‘Our people hire our people': Long before DOJ probe into Mayor Brandon Johnson, racial politics coursed through City Hall hiring
Mayor Brandon Johnson sat onstage at a cavernous Woodlawn church and shot back at the criticism that he only cares about hiring Black people with his most forceful defense yet of the representation among his top appointees.
Addressing a Black audience last week, he quoted the Rev. Jesse Jackson: 'Our people hire our people.' Then one by one, he shouted out six of his Black deputies and a Black-owned business recently awarded an airport contract.
Less than 24 hours later, his remarks reached the walls of President Donald Trump's Justice Department, triggering an investigation into City Hall's hiring practices.
But while Trump's crusade against diversity policies that he views as discriminatory against white Americans is unprecedented, the practice of powerful officials hiring from within their own ethnic group is a tried-and-true tradition in the bare-knuckle arena of Chicago politics.
Long before DEI, or diversity, equity and inclusion, entered the political lexicon, the city's various racial groups each approached the power struggle for jobs with the ethos of 'Where's mine?' Johnson, while maintaining he's looking out for the entire city, has also argued that now it's Black residents' turn.
'Why wouldn't I speak to Black Chicago? Why wouldn't I?' the mayor challenged reporters when asked about the DOJ probe last week. 'It would be shameful if I were to repeat the sins of those who have been in this position before because they did not speak enough to Black Chicago.'
Former Ald. Ed Vrdolyak, a ringleader of the white opposition to Mayor Harold Washington in the 1980s, once laid out Chicago's ethnic political principles in stark terms, as an outsider taking stock of the Daley clan's decades of iron control of the city's levers of power.
'You've got to understand something about the Irish, the Daley Irish,' Vrdolyak told the Tribune in 1996. 'It's the Irish first, and everybody else is a Polack. Everybody. I'm Croatian, and to them I was a Polack. The Blacks are Polacks. Latinos, everybody … are Polacks. That's how they are.'
Ald. Walter Burnett, 27th, the most veteran sitting member of the City Council, chuckled recently when he heard the quote. 'Isn't that something? This is real talk in Chicago.'
'We keep going through this evolution of who gets the short end of the stick,' said Burnett, who is Black. 'And when you have been oppressed and neglected for such a long time, you know you are going to continue to try and get more. It's just a natural reaction.'
During the 20th century, European immigrants came to Chicago in waves, with each group starting from scratch when it came to amassing economic and political might. Longtime white Chicagoans often didn't accept the newcomers at first, but eventually the burgeoning populations of Irish, Italians, Polish and others established their own unique enclaves across the city.
Most famously, the Irish American Daley family came into power and built a formidable political machine from the 11th Ward in Bridgeport, making a point to hire and promote other Irish Chicagoans. Other white ethnic groups such as the Polish did the same.
That reward system came under fire in the early 1970s under Mayor Richard J. Daley, when federal courts issued a series of orders prohibiting patronage employment in Chicago. They were known as the Shakman decrees.
The DOJ probe into Johnson hinges on whether he 'made hiring decisions solely on the basis of race,' in potential violation of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, according to a notice issued by Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon.
Flashback: Chicago's Council Wars pitted defiant white aldermen against a reform-minded Harold Washington
Washington, the city's first Black mayor, bucked the status quo by recruiting a coalition of Black and Latino aldermen to counter Vrdolyak and other white ethnic members of the Democratic machine who tried to thwart him, in a period known as Council Wars. After Washington's death in office in 1987, however, that so-called Rainbow Coalition waned as Mayor Richard M. Daley took over in 1989.
Daley assembled his own alliance of ethnic whites and Latinos as the 1990 decennial ward remapping process loomed to prop up a wedge against a growing Black influence at City Hall. Latino hiring did surge, thanks to the Daley-allied Hispanic Democratic Organization — until a federal investigation into its patronage hiring practices kneecapped the group.
Faced with these setbacks, some Black politicians have tried to take matters in their own hands.
'I've always liked patronage,' the late Ald. William Beavers was quoted saying in the Tribune in 1988. 'Why change the game when Harold Washington became mayor? You should be allowed to hire whomever you want.'
