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Thursday, October 9, 2025

Chicago anti-ICE chaos only proves why National Guard is needed, Windy City Dem says

 One of Chicago’s most prominent South Side Democrats thinks the anti-ICE radicals are only showing why federal troops are needed in the Windy City.

He also blames local liberal leaders for goading agitators into the violence seen over the weekend.

Raymond Lopez — alderman for Chicago’s 15th Ward — fears rhetoric from leaders like Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Mayor Brandon Johnson is pushing the city and the country to a dangerous place that there may be no coming back from.

Federal Immigration agents have been operating in Chicago since September, and began facing violent resistance.Getty Images

“The politics of this city and of hyper progressive liberalism is bringing us closer to the brink with an escalation that I don’t think any of us truly wants to see,” Lopez told The Post.

“The governor, the mayor, with a wink and a nod, told everyone to protest peacefully. And we’ve seen the exact opposite unfold,” he added.

“They’re continuing to play a game of chicken with other people’s lives.”

Lopez is one of Chicago’s only Democratic leaders to openly support President Trump’s plan to use the National Guard to fight local crime since it was first proposed over the summer.

He said his position hasn’t changed since the White House confirmed over the weekend that 300 troops would be dispatched to protect ICE agents conducting immigration-enforcement raids in the city.

Those ICE operations were targeted by violent harassment, with some protesters even following federal agents and boxing them in on Saturday, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

Alderman Raymond Lopez is one of Chicago’s only Democrats to openly support Trump’s National Guard plans.LP Media
Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker called Trump a “wannabe dictator” after the president said he should be “in jail.”AFP via Getty Images

Chicago police were reportedly ordered not to answer federal agents calls for back-up.

The Chicago Police Department has since disputed those reports.

Lopez feels that such behavior — encouraged “directly or indirectly” by local leadership — made Trump’s decision to send in federal troops “a fore-drawn conclusion.”

“If we’re not going to allow law enforcement to protect [ICE] and keep the peace with our residents, then the president of the United States most definitely is going to take that action,” he said. “We cannot have our our citizenry thinking that they can take up arms against the federal government and suffer no consequences.”

And none of the current chaos had to happen if leaders simply followed a “common sense” approach to apprehending Chicago’s worst criminal element by just coordinating with the federal government to “surgically” remove them months ago, Lopez said.

“Instead, what we got were politicians — from the governor to the mayor on down — challenging the Trump administration to go into our communities and find those targets themselves,” he said. “They almost joked about it, as if they as if that would never have been a possibility or a reality. And yet here we are today.”

“We are making the case as to why we need the National Guard now more than ever, with people choosing to try to attack federal law enforcement agents here in the city of Chicago,” Lopez added.

The Texas National Guard arrived in Illinois on Tuesday, and is expected to be in Chicago any day.AP

Tensions have continued to boil as National Guard troops began arriving in the Chicago area Tuesday — with Trump raging on Truth Social that Pritzker and Johnson both should be “in jail,” while the governor and mayor returned fire by calling the president a “wannabe dictator.”

Alderman Lopez maintains that both sides are so busy playing politics they’ve forgotten about the Chicagoans they claim to be protecting — and that the longer they squabble, the greater the stakes become.

“We have nearly three and a half years left with Donald Trump. We better figure it out because we cannot exist in this fashion,” he said, adding that federal agents are “going to do what they’re trained to do, which is to de-escalate by any means necessary in order to protect life and property.”

“This is what you get when you are acting in this manner with people who are trained in a very different level,” he added.

“I don’t think they’re prepared for what’s going to happen next.”

https://nypost.com/2025/10/09/us-news/chicago-anti-ice-chaos-proves-national-guard-is-needed-alderman-raymond-lopez/

'Sherrill: Ciattarelli took millions to publish propaganda on opioids: ‘Tens of thousands in NJ died’'

 NJ gubernatorial candidate Rep. Mikie Sherrill accused Republican opponent Jack Ciattarelli of personally profiting off the opiate crisis in the tensest moment of Wednesday night’s debate.

