Midwest
SEN TAMMY DUCKWORTH: Trump’s domestic troop deployments betray our military and nation
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
One of the proudest moments of my life was the first time I ever laced up my boots, put on my uniform and raised my right hand to swear my oath to the Constitution as a member of the Illinois Army National Guard.
I cherished every day that I got to wake up and call myself a United States soldier. And it is precisely because I love our military so deeply that I refuse to let a five-time draft-dodging coward abuse it for his own gain and to our country’s detriment.
At Quantico last week, President Donald Trump —the same man who insists on rebranding the Pentagon as the “Department of War”— told top military leaders that he wants to use American cities as “training grounds” for our troops.
TEXAS NATIONAL GUARD DEPLOYS 200 TROOPS TO ILLINOIS FOR FEDERAL PROTECTION MISSION AMID PROTESTS
Let that sink in: the commander in chief wants members of the Department of War to “train” against the same citizens they swear an oath to protect. Last month, he announced Chicago would “find out why it’s called the Department of WAR.” And this week, he’s making good on his threats: Trump has now forced hundreds of National Guardsmen into Chicago.
Members of the Texas National Guard assemble in Elwood, Illinois, at the Army Reserve Training Center in the southwest suburb of Chicago, on Oct. 7. 2025.
(Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
For months, Trump has fabricated claims of chaos and crime on American streets to justify false claims that there is a “need” to deploy troops into our cities against local officials’ wishes. First to Los Angeles, then Washington, D.C. — and he isn’t stopping there, he’s also attempting to deploy troops to Portland. Over the weekend, however, a federal judge that Trump appointed blocked his efforts to deploy troops there — twice — because, in his own handpicked appointee’s words, his claims about why they are needed were “untethered to facts.”
Another way to put that is that he’s lying.
In just the past week in Chicago, we’ve seen Trump’s agents detain innocent Americans, deny citizens their right to legal representation, zip-tie children, arrest elected officials, ransack apartment buildings and injure journalists. And in recent weeks, they’ve shot two people, leaving one — a father of two young children — dead, making dubious and unsubstantiated claims about why they felt the need to use lethal force.
It’s obvious what Trump is doing. He’s targeting and punishing the cities who dare push back against him — the ones who are willing to call the president what he really is: a wannabe emperor with no clothes, no courage and certainly no moral compass.
And while he’s currently targeting blue cities with his lies, if these deployments are not stopped, there will be nothing to stop him — or any future president — from doing this to anyone, anywhere, for any made-up reason.
PRITZKER SUES TRUMP TO BLOCK NATIONAL GUARD ACTION IN ILLINOIS
Let’s be clear: Ordering our troops to intimidate the very Americans they sacrifice every day to protect does nothing to make our nation safer. Policing Americans in their own communities is not the National Guard’s job. They can’t make arrests, and they’re not adequately trained to carry out police duties in urban environments. These deployments are simply another unwarranted, unwanted and unjust move from Trump straight out of the Authoritarian 101 textbook, further jeopardizing civil rights while distracting our troops from executing their core mission of keeping our families safe from the actual adversaries who wish us harm.
President Donald Trump talks to the media after walking off Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House on October 5, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)
We know Trump’s actions aren’t about “law and order.” If this 34-time convicted felon actually cared about law and order, he wouldn’t flagrantly and seemingly gleefully refuse to coordinate with state and local officials. He wouldn’t be taking our troops away from their training missions just to do his personal bidding, forcing our heroes to stand on the side of the street picking up trash instead of using their time preparing to protect our nation in case of future conflict. He wouldn’t literally defund the police by freezing and slashing federal dollars that help hire, train and equip law enforcement.
But he did. All of those things, instead of supporting and expanding proven violence and crime prevention strategies that prevent retaliatory escalation.
