As feds pull back, states look inward for election security support

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It’s no secret that the Trump administration has radically altered the federal government’s relationship with state election officials since being sworn into power last year.

While his first term included the creation of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency and the distribution of hundreds of millions in congressional funding sent to help states upgrade election security, Trump’s second term has so  far been more adversarial toward states.

As CyberScoop and others have reported, CISA has scaled back its election security support – in some cases shuttering work on topics like disinformation — while firing or sidelining election security specialists at the agency. The administration is also pursuing voter data from all 50 states, an effort that has been called “unprecedented and illegal” by one court. 

Congressional Democrats, including California Sen. Alex Padilla, have been sharply critical of the federal government’s support for elections under the second Trump administration.

Cuts to CISA’s funding and staff, combined with the absence of dedicated congressional funding for election security grants, have “created a scenario where states may feel a lot more like they’re going it alone than as opposed to working in partnership,” said Padilla. The current senator served as Secretary of State for California before being appointed in 2021 to replace Sen. Dianne Feinstein. 

Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes was discussing the status of a $650,000 package moving through the Arizona legislature with an aide when CyberScoop approached him for an interview at the National Association of Secretaries of State winter conference.

Fontes said the spending package (which passed later that day) would help Arizona patch vulnerabilities and recover from last year’s cyberattack on the state’s online portal for political candidates. The attack also defaced state websites with pro-Iranian propaganda.

The $650,000 appropriation is part of a larger $3.4 million pool the legislature approved last year to strengthen cybersecurity in the state’s election system ahead of a special election in the 7th congressional district. Because turnout in that election was low, some of the money was left unspent and would otherwise go unused. Fontes said his office made a  “very clear” case in a December letter outlining the significant investments Arizona still needs to make to secure its elections.

The money, while welcome, “is not going to go anywhere near supporting all the other programs that we need for elections to go well,” he said.

“We were saying ‘Hey, let us use [the leftover money] for elections, let us rebuild our cybersecurity infrastructure’… that’s $2.8 million dollars worth of other stuff that would help counties,” said Fontes.

Arizona is one of several states scrambling to find new ways to pay for election security as the federal government pulls back.  States are now relying on just $45 million in federal election security grant funding from the Election Assistance Commission— less than $1 million per state on average— while election-security expertise at CISA has been sharply reduced. 

Some states are turning to local sources to fill in gaps in information sharing. West Virginia Secretary of State Kris Warner told CyberScoop he had just completed his first tour of all 55 country clerks in the state.

“They all have cell phone numbers for me, for Dave [Tackett, chief information officer] and my chief of staff,” Warner said. “We’re in close contact if there’s a concern [around] the risks and points of entry that may affect all of us.”

Last year, Warner’s office helped distribute $272,000 in Help America Vote Act (HAVA) grant funding to six counties, who added another $323,000 in matching funds, to upgrade voting systems, enhancing ID printer capabilities to strengthen voter identification procedures and other tasks.

A lack of poll workers is one of the state’s biggest challenges ahead of this year’s elections. Warner’ said his office is backing several bills to address it, including one that would create a new tax credit for poll workers  and another that would let 15- or 16-year-olds  receive poll worker training.

The White House and federal officials have attempted to downplay reports of a fraying relationship. In January, acting CISA Director Madhu Gottumukkala told Congress that claims DHS or CISA have rolled back their election security practices were “not accurate,” citing ongoing support to states around cybersecurity support, physical security guidance, incident response services and threat briefings.

“We treat election security like any other infrastructure sector and our election security services remain fully in place,” he said.

That statement directly contradicts what many state and local officials have said over the past year: that communication and support from CISA and the federal government have either shrunk or are completely absent compared to previous election cycles.

According to Brenna Nelson of the National Conference of State Legislatures, CISA performed 1,300 physical security assessments, 700 cybersecurity assessments and 500 election security trainings for election jurisdictions across the country between 2017 and 2025. Support and services related to cybersecurity that election offices have used for the past seven years are “less available” now, as “the agency is not prioritizing elections in the same way it has since 2017.”

