U.S. Department of Justice opening civil rights investigation into Chicago mayor

The U.S. Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division says it’s opened an investigation into Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson’s hiring.
Why it matters: The letter outlines what the Trump administration and some MAGA activists have identified as race-based hiring that they say discriminates against white candidates.
  • The DOJ says the investigation is to determine whether Johnson has violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which bans hiring based on race.
Driving the news: The letter from DOJ Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon references remarks Johnson made Sunday at a church on Chicago’s South Side.
What they’re saying: “In your remarks made yesterday at the Apostolic Church of God in Woodlawn, you‘highlight[ed] the number of Black officials in [your] administration,'” the letter to Johnson says.
  • “You then went on to list each of these individuals, emphasizing their race,” the letter continues, with a list of the various positions in the Johnson administration held by Black people.
  • “If these kind of hiring decisions are being made for top-level positions in your administration, then it begs the question whether such decisions are also being made for lower-level positions,” the letter says.
Zoom in: Some of the positions Johnson highlighted included two deputy mayors, positions held by Black women, and the city’s chief operations officer, who is a Black man.
  • Johnson made the comments during a nearly 50-minute interview Sunday with Bishop Byron Brazier as part of his media blitz touting his accomplishments at the midpoint of his tenure.
  • “It is the most diverse administration in the history of Chicago,” Johnson said.
State of play: The mayor’s office said in a statement Monday afternoon that Johnson “is proud to have the most diverse administration in the history of our city….[reflecting] the diversity and values of Chicago.”
  • The office cited 2025 data indicating that the mayor’s staff is 34% Black, 30% white, 24% Latino and 7% Asian, roughly matching the city’s demographics.
The intrigue: When Axios asked how the DOJ knew about the mayor’s comments, the department pointed to a footnote in the letter that references an article titled: “‘Could he be more racist?’: Chicago mayor Brandon Johnson slammed for ‘only hiring black people’ comment in viral speech” with a broken link to MSN.com.