“My opponent likes to talk a lot about being a businessman, but I think what New Jersey doesn’t know much about his business,” she said — pivoting from a question about the unemployment rate.

“How he made his millions by working with some of the worst offenders and saying that opioids were safe, putting out propaganda, publishing their propaganda.”

Mikie Sherrill speaking at a debate.
Mikie Sherrill abruptly used a question about unemployment to pivot to an attack on Ciattarelli.6ABC

Sherrill was referring to controversy that emerged during Ciattarelli’s 2021 bid for governor about training materials his company published, which critics said included pharma industry talking points about opiates that were dangerously inaccurate.

Galen Publishing, one of two medical publishing companies Ciattarelli co-founded alongside American Medical Publishing, had produced content on pain management that critics say minimized the potential repercussions of opioid use. 

“Misuse or diversion of pain relievers is a significant problem, especially among adolescents and young adults. Concerns about opioid dependence, addiction, or non-medical use often create barriers to effective pain management,” one of the papers said, NJ.com reported in 2021.

“The risk of opioid misuse is low among patients with chronic pain who do not have preexisting substance use disorders.”

The material was published as part of a deal with the University of Tennessee that was underwritten in part by key players in the pharmaceutical industry. 

Sherrill tried to use the work by Ciattarelli’s company to tie him to the opiate crisis.

“Tens of thousands of New Jerseyans died. And as if that wasn’t enough, then he was paid to develop an app so that people who were addicted could more easily get access to opioids,” she said.

Republican Jack Ciattarelli in a debate.
Ciattarelli responded with “shame on you.”6ABC

Ciattarelli did not directly address the allegations and instead counterattacked.

“First of all, shame on you,” he snapped back.

“During the Biden administration, she had no problem whatsoever with tens of thousands of people crashing our border each and every day, not knowing what impact they had in our communities with regard to the fentanyl crisis,” he continued.

The NJ.com article reported that Ciattarelli’s company, Somerville-based Galen Publishing, made $12.2 million between 2007 and 2016 on a contract for continuing education materials with the University of Tennessee’s pharmacy school.

Critics claimed that the materials used pharma industry talking points.

In 2023, Ciattarelli’s campaign said that the University of Tennessee picked the topics, had its faculty write the articles and oversaw the editorial content.

Galen acted as an intermediary to help get industry funding for the publications.

“An absurd, unhinged attack by a candidate who is in freefall and hasn’t the slightest clue about New Jersey or how to bring the change we desperately need,” Chris Russell, a GOP strategist for the Ciattarelli campaign, told The Post about Sherrill’s attack.

After the debate, Sherrill was pressed about whether she had any proof that material published by Ciattarelli’s old firm, which he sold in 2016, actually exacerbated the opioid crisis and led to the deaths of New Jerseyans. 

“I guess he’s not really expressed anything about this. I think there’s a lot we don’t know. I think he continues to not be very transparent about it,” she told reporters.

“I think he’s responsible for publicizing the propaganda from opioid companies, when he was saying opioids were safe and the publishing company was saying they were safe, and people were dying,” she explained at another point. 

The Post has reached out to the Sherrill campaign for separate claims she made that Ciattarelli was involved with an app which which she alleged enabled people to “more easily get the opioids once they were addicted.”

The opioid issue had largely been dormant in the 2025 gubernatorial race until Sherrill raised it in the debate. 

According to state data, 2,800 New Jersians died of opiate overdoses in 2023 — down form a high of 3,100 the prior year. The state’s drug overdose death rate was 28 per 100,000 residents, lower than any of its neighbors, including New York. 

https://nypost.com/2025/10/08/us-news/mikie-sherrill-accuses-jack-ciattarelli-of-taking-money-to-publish-propaganda-about-opioids/

'Virginia AG candidate Jay Jones plummets in internal poll after text scandal'

 Virginia Democratic Attorney General candidate Jay Jones has taken a hit in the polls following the release of text messages he sent fantasizing about the Republican former state House speaker being shot in the head.

