Brandon Johnson

Last updated

Stacie Rencher
(m. 1998)
Brandon Johnson
Brandon Johnson 2024.jpg
Johnson in 2024
57th Mayor of Chicago
Assumed office
May 15, 2023
Children3
Education Aurora University (BA, MA)
Signature Brandon Johnson signature (1).svg

Brandon Johnson (born March 27, 1976) [1] [2] is an American politician and educator who is currently serving as the 57th mayor of Chicago since 2023. [3] [4] [5] A member of the Democratic Party, Johnson previously served on the Cook County Board of Commissioners from 2018 to 2023, representing the 1st district.

Contents

Johnson was first elected to the Cook County Board of Commissioners in 2018 after defeating incumbent Commissioner Richard Boykin in the Democratic primary election and winning the general election unopposed. Johnson won reelection to the County Board in 2022.

Johnson was elected mayor of Chicago in 2023. In the first round of the election, he and Paul Vallas advanced to a runoff, unseating incumbent mayor Lori Lightfoot. Johnson defeated Vallas in the runoff election and was elected to serve as the 57th mayor of Chicago. [6] [7]

Johnson is considered to be a political progressive. [8]

Early life and education

Johnson was born in Elgin, Illinois. [1] He was one of ten children born to Andrew and Wilma Jean Johnson. [9] Johnson grew up in Elgin with his nine siblings. [9] His father was a pastor and his parents were occasional foster parents. [9] Johnson's father, Andrew Johnson, also worked at the Elgin Mental Health Center. [10] When Johnson was nineteen years old, his mother died of congestive heart failure. [9]

Johnson married Stacie Rencher. [11]

Johnson earned a bachelor's degree in youth development and a master's degree in teaching from Aurora University. [9]

Early career

Johnson during the 2019 Chicago Public Schools strike CTU Strike.jpg
Johnson during the 2019 Chicago Public Schools strike

Johnson worked as a social studies teacher at Jenner Academy Elementary and George Westinghouse College Prep, both part of the Chicago Public Schools system. [12] He became an organizer with the Chicago Teachers Union in 2011, and helped organize the 2012 Chicago teachers strike. [13] He also helped lead field campaigns during the 2015 Chicago mayoral and aldermanic elections. [12] [13]

Cook County commissioner (2018–2023)

Johnson ran against incumbent Richard Boykin in the 2018 election for the Cook County Board of Commissioner's 1st district. He was endorsed by a number of labor organizations and progressive advocacy groups, including the Chicago Teachers Union, Grassroots Illinois Action, The People's Lobby, Our Revolution, and SEIU Locals 1 and 73. [14] He was also endorsed by Cook County Board of Commissioners President Toni Preckwinkle. [15] He won the Democratic Party primary election on March 20, 2018, defeating Boykin by 0.8 percentage points (437 votes), and ran unopposed in the general election on November 6, 2018. [16] Johnson was sworn in as a Cook County commissioner on December 3, 2018. [17]

Johnson was the chief sponsor of the Just Housing Ordinance, which amended the county's housing ordinance by prohibiting potential landlords or property owners from asking about or considering prospective tenants' or homebuyers' criminal history. [13] The ordinance was passed in April 2019. [18] [19]

In October 2019, Johnson spoke at a solidarity rally supporting striking teachers and support staff during the 2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike, and wrote supportive letters to the editor in the Chicago Tribune and Chicago Sun-Times. [20] [21] [22] Johnson worked as a paid organizer for CTU, focusing on legislative affairs. [13] Politico's Illinois Playbook reported after the strike that Johnson was rumored as a potential mayoral candidate in the 2023 election; Johnson responded by calling the rumors "laughable" and criticizing the publication for making a connection between the strike and his electoral career. [13] In November 2019, Johnson wrote an essay in a CTU publication drawing a distinction between the union's organizing model and "top-down school governance." [23] [24]

Johnson endorsed Toni Preckwinkle ahead of the first round of the 2019 Chicago mayoral election. [25] He also endorsed Melissa Conyears-Ervin in the 2019 Chicago city treasurer election. [13] In August 2019, Johnson endorsed the candidacy of Elizabeth Warren in the 2020 Democratic Party presidential primaries. [26] [27]

In the summer of 2020, amid the George Floyd protests, Johnson authored the "Justice for Black Lives" resolution that was adopted in July 2020. [28] [29] The resolution called for reallocating funding "from policing and incarceration" to "public services not administered by law enforcement that promote community health and safety equitably." [28] In an interview that year, Johnson praised the political catchphrase "defund the police" as a "real political goal". He would later walk back his embrace of the phrase "defund the police", especially making an effort to disassociate himself from it during his 2023 mayoral campaign. [28] [30]

