From Champaign to Grand Slam Finals, Anderson honored with Hall of Fame induction



Illini legend Kevin Anderson becomes just the second in Illini tennis history to earn ITA Hall of Fame induction.



TEMPE, Ariz. - Kevin Anderson, who rose from a standout at Illinois to one of the world’s top tennis professionals, will be inducted into the Intercollegiate Tennis Association Men’s Hall of Fame in May 2026. The ITA announced the Class of 2026 in late July, honoring Anderson as part of a five-member group that includes John Isner, Steve Johnson, longtime Georgia coach Manny Diaz, and contributor John Frierson.

Anderson’s journey to the Hall of Fame spans from his days in Champaign to his rise as a two-time Grand Slam finalist and world No. 5. A native of South Africa, he played for Illinois from 2004 to 2007, helping elevate the Fighting Illini to national prominence. Anderson captured the 2006 NCAA doubles championship alongside Ryan Rowe, reached the NCAA singles semifinals and doubles final in 2007, and led Illinois to a team runner-up finish that same year.

His collegiate honors included three First-Team All-Big Ten selections, the 2007 Big Ten Tennis Athlete of the Year award, and recognition as the Fighting Illini Dike Eddleman Male Athlete of the Year in 2007.

Turning professional after his junior season, Anderson embarked on a career that spanned 16 years. He became the first Illinois alum to reach a Grand Slam singles final, finishing runner-up to Rafael Nadal at the 2017 U.S. Open. The following summer, he returned to the sport’s biggest stage at Wimbledon, reaching the 2018 final after a marathon six-hour, 36-minute semifinal victory over Isner — still the longest Grand Slam semifinal in history. He later fell to Novak Djokovic in the championship match.

At his peak in 2018, Anderson climbed to No. 5 in the world rankings, collecting seven singles titles and one doubles title before retiring from the professional tour in 2022. His final ATP crown came at Newport in 2021, a fitting close to a career defined by resilience and power.

Anderson now joins coach Craig Tiley, inducted in 2010, as the only representatives of Illinois men’s tennis in the ITA Hall of Fame. The induction ceremony is scheduled for May 2026 at the University of Georgia, held in conjunction with the NCAA Division I Team Championships.

Since its founding in 1983, the ITA Men’s Hall of Fame has honored more than 270 players, coaches, and contributors. Eligibility requires both collegiate excellence and accomplishments beyond college, criteria Anderson met at every stage of his career.

For Illinois, his induction serves as both recognition of Anderson’s legacy and a reminder of the program’s impact on the broader tennis world.


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DOJ demands sensitive Illinois voter registration information after Illinois responds to initial request



In response to a July letter, the Illinois State Board of Elections provided the U.S. Department of Justice with the same limited voter data that it provides to political parties.

Illinois Governor JB Pritzker speaks at rally in August

Photo: Capitol News Illinois/Jerry Nowicki

Gov. JB Pritzker takes questions during a news conference Thursday, Aug. 14, 2025, in Springfield. He defended Illinois’ decentralized election system after signing an unrelated bill.

by Peter Hancock
Capitol News Illinois
SPRINGFIELD - The U.S. Department of Justice is insisting Illinois election officials hand over the state’s entire computerized voter registration database, including sensitive information such as driver’s license and partial Social Security numbers.

In a letter dated Thursday, Aug. 14, an attorney in the department’s Civil Rights Division rejected the Illinois State Board of Elections’ offer of a partially redacted database – the same data that state law allows political committees and other governmental agencies to access – insisting that federal authorities are entitled to the complete, unredacted data.

“We have received Illinois’s statewide voter registration list (“VRL”),” Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon wrote. “However, as the Attorney General requested, the electronic copy of the statewide VRL must contain all fields, including the registrant’s full name, date of birth, residential address, his or her state driver’s license number or the last four digits of the registrant’s social security number as required under the Help America Vote Act (‘HAVA’) to register individuals for federal elections.”

The letter indicated DOJ was making the request under a provision of the National Voter Registration Act, also known as the “Motor Voter Act,” a 1993 law that was intended to make it easier for people to register whenever they conducted other government business such as obtaining a driver’s license or renewing their vehicle registration.

“Our request is pursuant to the Attorney General’s authority under Section 11 of the NVRA to bring enforcement actions,” the letter stated.

The letter also cited the 2002 Help America Vote Act. Passed in the wake of the controversial 2000 election between Republican George W. Bush and Democrat Al Gore, that law made sweeping changes to the nation’s voting processes, including new requirements about how states must maintain accurate and up-to-date voter registration databases.

‘Not entitled to demand’

DOJ first requested a copy of the Illinois database in a July 28 letter. That was a few weeks after the agency filed what’s known as a “statement of interest” in a civil lawsuit that the conservative legal activist group Judicial Watch, along with other plaintiffs, had filed against the state board, alleging it was not meeting its duties under HAVA to maintain the voter database. Read more: Trump administration requests voter data from Illinois elections board

In that initial letter, DOJ also requested the names of all election officials in the state who are responsible for maintaining the registration list. It also asked the state to identify the number of people removed from the registration list during the 2022 election cycle because they were noncitizens, adjudicated incompetent or due to felony convictions.

David Becker, a former attorney in the DOJ’s voting section who now runs the nonpartisan Center for Election Innovation and Research, told Capitol News Illinois last month that the letter is similar to requests filed in multiple other states and that it goes far beyond the Justice Department’s legal authority.