For many state officials, the change from CISA came suddenly and with no warning, giving them little time to make alternative plans. Speaking to StateScoop last year, Nevada Secretary of State Maggie Toulouse Oliver said “we didn’t even have the foreknowledge to be able to relay to our legislature that we were going to be losing out on a lot of these tools and resources.”

Tackett, said cyber hygiene scans were the only recurring services they relied on CISA for, and the office has become proficient in tapping other local or regional sources — like information sharing and analysis centers, fusion centers, local university research centers and the National Guard – for no cost services around election security.

Because of this, Tackett said the state’s relationship with CISA hasn’t been impacted as much as other states. However, he also said that when it comes to incident response and intel sharing, the relationship has “maybe diminished somewhat.”

Fontes was blunt, saying there has been “no change” in his state’s relationship with CISA since he spoke out in frustration last year, either in terms of outreach or technical assistance.

“If somebody said it’s business as usual, he’s full of s—t and lying,” he said. “That’s not true.”

Derek B. Johnson

Written by Derek B. Johnson

Derek B. Johnson is a reporter at CyberScoop, where his beat includes cybersecurity, elections and the federal government. Prior to that, he has provided award-winning coverage of cybersecurity news across the public and private sectors for various publications since 2017. Derek has a bachelor’s degree in print journalism from Hofstra University in New York and a master’s degree in public policy from George Mason University in Virginia.



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Son of Norway’s crown princess pleads not guilty in rape case | Sexual Assault

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Norway’s Crown Princess Mette-Marit’s son has pleaded not guilty to four rape charges as his trial opens in Oslo. Marius Borg Hoiby faces 38 counts, including assault and domestic violence, in a case that has shaken Norway’s royal family.



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Teenage boy swims for four hours to save family swept out to sea | World News

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A 13-year-old Australian boy has described battling “massive” waves to swim around four hours to shore and raise the alarm after his family were swept out to sea.

Austin Appelbee was with his mother, brother and sister on an inflatable kayak and paddleboards when they got into difficulties on Friday as strong winds picked up off the coast of Western Australia.

Desperate to get help, Joanne Appelbee, 47, asked her son to swim around 4km (2.5 miles) to shore.

Austin told local broadcaster ABC: “I was very puffed out but I couldn’t feel how tired I was. I don’t know, I was more thinking of a lot of things that, you know, was happening in my life.

“I think at one point I was thinking of Thomas the Tank Engine, trying to get the happiest things in my head… not the bad things that’ll distract me… at this time the waves are massive and I have no life jacket on. Anyway, I just keep swimming.”

Austin says he was thinking happy thoughts to get him through his 4km swim. Pic: ABC/AP
Image: Austin says he was thinking happy thoughts to get him through his 4km swim. Pic: ABC/AP

Austin said he initially set off for help on an inflatable kayak that was taking on water. He abandoned the kayak and then took off his life jacket because it impeded his swimming.

The family, from the state capital, Perth, found themselves stranded with only lifejackets and no means of communication.

They had to wait 10 hours before rescuers reached the group, which included Austin’s brother, Beau, 12, and his eight-year-old sister, Grace.

“We kept positive, we were singing and we were joking and… we were treating it as a bit of a game until the sun started to go down and that’s when it was getting very choppy. Very big waves,” Joanne said.

Stunning coastline in Dunsborough, neighbouring Quindalup, in Western Australia. Pic: iStock
Image: Stunning coastline in Dunsborough, neighbouring Quindalup, in Western Australia. Pic: iStock

Scariest moment ever

“Ten hours we were out there, and I think definitely eight and half of them were the most scariest we’ve ever been through ever,” she added.

Austin also said his ordeal was not over when he finished his swim.

“I just keep swimming… and then finally I just made it to shore and I hit the bottom of the beach and I just collapsed and then after that I had to sprint two kilometres to go get to the phone.”

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Joanne (left) says her family, including daughter Grace (right), faced the scariest moment ever. Pic: ABC/AP
Image: Joanne (left) says her family, including daughter Grace (right), faced the scariest moment ever. Pic: ABC/AP

Mum: ‘Super proud’

Mum Joanne said she was “super proud” of her son and was just grateful the family survived being stuck so far out to sea.

