Springfield News
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ComEd and Ameren both submitted four-year grid plans and rate hikes over $1 billion to the Illinois Commerce Commission earlier this year.
The Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) dealt a major blow to Illinois’ two largest electricity providers and denied their grid upgrade plans for failing to be transparent and follow the state’s statutorily defined clean energy goals.
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Rep. Mike Marron (R-Fithian) will resign from the House on Monday. [House Republicans]
Rep. Mike Marron (R-Fithian) will still be involved in advocating for improvements and growth in his district, but in a new role after Monday, when he resigns from the House to take a job leading a local economic development organization in Vermilion County.
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Former Rep. LaToya Greenwood (D-East St. Louis) is pictured during a previous year in the Illinois House. [House Democrats]
A closely watched House race in the Metro East region got off to a hot start that could prematurely end it after former Rep. LaToya Greenwood (D-East St. Louis) had her signatures challenged as she attempts to win back her seat.
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Thomas More Society attorney Peter Breen, right, and Attorney General Kwame Raoul, left, speak at separate news conferences in Chicago last month. [Ben Szalinski/The Daily Line]
Attorney General Kwame Raoul agreed to not enforce a controversial law designed to prevent deceptive business practices at anti-abortion pregnancy centers after fierce pushback from advocates that resulted in a Rockford federal judge blocking the law a week after it was signed.
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Illinois State Police attorney Suzanne Bond and State Police Capt. Jeffrey Yenchko participated in the Joint Committee on Administrative Review on Tuesday. [Blue Room Stream]
The Illinois State Police (ISP) have made several changes to the agency’s rules for the assault weapons registration process in response to feedback at public hearings while a legislative oversight committee plans to make a final decision about the rules next month.
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Rep. Lance Yednock (D-Ottawa), left, and Sen. Sue Rezin (R-Morris) hold a news conference in Springfield in November. [Ben Szalinski/The Daily Line]
Gov. JB Pritzker signed 17 bills on Friday, concluding his bill signings for the first half of the 103rd General Assembly. Among the bills signed Friday was a long-awaited plan to lift the state’s 1980s-era ban on building new nuclear reactors.
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Gov. JB Pritzker signs the assault weapons ban into law in January. [Ben Szalinski/The Daily Line]
The Illinois Attorney General filed a petition to reject a request to the U.S. Supreme Court from opponents of Illinois’ assault weapons ban that asks the justices to issue an emergency injunction to block the law to allow for more appeals in lower courts.
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A series of recommendations being considered by the General Assembly could result in major changes for Chicago-area public transit agencies.
Illinois lawmakers are in receipt of a report from the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning (CMAP) with a list of recommendations to make public transportation more accessible for residents and financially sustainable for transit agencies in the Chicagoland region.
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Candidates line up outside the State Board of Elections in Springfield on Nov. 27. [Ben Szalinski/The Daily Line]
Illinois Republicans are hoping to make a dent in Democrats’ large supermajority in the General Assembly in 2024, though the party also faces natural headwinds that traditionally favor Democrats in years voters will also cast a ballot for president of the United States.
Across the aisle, Democrats are eying new pick-up opportunities to boost the supermajority in districts currently held by Republicans but where Democrats running for statewide offices have performed well


