Or as former Cook County Board President Todd Stroger once argued, 'Patronage has been as American as apple pie.'
Ameshia Cross, a Democratic strategist who grew up in South Shore, said comparing the racial politics of then versus now is imprecise, however. While earlier generations of European immigrants have since assimilated with white Americans, Black people remain in 'an entirely separate bucket,' she said.
Cross said the city has yet to fully rectify its sordid legacy of redlining, discriminatory banks and other practices that segregated the South and West sides. That's why the modern apparatus of government jobs serving as a 'backbone' for the Black community is so critical for Johnson to protect, she said.
'Even though Chicago has never been a part of Jim Crow, Chicago very much had a separate but equal stance,' Cross said. 'There is a movement, and has been for at least the better half of the past three and a half decades, to ensure that many of those gaps reach a level of closure. … That's one of the things that this White House is trying its darnedest to erase.'
One of Washington's signature lines that encapsulated the promise behind his Rainbow Coalition was, 'You're going to get your fair share,' as former U.S. Rep. Luis Gutiérrez recalled hearing the late mayor promise constituents.
In the decades since, Chicago's racial interests have scarcely agreed on what a 'fair share' looks like. Gutiérrez, who joined Washington's ranks as an upstart Puerto Rican alderman, has since gravitated toward more establishment positions. He said the current political climate doesn't need more inflammatory rhetoric like Johnson's.
'Why would a mayor that represents everybody tout exclusively about the Black people that he's hired?' Gutiérrez said. 'The city of Chicago has come a long way, a long way, and I don't think it needs a mayor that fans the flames of race as an issue.'
Since Johnson took office two years ago, he's faced pushback from Latino leaders who want his staff and cabinet makeup to be more reflective of Chicago's shifting demographics. For his part the mayor says he has the 'most diverse administration' in the city's history, which is true when measuring his share of nonwhite employees against his last three predecessors, at the very least.
But the 'most diverse' label becomes more fraught when breaking down the nonwhite representation.
Over the past decade, Latinos have surpassed the shrinking Black population for the first time, leaving Chicago at about 30% Latino, 29% Black, 31% white and 7% Asian. The map that ultimately passed the City Council in the most recent ward remap following the 2020 census had 16 majority-Black wards and 14 majority-Latino wards — one fewer than what the Latino Caucus wanted — while forming the city's first majority-Asian ward.
The makeup of the entire mayor's office staff is 34% Black, 24% Hispanic, 30% white and 7% Asian, according to the latest numbers provided last week. Johnson's cabinet was much Blacker, however, hovering at about 44% as of last year, according to the Triibe news website.
The mayor's press office did not provide updated figures to the Tribune.
When asked last week whether the strong Black focus among his staff leaves Latinos, Asians and other marginalized groups behind, the mayor retorted that's 'the type of divisiveness that this president wants us to have.' He then listed seven Latinas across his leadership and cabinet team.
Ald. Gilbert Villegas, 36th, a frequent Johnson critic, said he will continue pushing for the mayor's Latino representation to be closer to 30%, arguing that Latinos will likely surpass white Chicagoans in next decade and become the largest group.
'There are going to be some communities that get ahead, but it should not be because of the fact that you're saying, 'Oh, because it's my community, I want to get them ahead,'' Villegas said. 'This is not the 1970s and '80s, and if we want to revert back to that, it's the wrong approach.'
Villegas was chair of the Latino Caucus during the most recent ward redistricting process under then-Mayor Lori Lightfoot, leading the failed effort to secure an additional majority-Latino seat. Then under Johnson, Villegas unsuccessfully threw his hat in the ring to be appointed Zoning chair after the coveted leadership role was vacated by Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa, 35th.
Johnson found himself in a monthslong quagmire last year because he had promised the seat to the Latino Caucus but was unable to pick a candidate he could both trust and muscle through the council, so he opted to go with Burnett and boost the Black Caucus' chairmanships instead.
While remaining steadfast in defending the prioritization of the Black neighborhoods he says have 'borne the brunt' of policies such as the 2013 mass school closings, the mayor has also sought to challenge what he sees as a cherry-picked narrative over how he approaches race.