“To keep going for so long… he’s absolutely amazing. Me and his dad are super proud.

She said: “One of the hardest decisions I ever had to make was to say to Austin, ‘try and get to shore and get some help. This could get really serious really quickly’.

“We made it, we’re alive and that’s the most important thing, and I have all three babies. All three of them made it. That was all that mattered. It was good.”

A search helicopter found Joanne and her two children wearing life jackets and clinging to a paddleboard at 8.30pm (12.30pm UK time), police said. They had drifted 14km (9 miles) from Quindalup, where they had originally entered the water.

“The actions of the 13-year-old boy cannot be praised highly enough – his determination and courage ultimately saved the lives of his mother and siblings,” Police Inspector James Bradley said.

The teenager survived his ordeal relatively unscathed, needing only a crutch to help his sore legs bear his weight.



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Two Swedes convicted of terrorism for grenade attack near Israeli Embassy

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Two Swedes were convicted in a Danish court of terrorism and attempted murder for detonating two hand grenades near the Israeli Embassy in Copenhagen in October 2024.

The younger of the two men, who is 18 years old, was sentenced to 12 years in prison, while his older accomplice, aged 21, was sentenced to 14 years, according to The Associated Press, which cited Swedish news agency TT. The two men, who have not been identified, were said to be acting on behalf of a criminal gang, the AP reported.

The attack occurred on Oct. 2, 2024, when the two threw hand grenades towards the Israeli Embassy in Copenhagen. The grenades detonated on the terrace of a residential building, which was inhabited by a family with children, according to the AP. No one was injured in the blasts. The nearby Jewish school, Carolineskolen, was closed when the attack took place.

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A police vehicle parked near the Israeli Embassy in Denmark

A police vehicle is seen near the Israeli embassy in Copenhagen, as police investigate two explosions near the site, on Wednesday, Oct. 2, 2024. (Emil Helms/Ritzau Scanpix via AP, File)

The two men admitted to throwing the grenades, but denied being ideologically motivated, saying they did it for money, the AP reported.

Israeli soldiers stand on military vehicles

Israeli soldiers stand atop military vehicles, after Israel’s government ratified a ceasefire with Hamas in Gaza, on the Israeli side of the Israel-Gaza border, in Israel, Oct. 10, 2025.  (Shir Torem/Reuters)

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The Danish court was reportedly split on whether the two should be convicted of terrorism. Two judges and four jurors concluded that they were guilty, while one judge and two jurors disagreed, according to the AP, which cited TT.

At the time of the attack, Israel’s war in Gaza had been ongoing for nearly a year following Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, massacre that left 1,200 dead and resulted in the taking of 251 hostages. Throughout the war, Jerusalem faced international scrutiny as world leaders debated whether the Israel Defense Forces’ actions in Gaza were excessive.

Israeli soldiers watch the northern Gaza Strip from southern Israel.

Israeli soldiers watch the northern Gaza Strip from southern Israel, Wednesday, July 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Ohad Zwigenberg)

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The war ended in October 2025 with a peace deal brokered under the Trump administration.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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CISA flags critical SolarWinds RCE flaw as exploited in attacks

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SolarWinds

CISA has flagged a critical SolarWinds Web Help Desk vulnerability as actively exploited in attacks and ordered federal agencies to patch their systems within three days.

Tracked as CVE-2025-40551, this security flaw stems from an untrusted data deserialization weakness discovered and reported by Horizon3.ai security researcher Jimi Sebree, which can allow unauthenticated attackers to gain remote command execution on unpatched devices.

“SolarWinds Web Help Desk was found to be susceptible to an untrusted data deserialization vulnerability that could lead to remote code execution which would allow an attacker to run commands on the host machine,” the company explained on January 28 when it released Web Help Desk 2026.1 to patch the vulnerability.

Wiz

The same day, SolarWinds also patched a high-severity hardcoded-credentials vulnerability (CVE-2025-40537) discovered by Sebree and two authentication-bypass security flaws (CVE-2025-40552 and CVE-2025-40554) reported by watchTowr’s Piotr Bazydlo, all of them remotely exploitable.

