
There were surprises on both sides.
For starters, a really dynamic young lady running for Congress won her Republican primary race – Christian Maxwell
Never count your chickens before they hatch but I feel like this one is in the bag!
Congrats to the future Congressman! https://t.co/mnG41NoIi9 pic.twitter.com/BoZlyrfWyC
— Libs Of Chicago (@Libs_OfChicago) March 18, 2026
And, yeah, while she gets to go head-to-head with the Cook County (read: Chicago) political machine in November, she is up for it.
She’s so incredibly sharp. And the more people hear of her and actually HEAR her, I know the more will come over to the red side.
A fearless mother of 4, wife and entrepreneur and first time candidate for Illinois district 1 congressional seat is running to restore hope for Illinoisans!
.@TheDemocrats have failed the people of Illinois for decades and it’s time to flip them red!
Get out and vote Tuesday… pic.twitter.com/yX2YFLVJ4j
— Erica 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 (@EricaRN4USA) March 14, 2026
I guess there was a huge upset in the state GOP, too. A young conservative guy upended what appears to be a long-held incumbent seat and dislodged an establishment fixture
That’s where the new blood comes in when you need it.
🚨🚨 Major Upset:
Conservative grassroots candidate topples Deputy House Minority Leader Norine Hammond — one of the Illinois GOP establishment’s most powerful figures. pic.twitter.com/3yQQi8jCZs
— Illinois Review (@IllinoisReview) March 18, 2026
They called it a ‘stunning’ upset. No one’s more stunned than establishment types when they get booted, that’s for sure. And, man, he thumped her.
In one of the most shocking results of the Illinois primary election, conservative grassroots candidate Josh Higgins delivered a decisive defeat to longtime Republican incumbent and Deputy House Minority Leader Norine Hammond.
With 99 percent of precincts reporting, Higgins secured a commanding 57.75 percent of the vote, compared to Hammond’s 32.37 percent. A distant third candidate, Bailey Templeton, received just under 10 percent.
The margin was not close. It was a political earthquake in western Illinois.
Weee! I love this stuff.
On the Democratic side, interestingly enough, the cute little Palestinian activist last seen bouncing off the street outside the ICE detention center in Broadview…
Kat Abughazaleh (D) just fcked around with ICE and found outpic.twitter.com/6OoPaBjcDx
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) September 19, 2025
…wound up being bounced from the primary.
IL U.S. House 9 Democratic Primary
Est. 79% reporting:
🟣 Daniel Biss – 32,409 (29.8%)
🟢 Kat Abughazaleh – 27,947 (25.7%)
🟠 Laura Fine – 22,002 (20.2%)— VoteHub (@VoteHub) March 18, 2026
Her concession speech is here and not actually here on the blog because it’s NSFW. The princess is as foul-mouthed in defeat as she is normally on her podcast.
And free Palestine, whatever.
Abughazaleh is getting crushed in the Cook and Lake County suburbs.
Evidence that Mamdani style leftism only has purchase in deep-blue cities and college towns.
— Josh Kraushaar (@JoshKraushaar) March 18, 2026
Interesting results from a blue state.
https://t.co/zjQJ8pzI67 https://t.co/sedpFDGvsT
— Angela Van Der Pluym (@anjewla90) March 18, 2026
Maybe it’s not as hopeless as we feared?
I know – don’t tease.
There was some chirpy news coming out of the Windy City, too.
Oh, my gosh – look at this long face.
It was a bad election night for the Chicago Teachers Union. 🧵 pic.twitter.com/fKiMEoitYq
— Austin Berg (@Austin__Berg) March 18, 2026
It turns out that the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) blew many, many hundreds of thousands of dollars on candidates who did not win.
SQUEEE!!!
1. Candidates backed by the CTU lost most of the races Tuesday in which they faced competitors. The union spent ~$300K on losing candidates. pic.twitter.com/aKLSOrwZyC
— Austin Berg (@Austin__Berg) March 18, 2026
And, contrary to the union’s urgent exhortations to vote ‘no,’ Chicago and Illinois voters overwhelmingly approved the federal scholarship tax credit program.
3. Illinois voters overwhelmingly backed the federal scholarship tax credit program (FSTC). This program provides a federal tax credit for donations to nonprofits that fund education resources for public and private school students in Illinois. But the state must first opt in.… pic.twitter.com/ix2CgfWVmu
— Austin Berg (@Austin__Berg) March 18, 2026
…But the state must first opt in. CTU staunchly opposes opting in and told voters to reject these referenda.
The FSTC was part of the Big Beautiful Bill.
…Under the program, taxpayers will be eligible to receive a tax credit of up to $1,700 for the value of cash contributions to certain scholarship granting organizations (SGOs). These organizations, in turn, will be required to use these contributions to grant scholarships to students at private and public elementary and secondary schools located within their states.
