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Boston mayor doesn’t want Trump ‘bromance’ after Zohran Mamdani’s chummy White House visit

boston-mayor-doesn’t-want-trump-‘bromance’-after-zohran-mamdani’s-chummy-white-house-visit
Boston mayor doesn’t want Trump ‘bromance’ after Zohran Mamdani’s chummy White House visit

Boston Mayor Michelle Wu said she isn’t “interested in a bromance with the federal regime” days after New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani’s chummy visit with President Trump.

The progressive Democrat — whose policies Mamdani has praised — told local news outlets Monday she wasn’t looking to replicate Mamdani and President Trump surprisingly buddy-buddy tone in a White House meeting Friday.

“From my point of view, flattery is not the way,” Wu said at a Thanksgiving drive when asked if she’d accept a similar invitation, according to the Boston Herald.

Michelle Wu at a podium in front of the Boston city flag and an American flag.
Michelle Wu doesn’t want to be friendly with President Trump. Boston Globe via Getty Images

“Boston residents want us to stand strong on our values and to get things done and to keep moving forward, and that’s what we’re going to continue to do.”

Wu, whose national profile has grown since she took office in 2021, has been a vocal critic of the Trump administration and slammed his crackdown on illegal immigration.

Mamdani, who shares similar policy positions with Wu, slammed Trump as a “fascist” during his mayoral campaign, but the pair were complimentary and cordial during the mayor-elect’s visit to the Oval Office.

The Queens democratic socialist, 34, carefully avoided praising Trump, but stressed the two talked about how they can both help New Yorkers.

When reporters asked Mamdani about previous insults the state lawmaker leveled against Trump, the president even ran interference for him.

Wu, 40, said she would only meet with Trump if the federal government met various conditions.

President Trump met with Mamdani on Friday.
President Trump met with Mamdani on Friday. AFP via Getty Images

“If it came with a promise to stop snatching residents illegally off the streets, stop prosecuting his political enemies, stop cutting life saving research and funding?” she said, per the Boston Globe.

“Sure, I would be open to a conversation at that point.”

But she also made clear every city and its leaders have a different calculus when dealing with the White House.

“Every community has their unique and individual contexts, and every city leader, every university, every law firm, has to make their own decisions about how they handle this moment,” Wu said, according to reports.

“On my part, I am fighting as hard as I possibly can to stop the actions of a federal government that seems intent on attacking its own people.”

When reached for comment about Wu’s remarks, Mamdani’s transition campaign referred The Post to comments the incoming Hizzoner made on “Meet the Press.”

“I think working for the people of New York City demands that you work with everyone and anyone, and that you always look to find those areas of agreement while not overlooking the places of disagreement,” he said on the Sunday morning show.

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