The Boston Globe

Philadelph­ia swears in first woman mayor

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Cherelle Parker, who first got involved in politics as a teenager, publicly swore her oath of office on Tuesday as Philadelph­ia’s 100th mayor, becoming the first woman to do so.

The 51-year-old Democrat with years of political experience took the helm of the nation’s sixth-largest city in a ceremony at the historic Met in Philadelph­ia.

She succeeds term-limited Democratic Mayor Jim Kenney.

“By every statistic imaginable, I am not supposed to be standing here today,” Parker told supporters gathered for her roughly hourlong address. “I, Cherelle Parker, was a child who most people thought would never succeed. And they almost did have me thinking the same thing.”

Surrounded by family, friends, former mayors, and current US and state legislator­s and officials, Parker echoed her campaign promise: to make Philadelph­ia the “safest, cleanest, greenest big city in the nation that will provide access to economic opportunit­y for all.”

Parker had emerged early in the crowded mayoral race as the only leading Black candidate and soared to a victory in November’s election in the heavily Democratic city. Parker’s moderate message resonated with voters who are increasing­ly worried about public safety as well as quality-of-life issues, from faulty streetligh­ts to potholes to trash collection. She also promised a well-trained police force that is engaged with the community along with mental health and behavioral support.

Parker served for 10 years as a state representa­tive before her election to the City Council in 2015.

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