On Tuesday, CISA added CVE-2025-40551 to its catalog of flaws exploited in the wild and gave Federal Civilian Executive Branch (FCEB) agencies three days to secure their systems, as mandated by the Binding Operational Directive (BOD) 22-01, issued in November 2021.

Although BOD 22-01 targets only federal agencies, CISA encouraged all network defenders, including those in the private sector, to patch their devices against ongoing CVE-2025-40551 attacks as soon as possible.

Admins are advised to patch their systems as soon as possible, given that hackers have frequently exploited Web Help Desk vulnerabilities in the wild. For instance, CISA tagged a Web Help Desk hardcoded credentials flaw in October 2024 as actively exploited, and SolarWinds addressed a patch bypass in September 2025 for another Web Help Desk RCE flaw flagged as exploited in attacks.

Web Help Desk is a popular help desk management software among government agencies, large corporations, healthcare organizations, and educational institutions. SolarWinds claims that more than 300,000 customers worldwide use its IT management products.

Modern IT infrastructure moves faster than manual workflows can handle.

In this new Tines guide, learn how your team can reduce hidden manual delays, improve reliability through automated response, and build and scale intelligent workflows on top of tools you already use.



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Walmart hits trillion dollar market cap for the first time | Retail News

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Walmart has reached a $1 trillion market valuation, a first for the big-box retailer.

The company’s shares hit a high on Tuesday morning trade as the stock continues to soar on the news of a new CEO and looming trade negotiations with India, where the Arkansas-based company maintains a large presence both in supply chain and domestic markets within India. The stock was up 2.1 percent from the market open in midday trading.

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Walmart, which has 11,000 stores in 19 countries, joins a slate of nine corporate giants in the so-called trillion dollar club, including Nvidia, Apple, Alphabet, and Microsoft, among others. Amazon is the only other retailer that has broken the barrier and is now valued at $2.6 trillion.

Trade deal bump

On Monday, United States President Donald Trump announced a trade deal with India that would slash tariffs to 18 percent from 50 percent and that impacts Walmart, which has strategically shifted supply chain operations to India and away from China.

On Tuesday, in an interview with CNBC, US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said that the White House is still ironing out the details of the deal, but that still hasn’t slowed Walmart’s stock from popping on the looming deal.

“We have an announcement of an India deal, but still no timeline about when it comes into effect and whether the secondary tariffs, the 25 percent linked to India’s purchase of Russian oil, when those would be removed, so I think there’s still a lot of questions,” economist Rachel Ziemba, founder of Ziemba Insights, told Al Jazeera.

While there are limited details on the specifics of the deal, markets are responding to tariffs likely to come down.

“Markets are, of course, forward-looking. I think this sort of reinforces a view in the marketplace that incremental tariffs will be less this year,” Ziemba said.

The big box retailer jumped from 2 percent of its global exports coming from India in 2018 to 25 percent in 2023, according to a Reuters review of import data in 2023. Walmart hopes to source $10bn in goods from India by next year.

At the time, the company also decreased its percentage of goods from China to 60 percent from 80 percent.

Walmart did not respond to Al Jazeera’s request for comment.

The Federation of Indian Export Organisations (FIEO), a lobby for exporters, said the cut in US tariffs will significantly boost Indian exports, including textiles and apparel, putting them on par with Asian peers, such as Vietnam and Bangladesh.

According to data from ImportYeti, a platform that tracks import contracts for major companies, Walmart’s biggest import areas are in home fabrics, apparel and toys.

“Those are the products facing the highest tariffs, while consumer electronics and other categories have largely been shielded. If the India–US deal becomes a reality, it would put tariffs on Indian goods entering the US at roughly the same level as those from Southeast Asia, making that supply-chain realignment more attractive. You also highlight the importance of the Indian market,” Ziemba added.

While the trade deal is in focus, Walmart has also invested significantly in India domestically, as well, and holds an 80 percent stake in India’s e-commerce giant Flipkart.

C-suite changes

The surge also comes concurrently with a shake-up in the C-suite. On Monday, John Furner took over as Walmart’s chief executive, succeeding longtime CEO Doug McMillion who announced his retirement late last year.