'It sounds like to me that people tune in to what they wanted to, because the fact of the matter is that I've shown up for this entire city,' Johnson said last week. 'The city of Chicago has suffered from a great deal of pain because of the political and the racial dividing lines that have existed in this city for a long time. I'm going to break those.'
For Ald. Nicole Lee, who represents the new Asian-majority 11th Ward, the drop in Asian representation at the senior levels was 'striking.' Lightfoot had four Asian Americans in her leadership team, while Johnson has had no Asian representation among his appointees to his office for the vast majority of his term.
'I would question how we define the most diverse,' Lee said. 'It is disappointing that his administration doesn't feel representative of my own community, and it's not something that's lost on the community, either. It is definitely a topic of conversation among folks.'
Lee said she's voiced this concern to Johnson before and suggested Asian American candidates for open positions, but they were not selected.
Last month, the mayor did appoint Jung Yoon as policy chief.
Victor LaGroon, former chief diversity officer at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, said it's not realistic for governments to match their constituents' demographics one-to-one. When the age-old bickering over 'where's mine?' does spill over, that is more a reflection of a historic scarcity of opportunity within those populations, LaGroon, who also served in Mayor Rahm Emanuel's administration, said.
'The communities who view themselves as waiting for their turn to be served can view themselves in a very myopic way and say, 'Hey, we didn't get what we needed. Where's ours?' It's unfortunate,' Lagroon said. 'While mayors today try to get it right, I think it's also important to notice that many of our mayors are trying to also undo some of the harm done in the past.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
12 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Republican NJ governor candidates focus on budget waste, immigration, Trump
New Jersey voters in both parties have begun to vote to select their nominees for governor in the June 10 primary election. This spring, the USA TODAY Network New Jersey Editorial Board convened conversations with nearly all of the major candidates. We talked broadly about their campaigns, their agendas if nominated and elected and about the impact of the administration of President Donald Trump. Here are thoughts and impressions about candidates in the Republican field, presented alphabetically: State Sen Jon Bramnick, first elected to the Assembly in 2003 and its longtime Republican leader, was elected to the upper chamber in 2021. Bramnick, 72, is a Plainfield attorney and was the first Republican to enter the race for governor. An avowed Never-Trumper, Bramnick said that, when appropriate, he would continue some of the state's ongoing legal challenges that seek to block parts of the administration's policy agenda. He also said he would call on the New Jersey congressional delegation to protect Medicaid coverage for the state's most vulnerable residents. Bramnick's campaign is designed to appeal to moderates in both parties who are concerned about New Jersey's tax burden and want to see the Garden State's economy grow. 'My feeling is we need balance. I don't believe in this one-party system. Now, you've had the Democrats control the Legislature for 20 years. And now you've had a Democratic governor for seven years. It doesn't work. What you want is balance because most people in New Jersey are in the middle.' Bramnick is focused, too, on fixing New Jersey's housing crisis and suggested to the USA TODAY Network New Jersey Editorial Board that he would work with developers across the state to locate large tracts of land on which to construct affordable single-family and multi-family units to meet market demand. Bramnick also outlined positions on reconfiguring the state budget to better fund NJ Transit, said he would work to reconfigure the state's complex school funding formula and suggested that he would regularly take questions from the public and from members of the Legislature if elected. Jack Ciattarelli, a former state Assemblyman who lives in Somerville, nearly ousted Gov. Phil Murphy in the 2021 election. It was immediately clear that Ciattarelli, a sometime contributor to the opinion pages of the USA TODAY Network New Jersey, would seek his party's nomination again this year. Ciattarelli, who once dismissed President Donald Trump as a "charlatan," earned the president's endorsement earlier this month. While Ciattarelli has positioned himself as a right-of-center moderate in earlier campaigns, this year, he has embraced the MAGA mood that holds grip over large swaths of the Republican primary electorate. "The president's trying to hit the reset button," Ciattarelli said, pointing to Trump's efforts to stem the federal deficit