Johnson was reelected in 2022. [31]

During Johnson's tenure on the Board of Commissioners, Board President Toni Preckwinkle exerted strong influence on the policy pursued by the body. [32] Johnson had generally been allied with Preckwinkle. [33]

2023 mayoral campaign

Johnson's mayoral campaign logo Brandon Johnson for Chicago 48118368 (2).png
Johnson's mayoral campaign logo

Johnson was elected the mayor of Chicago in the city's 2023 mayoral election. He became the third black person to be elected mayor of Chicago. Johnson is the fourth black person to serve as the city's mayor, as Eugene Sawyer had been appointed to serve following Harold Washington's death in office but was never elected. [34] He also became the first mayor to hail from the city's West Side since the tenure of Anton Cermak in the 1930s. [35] Johnson was sworn in as Chicago's 57th [36] mayor on May 15, 2023. [37]

First round

As early as November 2019, there had been speculation that Johnson might run for mayor of Chicago in 2023. [13] On September 13, 2022, Johnson launched an exploratory committee to consider running for in the 2023 mayoral election. [38] In the weeks that followed, he received endorsements from United Working Families, [39] the Chicago Teachers Union, [40] and progressive independent political organizations in the 30th, 33rd, 35th, and 39th wards. [41] On October 23, the American Federation of Teachers pledged to donate $1 million to Johnson's campaign should he enter the race. [41] On October 27, Johnson formally announced his candidacy. [39] [42] [43]

Johnson's campaign was supported by what Heather Cherone of WTTW News described as a "coalition of progressive groups". [44] Johnson was the beneficiary of Chuy García's decision to wait until after the 2022 United States House of Representatives election to announce his mayoral candidacy, as a number of groups that had supported García 2015 mayoral campaign, such as the Chicago Teachers Union and the United Working Families, grew impatient of waiting for a decision by García on whether he would run and instead pledged their support to Johnson. [45] [46]

Johnson was described as a "progressive" and a favored "candidate of the left." [47] [48] [49] His campaign emphasized funding and resources for public schools, [50] a public safety platform that includes efficiency audits and non-police responses to mental health emergencies, [51] support for a real estate transfer tax to fund homelessness response and prevention, [50] and a budget that proposes raising $1 billion in new revenues, including through new or increased taxes on airlines, financial transactions, high-value real estate transfers, and hotels. [52] [53] [54] Amid polling showing crime and police relations as the leading issue, Johnson was the only primary candidate who did not express support for hiring more police officers, suggesting instead an increase in the detective force from existing ranks, citywide youth hiring, reopening mental health centers, and investment in violence prevention as means to address 'root causes of crime', [55] in line with voter preferences for increased job training and economic opportunity over force expansion. [56]

Johnson exchanged criticisms with several of his opponents. Johnson delivered focused criticisms of Mayor Lightfoot, who criticized Johnson in return. [57] Another opponent that Johnson exchanged barbs with was Chuy García. [58] Johnson characterized García of having "abandon[ed] the progressive movement” and of having presented no distinction from Mayor Lightfoot in his proposals for combatting violent crime in Chicago. [45] Johnson further characterized García as having been absent from work on a number of issues that impacted Latino neighborhoods in the city. [57] In turn, García characterized Johnson's tax proposals as being incomplete and outside of a mayor's ability to enact and questioned whether Johnson, as a former organizer for the Chicago Teachers Union, would be able to objectively negotiate with them on behalf of the city. [45]

Johnson, at a mayoral debate, attacked fellow candidate Paul Vallas, the former CEO of Chicago Public Schools, by claiming that Vallas' tenure as CEO had, "further stratified our school district, leaving our schools without the necessary support that they need." [59] In the closing weeks of the campaign, as Johnson was recognized as a more prominent contender in the race due to a continued rise in polls, he began to face focused criticism from Mayor Lightfoot as well as fellow progressive challengers Kam Buckner and Ja'Mal Green. [60] Until February, Lightfoot had made public remarks that were dismissive of Johnson's chances in the election. [60] However, her regard for Johnson's electoral prospects appeared to change once Johnson's standing in the polls ascended. On February 8, 2023, a political action committee supporting Mayor Lightfoot began to run an attack ad against Johnson. [44] By mid-February, polls indicated that Johnson was one of four candidates with clear probability of being among the first two finishers and advancing to a likely runoff election. The other three candidates who were shown by polls to be the most likely to advance were Paul Vallas, Mayor Lightfoot, and Chuy García. [60] Reflecting his increased standing in the race, in the final televised debate prior to the close of the initial election Johnson faced strong targeted criticism from several of his opponents, receiving particularly intense criticism from Lightfoot and Green. [61]