Eligibility for scholarships will be limited to students whose family income is below 300% of their area median income. Recipients may only use the funds for qualified expenses, including
- tuition, fees, books, supplies, other equipment, academic tutoring, and special needs services for special needs beneficiaries that are incurred by the beneficiary in connection with enrollment or attendance as an elementary or secondary school student at a public, private, or religious school;
- room and board, uniforms, transportation, and supplementary items and services (including extended day programs) if these expenses are required or provided by a public, private, or religious school in connection with enrollment or attendance; and
- computer technology, equipment, or internet access and related services if used by the beneficiary and the beneficiary’s family during any of the years the beneficiary is in elementary or secondary school.
Under the law, these scholarships will constitute tax-free income for the recipients and their families.
This has to be very frustrating for Mayor Brandon Johnson’s bosses in the CTU. They are so used to being the big dog on the block, and suddenly, for whatever reason – winkwinknudgenudge – they’re nowhere near as popular as they used to be.
It’s almost like their endorsement is the political kiss of death or something.
NEW: Poll finds record low support for the Chicago Teachers Union among Chicago voters.
🔴Just 27.5% of Chicago voters have a favorable opinion of CTU. A new record low.
🔴More than half (53.6%) have an unfavorable opinion of the union. That’s ~2:1 opposition.
🔴Nearly 50% of… https://t.co/gd8WWnaxVv
— Austin Berg (@Austin__Berg) March 11, 2026
…Nearly 50% of voters are less likely to vote for a candidate who takes money from CTU (vs. 16% who are more likely and 34% who say there’s no difference). This explains candidates’ reluctance to embrace CTU support in the primary election cycle.
I can’t imagine why.
‘Lackeys.’ It’s such a harsh term.
The races that they lost were their biggest lackeys too. Let’s face it the people of Illinois are getting to know the Marxists and their platform at the CTU and they’re not liking it. When the time comes for pension haircuts it’s going to be easy to do with their ratings falling.
— Colonel Shortshanks (@Tenelachicity) March 18, 2026
But while we’re on the subject of lackies, Chicago Mayor Bear of Little Brains Johnson is still ignoring the fiscal side of the Chicago house, concentrating on the important stuff.
Black firefighters, for instance.
BREAKING🚨: Mayor Brandon Johnson: ‘I’m working with our HR to ensure the city of Chicago has more black firefighters.’
Prioritizing race over merit in public safety hiring? That’s not equality—it’s discrimination. Chicago deserves better! 🤦🏿♂️🚒
pic.twitter.com/UDFhVDiYZI— Officer Lew (@officer_Lew) March 17, 2026
Ignoring his stupid youth problem.
“…but, but, but, guns are illegal in Chicago.” The Black community needs to talk to the guy they elected as Mayor. His name is Brandon Johnson, pictured below.
Here’s the feedback form we might actually see-https://t.co/jbyOZcqoHb pic.twitter.com/tj9zQ28BNO— HWVIII (@HowieVernonIII) March 17, 2026
So he can spend the time duking it out with the city council over freezing the city’s scheduled minimum wage raise for tipped workers.
As Trump’s economy gets less and less affordable by the day, I will continue standing up for our tipped workers and @OneFairWage. pic.twitter.com/pmAns6EsXT
— Mayor Brandon Johnson (@ChicagosMayor) March 18, 2026
The restaurant industry points out that one has to have restaurants for tipped workers to serve at, and those are becoming a rare commodity.
…Restaurant industry groups led the effort jumpstarted last week to freeze the planned wage increases. They argue the legally required pay bump — which will eliminate sub-minimum wages for tipped workers by 2028 — are hurting restaurants and harming jobs.
“We are losing the restaurants we love… People are losing their jobs. Shifts are being eliminated. Prices have increased,” Illinois Restaurant Association president Sam Toia said during a City Hall news conference Wednesday morning. “Everyone says the very same thing: The elimination of tip credit is the reason why.”
The alderlady who proposed the freeze only has to get four more aldermen on board to be able to override a Bear veto. She’s pretty happy about that.
And even the uber-woke Washington Post took the time last week to point out how out of control Chicago is compared to every other major city in the country. There is not one single fiscal guard rail to stop a Bear of Little Brains from doing exactly what he’s done.
That’s pretty shocking.
1. Independent oversight of the budget.
As the most recent budget fight illustrated, Chicago is not equipped to implement structural changes in its budget, make good budgeting decisions, or even independently analyze the numbers outside of the mayor’s office.
Candidates for… pic.twitter.com/Sm12SFjxsB
— Austin Berg (@Austin__Berg) March 15, 2026
…Candidates for Chicago’s mayor should advocate for:
• Creating an independent budget office a la New York City.
• Filling the legally required position of city administrator, which could help implement the budget and lead a zero-base budgeting process.
• Changing the responsibilities of the elected city treasurer to be more like a CFO or comptroller, based on similar offices in New York, LA, and Houston.
All of these measures are common in other big cities.
Then again, that’s pretty Chicago.
It looks as if the rest of the state is starting to stir a bit from progressive madness, even as Chicago surprisingly shuffles off some of its CTU coils.
It just goes to show you that even in the deepest of deep blue, there’s only so close to midnight navy people can go before they want to see a little sunshine.
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