Brandon Johnson

From Italian Beef to Chicago's Soul to Pandemic Scars: See Brandon Johnson's 1st Speech as Mayor

Addressing the newest City Council, his supporters and even his critics, Johnson acknowledged the city's passion and pride -- its soul -- as he gave an impassioned speech about his plans as mayor

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Chicago on Monday ushered in a new mayor and, with him, what he hopes will be a "new era" for the city.

Brandon Johnson took his oath and became the city's 57th mayor, promising to deliver changes when it comes to violence, mental health, business and more.

Addressing the newest City Council, his supporters and even his critics, Johnson acknowledged the city's passion and pride -- its soul -- as he gave an impassioned speech about his plans as mayor.

Read his full address below.

Thank you so much for being here today. I am truly humbled and honored to stand before you as the 57th mayor of the greatest city in the world. And I truly believe that.

It's not just the incredible natural beauty of our city as you look out over Lake Michigan. It's not just the outstanding food - from pizza, to Italian beef, to the vegetarian tacos. It's not just art and music that pushes the boundaries and redefines genres. I believe what truly makes us great is our people - and not just the names that show up in our history books, but the ones that show up in our schools, on the beat at the worksite, at the concert hall, and of course in the boardrooms, and of course, at the respite center, looking out for strangers in need.

Chicago wins. We show up. And we have leaders who show up too, that's why I'm grateful. We have Gov. J.B. Pritzker, Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton, Sen. Dick Durbin, Sen. Tammy Duckworth, Senate President Don Harman, the first Black speaker House Speaker Chris Welch, our entire congressional delegation, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle, the members of the General Assembly, and of course my former colleagues at the Cook County Board. And to every other elected leader who was here today - thank you for your service and thank you for being here. And to the City Treasurer Melissa Conyers Ervin and the City Clerk Anna Valencia, congratulations on your inaugurations. I look forward to serving with both of you and building a stronger city together. And to the members of the City Council, and especially the 13 newly elected alderpersons, congratulations. This is your day too and you deserve recognition. And I'm going to turn around and clap for them.

I want to make this clear. The people of Chicago are counting on us to work together to collaborate to make their lives better every day. Now, we won't always agree. But I won't ever question your motives or your commitment. And I'll always do my part to find common ground.

I'd like to thank Mayor Lori Lightfoot and her leadership of our city through turbulent times. Let us not forget that Mayor Lightfoot made history twice as the first Black woman and the first openly gay LGBTQ mayor. And in doing so, she broadened the imagination of so many young people across this city, including my daughter. Lori, I am grateful to you for your service and your sacrifice.

And to my extended family here today. Yeah, I didn't know how many cousins I had until I ran for mayor. And to my play cousins, but also my three children Owen, Ethan and Braedyn, and of course, my wife, Stacy. None of this will be possible or mean nearly as much without you. And of course, you all know I've got to brag a little bit about my wife because I may be getting inaugurated, but Stacy is the one making history today as the first Black first lady in the history of Chicago. Stacy, your love and care for Chicago is only dwarfed by your love for our family. Thank you for everything that you do every single day, and everything you will do for Chicago.

Now look, I'll be honest with you all, this is still very, very humbling for me. Because I have to tell you, growing up, I never imagined I could be on a stage like this. Growing up one of 10 in a working class family, it teaches you a lot about things, but I never could have foreseen this. Now, make no mistake about it. That doesn't mean that I'm not prepared. In fact, I think often about my upbringing, and the lessons that my parents and my siblings instilled. My mother is not here today, she's an ancestor. But my mother had the biggest heart of anyone that I knew. She always made room for one more at the table - a cousin, a neighbor, someone in need of a warm meal and a warm embrace. She taught me to love people. And that's ultimately the reason I stand before you today. And I can feel you Wilma Jean Johnson in this room.

Now, my father is here. He told me what it means to work hard and to be accountable. This brother worked three jobs. Now he was a carpenter and a pastor. You understand the pressure growing up in a house when your father is just like Jesus. I've learned my core values of hard work and accountability and love that formed the foundation for my approach to public service. And now I stand before you today as the new mayor of the nation's third largest city - a place where to hope and to have opportunity, it's been here for decades, met with the promise and the possibility that only a place like Chicago can provide.