PRITZKER SAYS TRUMP ORDERING 400 MEMBERS OF THE TEXAS NATIONAL GUARD TO ILLINOIS, OREGON AND OTHER LOCATIONS
Trump is wasting millions of taxpayer dollars to terrorize law-abiding citizens and legal visa holders who are simply exercising their First Amendment rights. And he’s diverting federal resources and agents away from operations that investigate drug cartels and gun traffickers, from missions that identify and disrupt terrorist plots and from actions that protect our families from cyber-attacks to do it.
Military personnel in uniform, with the Texas National Guard patch on, are seen at the U.S. Army Reserve Center on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025, in Elwood, Ill., a suburb of Chicago. (AP/Laura Bargfeld)
I drove past some of the National Guardsmen who have been mobilized on the way to work today. I felt for them. Because when they raised their right hands and took their oaths, they didn’t do so to help a draft dodger dodge not just wars but his own personal scandals, too.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE FOX NEWS OPINION
They signed up to defend Americans’ right to free speech — not to intimidate Americans from that act of speaking out. They were willing to die to defend this country — not to defend one man’s ego.
Los Angeles did not ask for this. Washington, D.C., did not ask for this. Portland did not ask for this. Chicago did not ask for this. Our servicemembers do not deserve this. And it is because I respect our military so deeply that I refuse to stay silent as it is disrespected and abused by a man who was never brave enough to serve himself. I cannot and will not let him keep giving our troops the middle finger — taking them from their families and their missions, while eroding the hard-won trust and confidence they’ve earned from the American public over generations.
These days, I may no longer be wearing my Army uniform, but it still hangs proudly in my Senate office. Now, I spend a lot of my time seated under the great, beautiful Capitol Dome rather than beneath my Black Hawk’s main rotors. But my core mission is still the same as when I was in the National Guard: to keep America as strong and safe as she should be.
If only Donald Trump cared about doing the same.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM SEN TAMMY DUCKWORTH
Read the full article from Here
Detroit, MI
Jackson Jobe throws first bullpen in return from Tommy John surgery
Detroit Tigers prospect Jackson Jobe explains pitching development
Detroit Tigers right-hander Jackson Jobe joined the “Days of Roar” podcast to talk about his MLB debut in 2024 and his expectations for 2025.
ATLANTA – Detroit Tigers right-hander Jackson Jobe has taken a big step in his return.
The 23-year-old completed his first bullpen session Tuesday, April 28, as he continues his rehabilitation program after Tommy John surgery to repair the ulnar collateral ligament in his right elbow.
He isn’t joining the Tigers anytime soon.
“He’s well off into the future,” manager A.J. Hinch said before Tuesday’s opener of a three-game series against the Atlanta Braves at Truist Park. “But it’s nice to see him change his program a little bit.”
The Tigers hope Jobe will be available in August to pitch MLB innings.
Before that happens, Jobe needs to complete an abundance of bullpen sessions, several live batting practice sessions and then five or six starts on a rehab assignment. Only then will the Tigers be ready to decide whether to promote him to MLB or let him work in Triple-A.
That decision is more than three months away.
Jobe hasn’t pitched for the Tigers since May 28, 2025, the final of 10 starts in which he registered a 4.22 ERA with 27 walks (12.4% walk rate) and 39 strikeouts (17.9% strikeout rate) across 49 innings. He suffered an elbow injury that required Tommy John surgery on June 16, 2025.
Jobe made his MLB debut in September 2024.
Before his Tigers debut, Jobe struggled in two starts for Triple-A Toledo in 2024. He allowed six runs on 12 hits and five walks with seven strikeouts over nine innings in those two starts for the Mud Hens.
The Tigers selected Jobe with the No. 3 overall pick in the 2021 draft.
Troy Melton building workload as starter
The Tigers need help in the bullpen.
But right-hander Troy Melton is building his workload as a starter – not a reliever – as he returns from right elbow inflammation. The 25-year-old has been sidelined since spring training, but on Tuesday, he completed his second live batting practice session in preparation for a rehab assignment.
Melton isn’t eligible to pitch for the Tigers until May 25.
“He’ll have a full spring training,” Hinch said.
Expect about six starts for Melton during his rehab assignment as the Tigers replicate a spring training experience. The timeline of six starts would make him ready to join the Tigers in late May.
