Boston Herald

AG REJECTS COMPLAINTS OVER ‘ELECTEDS OF COLOR’ PARTY

Mayor Wu has been under fire for the holiday bash

- By Gayla Cawley gcawley@bostonhera­ld.com

The AG’s office has fielded four complaints about Mayor Michelle Wu’s highly criticized “electeds of color” holiday party — a bash that included an email uninviting white city councilors.

The Dec. 13 party, however, did not appear to violate the public accommodat­ion law “since it was not open to the public,” state Attorney General Andrea Campbell’s office told the Herald in an email.

Three of the complaints were from out of state and the other did not contain an address, the AG’s office added. A spokespers­on would not confirm or deny if any investigat­ion was launched as a result of the complaints.

Under Massachuse­tts law, the AG enforces the public accommodat­ion law, which “prohibits discrimina­tion in places of public accommodat­ion” based on race, color, religion, national origin, sex, gender identity, sexual orientatio­n, deafness, blindness, or any physical or mental disability, or ancestry.

Campbell is a former city councilor. Her office did not elaborate on why Wu’s party was not in violation. The Parkman House is listed as the mayor’s official reception hall.

The Rev. Eugene Rivers III, a Dorchester pastor and leading Black voice in the city, disagrees — adding the party was “clumsy politics, generation­al politics,” that does little to heal any lingering racial tensions.

“Number one. Had any white politician­s said they were having some St. Patty’s Day event and it was only for the Irish, that would have been called racist by every politician of color in the city council and possibly in the state,” Rivers said.

“You can’t have two sets of moral political books,” he added. “It’s simply hypocritic­al. And there’s just no reason for that.”

Rivers said if Wu was attempting to build her “street cred,” it should have not come at the “expense of white people.”

The Parkman party, first reported by the Herald, caught internatio­nal attention after a Wu administra­tion official, on behalf of the mayor, mistakenly sent all Boston city councilors an email inviting them to a holiday party that was meant exclusivel­y for “electeds of color,” prompting an apology and mixed reactions.

Fifteen minutes after the mayor’s director of City Council relations sent out the email, inviting each councilor and a guest, the employee sent a follow-up email to councilors, apologizin­g for the prior email, which was apparently only meant for those who were invited.

The party was quickly criticized by some for being “divisive,” while others, including the mayor, defended the event for creating space for specific groups in city government.

Wu, who went ahead with the “electeds of color” party, did hold another one a day later for everyone where the attendance has come under question.

City Councilor Erin Murphy, who is white and was not invited to the first party, took issue with the mayor’s version of events.

“I don’t care who leaked the email invite,” Murphy told the Herald last week. “It was sent to over 40 people so it could have been anyone. In a world that seems increasing­ly intolerabl­e and unacceptin­g, I pray daily that we find a common ground, a path to togetherne­ss. I hope that those of us in power find ways to bring people closer, not further apart.”

Wu’s party also hit as a cultural war seethes across the river at Harvard University where the college is under federal investigat­ion for antisemiti­sm on campus following the Oct. 7 Hamas terror attack on Israel.

 ?? CHRIS CHRISTO — BOSTON HERALD ?? Mayor Michelle Wu speaks with the media at the door to the Parkman House on Beacon Street as state Rep. Russell Holmes looks on just before the Dec. 13 party for “electeds of color.”
CHRIS CHRISTO — BOSTON HERALD Mayor Michelle Wu speaks with the media at the door to the Parkman House on Beacon Street as state Rep. Russell Holmes looks on just before the Dec. 13 party for “electeds of color.”
 ?? @WUTRAIN INSTAGRAM PHOTO ?? The mayor’s “Electeds of Color” party at the Parkman House earlier this month.
@WUTRAIN INSTAGRAM PHOTO The mayor’s “Electeds of Color” party at the Parkman House earlier this month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States