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Willie Wilson: Even Pharaoh knew his limits when it came to taxes

Willie Wilson: Even Pharaoh knew his limits when it came to taxes

Chicago Tribune2 days ago
The 2026 budget crisis has reached 'a point of no return,' according to Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson.
Severe underfunding of pensions and excessive government spending has led to this crisis. The city is facing a $1.1 billion budget deficit for 2026. That number will grow given the pension legislation signed by Gov JB Pritzker that increases retirement benefits for Chicago police and firefighters.
Mayor Brandon Johnson is considering, among other things, a corporate payroll expense tax, a head tax, grocery tax and even a congestion tax on cars coming into downtown to close the deficit. How much more can Pharaoh tax businesses and the people without driving the city into financial ruin?
These are bad ideas and would discourage employers from hiring people and harm jobs. A previous mayor called the head tax a 'job killer that puts Chicago at a disadvantage.' In this time of economic uncertainty, we need more jobs, not fewer. The mayor should be cutting costs, reforming pensions and renegotiating union contracts.
A tax on businesses is a tax on consumers. Businesses pass the cost to customers by raising prices. A prime example is President Donald Trump's tariffs. The new tariffs implemented by the Trump administration will drive costs up.
Prices rose 2.6% in June, up from an annual pace of 2.4% in May, the U.S. Department of Commerce reported last month. The consumer price index also went up in June. It is also expected that prices on food and drinks will climb due to the tariffs.
Johnson has failed to control overtime spending. The Chicago Police Department exceeded its personnel budget by $127 million in 2024 even though it has 1,000 vacancies.
Additionally, the mayor needs to get more people into the workforce. Three communities on the West Side have Great Depression levels of unemployment. According to the July 2025 Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning community data snapshots, North Lawndale unemployment was 13.9% in 2023 and 46.1% were not in the labor force. Austin had a 14.4% unemployment rate and 41.6% of people were not in the labor force. In West Garfield Park, the unemployment rate was 22.5% and 45.6% were not in the labor force. These communities underscore what is wrong with Chicago. The national unemployment rate is 4.2%.
Johnson should not rely on budgetary gimmicks to balance the budget. Casino revenue is not consistent — it is a volatile source. Red-light and speed camera traffic enforcement tools have had a disproportionate impact on Black and Latino communities. Several studies have revealed that households in majority-Black and Latino ZIP codes receive tickets from red-light and speed cameras at a rate roughly twice that of households in white areas. Regressive revenue penalizes hardworking citizens. Why would citizens vote for someone who burdens them with regressive taxes and prioritizes labor unions and migrants over them?
The mayor has been doing the bidding for his labor union buddies while costs are being borne by taxpayers. We need to create opportunities for people who are not a part of the union. Johnson should represent all the citizens of Chicago.
The following are suggestions to address the impending budget crisis:
We must get individuals in communities working. More people with W-2's increases tax revenue to the city and stabilizes families.
The city of Chicago has spent $638.7 million on migrant aid since August 2022, Fox 32 reports. These are resources that were spent because of the city's sanctuary status. The people of Chicago deserve to have a say on how their tax dollars are spent.
The mayor and his administration should be looking at ways to lower taxes and regulations on businesses and residents. This will lead to increased business receipts, jobs, and bring us back from the point of no return.
I write this commentary to make those comfortable with raising taxes on businesses and residents uncomfortable.
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With indictment, Cantrell joins Louisiana's notorious political history
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With indictment, Cantrell joins Louisiana's notorious political history

Mayor LaToya Cantrell became the first New Orleans mayor to ever be federally indicted while serving her term in City Hall. Why it matters: Cantrell becomes part of a notorious history of Louisiana politicians who have faced criminal charges from their time in office, which has long lent the state an unenviable reputation. Between the lines: Also the first Black female mayor of New Orleans, Cantrell has long said she has faced more intense scrutiny than others who have held the role. As New York Times columnist Charles M. Blow wrote last year during a failed effort to recall Cantrell, the mayor "has faced constant accusations of impropriety" as she's been "subject to a kind of sexism specific to Black women: misogynoir, as it's called." Worth noting: Cantrell's attorney told Axios around 1:30pm Friday that he had not received a copy of the indictment yet. He did not make any further comments. Catch up quick: Dozens of Louisiana politicians have faced criminal charges. Here are three standouts. Former Rep. William Jefferson Jefferson faced corruption charges after the FBI filmed him taking a $100,000 cash bribe with the goal of paying off an African official, the FBI says. Days later, the FBI infamously found $90,000 stashed in his freezer. He was convicted of bribery, racketeering and money laundering. Former Gov. Edwin Edwards The colorful Cajun was so popular with voters that he was elected governor four times from the 1970s through the early 1990s, though he faced multiple federal indictments during his third term. But he wouldn't be convicted until May 2000, when he was found guilty of taking bribes over riverboat casino licenses in his fourth term. Edwards spent eight years in a federal prison before launching a final unsuccessful campaign for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives in 2014. Former Mayor C. Ray Nagin Nagin, who led New Orleans during and immediately after Hurricane Katrina, was the city's first mayor convicted of corruption, according to WWL. Nagin, who was charged after leaving office, was found guilty of 20 counts of wire fraud, bribery and tax evasion after prosecutors said he took bribes while in office. He was sentenced to serve 10 years and was released early when officials sought to decrease prison populations in 2020 during the coronavirus pandemic.

