Dems rising / 3,000 missing / Calm? Calm?? CALM???

Chicago Public Square was built for moments like this. Print newspapers, with their early deadlines, won’t round up Tuesday’s election results until … Thursday.
 But Square’s here for you, thanks to those whose financial support—even just $1, once—keeps this service coming.
 So let’s get to it:

Dems rising. In the first major Election Day since Donald Trump reclaimed the White House, Democrats dominated, coast to coast.
 Axios: “In race after race, the margins of victory … were wider than expected” …
 … across what Andrew Prokop at Vox says were “high-profile and low-profile elections.”
 The New York Times: Turnout was extraordinary.”
 The AP rounds up the numbers from every state.
 Columnist Steven Beschloss: It was “a good night for democracy and sanity.”
 Law Dork Chris Geidner: “If you are a fan of democracy and wanted to breathe, Tuesday night was a night for you.”
 Former megachurch pastor and writer John Pavlovitz sees “irrefutable evidence that the beautiful collective heart of our nation is still functioning.”
 Transgender journalist Erin Reed perceives “a stunning rebuke of anti-trans politics.”
 New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie (gift link) says the results make clear that Trump is “an albatross around the neck of his party.”
 Pod Save America co-host Dan Pfeiffer: “This was the first real test of Donald Trump’s political strength since winning the White House, and he fell flat on his face.”
 Columnist Charlie Sykes: It was “a coast-to-coast repudiation of Donald Trump and all his works.”
 Trump was not a happy guy.
 The view from Portugal: Chicago expat—and Chicago Tribune alumnus—Kevin Williams: “Republicans erred in being too horrible for people to countenance because that horrible behavior is now affecting the lives of everyone.”
 Economist Paul Krugman doesn’t expect an end to Republicans’ “attempt to consolidate authoritarian rule. … If anything, they’ll redouble efforts to rig the 2026 midterms, although California, by approving a major redistricting, has largely neutralized their gerrymandering plot.”

‘Zohran Mamdani is gonna be the mayor of New York, and also of America.’ Wonkette’s Evan Hurst: “Don’t let anybody tell you normal New Yorkers are not giddy right now. It is palpable.”
 The Lever’s David Sirota: “Mamdani’s victory could be a turning point for Democrats—if the party finally learns from its past leaders’ betrayals.”
 The Wall Street Journal (gift link): Democrats won back at least some minority voters and held on to Virginia’s federal workers despite the shutdown.
 The American Prospect hails California’s referendum on congressional redistricting as proof that resistance works.
 The Times: In a sign of the party’s newfound strength, Democrats even ousted two Republican members of Georgia’s utility board.
 Author and former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich: “The sleeping giant of America is up and roaring.”
 And then, there’s the plainspoken Jeff Tiedrich: “Democrats, fuck yeah!

3,000 missing. That’s the National Immigrant Justice Center’s estimate of how many Chicago-area immigrants have vanished from federal records.
 404 Media: Customs and Border Protection’s given state and local cops an app they can use to scan someone’s face as part of immigration enforcement.
‘The conditions would be found unconstitutional even in the context of prisons holding convicted felons.’ A federal judge said he’d issue an order today regarding what lawyers call inhumane conditions at the Broadview immigrant detention center …
 … including overflowing toilets, crowded cells, no beds and water that “tasted like sewer.”
 Axios: “Attorneys quibbled about whether detainee meals come from Subway or Jimmy John’s.”
 In another Chicago courtroom today, U.S. District Judge Sara Ellis was to consider more evidence in news outlets’ and protesters’ suit complaining of excessive force by the feds …
 … including footage from at least a dozen cameras worn by immigration agents …
 Plaintiffs in that suit say Bovino made up a claim he was hit by a rock before he OK’d the use of tear gas.
 Re: Yesterday’s item about prosecutors dropping a complaint against a man for injuring Bovino’s groin, reader Mary Cronin jokes: “Because it was a petty offense.”