That’s right on schedule.
Right-handed reliever Beau Brieske (left adductor strain) joined Melton in Tuesday’s live batting practice session, while Zach McKinstry (left hip/abdominal inflammation) swung in the batters box against both pitchers.
The session took place in Lakeland, Florida.
“We’re chipping away at this health thing,” Hinch said. “We’re feeling better by the update so far.”
Contact Evan Petzold at epetzold@freepress.com or follow him @EvanPetzold.
Milwaukee, WI
Three Milwaukee youth now charged in Walker’s Point homicide
Milwaukee storm uproots tree, crushing both of man’s trucks
David Machado describes how an uprooted tree fell on both of his trucks after heavy rain and high winds swept through Milwaukee.
Three Milwaukee teenagers are charged with felony murder in the Walker’s Point fatal shooting of a 35-year-old man April 14.
Milwaukee prosecutors issued charges of murder and attempted armed robbery in the killing of David Krause, which prosecutors and family said followed the man’s celebration of the city’s 414 Day celebration and asking the youth for a ride during the day’s heavy storms.
Milwaukee police said those arrested include a 16-year-old boy, a 14-year-old boy, a 15-year-old boy and a 16-year-old girl. The girl was released without any charges being immediately filed, according to a children’s court official, while the other three are charged.
A Milwaukee County Court Commissioner ruled each of the three charged teens will remain in custody ahead of their next court proceedings.
Krause’s mother, Diane Krause, described her son’s killing as a “monstrous act” and a “senseless crime” during an April 28 court hearing for one of the teenagers.
Krause had been celebrating 414 Day when he was dropped off at a Walker’s Point gas station and later asked a group of teens for a ride during the day’s heavy rains, according to his mother and a juvenile petition, the charging document, filed against one of the teenagers.
Footage shows Krause entered the vehicle, which authorities say was stolen, and the vehicle drove away, according to the petition. Afterward, footage showed Krause running from the vehicle and toward a bar entrance, but two of the youth attacked him before he reached it and one shot him.
The teenager who is accused of pulling the gun’s trigger faces an additional charge of arson for allegedly attempting to burn the vehicle they used in order to destroy evidence, prosecutors said at an April 27 court hearing. During the hearing, it was detailed the youth had previously been charged with firearm and car-theft related offenses and his whereabout was unknown to authorities since September 2025.
The April 28 hearing comes days after the first teenager charged in Krause’s shooting was mistakenly released by Milwaukee County staff and re-arrested April 27. That incident is under review, a county spokesperson said.
Krause’s family has been critical of the mistake.
“Someone has to answer for their incompetence,” Diane Krause previously told the Journal Sentinel.
David Clarey is a public safety reporter at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. He can be reached at: dclarey@usatodayco.com.
Minneapolis, MN
HCMC closing: Lawmakers weigh sales tax
Hennepin County Medical Center faces possible closure as it loses millions each month, and time is running out for lawmakers and hospital leaders as the financial crisis deepens. FOX 9’s Corin Hoggard has the latest.
Posted
-
Wyoming5 minutes agoWyoming Announces Rosters for 2026 Wyoming-Montana All-Star Basketball Series
-
Crypto11 minutes agoFederal government plans to ban crypto ATMs to stop scammers from defrauding Canadians | CBC News
-
Finance17 minutes agoMega landlord warns some investors ‘will be wiped out’ in budget changes
-
Movie Reviews35 minutes agoPanic Fest 2026 Film Review: “Buffet Infinity” – MediaMikes
-
World47 minutes agoAcid Attack in Indonesia Evokes Brutality of Suharto Era
-
News53 minutes agoBeneath King Charles’s Jokes and Decorum, Some Subtle Rebuttals to Trump
-
Politics59 minutes agoFull Guest List for Trump’s State Dinner With Charles and Camilla
-
Business1 hour agoPrime Minister Mark Carney Says Canada’s Economy Is Expected to Grow and Deficit to Fall