Illinois
Illinois state senator asked to resign after 'Islamophobic' social media posts
Illinois state senator apologizes for social media post that prompted calls for her resignation
State Sen. Sara Feigenholtz is in hot water for social media posts considered to be Islamophobic.
CHICAGO – An Illinois state senator is in hot water for social media posts that faith groups have called Islamophobic.
State Sen. Sara Feigenholtz replied to a post on X last week that referred to Westerners who praised Islam as “bootlickers” and suggested “They move to an Islamic country and stick their heads in the dirt multiple times a day for enlightenment.”
Feigenholtz replied “You are a [bad***] truth teller” to the post.
Several faith groups, including the Council for American Islamic Relations (CAIR), called on Feigenholtz to resign as state senator.
“When the intent is clear and the track record is clear, again, our intelligence shall not be insulted. I think the only way forward, if she is truly sorry as a matter of fact, is to step down as a statement of her being sorry and to work on whatever issues she might have because she has lost confidence as far as constituents and as far as communities are concerned,” said Ahmad Rehab, executive director of CAIR-Chicago.
CAIR also criticized an Oct. 13 post on Feigenholtz’s personal Facebook page that quoted former Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir.
“We can forgive the Arabs for killing our children. We cannot forgive them for forcing us to kill their children. We will only have peace with the Arabs when they love their children more than they hate us,” the post said.
Feigenholtz issued an apology in a statement Friday:
“I made a mistake and, as a result, I shared a message I do not believe in. It was never my intention to reply to – let alone amplify that individual’s inflammatory remarks. Everyone deserves to feel heard and respected, especially by their elected leaders. I apologize for the pain my action has caused, and I will work with my staff and colleagues to ensure this does not happen again.”
The Jewish Council of Urban Affairs also condemned Feigenholtz’s post:
“JCUA is troubled to learn of a deeply offensive social media post by Illinois State Senator Sara Feigenholtz. In a since-deleted tweet, Sen. Feigenholtz amplified blatantly Islamophobic, bigoted rhetoric that denigrates and dehumanizes Muslims. This hateful speech has no place in our public discourse — let alone shared by our elected officials.”
Feigenholtz had been critical of the anti-semitic posts of the since-resigned Chicago Public Schools Board Chair Rev. Mitchell Johnson.
Feigenholtz has removed social media posts considered Islamophobic. She has not indicated that she would be stepping down.
Illinois
Illinois bill to expand sale of raw milk fails as advocates continue push
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Illinois
Teacher strike threats highlight fact that Illinois allows such walkouts
Illinois is among the minority of states allowing teachers to strike. None of Illinois’ neighbors allow it.
Illinois teachers unions officially threatened strikes 188 times from 2010 to 2025, according to state records.
That’s the number of times unions provided the Illinois Educational Labor Relations a required 10-day notice to before going on strike. So that doesn’t include the number of times the unions threatened walkouts without filing that notice.
While no teachers unions went on strike in 2025, eight filed strike notices, according to the board. Unions have walked out 58 times since 2010.
That’s a reminder that Illinois is in the minority in allowing teachers unions to walk off the job. The state is one of only about a dozen that allow teachers to strike. None of Illinois’ neighboring states permit teacher walkouts.
And among the 10 largest school districts in the U.S., Chicago is one of just two that allow strikes.
The Chicago Teachers Union, the state’s largest local teachers union, has a history of putting its agenda ahead of students. It has walked out on students five times over the past 14 years:
- In 2012, a strike during contract negotiations kept kids out of classes for seven days.
- On April 1, 2016, the union conducted an illegal one-day strike in response to alleged “union-busting” efforts of former Gov. Bruce Rauner, former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel and former CPS CEO Forrest Claypool.
- In 2019, a strike during contract negotiations closed schools for 11 days.
- In January 2021, classes were canceled when CTU refused to return to school for in-person learning following COVID-19 closures.
- In January 2022, CTU walked out on schoolchildren for five days. Parents were notified of the strike after 11 p.m. on a school night, leaving them just hours to plan after the union decided not to show up for Chicago’s children.
Last year CTU came close striking once again after rejecting recommendations from a third-party fact finder in its negotiations with Chicago Public Schools. That rejection caused CTU and CPS to enter a legally required 30-day “cooling off” period before the CTU was allowed to vote to strike.
Claypool has called for Illinois to ban teacher strikes, noting in a LinkedIn post the detriment walkouts bring to parents and children.
Teacher strike threats create uncertainty for parents and children. Illinois should place kids first and join the majority of states that ban teacher strikes.
Illinois
Vanderbilt vs Illinois predictions, picks, odds for NCAA Tournament Second Round
The Second Round of the women’s 2026 NCAA Tournament continues Monday with a slate featuring No. 2 Vanderbilt vs. No. 7 Illinois on the eight-game schedule.
Here is the latest on Monday’s March Madness matchup, including expert picks from reporters across the USA TODAY Sports Network.
USA TODAY Sports has a team of journalists covering the women’s NCAA Tournament to keep you up to date with every point scored, rebound grabbed and game won in the 68-team tournament.
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No. 2 Vanderbilt vs No. 7 Illinois prediction
- Heather Burns: Vanderbilt
- Mitchell Northam: Vanderbilt
- Nancy Armour: Vanderbilt
- Cydney Henderson: Vanderbilt
- Meghan Hall: Vanderbilt
No. 2 Vanderbilt vs No. 7 Illinois odds
- Opening Moneyline: Vanderbilt (-1000)
- Opening Spread: Vanderbilt (-13.5)
- Opening Total: 153.5
How to Watch Vanderbilt vs Illinois on Monday
No. 2 Vanderbilt takes on No. 7 Illinois at Memorial Gymnasium in Nashville on March 23 at 7:00 p.m. (ET). The game is airing on ESPN2.
Stream March Madness on Fubo
2026 Women’s NCAA Tournament full schedule
- March 18-19: First Four
- March 20-21: First Round
- March 22-23: Second Round
- March 27-28: Sweet 16
- March 29-30: Elite 8
- April 3: Final Four
- April 5: National Championship
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