‘We don’t have the air traffic controllers.’ More flights out of Chicago are getting delayed as the federal shutdown—now the longest in history—drags on.
 Another D.C. record: House Speaker Mike Johnson’s delay swearing in an Arizona Democrat elected in September—a woman whose vote could free the files about Trump’s dead sex-offender friend Jeffrey Epstein—is eight days beyond the previous longest stall.
 The Supreme Court today was considering the legality of Trump’s tariffs. (Hear here.)

‘A sleazy end.’ A Trib editorial condemns departing U.S. Rep. Jesus “Chuy” García’s gambit to clear the way for his chief of staff to run for his seat with no opposition.
 Axios: “This was once the norm for Chicago politicians of García’s ilk.”
 The Sun-Times: As he runs to reclaim the House seat he surrendered in a corruption scandal, Jesse Jackson Jr. has been taking campaign cash from a guy under federal investigation.
 Freedom of Information inquiries reveal that Chicago’s cultural affairs chief quit amid charges of sexual harassment and more.
 Remember how Mayor Johnson agreed to be more transparent about all the gifts he’s received? The city’s inspector general says, um, not so much. (Read the report here.)

In Dick Cheney’s defense … Chris Geidner says the dead ex-vice president was an early Republican voice for treating same-sex couples fairly.
 Closer to the Edge: “Whatever clarity came at the end doesn’t wash the blood from his hands.”
 Jed Rosensweig at LateNighter: Cheney became late-night TV’s perfect villain.” (Cartoon: Jack Ohman.)

‘A tech billionaire bet big on Trump. It’s paying off for Silicon Valley.’ Especially, ProPublica reports, venture capitalist—and University of Illinois graduateMarc Andreessen.
 The Washington Post (gift link): A secretive donor circle that lifted JD Vance is rewriting MAGA’s future.
 Meanwhile, Bloomberg reports, the median age of first-time homebuyers in the U.S. has now reached a record high of 40.

Calm? Calm?? CALM??? Your Chicago Public Square columnist mounts the soapbox to complain about NBC News’ new slogan.
 About to split from NBC, MSNBC—soon to be MS NOW—is spending big to let the world know.

Thanks. Mike Braden made this edition better. 

Off-year voting on / ‘Classic Chicago political strategy’ / Square mailbox

 … no race more watched than New York City’s mayoral contest.
Also: Governors’ races in Virginia and New Jersey.
Stop the Presses columnist Mark Jacob offers “12 helpful terms to understand American chaos.”
The Onion:Breaking: The Darkness Returns.”

‘Chicago is really putting on a clinic in bravery.’ Rachel Maddow more directly praised the people of Evanston—and its mayor and congressional candidate Daniel Biss—for their stand against ICE oppression.
A security guard at a Menards store in Cicero says he was fired after refusing to delete phone video of Homeland Security officers smashing the windows of a man’s pickup truck and hauling him off in an unmarked vehicle. (Menards has yet to answer Chicago Public Square’s inquiry about that incident.)
A Broadview village board meeting wound up early as anti-ICE protesters complained of their treatment outside the detention center there.
A federal judge was set to devote the whole day to consideration of a complaint that the Broadview ICE facility is a “black hole.”
Federal prosecutors have dropped a complaint against a man accused of injuring Border Patrol ringleader Greg Bovino’s groin.

‘Slimy disingenuousness.’ David Lurie at Public Notice: House Speaker Mike Johnson’s lies in the federal shutdown “keep getting lost in the facts.”
As the government shutdown drags on, Trump’s Agriculture Department says it’ll partly fund the federal SNAP food aid program through this month. (Cartoon: Jack Ohman.)
The American Prospect: “Trump lost the politics of the shutdown.”

