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Good morning, Chicago. Before Jonathan Jackson entered Congress in 2023, a construction company he owned received nearly $750,000 through Gov. JB Pritzker’s landmark Rebuild Illinois infrastructure program, even though records show the company had scant experience and initially lacked the certification it needed to acquire state funds as a minority business. The payments to Jackson’s 3 I Roadwork Inc. began in the year after he endorsed Pritzker’s first bid for governor in 2018. That endorsement came months after Pritzker’s campaign quietly hired Jackson as a $13,000-per-month political consultant. The revelations about the state work and the political connections illustrate closer ties between the two Democrats than previously understood and as they both seek third terms next year — and as Pritzker’s name circulates as a potential candidate for president in 2028. Read the full investigation. Here are the top stories you need to know to start your day, including how a garden store worker became part of the “Broadview Six,” how the Bears clinched their first playoff spot since 2020 and what to know as shake-ups at a classical station continue with the exit of a longtime host. Today’s eNewspaper edition | Subscribe to more newsletters | Asking Eric | Horoscopes | Puzzles & Games | Today in History Joselyn Walsh at her apartment on Dec. 10, 2025, in Chicago. Walsh is a musician and activist who plays with a group of
musicians called Songs of Liberation. Walsh is among six protesters facing federal conspiracy charges in one of the highest-profile cases to emerge from Operation Midway Blitz. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune) Joselyn Walsh was working from her Pilsen home last month when her phone began to ring. It was a special agent from the FBI, the caller said, and they needed to speak with her. Unfamiliar with the number, the 31-year-old part-time researcher, part-time garden store worker dismissed
the call as spam. But then her cell sounded again. This time, Walsh googled the 10 digits flashing up at her. Sure enough, it was the FBI headquarters in Chicago. And they had a warrant out for her arrest. Walsh is among six protesters facing federal conspiracy charges in one of the most high-profile cases to emerge from Operation Midway Blitz, the Trump administration’s mass deportation mission in Chicago this fall. A privately made firearm recovered by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. “Privately made firearms” or “ghost guns” are often made from kits bought and sold on the Internet. A serial number is
not required and buyers are not subject to a background check. In 2022, Gov. JB Pritzker signed legislation outlawing the possession of ghost guns in Illinois, though CPD officers still recover at least 400 every year, data show. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune) “Privately made firearms” are now the sixth most common make of gun recovered by CPD, topped only by familiar brands such as Glock, Taurus, Smith & Wesson, Sturm
& Ruger and Springfield. Data from CPD show the department logs, on average, one gun recovery every seven hours throughout the year. Ghost guns have been recovered all over Chicago, but more than 10% of them were recovered in the Englewood (7th) District on the South Side this year, the most of any patrol district. Associate Pastor Joseph L. Morrow, at Fourth Presbyterian Church, center, prays as he stands with other Chicago-area pastors
in the lobby of the County Building on Dec. 15, 2025, to demand action to reverse increases in home property taxes. (Eileen T. Meslar/Chicago Tribune) The due date for property tax bills has come and gone, but Cook County
officials remain under siege. On one side, a group of pastors are pressing the assessor, members of the Board of Review and the treasurer to unwind this year’s bills for South and West siders and cap future bill increases. On the other side, suburban school districts are begging to receive their share of property tax revenues to make payroll. Caught in the middle are leaders — most of whom face reelection in less than 90 days — with only limited capacity to address their claims. Mayor Brandon Johnson presides over a City Council meeting about the city’s 2026 spending plan on Dec. 20, 2025, at City Hall in the Loop. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune) Aldermen passed the final part of a counterproposal to Mayor Brandon Johnson’s 2026 budget on Saturday, in a historic meeting that redraws the political lines at City Hall and further
imperils his progressive agenda. The consequential day was punctuated by hours of floor speeches with the usual finger-pointing and grandstanding between the council’s ever-deepening factions, before a final 30-18 vote on the remainder of a $16.6 billion budget for next year that Johnson has failed to stop. The revenue package of that plan passed in a 29-19 vote a day earlier. Even as the city plowed aside the snow on Lake Shore Drive on Jan. 12, 1979, more snow fell, making travel slow and hazardous. (Michael Budrys/Chicago Tribune) If you’ve been searching for opportunities to use your snow puns — look no further. Chicago’s Fourth Annual ‘You Name a Snowplow” contest is back. |