“The Department of Justice asked for the complete voter file for the state of Illinois, including all fields in that file, which is an absolutely huge file that contains so much sensitive data about Illinois citizens, including driver’s license numbers, Social Security numbers and dates of birth that the Department of Justice is not entitled to receive and not entitled to demand,” he said in an interview. “They know this. Other states have told them this, and yet they continue to seek to receive this information, citing sections of federal law that don’t apply and don’t require that.”

Illinois’ initial response

The State Board of Elections responded to that request Aug. 11 with answers to DOJ’s questions as well as an electronic copy of what it described as the statewide voter registration list.

However, the board also cited a state statute that limits what the agency can disclose from the centralized registration list. A spokesperson for the board said in an email that the law allows the release of two types of data files. One, available only to political committees or “a governmental entity for a governmental purpose,” includes the voters’ names and addresses, their age at the time the registration was completed, the voting jurisdictions in which they reside, and their voting history. That includes elections in which they voted and, in the case of primary elections, which party’s ballot they selected.

That is the list the state board provided to DOJ. The board also waived the normal $500 fee it charges for providing the list. Another version of the file, available to the general public, contains much of the same information, but only the name of the street on which they live, not their exact street address.

But neither file, the spokesman said, contains voters' personal identification information used to verify voter registrations such as driver’s license numbers or Social Security numbers.

DOJ, Pritzker respond

In its letter Thursday, however, DOJ said the list that the elections board provided was insufficient. “In charging the Attorney General with enforcement of the voter registration list requirements in HAVA and the NVRA, Congress plainly intended that DOJ be able to conduct an independent review of each state’s list,” Dhillon wrote. “Any statewide prohibitions are preempted by federal law.”

The letter directed the board to provide the information by Aug. 21.

The board spokesman said the latest DOJ letter is “under review.”

On Monday, Pritzker declined to say whether the board’s decision to provide the partially redacted database was the correct one. But he also accused the Trump administration of ulterior motives.

“Well, it's clear why they're hunting around for voter data, right? They're trying to say that in the next election, that there will be fraud because they know they're going to lose,” he said at an unrelated bill signing. “They are looking, essentially, to say that, well, we found somebody who died who's still on the rolls, and therefore there's fraud, and therefore these elections are fraudulent and should be overturned.”

He also defended Illinois’ decentralized election system.

“We have, actually, one of the safest, best systems in the entire country, because it's run by individual county clerks so it's unhackable,” he said.



Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.

Illinois joins suit against Trump administration orders limiting gender-affirming care



Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul and other Democratic attorneys general are suing the Trump administration over policies to limit gender-affirming care for youths. The lawsuit argues the policies violate states’ 10th Amendment right to regulate health care.


Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul on Senate floor in May

Photo: Capitol News Illinois/Jerry Nowicki
Raoul is pictured on the floor of the Senate in May of this year. The Illinois Attorney General joined a multi-state bid to block the Federal government from limiting gender-affirming care.


by Ben Szalinski
Capitol News Illinois

SPRINGFIELD - Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul is joining a multi-state lawsuit seeking to block the Trump administration from limiting gender-affirming care.

The lawsuit, filed in Massachusetts district court by 17 states, argues an executive order signed in January by President Donald Trump that directs federal agencies to take “appropriate steps to ensure that institutions receiving federal research and education grants end the chemical and surgical mutilation of children” violates states’ 10th Amendment right to regulate medical care.

The order defines “children” as people under age 19, which the attorneys general say conflicts with many states such as Illinois, where people are generally considered adults when they turn 18. A separate executive order by the president established that the federal government only recognizes two genders.


How does any of this keep our children or our communities safer?

It also seeks to block two Department of Justice orders that direct the DOJ to investigate and enforce legal action against doctors, hospitals and other medical professionals that provide gender-affirming care to youths.

The orders use “cruel, demeaning language” to “undermine the legitimacy” of medical care, California Attorney General Rob Bonta said at a news conference Friday.

“This administration is driving a wedge between patients and health care providers from providing patients the health care that they need,” Raoul said.

Also troubling to the attorneys general is the prospect of criminal prosecution against doctors who provide care.

“The Department of Justice is diverting valuable law enforcement resources away from catching criminals and predators who are actually harming children,” Raoul said. “How does any of this keep our children or our communities safer?”

Guidance to Illinois doctors

The orders have also caused Illinois health care providers to stop providing types of gender-affirming care, including University of Chicago Medical Center, UI Health, Rush, Northwestern Medicine and Lurie Children’s Hospital in Chicago.

Though Raoul said he opposes the Trump administration’s policies and believes they are illegal, he declined to give legal advice about whether Illinois health care providers should continue following the federal directives while the lawsuit proceeds.


Illinois has numerous laws on the books establishing legal gender-affirming care.

“I am not a health care administrator; I am not the head of a hospital that’s being threatened with potential criminal investigation or prosecution or removal of funding that goes toward saving the lives of various patients,” Raoul said. “And so I am not in the position of either advising what administrative decisions should be made at hospitals.”

Raoul said his role is to “remove” legal threats against the state and its residents.

Medical providers that decide to stop providing gender-affirming care are likely not guilty of discrimination under Illinois law, Raoul said, “particularly if the federal government is threatening you with criminal prosecution.” He added Illinois laws don’t require doctors to provide a full range of gender-affirming care.

Illinois has numerous laws on the books establishing legal gender-affirming care, including protections for Illinois health care providers from prosecution and other disciplinary action in other states for giving legal health care to patients in Illinois that might be considered illegal in another state.

Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.


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