The blunt assessment of Mayor Brandon Johnson’s first year

by Admin
The blunt assessment of Mayor Brandon Johnson’s first year

Looking back on his first year in office, Mayor Brandon Johnson sees a succession of wins. “Name one thing that I said I was gonna do that I haven’t done,” he said in one interview. “You won’t be able to.” In another, he said, A year ago people voted for me, and as a result of that, we have moved a very bold, audacious, progressive agenda.”

Most Chicago residents see something else. Less than 20% think the city is better off today than a year ago on fundamentals such as the local economy and health, and that percentage drops to 11% or lower on public safety, social inequities, the migrant situation and taxes, according to a new citywide survey by The Harris Poll.

Asked to grade Johnson’s performance as mayor, 9% of adults in Chicago say above average, and 41% say average. The biggest bloc — 50% — say below average, with most of them effectively giving the mayor an F by categorizing his achievements as not just low but very low.

Running a big city has become a thankless chore. Mayors from New York to San Francisco and cities in between are losing public support, often because of widening concerns about crime, homelessness and taxes. That may be comforting to beleaguered officeholders, but all that really matters to Chicagoans is how Chicago’s mayor is doing.

As Johnson enters his sophomore year, he has a second chance to show he’s up to the job. If he shows indisputable progress on the city’s quality-of-life issues — and shows off a vibrant and tranquil Chicago to the world during the Democratic National Convention and secures a pro sports stadium, or maybe two — his first-year grades won’t matter much.

The city would be better off too. As deeply as residents are proud of their hometown, our polling shows that at least half believe things such as crime, taxes and the migrant crisis are worse here than elsewhere. We’re in a funk. More than almost anything else, we want our city to work.

Johnson may be getting that message. Lately, he has shown an openness to coordinating with interests beyond the progressive base that put him in office. The mayor announced, for instance, that he will ask the City Council for $151 million to breathe new life into downtown by turning empty office buildings along LaSalle Street into residences.

Embracing another plan that originated with predecessor Lori Lightfoot, Johnson wants to get immediate access to $1.25 billion in anticipated revenue from tax increment financing districts and use the money for affordable housing and economic development in neglected city neighborhoods.

Johnson could win over more residents, too, if he can keep the Bears and White Sox from abandoning Chicago by aiding the teams in building new stadiums within the central business district. There’s a big risk here for the mayor, which he’s acknowledged: Most city residents, according to prior Harris Poll research, oppose bankrolling professional sports facilities with tax dollars.

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