There is something special about this city. I like to call it the soul of Chicago. Karen Clark Sheard this is where I believe in our faith tradition, we start to say, I think I feel my help coming. It is alive in each and every one of us here today. And it's always been the strong, and the heart of everyone who has ever called this land home. I'm talking about the soul of Chicago. It's alive in the hearts of the Miami, the Sauk, the Potawatomi, who lived on this land for centuries. The soul of Chicago sent a Black Haitian man named Jean Baptiste Point du Sable to establish a city at the mouth of the Chicago River. It was alive in the hearts of tens of thousands, who arrived here in the Great Migration, including my grandparents, who came to Chicago in search of a home. They injected the soul, the rhythm, combined with the traditions of the South, like the blues and of course the new cadence, making Chicago the center of both Black enterprise and Black freedoms struggles. It is the soul of Chicago that brought immigrants from all over the world to work to organize to build the first sky skyscraper, to flee persecution in one country and create an entire industry in another country, including one of the largest hospitality companies in the world. I'm talking about the soul of Chicago. Because that same soul, spurred two immigrants from Guatemala to Humboldt Park, where they raised a daughter named Delia Ramirez, who would grow up to make our city proud as a member of the United States Congress. Congresswoman Ramirez was born in the same public hospital where I, a child of the Great Migration, received life-saving asthma treatment. I'm talking about the soul of Chicago. That my friends is the rich soul of Chicago. That soul is what strikes me today. I am marveling ... Boy, West Siders are everywhere, because if you didn't know, now, you know.

I'm marveling not just at the peaceful transfer of power, or the miracle of American democracy, or the grand tradition of Chicago elections. It is how much we all share. I'm struck by how much work it took to bring us to this moment. How many decades of slow grinding progress - think about the labor movement, which produced luminaries like my mentor and dear sister Karen Lewis, who modeled true social justice unionism, and helped lead the multiracial, multicultural, working class movement that organized its way to this moment. The same labor movement that raise wages, established the 40-hour workweek, and built the middle class in this city. From the Civil Rights Movement, embodied by our very own brother, Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr., which abolished racial segregation in our laws and gave us the Voting Rights Act. From the women's right movement, led by Chicago's Jane Addams and Ida B. Wells, which ensured women would participate fully in every part of civil life. In fact, we all are here because of the work of giants who came before us, and without whom this day would not be possible. I bring that up because so often in politics, we think and talk and argue about the things that divide us. I want to be clear about something. Those divisions are real. They are many people who love our city deeply, have radically different ideas about how to confront the shared challenges that we face. That's true. You know, we need revenue. We have a structural deficit and we have to invest in people. And we have to do that without breaking the backs of working people with fines, fees and property taxes. You can't make people feel bad because they have a payment plan. You can't stop someone with a payment plan from becoming mayor of the city of Chicago. Oh my help is coming this morning.

But too many Chicagoans though fear for their safety. And when they walk down the streets, to get groceries or drive to the gas station, because our city's homicide and violent crime rates have consistently outpace our peer cities. Our public transit is unreliable and unsafe. So much so, that many parents refuse to let their children ride even when the CTA could be the pathway to opportunity and enrichment. Rent in Chicago continues to go up year after year after year. While the development of both affordable and market-rate housing stagnates, and as a result, too many in our city go to sleep unhoused and too few families know the security of owning their own home.

Our downtown commercial corridors still bear the scars of the pandemic with higher vacancy rates, and lower foot traffic. And of course, our neighborhoods, particularly those on the South and West Side, have still not tasted the fruits of the investments that they demand and deserve.

Our schools call out for more resources to fulfill their mandate of providing every single child in our city with a world-class education that meets their specific needs. And despite the trauma these challenges produce, too few can rely on the consistent access to mental health care that they desperately need.

But as we debate and discuss the solutions to these crises, I want to remind us that we have the real conversation. And that conversation is about the soul of Chicago. It's alive. It's alive and well in each and every one of us. We have so much in common you all - we really do. And we know that we all suffer when these ills are allowed to fester and grow. These problems don't just affect particular neighborhoods, one community or an ethnic group. It affects all of us.

You know, the tears of Adam Toledo's parents ... the tears of Adam Toledo's parents are made of the same sorrow as the parents of Officer Preston's parents. Officer Preston's tragic death at the age of 24 just last week reminds us what is really at stake. When we talk about the future of Chicago, we have to be very clear about what's at stake because she joined the Chicago Police Department for the very same reason that I ran to become the next mayor of the city of Chicago. She believed that through public service, she could be a conduit for justice. To the family of Officer Preston, my heart is with you and know we be with you every step of the way. Thank you for sharing your extraordinary daughter with the city of Chicago.

