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Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson meets with Biden to ask for $5 billion in migrant funding

Mayor Brandon Johnson speaks during a media availability following Chicago City Council meeting at City Hall on Wednesday, Nov. 1, 2023. (Trent Sprague/Chicago Tribune/TNS)
November 03, 2023

Mayor Brandon Johnson visited the White House Thursday morning to sound the alarm on Chicago’s migrant crisis, in his first in-person meeting with President Joe Biden centered on the burgeoning asylum-seeker issue.

Johnson’s spokesman Ronnie Reese confirmed the mayor sat down with Biden and his chief of staff Jeff Zients, White House senior adviser Tom Perez and other officials with the Department of Homeland Security to discuss Chicago’s need for additional federal relief.

Though the mayor has met with Biden before, this was the first session specifically addressing the more than 20,000 migrants who have come to the city in the past 14 months.

Biden did not promise anything in response to Johnson’s ask for at least $5 billion in additional aid for migrants, but “these were very productive and positive conversations,” Reese said. The president is attempting to push a supplemental $1.4 billion package for migrant shelters and services through Congress, but Illinois leaders have said much more is direly needed.

“From day one, I’ve said that the federal government has to do more,” Johnson said Wednesday in a news conference where he confirmed the trip. “Look, Chicago is leaning in. We have borne the brunt of the responsibility here. That’s not an equitable distribution of how government should cooperate. … We are a model example for the rest of the world. And we’ll take that message to DC.”

In addition to migrant support, the mayor asked Biden Thursday for more resources to help gun violence victims, Reese said.

Johnson’s trip followed a recent joint letter with the mayors of Denver, Houston, Los Angeles and New York urging the president to meet with them and secure more funding for their rapidly growing migrant populations. It was not clear how many of Johnson’s mayoral counterparts were there for the Thursday meeting with the president.

For months, Johnson has sought to dial up the urgency in his public messaging to the White House regarding the migrants while still showing a unified front with the leader of the Democratic Party. That has at times been a delicate dance, especially as Chicago was chosen as the location of the 2024 Democratic National Convention.

This summer, Johnson warned federal officials that Chicago could not go on with the pace of new arrivals without more funding, though his surrogates have taken on a more critical tone with what they say is Biden’s failure to address the humanitarian crisis.

The president, seeking reelection next year, has taken some of his sharpest intraparty blows on the topic of immigration, as scores of migrants struggle to get by without work permits in Democratic cities.

In Chicago, that has taken on the form of more than 3,300 migrants sleeping on the floors of police stations and airports. Johnson has vowed to get them out and into heated base camps by winter, but the frosty start to the week has left many advocates worried that time is running out.

Later Thursday, Johnson met with U.S. Reps. Hakeem Jeffries, Democratic House minority leader, and Jim Clyburn, assistant Democratic leader, as well as with the Illinois congressional delegation and a group of senators including Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth.

Although Johnson and Illinois congressmen officially asked for $5 billion in more migrant relief from Washington, some House members such as U.S. Rep. Delia Ramirez, D-Chicago, are calling for $10 billion, her spokesman confirmed.

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© 2023 Chicago Tribune

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