Illinois quick hits: Primary election ballot certified; indictments increased in 2025
Primary election ballot certified
The Illinois State Board of Elections certified the March 2026 primary ballot this week, removing several Republican candidates for governor after upholding petition challenges.
Remaining on the GOP gubernatorial ballot is Darren Bailey, Ted Dabrowski, James Mendrick and Rick Heidner. Gov. J.B. Pritzker will be unchallenged in the Democrats’ primary March 17.
For U.S. Senate Candidates, Democrats will have 10 to choose from, Republicans six.
Indictments increased in 2025
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Illinois says it cracked down on crime and implemented new policies in 2025.
Statistics the office released show indictments were up 34% compared to the previous year.
The office also touts more focus on mass transit safety, health care fraud investigations and immigration enforcement efforts.
Unemployment rate forecast
The Chicago Fed Real-Time Unemployment Rate Forecast is estimating the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics monthly unemployment rate at 4.56% for December, matching the actual BLS unemployment rate for November.
The December 2024 unemployment rate was 4.09%.
Latest News Stories
More Illinois Catholic schools close; candidates call for change
U.S. effort to limit China’s influence reaches Latin America
Govt. shutdown risk spikes as Senate Democrats vow to tank funding package
Report: EU regulations cost billions for American tech companies
Acting ICE director ordered to court by Minnesota federal judge
Crackdown in Minneapolis underway following Trump talks with Walz, Frey
WATCH: Chicago IG seeks urgency on OT costs; Group warns taxpayers paying for polls
Illinois Quick Hits: Grants issued for apprenticeship programs
K-12 schools, higher ed institutions prevail in diversity litigation
Medical group debunks recent study on racial concordance, says patient outcomes not improved by philosophy
County Approves $22 Million in Road Projects for Lorenzo Road and Mills Road
Three Democrats seeking Illinois U.S. Senate seat debate in Chicago