Chicago council, 'starting to legislate,' sends $16.7 billion budget to mayor

Chicago council, ‘starting to legislate,’ sends $16.7 billion budget to mayor

Spread the love

(The Center Square) – The Chicago City Council has approved a $16.7 billion budget for 2026 and sent it to Mayor Brandon Johnson.

Aldermen rejected the mayor’s corporate head tax and passed a spending plan Saturday with higher taxes on cloud computing, liquor and plastic bags.

The alternative budget also includes a roughly $1 billion sweep of tax-increment-financing dollars to Chicago Public Schools.

Alderman Anthony Beale voted in favor of the budget, despite concerns about another potential credit downgrade for the city. Beale said Johnson’s administration promised the 2025 budget would not lead to a credit downgrade, but it came “almost immediately” after the budget passed.

“The downgrade is because we did not pay the full pension payment. The downgrade is because, once again, we’re bailing out CPS with a $1 billion TIF sweep,” Beale said.

Alderman Jim Gardiner echoed other city council members when he said the budget was not perfect, but he still supported it.

Gardiner addressed aldermen who had concerns about the budget including video gambling to generate revenue.

“The gamble that got us here today is the gamble that we made on migrants,” Gardiner said, as shouting was heard in the council chambers.

Gardiner said he wasn’t hating on immigrants and didn’t blame them for coming.

“We invited them with free food, free clothing, free rent, free education. That’s why we’re here today,” the alderman said.

Gardiner said the city gave migrants more than $1 billion to come to Chicago.

“We gambled on the migrants and we lost,” Gardiner said, adding that city officials “pushed them to come here.”

Gardiner addressed the mayor and said he knew a bad gambler when he saw one.

“Mayor Johnson, you’re a bad gambler. I cannot go with you at all,” Gardiner said.

The budget includes a provision to sell city debt to collectors.

Alderman Desmon Yancy supported the measure and said deadbeat developers and city workers owe millions of dollars.

“To be paid by the city and ignoring your debts to the city is insane. Many of these employees are able to pay their debts to the city but don’t feel compelled to pay and that’s not ok,” Yancy said.

Yancy said attacks from the Chicago Teachers Union, the Johnson administration and some aldermen, along with a lack of goodwill, made the current situation “inevitable.”

According to the Illinois Policy Institute, the budget includes $535 million in tax increases.

Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza is considering a run for mayor in 2027. Mendoza opposed Johnson’s head tax but said aldermen needed to start with a lower budget rate and see what was absolutely necessary.

“And whatever is not, you tighten your belt and you re-right this ship. It’s the only way the city will get back on a better, stronger financial path, which is absolutely necessary to be able to build our city and make it a city that is much more affordable for all Chicagoans,” Mendoza told The Center Square.

The Better Government Association released a statement shortly after the budget passed Saturday.

“The process marked a sea change in Chicago’s legislative norms, with the mayor making an initial proposal and a majority of the city council rejecting substantial parts of it and introducing their own counterproposal,” the BGA statement said.

The group said 2025 was a far cry from many years when mayors’ proposals sailed through nearly uncontested.

“Chicago’s legislature is really starting to legislate,” the BGA added.

Johnson said Friday he had not decided whether he would veto the budget if it passed.

Thirty aldermen voted in favor of the spending plan Saturday. The city council would need 34 votes to override a veto.

The council had meetings scheduled Dec. 23 and 24 but changed the schedule after Saturday’s vote to hold meetings Dec. 29 and Jan. 21.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Joliet-Junior-college.-Graphic-Logo.2

Joliet Junior College, City of Joliet to Explore Joint Public Safety Institute

Joliet Junior College Board of Trustees Meeting | September 2025 Article SummaryThe Joliet Junior College (JJC) Board of Trustees approved an intergovernmental agreement with the City of Joliet to begin...
Manhattan Township

Manhattan Township to Draft Solar Farm Ordinance Amid Growing Interest

Manhattan Township Meeting | August 2025 Article Summary: In response to increasing interest from solar energy developers, the Manhattan Township Board has scheduled a special meeting for August 19 to discuss...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Village of Manhattan Board of Trustees for September 2, 2025

The Village of Manhattan Board of Trustees adopted a comprehensive 20-year land use plan to guide future growth and development at its meeting on Tuesday. The board also held an...
Screenshot 2025-09-27 at 8.20.13 AM

Manhattan to Install Solar-Powered Flashing Beacons in School Zone

Article Summary: The Manhattan Village Board has approved the purchase of two solar-powered, dual-flashing beacon signs to increase safety in the school zone for St. Joseph Catholic School on Route...
Village of Manhattan Logo Graphic

Resident Shares Personal Tragedy as Manhattan Proclaims Suicide Prevention Month

Article Summary: During a solemn moment at the Village of Manhattan board meeting, resident and advocate Shelly Lewis shared the story of losing her 15-year-old son to suicide as the...
Screenshot 2025-09-27 at 8.20.13 AM

Manhattan Adopts 20-Year Comprehensive Plan to Guide Future Growth

Article Summary: The Village of Manhattan Board of Trustees has unanimously adopted a new Comprehensive Land Use Plan, a guiding document that will shape development, community investment, and growth for...
WATCH: Legislator warns gas could reach $8 to $10 a gallon

WATCH: Legislator warns gas could reach $8 to $10 a gallon

By Dave MasonThe Center Square California needs to produce more oil to keep gas prices from hitting $8 to $10 a gallon, a Republican assemblymember said during a virtual news...
White House announces new AI Education initiative

White House announces new AI Education initiative

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square The White House announced the Presidential AI Challenge, a new initiative to unite innovation and education. Launched on Aug. 26, the initiative is a project...
Chicago student petitions to restore bathroom doors

Chicago student petitions to restore bathroom doors

By Esther Wickham | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) - A Chicago student launched a petition to restore bathroom doors after Oak Park and River Forest High...
Alleged Epstein 50th birthday letter from Trump released

Alleged Epstein 50th birthday letter from Trump released

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square Congressional Democrats posted an image of what they say is the 50th birthday letter from the president to Jeffrey Epstein after receiving some of the...
WATCH: Bonta disappointed with U.S. Supreme Court ruling

WATCH: Bonta disappointed with U.S. Supreme Court ruling

By Dave MasonThe Center Square California Attorney General Rob Bonta expressed disappointment Monday with a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that temporarily overturns a lower court’s order prohibiting U.S. Immigration and...
Trump's tariffs 'not survivable' for some U.S. small businesses

Trump’s tariffs ‘not survivable’ for some U.S. small businesses

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The small businesses that challenged President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs told the U.S. Supreme Court that the import taxes are "not survivable" for some U.S....
Postal traffic to U.S. dropped 80% after end of duty-free shipping

Postal traffic to U.S. dropped 80% after end of duty-free shipping

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square Postal traffic to the U.S. plummeted 80% after President Donald Trump suspended the duty-free de minimis exemption on Aug. 29. The Universal Postal Union, the...
Illinois quick hits: Hundreds of layoffs reported; man charged with converted handgun

Illinois quick hits: Hundreds of layoffs reported; man charged with converted handgun

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Hundreds of layoffs reported Layoffs are coming for more Illinois workers. According to the Notices of Layoffs and Closures (WARN) Report...
'Glaring failure:' Lawmaker accuses Meta of failing to make AI chatbots kid-safe

‘Glaring failure:’ Lawmaker accuses Meta of failing to make AI chatbots kid-safe

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square A U.S. lawmaker is once again demanding that Meta prevent minors from accessing its AI chatbots, citing the technology company’s “glaring failure to properly and...