The crisis in Chicago this past week revealed a deeper failure in leadership—when Mayor Brandon Johnson responded with indignation instead of clarity, it exposed a broader problem in political accountability.
The reporter raised a straightforward, factual concern: Why was a Christmas market being treated as a greater public-safety threat than teenagers running through downtown, shooting at people—violence that had just taken a child’s life and injured eight others? Instead of acknowledging the gravity of the moment, the mayor lashed out. He called the question “disgusting and racist,” told Chicagoans to “avoid” the reporter, and then launched into a self-promotional speech about how many employees he hires and how he runs “the biggest corporation in Chicago.” A child was dead. Families were traumatized. And the city’s chief executive chose ego over accountability.
This isn’t just about Chicago; it reflects a national crisis where questioning power is seen as betrayal, and accountability is replaced with defensiveness across Black-led cities.
Crime rates in Chicago remain high compared to most majority-Black cities, with over 1,500 aggravated assaults in a month, yet many Black politicians avoid addressing these facts directly.
And this is where the political dishonesty becomes impossible to ignore. The data is not ambiguous. Some analyses place the share of Black-on-Black homicides between 80 and 90 percent of Black victims being killed by other Black people. Historically, when race is known, around 91 percent of Black homicide victims in single-victim, single-offender cases were killed by Black offenders. These statistics have persisted for decades. Yet when you ask many Black politicians about violence in their own cities, they don’t talk about failed policy decisions, decades of mismanagement, or the leadership vacuum they helped create. They don’t address the conditions they were elected to fix. Instead, they blame racism. They blame Trump. They blame “the white man.” They blame anyone except themselves and the policies in their cities that have failed to keep their own people safe.
This is where the hypocrisy of Black politics becomes undeniable. When violence comes from within our own communities, leaders attack the messenger instead of the problem. They dismiss questions as racist, or if it’s a Black female elected, she will say it’s sexist even when those questions come from Black residents and Black journalists. I have lived this personally. I’ve been told that by raising concerns about political corruption or the high levels of crime and violence in a Black city, “I’m making the city look bad.” Accountability is treated as betrayal. Criticism is treated as an assault on identity. It is easier for them to moralize than to manage, easier to posture than to perform, easier to register indignation than to deliver results.
Mount Vernon, New York, offers one of the clearest examples of how this political culture corrodes Black cities over time. The town has been trapped in a cycle of financial mismanagement, missing funds, broken audits, neglected infrastructure, understaffed police, and persistent violence. Residents see the decline daily. Yet when anyone raises these issues—journalists, activists, taxpayers—the leadership responds with the same defensiveness Chicago saw: blame the critic, deny the problem, and protect the political brand at all costs.
When you compare major Black cities like Memphis, St. Louis, Baltimore, New Orleans, Detroit, and Mount Vernon, one truth becomes unavoidable: crime is not just a cultural issue — it is the direct outcome of policy failure. These cities share the same patterns of high violence, collapsing infrastructure, weak economic development in Black neighborhoods, failing schools, and broken workforce pipelines. Add to that the chronic budget downfalls placed squarely on the backs of Black taxpayers, who pay more and receive less. If the policies were working, the outcomes would reflect it. Instead, the same political class that has governed these cities for decades responds to every concern with the same script: blame racism, blame Republicans, blame anything except their own leadership — even though in many of these cities there are barely any Republicans in elected office at all. It is not a coincidence. It is a pattern and practice of the usual Black politics of deflection, in which accountability is avoided and failure is recycled year after year. Mount Vernon stands as a perfect example: years of mismanagement, broken audits, and neighborhood neglect have produced predictable results that no amount of political spin can hide.
Black communities don’t need more speeches, cultural posturing, or emotional deflection — they need outcome-based governance. That means policies that actually create skilled workers, attract investment into Black neighborhoods, restore vocational and trade programs, rebuild competent city agencies, and produce measurable improvements in safety, education, and opportunity. Cities with strong schools, functioning institutions, and economic mobility have lower crime regardless of race; cities with failing schools, mismanaged budgets, and no path to opportunity have high crime regardless of race. The outcomes don’t lie. Until Black political leadership — from Chicago to Mount Vernon — abandons the politics of blame and embraces policies that deliver real results, Black taxpayers will continue carrying the cost of decisions that have failed them for decades.
This is not a Chicago problem. It is a national problem. From Chicago to Mount Vernon, from Baltimore to St. Louis, too many Black-led cities are governed by leaders who cannot separate public duty from personal pride. Emotion becomes a shield. Accountability becomes the enemy. And the communities that need honest leadership the most are left with excuses, deflection, and decline.
Mayor Johnson didn’t just dodge a tricky question. He exposed the operating system of a political culture that has failed Black America for decades. In this culture, leadership is measured by rhetoric rather than results, transparency is treated as a threat, and protecting the office becomes more important than protecting the people.
But the truth is unavoidable: when leaders defend themselves instead of protecting the public, the people lose every time.
If Black communities are serious about safety and progress, we must demand leaders who face questions honestly and prioritize our well-being over image.
Instead, we got political theatrics.
And until that changes—not just in Chicago but across the nation—our communities will continue to pay the price for leaders who refuse to face the truth.














