By birth and the grace of God, I am a New Yorker. Spending most of my adult life in Boston did not make me a Bostonian.
Readers applaud Boston Mayor Michelle Wu's testimony before Congress regarding the issue of "sanctuary cities." ...
Boston Mayor Michelle Wu had a great Saturday: her bid for a second term was endorsed by five Service Employees International Union groups, representing 135,000 Massachusetts workers.
Globe columnist Shirley Leung talks to political reporter Jim Puzzanghera about Boston Mayor Michelle Wu's appearance at a Congressional hearing on so-called "sanctuary cities." ...
Welcome back to The Weekly Wrap, our Friday roundup of stories that explain the problems oppressing people in cities and ...
NewsCenter 5 political reporter Sharman Sacchetti, who was in the room as Wu's testimony in congress on "sanctuary cities" unfolded, sat down for a Q&A with NewsCenter 5's Jessica Brown and Ben ...
Johnson testified alongside Boston Mayor Michelle Wu, Denver Mayor Mike Johnston and New York City Mayor Eric Adams. All four ...
Boston Mayor Michelle Wu racked up a six-figure bill with a high-powered law firm in preparation for Wednesday’s intense ...
Boston Mayor Michelle Wu racked up a six-figure bill with a high-powered law firm in preparation for Wednesday’s intense congressional hearing on sanctuary cities in Washington, D.C.
Democratic Mayors Michelle Wu and Brandon Johnson could not explicitly tell Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer ...
Wu emerged from the marathon hearing largely unscathed, and managed to land a few hits in the face of aggressive questioning.
Boston Mayor Michelle Wu appeared before a congressional committee alongside mayors from New York, Chicago and Denver on Wednesday.