It was supposed to change pro track. Now, short on cash, it owes athletes millions.
It was supposed to change pro track. Now, short on cash, it owes athletes millions.

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It was supposed to change pro track. Now, short on cash, it owes athletes millions.

As summer began in 2024, former Olympic gold-medal sprinter Michael Johnson stood in a downtown Los Angeles restaurant that had been rented out for a big announcement. Johnson said he had secured $30 million in funding for a new track league, promising payments never before seen in track and field. In a sport where even top stars earn modest livings by the standards of professional athletes, Grand Slam Track represented a huge windfall. More than one-third of that promised funding would be earmarked for prize money alone, a pool of more than $3 million per meet. And the biggest winners at each of its four meets would pocket $100,000 per meet — five times as much as first place earned on track's other global circuit. Additionally, 48 competitors who signed contracts with the circuit could earn an annual base compensation, plus a cut of revenue from group licensing. 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I know this makes some wonder if our vision can survive. That is why we are not just addressing the immediate problem; we are putting systems and partnerships in place to make sure it never happens again.' 'While I am no stranger to setbacks and overcoming obstacles, as an athlete, professionally, and personally, this current situation of not being able to pay our athletes and partners has been one of the most difficult challenges I've ever experienced,' the statement added. Prize money payments that take weeks to arrive are not unusual in track and field; if anything, they are the rule. In extreme cases, athletes have said that prize money payments have taken more than a calendar year to hit their accounts. Prize money from March's world indoor championships in China still has yet to arrive, one agent said. Delays largely stem from drug testing, because meets typically wait to pay until knowing an athlete was clean. Results generally take 10-30 days to return. In contracts with its 'racers,' Grand Slam Track stated that drug testing would be completed within 21 days of each meet, and that an athlete's promotional fee and earned prize money would be paid within 10 days of learning the doping results, according to a source. Delays are commonplace. But what made Grand Slam Track different, one agent said, was that there was a belief it already had its announced $30 million in funding waiting in escrow, ready to pay as obligated. Instead, they now wait for emailed updates from Grand Slam organizers. 'You're not getting anything directly answered,' one agent said. ''Our goal is to pay.' Well you can pay, but when? That doesn't sit well with anyone.'

New Orleans mayor indicted on federal corruption charges
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The Hill

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New Orleans mayor indicted on federal corruption charges

New Orleans Mayor Latoya Cantrell (D) was indicted on federal charges Friday after an alleged affair with a local police officer. Cantrell, the city's first female mayor, is accused of engaging in a romantic relationship with Jeffrey Paul Vappie II, a police officer in the executive protection unit. Court documents allege she orchestrated out-of-state trips to maximize their opportunities to engage in 'personal activities' that cost the City of New Orleans over $70,000 in addition to travel expenses for Cantrell. Prosecutors say both Cantrell and Vappie were warned about misconduct in 2022. The Democratic mayor is in her final term as the city's leader and is now charged with making false statements and false declarations before a grand jury, conspiracy to obstruct justice and conspiracy to commit wire fraud. 'Aware their conduct violated rules, policies, and criminal laws, Cantrell and Vappir attempted to distract and impede inquiries and investigations, including a federal grand jury investigation, about the true nature and circumstances of their relationship and their scheme to defraud,' the indictment reads. 'They did this by using an encrypted messaging platform, intimidating and punishing subordinates, lying to colleagues and advisors, making false public pronouncements, harassing a o colleagues and advisors, making false public pronouncements, harassing a private individual who took pictures of them in public together, deleting electronic evidence, making false statements to federal law enforcement agents, authoring an affidavit signed under oath and penalty of perjury containing false information, and testifying falsely while under oath before a federal grand jury,' it continues. Cantrell will face charges in the U.S. District Court's Eastern District of Louisiana. This is a sad day for the people of New Orleans,' said Monet Brignac, a spokesperson for City Council President JP Morrell told The Associated Press. 'Our thoughts and prayers are with the Cantrell family as they navigate through this difficult time.' Cantrell previously alleged she was targeted as a Black woman and faced 'very disrespectful, insulting, in some cases kind of unimaginable' treatment, according to the AP.

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