How Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson can improve trust

by Admin
How Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson can improve trust

Less than a month ago, Mayor Brandon Johnson presented voters with the Bring Chicago Home referendum. He asked voters to approve hundreds of millions of dollars in new public spending to support his homelessness initiatives. Voters said no. 

Last week, Johnson was before the public again with another request for billions, to support a new Chicago Bears stadium. Given the public reaction to date, the proposed stadium looks to be heading for the same fate as Bring Chicago Home.

After the public rejects these initiatives, Johnson has been quick to blame the rejection on MAGA Republicans and other boogeymen. But that excuse ignores a much more obvious explanation: The public doesn’t trust Chicago’s politicians to carry out big goals.

The track record among our elected officials doesn’t inspire confidence. Former Ald. Ed Burke was convicted on multiple federal charges and faces sentencing soon. The former Illinois House speaker, Michael Madigan, stands trial on federal bribery charges later this year. In another federal investigation, housing regulators announced that the City Council itself likely violates civil rights laws by letting aldermen issue unilateral vetoes over affordable housing developments, a practice known as aldermanic prerogative.

While federal prosecutors are trying to clean up government, elected leaders haven’t shown the same initiative. 

Past mayors have carried the torch of ethics reform, but Johnson wants nothing to do with it. Then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel entered a 2011 executive order that barred lobbyists from making political donations to the mayor. Johnson ignored the order and accepted contributions from lobbyists. He only stopped when called out by the Chicago Board of Ethics.

Lori Lightfoot as mayor also strengthened city government in ways that the Johnson administration has since abandoned. I had worked for Lightfoot on ethics issues, including efforts to roll back aldermanic prerogative. These efforts appear all but dead. Johnson’s office has even confirmed that he will not implement her final attempts to rein in aldermanic prerogative or to increase transparency.

And this Bears stadium proposal marks another step backward in good governance. The deal was negotiated behind closed doors with zero transparency, and it would saddle generations with as much as $6 billion in debt — all for poorly defined public benefit.

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