Honoring public servants, like Officer Preston, means truly addressing the challenges that we face. But the only way that we can truly confront and address those challenges is by working together and coming together. Now, we can't do it in a phony way, in an artificial way that pretends that differences don't exist. But I'm talking about in a deeper way, a deeper way that acknowledges the strength of what makes this city so strong and great. I'm talking about a strength that binds us in the face of our unique perspectives.

All of us in this room today, all of us in this room today have the product of our own stories. And each and every one of us has a story to not only tell, but lift up. And all of us in this room have the ability to take action, to be the courageous men and women who came before us. And that means right now, we get to write the story of our children's and our grandchildren's futures. And we get to do that together. And what will that story say? What will it say? That Chicago with its sturdy shoulders and its diverse economy and the legacy of all of our generosity was too afraid to stand up. Is that what our story will say?

We get to tell a different story. I'm talking about a story that again, that binds us together. We don't want our story to be told that we were unable to house the unhoused or provide safe harbor for those who are seeking refuge here.
Because there's enough room for everyone in the city of Chicago, whether you are seeking asylum, or you are looking for a fully funded neighborhood.

We don't want our story to say that we did not invest in all of the people and all of the communities that make our city great. We don't want that to be our story. We cannot afford to get it wrong Chicago. We don't want a Chicago that has been overwhelmed by the traumatization of violence and despair, that our residents felt no hope or no choice but to leave, shrinking our economy and making it difficult for this city to remain a world class city. We don't want that Chicago.

Our city gets to be as big as its promises. Our city gets to be as wide as our neighborhoods across this city, all 77 neighborhoods. That's the story is our neighborhoods.

I'm breathing it in you all. I'm just breathing it in.

So again, I'll repeat it again. We don't want our story to be that Chicago became so traumatized by violence and despair that our residents felt no other choice but to leave. And so a better day is ahead Chicago. Our stories get to reach well beyond this moment. They do. And I'm grateful that I will be working with a body of government that is committed to that transformation. But here's the thing. No, it won't be. That will not be our story, not on my watch. Because we right now together, are committing ourselves to writing a different future. As a pastor's son, I'm reminded of a scripture, Matthew 621, 'for where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.' And let's show the world, Chicago, where our heart is. Let's build a Chicago that is the economic marvel of our state, the Midwest, and this nation. Let's build a Chicago that means that our economy gets to grow by rerouting the rivers of prosperity to the banks of disinvestment, so that no one goes thirsty. Too much of our land is dry right now and we have to change that and we can. See I live in one of those drier communities - the beautiful Austin neighborhood, on the mighty West Side of Chicago. And the very fact that the mayor of Chicago lives in one of the most disinvested and violent communities in the city, it shows us what's possible. So let's not be discouraged by what it is, let's make sure that we never stop imagining of what it could be. So we'll create a Chicago where the big development projects get done, the poor have a pathway out of poverty. And large events like the Democratic National Convention that would generate a vitality in every single neighborhood that that gets done. Where our cultural institutions, whether it's our sporting events, hotels and a world class restaurants are supported, promoted and accessible not just to those from every corner of the world, but for those from every corner of the city. By imagining what is possible, by doing this, we can create a prosperous city, which no one is too poor to live in one of the richest cities and one of the wealthiest countries at the richest time in the history of the world. And so that means I'm talking about a Chicago where 65,000 people don't wake up on on the streets, or in a shelter. Where public housing and affordable housing and a pathway to home ownership exists for everyone. I'm talking about a city where it will no longer be the case where every network dollar belonging to a white family, where only eight cents belongs to a brown family and only one cent belongs to a Black family. We can do it Chicago, we can bring Chicago home. My family is living proof of the type of transformation that can happen with real investments. We'll create a Chicago where pathways to college and the high-tech industries in the future exists alongside the pathways to the trades and apprenticeships and the arts. Where every young person has a chance to pursue their passion and get a W -2. Where business, community, labor, philanthropy work together to connect every young person to an opportunity to fulfill their potential. Where we introduce these opportunities to young people as young as 6, 7 and 8 years old, and open up their minds to a world that could be. I'm talking about the soul of Chicago.