In the first round of the election on February 28, Johnson placed second with about 22% of the vote and advanced to the runoff election on April 4, where he faced Paul Vallas, who placed first in the initial round of the election with over 33% of the vote. [62] [a] [63] [64] [65]

Runoff

After they were eliminated in the election's first round as mayoral candidates, U.S. Congressman Chuy García and Illinois State Representative Kam Buckner endorsed Johnson in the runoff. [66] Among the most prominent figures to endorse Johnson in the general election were activist and two-time presidential candidate Jesse Jackson, [67] Cook County Board of Commissioners President Toni Preckwinkle (the runner-up of the previous mayoral election in 2019), [68] Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul, [69] former U.S. Senator Carol Moseley Braun (a 2004 presidential candidate 2011 mayoral candidate), [70] U.S. Congressman from South Carolina Jim Clyburn, [71] as well as U.S. Senators and former presidential candidates Elizabeth Warren (of Massachusetts) [27] and Bernie Sanders (of Vermont). [72]

Johnson alongside Paul Vallas at a runoff mayoral forum at Kenwood Academy, March 2023 2023 Chicago mayoral run-off fourm.jpg
Johnson alongside Paul Vallas at a runoff mayoral forum at Kenwood Academy, March 2023

Johnson criticized Vallas for ties to Republican Party organizations and figures, as well as his ties to conservative causes, remarking in the first runoff debate, "Chicago cannot afford Republicans like Paul Vallas". This included bringing up 2009 remarks in which Vallas had expressed opposition to abortion rights and declared himself "more of a Republican than a Democrat." In response to this line of criticism, Vallas proclaimed himself a "lifelong Democrat", citing his candidacy in the primary of the 2002 Illinois gubernatorial election and his unsuccessful campaign as the Democratic Party's nominee for lieutenant governor in the 2014 Illinois gubernatorial election. [73] [74] Johnson also attacked Vallas as having hurt Chicago Public Schools' finances during his tenure as CEO of Chicago Public Schools. [75] Vallas accused Johnson of lacking "substance", accusing him of lacking a significant political record. [73] Vallas campaigned on lowering crime while characterizing Brandon Johnson as wanting to "defund the police". [75]

Johnson and Vallas both agreed on continuing expanding the INVEST South/West Initiative launched by Mayor Lightfoot, which directs investment into historically disadvantaged South and West Side neighborhoods. [73] Vallas and Johnson also agreed that the city should not utilize public money in order to persuade the Chicago Bears football team, which is pursuing a new stadium in the suburb of Arlington Heights, to remain in the city of Chicago. [73]

Prior to advancing to the runoff, both Johnson and Vallas had come out in opposition to the notion of the city spending $2 billion or more to renovate and build a dome over the Bears' current municipally-owned home stadium, Soldier Field. [76] [77] While Vallas expressed his belief that it is a foregone matter that the Bears will not reconsider a move to Arlington Heights, [76] [78] in the runoff Johnson reiterated his previously declared stance that the city should still pursue the opportunity to negotiate with the football team, [79] and pledged that as mayor he would "sit down and work with the [Chicago Bears] ownership", in order to see what arrangement the city and the team, "can figure out". [73]

On April 4, Johnson defeated Vallas to win the runoff election. The Associated Press projected his victory within a few hours of poll closing, on the night of April 4. [4] His victory was described as an upset victory by several media outlets. [80] [81] He became mayor at noon on May 15, 2023. [82]

Johnson performed exceptionally strong in wards with majority black populations, winning as much as 80% in some such wards on the South Side and West Side of the city. He also performed strongly in some predominantly white lakeshore areas and in some Hispanic-majority areas northwest of the city's downtown. [83]

Johnson had been significantly out-fundraised in the election by Vallas, [84] and outspent by a ratio of nearly 2-to-1. [85] Some journalists have attributed grassroots organizing in support of Johnson's candidacy as having been the difference-maker in his victory. [86]

Mayor of Chicago (2023present)

Transition and inauguration

Many of those who led Johnson's transition team, including its chair, had ties to trade unions. [87]

On April 6, 2023, Mayor-elect Johnson met with Mayor Lightfoot at her Chicago City Hall office in order to discuss the mayoral transition. [88] [89] The following day, Mayor-elect Johnson met in person with Illinois Governor J. B. Pritzker. [90] He met in person with Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul on April 14, 2023. [91]

