The Guardian (USA)

Michelle Wu becomes Boston’s first woman and person of color to be elected mayor

- Gloria Oladipo

Michelle Wu has made history after being elected as mayor of Boston, becoming the first woman and person of color elected to the position in almost 200 years.

“From every corner of our city, Boston has spoken. We are ready to meet this moment. We are ready to become a Boston for everyone,” said Wu to her supporters on Tuesday night. “I want to be clear, it wasn’t my vision on the ballot, it was ours, together.”

In a victory for progressiv­es, on an otherwise difficult night for Democrats, Wu defeated the Democratic city council member Annissa Essaibi George, who identifies as a first-generation Arab-Polish American. Essaibi George was also born and raised in Boston, with her family roots being heavily emphasized throughout her campaign.

“I want to offer a great big congratula­tions to Michelle Wu,” said Essaibi George at her election party on Tuesday night. “She’s the first woman and first Asian American elected to be mayor of Boston.”

In addition to Wu’s election as the first Asian American mayor in Boston, Cincinnati also elected Aftab Pureval, the city’s first Asian American mayor.

Wu, who will be succeeding acting mayor Kim Janey, the first woman and Black person to lead Boston, is the child of Taiwanese immigrants. She moved to Boston from Chicago and is a graduate of Harvard University and Harvard Law School.

After launching her political career in 2013 when she was first elected to Boston’s city council, Wu has worked as a progressiv­e, supporting policies like a Green New Deal for Boston and has been endorsed by other highprofil­e Massachuse­tts progressiv­es including Senator Elizabeth Warren and Congresswo­man Ayanna Pressley.

Wu’s mayoral platform also included progressiv­e proposals like free public transit, an initiative that several US cities have been implementi­ng, improving housing in Boston through rent stabilizat­ion and rent control, as well as abolishing the Boston Planning and Developmen­t Agency, with Wu saying it was time to “empower a planning depart to create a master plan for updated zoning and clear, consistent rules”.

The mayoral race between Wu and Essaibi George, two women of color, as well as Wu’s victory suggest major changes for Boston’s political scene. After 199 years of only white, male mayors, Wu’s win signals the changing values and increasing­ly diverse demographi­cs in Boston. Currently, more than half of the city is made up of people of color and white population­s continue to shrink.

 ?? Photograph: Allison Dinner/Getty Images ?? Michelle Wu speaks to supporters Wednesday night in Boston, Massachuse­tts.
Photograph: Allison Dinner/Getty Images Michelle Wu speaks to supporters Wednesday night in Boston, Massachuse­tts.

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