And so Gary, Bob, Jim, Dunn, we need your leadership. Richard, Marty, Linda, we need your business expertise. G-2, Tanya, Andrea and Oscar, we need your organizing and relationships. So listen, this is not a call out. This is what organizres referred to as a call in. And I'm talking about calling in the wisdom of the soul of Chicago, calling in the compassion of the soul of Chicago, calling in the expertise, I'm talking about calling in every single person in the city of Chicago to build a city that works for everyone. So, let's get to work, where we doubled the amount of young people that we hire. Some say that we have to wait 20 years for the efforts to pay dividends. I don't believe that. We can change lives of people in Chicago right now. So let's show our heart is in our young people's education. Let's create a public education system that resources children based on need and not just on numbers. Where every single child in every neighborhood, whether they fill out an application or not, whether they are bilingual or not special needs or not, has access to a world class education. Let's have a system that respects this parents, educators and school employees. Where the president of the Chicago Teachers Union and SEIU Local 73, and the CEO of the Chicago Public Schools can work together to advocate for more resources for all of our children. So Stacy, Diane, Pedro, I need you. We can do this together, Tony and Juan, let's do the same thing for City Colleges, which shouldn't be a gateway to opportunity for all of our neighborhoods. And so, while we're at it, let's work together to make sure that there is childcare for all. for every single person in the city of Chicago.

So Greg, Erica, Maggie and Mr. Governor, let's do it. Let's do it together. I want to work with you to make sure that we are providing support for working parents and giving children the nourishment that they need from day one. And how about we also create a Chicago where the hundreds of thousands suffering from episodic mental health receive treatment and not trauma?

Because people like my late brother Leon, who died addicted and unhoused. If only there was treatment. I want to make sure that no one ever has to suffer because they do not have access to mental health services. And people have told us no for too long. It's a matter of life and death. So let's bring together the private sector, the public sector, the county, the state and the federal government to find the best solutions for delivering these services, including reopening our mental health care centers across the city of Chicago. So let's get to work Chicago. Cheryl, Rosana, President Preckwinkle and Roberta, we need your leadership. Let's get this right for future generations.

Here I actually believe we can even do something really bold and fix our public transportation system. We can secure safety and convenience for cyclists while making significant investments in the reliability, the safety and the connectivity of our buses and trains in every single neighborhood. These investments won't just benefit our economy, they'll result in a safer, more livable city for all of us.

And once and for all, let's create a safer Chicago. A safe Chicago means a safe Chicago for all. No matter what you look like, who you love, or where you live. We'll do it together by investing in people. We'll invest in housing, mental health, and youth jobs and higher wages and real economic development in every community. We'll do it by supporting law enforcement, especially those who are serving on the front lines. That means providing them with direct lines of supervision, clear expert expectations for their work, and equal opportunities for advancement and strong accountability and support for every stakeholder in this city. Our faith leaders, our philanthropic institutions, our business community violence interrupters, researchers, educators, coaches, counselors, is going to take all of us, not one of us can sit down in order to make a better, stronger, safer Chicago, I'm counting on the entire city to deliver on this.

So, you all know we have no time to spare. As I speak, a group of philanthropic and business leaders are partnering to increase the resources for community youth programming between when school lets out and Chicago Park District programs begin. And to provide more safe opportunities for young people during Memorial Day weekend and the Fourth of July. It's not just up to Fred Waller and his officers, it is up to all of us. So Charles, Abby, and Andrea, thank you, let's keep pushing to build a safer Chicago.

And speaking of the right thing to do, the soul of Chicago tells us we will never close our doors to those who come here in search of a better life. For our scripture says, 'I was hungry and you gave me something to eat. I was thirsty, and you gave me something to drink. I was a stranger, and you invited me in. I needed clothes, and you clothed me. I was sick, and you looked after me. I was in prison, and you came to visit me.' That has always been the soul of Chicago. And it will always be the soul of Chicago. We know the strength of a city is determined by how we treat the most vulnerable. And so we choose to be a strong city, we must reject a zero-sum formulation between investing in those who have been here for decades and supporting those who have been sent here on a bus even this morning. We can do both Chicago. And we can all thrive together.

I stand before you today deeply optimistic about the future, not because I'm ignorant of the challenges, but because I'm deeply aware of our history, from the Great Chicago Fire to the red summer of 2019, to the 1968 riots to now the aftermath of pandemic and unrest, our city has faced enormous challenges before. And every challenge has also been hidden within it tremendous opportunity.