The candidate’s unhinged text messages were published in the National Review on Oct. 3 – and internal polling conducted for the Jones campaign between Oct. 4 and Oct. 6 shows the Democrat holding only a slight 1 percentage point lead (46% to 45%) over Republican incumbent Attorney General Jason Miyares. 

In two polls conducted before Jones’ deranged text messages were brought to light – a Washington Post-Schar School poll and a Christopher Newport University survey –  both showed the Democrat up on Miyares by six percentage points. 

Virginia Attorney General candidate Jay Jones addresses supporters after winning the Democratic nomination on June 17, 2025.TNS

The new statewide survey, conducted by Hart Research, notes “weekend coverage of Jay Jones’ text messages had an impact on the candidate’s image and to some extent on the attorney general election.”

“Jay’s image has suffered some erosion during the events of the last few days; when asked their impressions of Jay based on what they had read, seen, or heard recently, fully 44% of voters say they feel LESS favorable toward him, compared to 12% more favorable,” the pollster found. 

Among Democrats, Jones continued to maintain “solid support,” but Miyares topped the wannabe AG by 1 percentage point in terms of independent voters (42% to 41%). 

The pollster noted that Jones’ texting scandal “has had the most impact” on independents, but concluded that the “overall dynamics” in the race “remain unchanged and favorable to Democrats.” 

“[W]hile Jay’s solid lead in the past few weeks has been narrowed, there is still a strong path to victory in November,” the Hart Research memo read.

Jay Jones sent a series of disturbing text messages to a former colleague in 2022.X/@NRO
Jay Jones appears at a campaign stop in Petersburg, Virginia on Oct. 2, 2025.Bill Atkinson/progress-index.com / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Meanwhile, a survey commissioned by the Republican Attorneys General Association (RAGA) showed Miyares leading Jones by about 2 percentage points (45.8% to 43.7%). 

The same pollster found Jones up on Miyares, 46.4% to 42.5%, just a month ago. 

The RAGA poll, shared with ABC 7News in Virginia, also found Jones’ unfavorability rating had ballooned from 19% in September to more than 43% since the text scandal. 

Jones has been under fire since his disturbing Aug. 8, 2022 text messages to Republican delegate Carrie Coyner were leaked. 

In the messages, Jones likened then-Republican state House Speaker Todd Gilbert to mass-murdering dictators Adolf Hitler and Pol Pot. 

“Three people, two bullets,” read one message. “Gilbert, hitler, and pol pot.”

“Gilbert gets two bullets to the head,” Jones continued, later adding: “Spoiler: put Gilbert in the crew with the two worst people you know and he receives both bullets every time.” 

Coyner told National Review that Jones went on to fantasize about Gilbert’s children — whom Jones labeled “little fascists” in the text thread — dying in the arms of their mother, so that Gilbert might change his political positions. 

Virginia Republican attorney general candidate Jason Miyares speaks at a campaign rally for gubernatorial candidate Winsome Earle-Sears in Chesterfield, Virginia, on Sept. 19, 2025.AP

The GOP delegate added that Jones is “not qualified to serve.” 

Coyner later came forward with allegations that Jones disparaged police officers, telling the Virginia Scope website on Monday that during a 2020 conversation about qualified immunity, she told Jones that without the controversial legal protection, police officers would get killed.

“Well, maybe if a few of them died, that they would move on, not shooting people, not killing people,” the lawmaker described Jones’ comment in response.

Jones, who previously supported bills to remove qualified immunity while he was still a member of the House of Delegates, has denied the allegation. 

He has, however, admitted to sending the disturbing texts about Gilbert and has offered an apology.

https://nypost.com/2025/10/09/us-news/virginia-ag-candidate-jay-jones-losing-support-in-internal-poll-after-text-scandal/