Furner, who started at the company in a job stocking shelves, has climbed up the ladder. Most recently, he served as the CEO of Walmart US, where he focused on key initiatives driving growth, including curbside pick-up. Prior to that, he served as the CEO of Sam’s Club, Walmart’s wholesale chain.

Furner’s appointment comes as the company grows as an e-commerce giant and intends to double down in AI tech, healthcare services, e-commerce, and hybrid options with its brick-and-mortar footprint.

“As AI rapidly reshapes retail, we are centralizing our platforms to accelerate shared capabilities, freeing up our operating segments to be more focused on and closer to our customers and members,” Walmart said in a statement last month.

“Walmart is masterful at brick-and-mortar retail and remains highly competitive with Amazon. I love that because it shows consumerism is still alive and well. Five years ago, the narrative was the fall of the mall and the decline of retail. This confirms the opposite. Walmart also has a clear strategy for retaining consumers and managing the customer experience,” Brett Rose, CEO and founder of United National Consumer Suppliers (UNCS), a distributor that focuses on excess inventories, which it provides to more budget-friendly retailers, told Al Jazeera.

The tech-centric focus comes as e-commerce has grown for the company, which reported a 28 percent jump in e-commerce sales compared with the previous quarter. Walmart is slated to release its next earnings report on February 19.

“What you need to look at is that Walmart has successfully become a marketplace, not as big as Amazon, but big enough to give it a run for its money,” said Rose.



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China to ban hidden door handles seen on some electric cars | Money News

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The world’s second-largest economy and major electric car maker is to ban hidden door handles, a common feature on electric vehicles (EVs).

China will ban hidden door handles from next year, making it the first country to do so.

Instead, cars must have a mechanical release function for handles, except for car boots, according to details released by China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.

Money blog: Gold set for biggest rise since 2008; Greggs taking on Costa and Starbucks with new product

It’s doing so to address safety concerns after EV accidents where electronic doors reportedly failed to operate and trapped passengers inside.

Last year, the US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration opened an investigation into some of Tesla’s door ‍release controls.

Hidden door handles open with a key fob, mobile phone ⁠or by manually pressing them.

The design was pioneered by electric vehicle company Tesla and adopted by Chinese competitors.

What’s changing?

Under China’s new safety technical ‌requirements, every car door should be equipped with both exterior and interior handles with mandatory mechanical releases.

Almost one in four new car buyers go electric

The policy also sets out rules for where handles must be located ‍and how they should function so they can be opened in an emergency. Interior handles must also be clearly ‌visible.

New vehicle models must comply with the latest door handle ⁠design regulation from 1 January ‌2027, while approved models will come in scope on 1 January 2029, the ministry said.

Tesla has been contacted for comment.



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Us: India did not compromise with farmers’ interests in the trade agreement with America, officials told the inside story – India Us Trade Deal Government Officials Said Agriculture Sensitivities Fully Protected

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News Desk, Amar Ujala, New Delhi Published by: Nitin Gautam Updated Wed, 04 Feb 2026 01:12 AM IST

India’s agriculture sector will benefit from the India-US trade agreement and exports from the agriculture sector will increase, which will benefit the farmers of the country. Officials said that the agriculture sector has been given full protection in the trade agreement.

India us trade deal government officials said agriculture sensitivities fully protected

India US Trade Agreement (Symbolic) – Photo: Adobe Stock

Expansion

In the trade agreement with America, India’s agricultural sensitivity has been taken full care of and farming has been given protection. A senior government official has given this information. Under the trade agreement, import duty on Indian products has been reduced to 18 percent. However, detailed information regarding the trade agreement is yet to be revealed.
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Speculations raised after the statement of the US Agriculture Minister
  • This statement of the officials has come at a time when there are discussions that India has given some concessions to America in its agricultural sector for exemption in tariffs.
  • These discussions got more strength from the statement of America’s Agriculture Minister Brook Rollins. In fact, Brook Rollins has said that the trade agreement will boost the export of American agricultural products to the Indian market.
  • He said that America’s agricultural trade deficit with India in the year 2024 was $1.3 billion. Now the trade agreement will reduce this and America’s farmers will benefit from it.