As history has shown us, that when we come together, we show up with the belief of what unites us and how powerful our differences are. And the differences is what makes us the amazing city that we are. There is no limit, Chicago, to what we can achieve when we do it together. And we can and we will deliver for every single person in the city of Chicago. I say this today, with a deep belief and conviction that our best and brighter days are ahead of us. We can lead Chicago to a new era. Together, we can build a better, stronger, safer Chicago. We just have to look deep into the soul of Chicago. Can I get a witness? As Reverend Meek said, 'Are you with me? Or am I by myself?' I'm talking about the soul of Chicago. Whether you live in Jefferson Park, or Morgan park, or McKinley Park, or Gage Park or in Humboldt Park, I'm talking about a revival in the city of Chicago, where the soul of Chicago comes alive. A brand new Chicago is in front of us. I can't wait to continue to lead this city towards the future that generations to come will look back and see the soul of Chicago that has made it possible for posterity. Thank you all. My name is Brandon Johnson, and I am the 57th Mayor of the City of Chicago.

NBC Chicago will stream the event in the player above once it begins.

Inauguration day for Chicago's 57th mayor is officially here.

Monday morning, former Cook County Commissioner Brandon Johnson, who defeated Paul Vallas in a tight and at times contentious runoff election earlier this year, will be sworn in as the city's next mayor.

According to Johnson’s inaugural committee, the swearing-in ceremony will begin at 10:30 a.m. at Credit Union 1 Arena, formerly known as the UIC Pavilion.

Last month, Johnson named Rich Guidice, the executive director for Chicago's Office of Emergency Management and Communications, as his incoming chief of staff. He also selected Dr. Cristina Pacione-Zayas, a current state senator serving the 20th district, as his incoming first deputy chief of staff.

“It’s going to take all of us to build a better, stronger, safer Chicago, and I know the people of Chicago will be served well by Rich Guidice as my chief of staff and Dr. Cristina Pacione-Zayas as my deputy chief of staff,” Johnson said in a statement. “Both Rich and Cristina have shown dedication to making Chicago work for all of Chicago, and I know they will lead these positions with a sense of collaboration, compassion, and competence.”

MORE: Mayor-Elect Brandon Johnson Reveals His Transition Team

Ahead of the swearing-in ceremony, Johnson will begin his day meeting with supporters and students in the Austin neighborhood, at Michele Clark Magnet High School. Following that, Johnson will head to the Credit 1 Arena on the city's West Side.

Following the ceremony, Johnson and the First Lady are set to hold a public meet and greet at City Hall and Daley Plaza beginning at 2 p.m.

Members of the public can line up on the south side of the building and be ushered to the 5th floor, a release from Johnson's campaign says.

MORE: Rahm Emanuel Sends Message to Mayor-Elect Brandon Johnson Ahead of Inauguration

Monday evening, Johnson will be joined by supporters, elected officials and community leaders for The People's Ball.

Political experts say Johnson in his first speech as Mayor is expected to lay out plans for his administration, and more clearly state how will wants to achieve them.

Professor Emeritus of Political Science at the University of Illinois Chicago Dick Simpson says that although Johnson is coming into office without a major budget deficit, he still faces financial challenges in order to bring the social service programs he campaigned on to life.

"He's going to have to find the money to do the social services to implement the kind of policies he wants," Simpson said. "And that also includes affordable housing and continuing 'INVEST South/West'" a program started by Lori Lightfoot.

"These are expensive items," Simpson continued.

Another point experts say they will be watching for is how Johnson's campaign as a progressive will translate into action.

“What kind of progressive is he going to be," Political analyst Delmarie Cobb said. "I think a lot of times, people govern a lot differently than they run as candidates. And once they get into that office, they wind up being very sober, about all the things that they face and how they have to go about solving.”

What to Know About Brandon Johnson

Johnson, 47 and a former organizer for the Chicago Teachers Union, was little known when he entered the mayoral race in 2022 and has no experience within city government. But the two-term Cook County commissioner gradually climbed atop a crowded field with the support of the influential union he once worked for, endorsements from Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren and local progressive groups to knock off the incumbent mayor, Lori Lightfoot, and win a tough runoff in April.

