Aldermen oppose Chicago mayor’s 'punishing' head tax proposal
[November 08, 2025]
By Jim Talamonti | The Center Square
Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson says he wants corporations to pay more in
taxes, but with some city council members opposed, one alderman says the
mayor could be planning a property tax increase.
In his 2026 budget proposal, Johnson included a $21-per-worker monthly
tax on businesses with 100 employees or more.
The mayor said it is not unreasonable for corporations to pay what he
called “their fair share” to support the city.
“Look, I made a commitment to the people of Chicago that we’re going to
invest in them and that we’re going to challenge those with means to put
more skin in the game, but I also made a commitment that we’re not going
to continue to balance budgets off the backs of working people,” Johnson
said.
During a press briefing at City Hall on Thursday, reporters suggested to
the mayor that he might not have the votes to get a corporate head tax
through the city council.
Johnson said big businesses should have no problem paying a tax for each
worker they employ.
“We’re really talking about, for these largest corporations, less than
1%, about 0.4% of their overall budget, $21 a month. We’re talking about
lunch,” the mayor said.

Alderman Raymond Lopez said 27 or 28 aldermen signed a letter saying
they don’t support the corporate head tax.
“I don’t necessarily believe that it will be in the final iteration of
this budget because, while it may be something that the socialists and
the extreme liberal left want to see, a vast majority of aldermen
recognize that you should not be punishing corporations for hiring
people from our communities,” Lopez told The Center Square.
Lopez said the head tax would punish homegrown companies like Walgreens
and Jewel-Osco that employ tens of thousands of people in the city.
“It’s easy to point at Amazon and the Walmarts of the world, but when
you look at the fact that you have homegrown companies like Walgreens
and Jewel-Osco and others that employ tens of thousands of individuals,
you quite literally are going to penalize them millions of dollars for
existing and operating and hiring in the city of Chicago,” Lopez said.
Lopez said a head tax would not solve the issue of food deserts.
“That’s not how you build growth. That’s not how you uplift economies or
disinvested areas. Sadly, the mayor does not understand that, but
thankfully, many of my colleagues and I do,” Lopez said.
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Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson speaks at the Illinois State Capitol
on Wednesday, April 30, 2025. Photo: Greg Bishop / The Center Square

Lopez suggested that the mayor could propose a property tax increase
to replace the head tax and other tax proposals.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker said he was “absolutely, four-squared opposed” to
a corporate head tax in Chicago because it penalizes employment by
businesses.
“When they decide they want to do something new, I want them to do
that here and not say, ‘Well, yeah, we’ve got our facility here but
the next facility, we’re going to build somewhere else,” Pritzker
told The Economic Club of Chicago last month.
The Tax Foundation’s Katherine Loughead said one unintended
consequence of the tax is that many employers would modify their
business decisions to minimize liability or to avoid the tax
altogether.
“Instead of hiring additional full-time employees who work in
Chicago most or all of the time, some employers would increase
reliance on artificial intelligence, shift more individuals from
full-time to part-time employment (especially in retail and food
services sectors), increase reliance on remote employees who live
outside Chicago (especially in professional services sectors), or a
combination of these alternatives,” Loughead wrote Nov. 5.
The Illinois Chamber of Commerce and the Illinois Retail Merchants
Association (IRMA) also expressed opposition to the corporate head
tax.
“This is just going to exacerbate Chicago’s business development
problems,” Karr told The Center Square last month.
The Chicago City Council Committee on Budget and Government
Operations has budget meetings scheduled next week. The full council
is scheduled to meet on Friday, Nov. 14.
Chicago is facing a budget deficit of $1.15 billion.
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