’re being watched. 404 Media breaks down a “dystopian hellscape” in which your day-to-day activities can be monitored by everything from doorbell cameras to license-plate trackers.

Ready to cruise the Jackson? A bill introduced to the Illinois House would rename part of the Dan Ryan Expressway for the Rev. Jesse Jackson.
 If you drive to Wrigley Field, the Cubs want you to have hundreds more parking spaces from which to choose.
 Columnist Eric Zorn’s all in on a bill to pay Chicago school board members.
 A Springfield mystery: Why has a member of the House Democratic caucus been excommunicated from the party?

She’s baaaa-aaaack. Scandal-scarred ex-Dolton Mayor Tiffany Henyard—widely compared to the principal on the TV show Abbott Elementary (2024 link)—is running for a county board … in Georgia.
 The Washington Post (gift link): Artificial intelligence money is flooding the 2026 elections.
 A veteran Illinois political strategist tells Politico that super political action committee spending here has gone “completely nuts.”
 The Chicago 312 newsletter: Senate candidate Raja Krishnamoorthi “wants to abolish the ICE he’s taking checks from.”
 Capitol News: Illinois election officials say they’re mostly insulated from Trump’s election threats.
 Been putting off your ballot calls? The Square Voter Guide Guide is here to help.

Yay, Costco. It’s one of the few companies that hiked prices due to Trump’s now-illegal tariffs and that now tells Popular Information it intends to pass some of the refunded cash back to customers.
 A bunch of others are not so eager to share the windfall.

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