He has since tried to appeal to those who didn't back him in the election, stocking his transition team with familiar names from Chicago corporations and philanthropies beside leaders of organized labor and progressive groups. He selected a veteran of Chicago's emergency management agency as his chief of staff and a retired police commander who is popular among rank-and-file officers as interim leader of the Chicago Police Department.

There is little doubt that public safety will remain the city’s top concern and Johnson’s response will shape his relationship with business leaders, other elected officials, his base of progressive activists and residents of every Chicago neighborhood.

“Mayor-elect Johnson’s top priority remains building a better, stronger, safer Chicago where all residents can live and work free from the threat of violence,” spokesman Ronnie Reese said in a statement.

Asiaha Butler, co-founder of the Resident Association of Greater Englewood on the South Side, said she hopes Johnson stays committed to his wholesale approach to crime — and that Chicagoans give it an opportunity to make a difference. Butler said improving safety on her own block took 10 or even 15 years of cooperation with neighbors and other community groups.

“Knowing the despair that our city sometimes faces, it will take a while to take that cloud away,” Butler said. “I wouldn’t put anyone up to that job in one term.”

Chicago has a higher per-capita homicide rate than New York or Los Angeles, but the most recent federal data shows it’s lower than other Midwestern cities, such as St. Louis and Detroit. Still, the number of homicides in Chicago hit a 25-year high in 2021 with 804, according to the Chicago Police Department.

That number decreased last year while other crimes, such as carjackings and robberies, increased.

Chicago business leaders overwhelmingly endorsed Johnson's opponent, former Chicago schools CEO Paul Vallas, typically swayed by his pitch to strengthen policing or Johnson's various tax proposals affecting large companies and the wealthy.

Key corporate groups or individuals have been impressed by the mayor-elect's quick outreach following his victory, said Farzin Parang, executive director of the Building Owners and Managers Association of Chicago.

The trade group represents the commercial office industry that drew 600,000 people downtown daily pre-pandemic but now reports at most 40% of that number. Efforts to draw new tenants are regularly hampered by Chicago's “headline weaknesses” — particularly public safety and real estate taxes, Parang said.

“You really just lose out on a bunch of people that don’t even consider Chicago,” he said. "So I think even small movements towards addressing some of those weaknesses, they have big returns."

The mayoral race was dominated by questions of how to address crime, and Johnson argued that a policing-first approach has failed.

Instead, he proposed increased mental health treatment, hiring more detectives, expanding youth jobs programs and increasing taxes on the sale of properties over $1 million to support more affordable housing. Johnson will also have the final say on naming the city’s next police superintendent, though for the first time an appointed citizen commission will select three finalists.

Andrea Sáenz, president and CEO of the Chicago Community Trust foundation, said she's hopeful that Johnson can bring philanthropies, businesses, police and activists together to create a wide-ranging strategy to prevent violence now and chip away at the conditions that let it flourish.

“It feels like this is a moment — the moment — to have those conversations, for a mayor to bring everybody to the table,” Sáenz said.

Johnson has shown no sign of backing away from his campaign strategies. When violence broke out as teens flooded Chicago's downtown streets in mid-April, he issued a statement asking that people not “demonize youth who have otherwise been starved of opportunities in their own communities.”

Paying for his campaign promises, including the public safety response, hinges on a number of tax increases aimed at high earners and large companies likely to put up a political fight. Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker, the state's most influential Democrat, already declined to back the mayor-elect's proposal to tax financial transactions, which would require sign-off from state lawmakers.

Johnson is also taking on a growing migrant crisis. Chicago is among the U.S. cities already struggling to provide shelter and other help to hundreds arriving from the southern border, with adults and young children sleeping in police station lobbies. The flow of new arrivals is expected to increase now that pandemic-era restrictions on migrant crossings have ended.

Illinois state Rep. Kam Buckner, a Chicago Democrat who also ran for mayor, said Johnson will have to use the same strategy that won him the mayor's office to achieve his many priorities.

“I think what Lori Lightfoot learned is that in Chicago, your defenders can very quickly become your detractors,” Buckner said. “We want our leaders to be authentic, have conversations with us about the future. As long as he continues to do that, I think people will give him an opportunity.”

Analysis and live coverage from NBC Chicago of Brandon Johnson's inauguration ceremony will begin at 10 a.m. Monday on our NBC 5, and on our NBC Chicago streaming channels.

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