and rebalance global trade. In conversations with the USA TODAY Network New Jersey Editorial Board, Ciattarelli said New Jersey faced "an affordability crisis, a public safety crisis, a public education crisis" and also expressed deep concern about overdevelopment and housing affordability. To address affordability, Ciattarelli outlined specific proposals to tackle the school funding formula and said the state, on his watch, would fund special education across the state. He also called for a unified state department to oversee all of the state's transportation infrastructure, including NJ Transit, the Garden State Parkway and the New Jersey Turnpike. Ciattarelli said he would also conduct a broad review of state spending with an eye toward trimming the budget as broadly as possible. On energy, Ciattarelli put the blame for forthcoming utility rate hikes squarely on Gov. Phil Murphy and the Democratic Legislature and said he would work quickly to stand up natural gas generation. He also said he would explore expanding the state's existing nuclear footprint. Bill Spadea, the longtime NJ 101.5 radio personality who lives in Princeton, is a stalwart supporter of President Donald Trump. Spadea and his campaign did not respond to invitations to sit with the USA TODAY Network New Jersey Editorial Board. Spadea has said his campaign is aimed at stemming New Jersey's affordability crisis, addressing what he calls an epidemic of illegal immigration and slowing down housing development that he says imperils New Jersey's suburban communities. Immigration, he has said, is his top priority. 'We're going to rescind the 2018 executive order and get rid of the sanctuary state. We're going to rescind the 2019 Immigrant Trust Directive,' he said. 'We're going to issue a series of executive orders … to stop phase four of this high-density housing nonsense that is crushing our suburban communities." Former Englewood Cliffs Mayor Mario Kranjac and Justin Barbera, a Burlington County contractor, are also on the June 10 primary ballot but did not meet various qualifications to participate in debates this spring. This article originally appeared on NJ governor 2025: Republican candidates focus on waste, immigration
Yahoo
12 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Video shows suspect of Colorado antisemitic attack
Eight people were injured in what officials are describing an antisemitic attack in Boulder, Colorado. The suspect in custody, identified as 45-year-old Mohamed Sabry Soliman, allegedly used a makeshift flamethrower and threw an incendiary device into the crowd. He also yelled 'Free Palestine,' according to the FBI.
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
8 People Burned, Suspect in Custody After Attack with ‘Makeshift Flamethrower' at Israeli Hostage Rally in Colorado
Eight people were injured in an attack at a mall in Colorado on Sunday, June 1 Boulder Police said witnesses reported that the suspect — who is now in custody — threw a 'makeshift flamethrower' at a group of people and yelled "Free Palestine" According to CBS News, the group were taking part in a march in support of Israeli hostages, with the FBI now investigating the attack as "an act of terrorism" An attack at a mall in Colorado involving a flamethrower has left eight people injured. In a news release, Boulder Police said the attack — aimed at a 'group of individuals' — took place at the Pearl Street Mall on Sunday, June 1. 'Witnesses reported that the suspect used a makeshift flame thrower and threw an incendiary device into the crowd,' the release read. 'The suspect was also heard to yell 'Free Palestine' during the attack.' 'The individuals were walking in a regularly scheduled, weekly peaceful event,' the release continued, with CBS News reporting that those injured were taking part in a march in support of Israeli hostages, citing an FBI official. The eight injured were taken to Denver metro hospitals. The victims include four men and four women, aged between 52 and 88, per the release. The FBI is investigating the attack on the Pearl Street Mall in Boulder with @BoulderPolice as an act of terrorism. If you have info please call 1-800-CALL-FBI. If you have digital media -- videos, social media posts, recordings -- please upload it at — FBI Denver (@FBIDenver) June 2, 2025 Want to keep up with the latest crime coverage? Sign up for for breaking crime news, ongoing trial coverage and details of intriguing unsolved cases. According to CBS News, citing an FBI official, the suspect threw Molotov cocktails that burned multiple victims. The suspect, who is now in custody, has been identified as Mohamed Sabry Soliman, 45, of El Paso County. 'He was taken to the hospital to be medically evaluated before being booked in the Boulder County Jail on multiple charges,' per the release. The FBI is also investigating the attack. In a post on X, the agency said they were investigating the attack as "an act of terrorism." Read the original article on People