Candidates pile on Brandon Johnson in last mayoral debate before election: ‘You are a fraud’
Candidates pile on Brandon Johnson in last mayoral debate before election: ‘You are a fraud’ · Chicago Tribune

The last televised Chicago mayoral forum featured a series of explosive exchanges as candidates differed over taxes, policing, and even questioned whether their challengers care about Black people.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot repeatedly swiped at Cook County Commissioner Brandon Johnson, who took the brunt of criticism from rival candidates during the panel convened by WMAQ- Ch. 5 and WVON — the last scheduled time the incumbent mayor will face her eight rivals in her bid for reelection before the Feb. 28 election.

Lightfoot’s focus on Johnson began when she was asked a question about her combative reputation repelling allies, including her hand-picked budget chair, Ald. Pat Dowell. Lightfoot acknowledged Dowell recently threw her support behind Johnson instead and surmised, “I can only think that she agrees with him” on adding “almost a billion dollars in new taxes.”

Then Lightfoot repeated her claims that Johnson supports a 3.5% city income tax on those who make at least $100,000.

Johnson revisited that point when asked about how to stem Black population loss in Chicago.

“People have lost confidence in this administration because she’s broken every single promise, and she continues to mislead the people of Chicago, where she just espoused about a 3.5% income tax on people who make $100,000 a year or more,” Johnson. “It’s just a lie. It’s not in my budget plan.”

That proposal is backed by the United Working Families political group that has endorsed Johnson, but he himself has not thrown support behind such a tax. Lightfoot claimed on the campaign trail on the West Side this weekend that Johnson would enact that levy, an indication she is shifting her attacks during the final stretch before election night on Johnson, who could peel away support from Black and progressive voters.

At Monday’s forum, Lightfoot jumped in again and challenged Johnson to vow he would not impose a 3.5% income tax.

“I’m happy to respond. If he doesn’t agree with taxing people over $100,000, say right now here that you will never support such a plan,” Lightfoot said. “The floor is yours.” After a moment, Lightfoot added, “Silence is deafening.”

“I just said that, Madame Mayor,” Johnson rebutted, accusing Lightfoot of misleading residents. “It’s why folks have lost confidence in her.”

While Johnson’s budget plan does not call for a city income tax, he has said he would support a renewed push for a statewide graduated income tax. That proposal, pushed by Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker, failed at the ballot box in 2020.

Johnson’s budget plan calls for a $4 per employee head tax at large companies that perform 50% or more of their work in Chicago, a roughly9-cents-per-gallon charge on jet fuel, and a boost in the real estate transfer tax on homes valued at more than $1 million. He ultimately walked back a plan that would impose a Metra tax on commuters heading to the city from the suburbs.