On April 11, 2023, Chicago was announced to have won the right to host the 2024 Democratic National Convention. [92] Johnson had supported the city's bid. After they had defeated Lightfoot in the first round, both Johnson and Vallas each vowed to provide their support for the convention bid that Lightfoot had been championing as mayor. [93] It was reported that when President Joe Biden made a congratulatory phone call to Johnson after he was projected the election's victory, Johnson took the opportunity to pitch him on Chicago's bid to host the convention. [94] After the mayoral election, in the final day before the Democratic National Committee was to select a host city for the convention, Johnson and Governor Pritkzer had worked with each other to advance the case for Chicago to host. [95]

Approximately a week after his election, Johnson joined a picket line alongside striking faculty members at Chicago State University. [96]

In April 2023, after several large groups of teens and young adults engaged in shootings and vandalism across multiple locations in the city, [97] Mayor-Elect Johnson issued a statement, writing "...in no way do I condone the destructive activity we saw in the Loop and lakefront this weekend. It is unacceptable and has no place in our city. However, it is not constructive to demonize youth who have otherwise been starved of opportunities in their own communities." [98]

On April 18, Johnson began a trip to the state capital of Springfield, Illinois, holding meetings there with state lawmakers. The following day he addressed the Illinois General Assembly. [99] [100]

Johnson made staff decisions during the transition period, such as selecting his mayoral chief of staff. [101] It was announced that Interim Chief of Police Eric Carter would step down from that position on the day that Johnson is inaugurated. [102]

Johnson was inaugurated at noon on May 15, 2023, at the Credit Union 1 Arena. [103] Hours later he signed four executive orders relating to public safety, migrants and youth employment. [103]

"One Fair Wage"

In October 2023, City Council passed the "One Fair Wage" ordinance with the support of Johnson. The ordinance establishes a timeline for the eventual elimination of the "subminimum wage" for tipped workers by July 1, 2028. [104] [105] [106]

Housing and "Bring Chicago Home"

As Mayor, Johnson has sought to remove red tape to streamline housing and commercial development in the city. [107]

During the 2023 mayoral campaign, Johnson campaigned on passing the "Bring Chicago Home" ordinance, a plan to increase the City's real estate transfer tax (RETT) on property sales over $1 million to fund affordable housing and homelessness support services. [108] [109] In November 2023, City Council voted to put a referendum to change the tax on the primary election in March 2024. [110] The referendum failed, with 53.2% of voters opposing the measure. [111]

In 2024, Johnson pushed for a 615-unit apartment building (of which 124 units were affordable housing) on the lot of a former industrial site at 1840 North Marcey Street. The alderman in the district, Scott Waguespack, sought to use his aldermanic privilege to block the housing development but Johnson pushed to streamline the project and not allow Waguespack to delay or block it. [112] [113]

Chicago Public Schools

In July 2023, Johnson appointed new members to the Chicago Board of Education, including appointing Jianan Shi as board president. [114]

In 2024, the city of Chicago was engaged in contract negotiations with the Chicago Teachers Union (Johnson's former employer). [115] In July 2024, Johnson began suggesting that the school district should take on a new loan in order to cover expenses required to meet the teachers union's demands related to the funding of pensions and contracts. [116] However, higher-ups within the school district as well as the school board took issue, expressing concern over the prospect of taking on additional debt obligation considering its existing debts. [115]

Amid a standstill, the teachers union publicly lambasted Pedro Martinez, blaming him and pejoratively labeling him a "Lightfoot holdover". [115] Johnson came into conflict with Martinez, and privately requested his resignation (something he would attempt to publicly deny having done). [117] On September 24, the Chicago Tribune published an op-ed by Martinez in which he outlined his reasons for refusing Johnson's request for him to resign. [118] With all of this occurring before a period of change for the board (with the 2024 board election set to reshape its composition from an entirely-appointed board to a hybrid board), the incumbent board members all declined to dismiss Martinez. Ultimately, this conflict led to the entirety of the board (including board president Jianan Shi) to tender their own resignations in early October. 41 out of the 50 members of the Chicago City Council (including some of Johnson's key council allies) signed an open letter criticizing Johnson's move to quickly reshape the board only weeks before the school board election. [117] Days later, Johnson named new appointees to six of the seven seats [119] Seven new appointed members and president were sworn-in together on October 28. [120]

In his shakeup of the board, Johnson appointed Rev. Mitchell Ikenna Johnson as the new board president. [121] After he was appointed, controversy arose over numerous social media posts he had previously made. Soon after he was appointed, attention was brought to a social media post he had made heralding the October 7 Hamas-led attack on Israel as "resistance against oppression", forty members of the city council and governor Pritzker expressed concern, with the governor accusing Mayor Johnson and his administration of failing to properly vet him before appointing him. [122] [123] He offered an apology for that post. The mayor initially defended his school board president, remarking,