‘The cruelty is the point, party edition.’ Don’t count Nobel-winning economist Paul Krugman among those labeling Trump “tone deaf” for holding a lavish party at Mar-a-Lago as millions of citizens were about to lose food benefits: “He understood perfectly well that he was partying while ordinary Americans were suffering. And that … was a big reason he enjoyed the event.”
Rex Huppke at USA Today: “Trump puts a marble bathroom ahead of helping Americans.”
Jon Stewart: “Your premiums may be going up, tariffs may be shutting down your small businesses, you may be losing your food assistance—but it’ll all be OK because Donald Trump is building a ballroom that looks like the inside of Marie Antoinette’s vagina.”
Stewart’s agreed to stay on another year at The Daily Show …
 … a deal that Oliver Darcy at Status calls “a smart business decision” that spares Paramount from “what would have been a major PR disaster.”
LateNighter’s Bill Carter hails host Seth Meyers’ comeback to Trump’s criticism: “A meticulous, hilarious takedown.”

‘An abdication.’ Press Watch proprietor Dan Froomkin offers questions 60 Minutes’ Norah O’Donnell should have asked the president.
Pulitzer winner Gene Weingarten: “Trump was right: He was in charge of this interview.”
CNN: Trump spewed at least 18 falsehoods in that interview.
Columnist Eric Zorn smells hypocrisy: “Wait, what? Trump doesn’t know anything about a guy he just pardoned?”
Cartoonist Ann Telnaes illustrates her take: “A big fat bullshit interview.”

A thousand a month. That’s how many complaints about smoking the Sun-Times reports the Chicago Transit Authority’s logged over the last year or so.

‘Classic Chicago political strategy.’ That’s Politico’s Shia Kapos on Rep. Jesús “Chuy” García’s announcement that he won’t seek re-election—conveniently, just as his chief of staff filed paperwork to run for his seat.

Right to die? Gov. Pritzker’s on the fence about whether to sign a bill that would let the terminally ill end their lives with a doctor’s prescription.
A Tribune editorial: “We hope he vetoes it.”
The Trib’s Chris Borrelli (gift link, courtesy of those who support Chicago Public Square) recaps “a lively visit” to the annual National Funeral Directors Association convention in Chicago.

Cheney dead. Former Vice President Dick Cheney—whom The Washington Post describes as the “chief architect of a post-9/11 war on terrorism that involved bypassing restrictions against torture”—is dead at 84.
Wonkette’s Erik Loomis: “Cheney was instrumental in creating the torture regime that completely dismissed all shreds of humanity the U.S. could ever claim.”

Friends in high places. Dilbert creator—and Trump supporter—Scott Adams had health insurance problems. Then he asked Trump for help.
Popular Information: A Medicare contractor whose products lack scientific backing—and that has benefited from a Trump administration delay in a Biden administration rule that would have cut its funding—secretly donated $2.5 million to Trump’s White House ballroom project.
The New York Times (gift link): Trump’s Food and Drug Administration chief has quit amid an ethics dispute.

‘The quantity of AI-generated articles has surpassed the quantity of human-written articles being published on the web.’ That was just one of the points cited yesterday as University of Illinois Chicago journalism lecturer Mike Reilley gave Chicago Public Square readers an overview of artificial technology and fact-check tech.
You can see the full two-hour session here …
 … and check out Reilley’s link-rich digital handout here.
Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch (gift link): “AI is coming for your job. Will the government pay you?

R.I.P., Teen Vogue. What media watcher Brian Stelter calls “an unlikely and widely respected source of progressive political journalism”* has lost its writers and editors explicitly covering politics …

Square mailbox. Reader Benjy Blenner was unsurprised by yesterday’s item about a drop in 911 calls to police during the ICE crackdown here: “When I called the Evanston police on Friday to say that there appeared to be people potentially posing as ICE, police or feds at my children’s elementary school, I was met with ‘Well, what do you want us to do about it?’ Why would I ever call the police again?”
Thanks to the many (many!) readers who flagged yesterday’s misspelling of palate.
Your thoughts are always welcome here.

* Which has on occasion published work by your Square columnist’s daughter-in-law.

Square up.

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