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Mamdani’s woke, white tenant advocate Cea Weaver whined about gentrification in Brooklyn neighborhood she moved into

mamdani’s-woke,-white-tenant-advocate-cea-weaver-whined-about-gentrification-in-brooklyn-neighborhood-she-moved-into
Mamdani’s woke, white tenant advocate Cea Weaver whined about gentrification in Brooklyn neighborhood she moved into

Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s radical-left tenant advocate Cea Weaver once whined about gentrification in her Crown Heights, Brooklyn neighborhood — despite being a middle class white transplant who attended an expensive private liberal arts college.

Weaver, who has come under fire for previously blasting homeownership as a “weapon of white supremacy,” dropped the eyebrow-raising remarks just months before Mamdani tapped her to be his new director of the city Office to Protect Tenants.

“Where I live in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, we saw this cycle where landlords and bankers and policymakers had driven up the value of real estate using speculative financial capital, the housing market crashed, and then the solution to that was just a different private equity firm coming in and owning the buildings,” Weaver, 37, said in a Dissent magazine interview published last winter.

Cea Weaver wiping away tears at a press conference.

Cea Weaver once whined about gentrification in her Crown Heights, Brooklyn neighborhood — despite being a middle class white transplant who attended an expensive private liberal arts college. Robert Mecea

“This cycle fueled waves of gentrification in Crown Heights.”

Weaver, a Rochester transplant, made zero acknowledgement of her own potential contributions to gentrifying the area where she rents.

The housing advocate attended Bryn Mawr College — a private college in Pennsylvania where tuition fetches as much as $88,000 per yearbroo

It wasn’t immediately clear if Weaver — who also went to NYU — attended the private school on a scholarship, or if she paid her own way.

Her mom, meanwhile, owns a Nashville pad worth $1.6 million and is a professor at the prestigious Vanderbilt University, records show.

Details of Weaver’s upbringing were thrown into the spotlight after her appointment as Mamdani’s new woke renters’ rights honcho started ruffling feathers last week.

A spate of old social media posts quickly emerged in which Weaver, a longtime advocate who spent five years organizing the Crown Heights Tenant Union from 2010 through 2015, railed against gentrification.

A white house with a stone entryway, brown roof, and multiple windows, surrounded by green hedges and trees under a partly cloudy sky.

Weaver’s mother owns a Nashville pad worth $1.6 million — and Weaver once called homeownership a “weapon of white supremacy,” Google Maps

Mayor Zohran Mamdani speaks at a press conference, with Cea Weaver by his side, at 85 Clarkson Ave. in Brooklyn.

Cea’s past positions have sparked a wave of outrage from Republicans and Democrats — Eric Adams who ripped her past remarks as “total detachment from reality.” Robert Mecea

“There is no such thing as a ‘good’ gentrifier, only people who are actively working on projects to dismantle white supremacy and capitalism and people who aren’t,” Weaver wrote in a post from July 2018.

“Private property including any kind of ESPECIALLY homeownership is a weapon of white supremacy,” she then spouted in 2019.

Weaver, a proud Democratic Socialists of America member, has long advocated for her far-left stance on private property.

Housing activists in masks hold a

Housing activists gather to protest alleged tenant harassment by a landlord and call for cancellation of rent in the Crown Heights neighborhood on July 31, 2020. Getty Images

The office she will now head up for Mamdani is focused on protecting tenants against unsafe or horrible living conditions.

Still, her past remarks have sparked a wave of outrage from Republicans and Democrats alike, including ex-Mayor Eric Adams who ripped her prior position as a “total detachment from reality.”

Weaver, for her part, defended her record in light of the backlash — but acknowledged her regret over some of her previous remarks.

“I don’t think I’m out of my mind,” she said in a NY1 interview on Tuesday.

“You know, I think that some of some of those things are certainly not how I would, how I would say things today, and are and are regretful. But, you know, I do think my sort of decades of experience fighting for more affordable housing sort of stands on its own.”

Mamdani, too, stood by his controversial pick, telling reporters, “We made the decision to have Cea Weaver serve as our executive director for the mayor’s office to protect tenants.”

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