CHICAGO – Voters chose former teacher Brandon Johnson to replace Lori Lightfoot to lead the nation’s third-largest city, culminating the city’s mayoral election season that has centered on the increase in crime during the COVID-19 pandemic and high property taxes. 

Tuesday’s highly anticipated runoff election was a tight race between Paul Vallas, a former public schools executive backed by the city’s police union, and Johnson, a union organizer endorsed by the teachers union which become highly influential in city politics.

Johnson will succeed Lightfoot to be the city’s mayor after emerging as a top candidate after none of the nine candidates received a majority of the vote in the late February election.

Vallas, 69, and Johnson, 47, both with deep roots in the Democratic Party, have pitted against one another with their opposing views on issues including crime, taxes, schools and investment in policing.

They’ve spent the past five weeks making their final appeals to Chicagoans.

Johnson has called for expanding social programs and new taxes. The former teacher says the city should focus on mental health treatment, affordable housing for all and jobs for youth, instead of further investing in policing and incarceration.

He has also proposed a plan he says will raise $800 million by taxing “ultrarich” individuals and businesses. Johnson’s plan includes a per-employee “head tax” on employers and an additional tax on hotel room stays.

Here’s what to know.

Vallas concedes to Johnson

Johnson’s victory was a momentous win for progressive organizations such as the teachers union. His win is the highest office of any active teachers union member in recent history, leaders say.