WATCH: Pritzker ‘absolutely, foursquare opposed’ to Chicago mayor’s head tax
(The Center Square) – The governor of Illinois says he is against the Chicago mayor’s plan to impose a head tax on employers.
Mayor Brandon Johnson’s 2026 budget proposal includes a monthly tax of $21 per employee on businesses with 100 workers or more.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker said he is “absolutely, foursquare opposed” to a head tax for Chicago.
“It penalizes the very thing that we want, which is, we want more employment in the city of Chicago,” Pritzker said.
The governor spoke Tuesday at an event hosted by The Economic Club of Chicago, where Pritzker is a longtime member and previously served on the club’s board.
Pritzker said he did not know enough details to offer comment on Johnson’s proposed cloud computing tax, but he spoke firmly in opposition to the head tax.
“It makes it very hard to attract companies outside of Chicago to come into Chicago and harder for companies that are in Chicago to stay,” Pritzker said.
Chicago is facing a budget deficit of $1.15 billion. Pritzker said there are three knobs you can turn to balance a budget.
“One of them is you can cut expenditures. Another one is you can raise taxes, raise revenues that way. The third one, and this is the one I prefer, is grow the economy, because your revenues increase if you grow the economy. It helps you pay for the things you think really matter,” the governor said.
The Illinois Policy Institute says Pritzker has enacted over 50 tax hikes since he took office in 2019.
Latest News Stories
Report details sexual abuse, falsified grant applications at Chicago Public Schools
Signature shortfalls knock multiple candidates off Illinois ballot
WATCH: Vance addresses Minneapolis shooting, questions leftwing influence
U.S. House clears $180B funding bills to avoid Jan. 30 shutdown
IL state lawmaker pushes back as analysis finds municipalities lost $10.9B
Trump invites Colombian president to White House
WATCH: Pritzker says receipts shown ‘all the time’ as audits show weaknesses
Pro life org to Congress: Hyde Amendment is non-negotiable
Florida joins redistricting push, schedules special session
Senate takes first vote to limit military action in Venezuela
Dem officials urge Trump EPA to keep Biden’s PFAS rules
Protests continue Thursday in Minneapolis; schools canceled