He recognizes the harm those statements have caused, and has expressed his apology and will continue to seek atonement to have the full confidence in every community in the city of Chicago. [122]

Additional controversial social media posts came to light on October 31, including a misogynistic meme and a post asserting a 9/11 conspiracy theory. Governor Pritzker issued a public statement calling for his resignation. Media reviews also uncovered many anti-Israel and pro-Palestinian posts on his social media accounts that used hostile and offensive rhetoric towards Jewish people. [124] Later that day, he tendered his resignation as school board president, [122] with the mayor releasing a statement that the board president's resignation had come at the mayor's request due to his past online statements which were, "that were not only hurtful but deeply disturbing." [121] On December 11, he appointed Sean Harden to replace Johnson as board president. [125]

Other matters

In late November 2023, Johnson acknowledged that the City of Chicago, with the backing of Gov. J.B. Pritzker, [126] was set to construct a tent city hosting mostly Venezuelan migrants on the Southwest Side. Along with the encampments, Johnson teamed up with churches in 17 of Chicago's parishes to house roughly 350 migrants. [127]

On January 31, 2024, Johnson supported a resolution calling for a permanent ceasefire in the Israel–Hamas war. [128] Daniel Goldwin of the Jewish United Fund said that Johnson "angered the real mainstream part of the Jewish community." [129]

On February 20, 2024, Johnson as Mayor of Chicago announced lawsuits against major oil and gas companies including BP, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, ExxonMobil, Phillips 66, Shell, and the American Petroleum Institute, accusing them of deceiving the public about the climate change impacts of their products, as the city of Chicago seeks accountability for climate change-related damages it has suffered. [130]

In October 2024, an Orthodox Jewish man was shot as he walked to his synagogue in West Rogers Park, and Johnson was condemned by local Jewish activists and community groups for neglecting to acknowledge the shooting victim's Jewish identity, with many speculating he was attempting not to portray the shooting as an anti-Semitic hate crime. The shooter in question was a Muslim man who was alleged to have screamed "Allahu Akbar" while in a shootout with Chicago police prior to his arrest. [131] U.S. Representative Ritchie Torres of New York City criticized Johnson, implying that the mayor should resign if unwilling to take action against blatant antisemitism in the city of Chicago. [131]

Approval ratings

As of October 29, 2024, Brandon Johnson has a 14% approval rating and a net favorability rating of -56. [132]

Personal life

Johnson lives in the Austin neighborhood on the West Side of Chicago with his wife, Stacie, and their three children. [1] [12]

In March 2023, it was revealed that Johnson owed the city of Chicago $3,357.04 in unpaid water and sewer charges and additional $1,144.58 in unpaid traffic tickets from 2014 and 2015. [133] [134] However, Johnson's debts were confirmed to be paid in full by March 31, 2023. [135]

Electoral history

Cook County Board of Commissioners

2018

Cook County Board of Commissioners 1st district Democratic primary [136]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Democratic Brandon Johnson 24,863 50.44
Democratic Richard Boykin (incumbent)24,42649.56
Total votes49,289 100.00
Cook County Board of Commissioners 1st district election [137]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Democratic Brandon Johnson 88,590 100.00
Total votes88,590 100.00

2022

2022 Cook County Board of Commissioners 1st district Democratic primary [138]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Democratic Brandon Johnson (incumbent) 30,702 100.00
Total votes30,702 100.00
2022 Cook County Board of Commissioners 1st district election [31]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Democratic Brandon Johnson (incumbent) 71,077 92.87
Libertarian James Humay5,4577.13
Total votes76,534 100.00

Mayor of Chicago

2023 Chicago mayoral election
CandidateGeneral election [139] Runoff election [140]
Votes %Votes %
Brandon Johnson122,09321.63319,48152.16
Paul Vallas 185,74332.90293,03347.84
Lori Lightfoot (incumbent)94,89016.81
Chuy García 77,22213.68
Willie Wilson 51,5679.13
Ja'Mal Green 12,2572.17
Kam Buckner 11,0921.96
Sophia King 7,1911.27
Roderick Sawyer 2,4400.43
Write-ins 290.00
Total564,524100.00612,514100.00

Notes

  1. These vote tallies were last updated on March 8, 2023. Some late-arriving mail-in ballots are still being counted.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">2024 Chicago Board of Education election</span>

The Chicago Board of Education election took place on November 5, 2024, alongside the statewide general elections. This was the first ever election to the Board, which has been an appointed body since its formation in 1837.

References

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Political offices
Preceded by Mayor of Chicago
2023–present
Incumbent