Indian officials told that India will get big benefit
  • Indian officials say that in the trade agreement, the government has ensured protection to sensitive agricultural products and only non-sensitive products have been allowed to enter the Indian market.
  • India exports agricultural products worth about $34 billion to America every year. Whereas India buys only $2.1 billion worth of agricultural products from America.
  • An official said that India’s agricultural exports will get further strength under the trade agreement.
  • India’s textile and apparel industry will also get big benefits under the trade agreement. These sectors export goods worth about 10 billion dollars to America every year and now after the tariff is reduced to 18 percent, these sectors will get big benefits.
  • Besides, sectors like leather, shoes, aquatic products, chemicals, plastics, rubber, home decor, carpets, machinery will also benefit. These sectors are labor intensive and will provide employment to a large number of people.

Pritzker donates $5M to super PAC aiding Juliana Stratton’s campaign

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Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker has stepped in with significant financial support for a super PAC aiding the Senate campaign of his lieutenant governor, Juliana Stratton, as she seeks to gain traction in next month’s Democratic primary for an open seat.

Pritzker donated $5 million in December to Illinois Future PAC, according to a campaign finance report posted on the Federal Election Commission website.

NBC News reported that contributions from Pritzker and his family members – including more than $1 million contributed by cousin Jennifer Pritzker – made up nearly the entirety of the super PAC’s $6.3 million raised last year. 

The primary elections for the crowded Senate race are scheduled for March 17.

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JB Pritzker answers questions from reporters inside a government building.

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker takes questions at the Illinois Capitol during the legislative session in Springfield, Oct. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

Stratton and Democratic Illinois Reps. Raja Krishnamoorthi and Robin Kelly participated in a debate hosted by WBEZ, the Chicago Sun-Times, the University of Chicago’s Institute of Politics and International House in late January.

The trio discussed a range of topics including whether they would support Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer if elected.

Krishnamoorthi said he was undecided and would “hear his pitch.” “I haven’t decided,” he told the moderators at the debate.

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Three Democratic candidates stand on a debate stage at a university auditorium before an audience.

Democratic U.S. Senate primary contenders U.S. Reps. Robin Kelly and Raja Krishnamoorthi, and Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton take the stage for a debate on Jan. 26, 2026, at the University of Chicago. (Terrence Antonio James/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

Kelly said her support would depend on who might run against Schumer.

Stratton, however, delivered a firm rejection, saying she has already made her position public.

“No, and I’ve already said that I will not support Chuck Schumer as leader in the Senate, and I’m the only person on this stage that has said so,” she said.

The Illinois lieutenant governor addresses reporters at a podium during a briefing about federal activity in the city.

Illinois Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton speaks during a press conference on reports of federal deployments in Chicago, Illinois, on Sept. 2, 2025. (Jim Vondruska/Reuters)

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Stratton received Pritzker’s endorsement in April as she campaigns to succeed Sen. Dick Durbin, who has said he will not seek a sixth term.

NBC News reported that Krishnamoorthi, the leading Democratic candidate in the Senate race, has built a massive war chest, pouring roughly $20.5 million into television advertising since July, according to data from AdImpact.



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Varanasi: Contract killer Banarasi Yadav killed in encounter, more than two dozen serious cases against the criminal carrying a reward of one lakh – Varanasi: Contract killer Banarasi Yadav killed in encounter

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After the encounter, he was sent to the nearest hospital in injured condition, where the doctor declared him dead.

Varanasi: Contract killer Banarasi Yadav killed in encounter

2 – Photo: Amar Ujala

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A reward of Rs 1 lakh was declared on the betel nut killer Banarasi Yadav who murdered Mahendra Gautam in Sarnath police station area. Today there was an encounter with the STF team on Bariasanpur Ring Road under Chaubepur police station. After the encounter, he was sent to the nearest hospital in injured condition, where the doctor declared him dead. More than two dozen serious cases are registered against Banarasi. Two pistols and a large number of cartridges have been recovered from the spot.

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