Chicago Mayor Declares War on Trump, Calls Him “A Threat to Black Families!
Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson claimed during a Tuesday press conference that President-elect Donald Trump is a threat to Black families in his city in response to Trump’s plan to address illegal immigration. “His threat is not just towards new arrivals and undocumented families. His threats are also against Black families…we’re going to protect undocumented individuals,” said Mayor Johnson. “We’re going to protect Black folks, Brown folks, Asian folks. The city of Chicago will be better, stronger and safer despite who’s in the White House.” A former Chicago gangster-turned-community activist said Johnson is “using Black people and Black families as a scapegoat or a tool for his dirty practices and immigration,” Tyrone Muhammad told “Fox & Friends,” Wednesday. Read More Here!
Chicago Teachers Union president paid over $269K but hides union financial records
Public records show the Chicago Teachers Union and other union entities pay Stacy Davis Gates a very healthy salary. But union transparency ends there. CTU is refusing to show members how it spends their money, despite that mandate in CTU’s rules. Chicago Teachers Union President Stacy Davis Gates makes over $269,000 a year, according to public records of her union employers. But the CTU president is fighting that kind of transparency about union spending, even though it’s mandated in the union’s rules. It’s been four years since members have seen audits of how the union spends their dues, and that refusal comes as public records show CTU’s spending millions on political campaigns. Davis Gates’ income is from multiple union entities including CTU, its state affiliate the Illinois Federation of Teachers and the AFL-CIO. It includes at least: Read More Here!
Chicago Mayor’s $300M Tax Increase for Migrants Sparks Outrage!
Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson wanted a $300 million property tax hike for his big budget. All 50 aldermen said “no.” So then he asked for $150 million and a 35% tax on liquor. Johnson fails to admit it’s not about taxes, it’s about making changes. All 50 Chicago aldermen told Mayor Brandon Johnson he couldn’t have his $300 million property tax hike, so he asked for $150 million in property taxes, $128 million in cloud computing taxes, $10 million in streaming service taxes and $10.6 million from a 35% hike in liquor taxes. Maybe Johnson should recognize “no” to $300 million in new taxes means “no” to $300 million in new taxes. Instead of asking for it a different way, he needs to stabilize Chicago’s finances by backing pension reform, cutting non-essential spending from his $17.3 billion budget and auditing departments for cuts. He needs to safeguard public safety and stop the financial games that deny Chicago long-lasting fiscal stability…. Read More Here!
How Mayor Brandon Johnson Lost Control of the Debate Over Chicago’s 2025 Budget
The first sign that Mayor Brandon Johnson’s proposal to spend $17.3 billion in 2025 was dead on arrival came just minutes after he finished telling the Chicago City Council the only way to balance the city’s budget was to hike property taxes by $300 million. Despite being one of Johnson’s closest allies, Ald. Byron Sigcho Lopez (25th Ward) wasted no time telling reporters that he would not even consider voting for the largest property tax hike since 2016. Pilsen residents struggling to keep their homes amid a wave of gentrification could not afford the increase, Sigcho Lopez said. The fact that Sigcho Lopez, Johnson’s hand-picked Housing Committee chair who has voted in lockstep with the mayor, dismissed the budget proposal out of hand sent shockwaves through the City Council, frustrating Johnson’s allies while emboldening his critics. Read More Here!
Chicago residents rip mayor over spending on migrants: ‘Worst mayor in America’
Watch the latest video at foxnews.com Mayor Brandon Johnson is trying to close $1 billion budget shortfall, with $60M property tax hike floated Residents of Chicago are blasting Mayor Brandon Johnson over the city spending more than half a billion dollars on sheltering migrants, with one telling the Democrat to his face during a City Council meeting that he’s the “worst mayor in America.” The criticism surrounding Johnson and Chicago’s New Arrivals Mission – which so far has cost the city $574.5 million since its inception in August 2022 – comes as the mayor is trying to overcome a $1 billion budget shortfall by the end of the year. The City Council held a meeting Monday during which residents voiced their opposition to an approximately $60 million property tax increase floated as one way to help close the gap. This is on top of a CPS Budget Short Fall! This year’s $8.4 billion operating budget for Chicago Public Schools included what was left of the district’s covid allocation, $233 million. Heading into this school year, the district faced a deficit of $500 million, and it anticipates another half-billion-dollar deficit next year. Oct 21, 2024 Plus a State Budget Short Fall! Elgie Sims, D-Chicago, said. The Governor’s Office of Management and Budget released a report on Nov. 1 projecting the state will face a $3.2 billion deficit for fiscal year 2026, which begins July 1.Nov 13, 2024 Read More Here! About ‘Worst mayor in America’
Illinois Education Association continues to lose members, underfund Job No. 1
The Illinois Education Association is the largest statewide teachers union in Illinois. But less than 15% of its in spending in 2024 was on representing its members – which could be why nearly 5,000 education employees have left the union. The Illinois Education Association is the largest state affiliate for local teachers unions across Illinois, but it is getting smaller. Nearly 5,000 education employees have left the union since its membership peaked in 2020, according to the union’s recent federal filing with the U.S. Department of Labor. Read More Here!
Wall Street sounds the alarm about Chicago finances!
Standard & Poor’s has put Chicago on a “credit watch,” which could raise the interest rate the city pays by about one-quarter of a percentage point. And with the city planning to refinance $1.5 billion in bonds, even that slightly higher rate could cost taxpayers $4 million a year over 40 years. Read More Here