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Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson has responded to pressure from City Council members and his constituents by dropping his effort to raise property taxes as a strategy for covering the city’s $1 billion deficit.

WTTW reported Johnson informed City Council members on Sunday that newly discovered “operational efficiencies” coupled with spending cuts has resulted in the withdrawal of his proposed $68.5 million property tax hike. Johnson abruptly cancelled a City Council vote on his budget proposal on Friday after he failed to secure the needed votes to pass his measure.

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Johnson, who campaigned on the promise not to raise property taxes, originally sought to enact a $300 million property tax. Following a harsh backlash, cut his proposal in half but still failed to garner support. Johnson’s proposed $68.5 million increase was narrowly approved last Tuesday by two committees of the City Council, but Johnson reportedly never had more than 19 council members backing his budget – he needed 26 votes for passage.

The mayor’s budget will retain his proposals for a $128 million tax increase from cloud computing services, $11 million from increased parking garage taxes, and higher taxes on rideshare services, grocery bags, and streaming platforms.

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Photo courtesy of Mayor Johnson’s Facebook page

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