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Wu says no thanks to 'bromance' with Trump after New York's Mamdani visits White House

Boston Mayor Michelle Wu says if asked, she would not accept an invitation to the White House, as New York City’s mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani did.
Mamdani's high-profile meeting with President Donald Trump came after months of the two men trading barbs. New York City's newly elected mayor has described Trump as a “fascist.”
Trump, meanwhile, has called Mamdani a “communist,” and suggested he be deported. Mamdani was born in Uganda before his family moved to the U.S. when he was 7 years old. He became a U.S. citizen in 2018.
But together in Washington last week, both posed for photos and were cordial in their comments after meeting. Trump said he’d be “cheering” for the mayor-elect.
Mamdani told CNN they discussed housing, immigration, and the cost of living in New York City.
“All I hoped to do in that conversation was to establish a working relationship,” Mamdani told CNN on Sunday, “and to have a productive meeting that focused on the work itself, focused on the people that many of the two of us know, and people across these five boroughs that we never met.”
Mamdani has called Wu the most effective Democrat in America. But on Monday, in response to reporters, Wu said she's "not interested in a bromance with the federal regime."
While every leader needs to decide how to handle this political moment, Wu said that, for her, “flattery is not the way.”
Her administration has spent months fighting Trump on immigration enforcement, federal funding cuts, allegations of antisemitism and more. In addition, Wu is fighting a Department of Justice lawsuit alleging the city's limits on police cooperation with ICE violates federal law.
Wu said she’d only consider changing her mind about a meeting on the condition of major change.
“Would I accept an invitation if it came with a promise to stop snatching residents illegally off the streets, stop prosecuting his political enemies, stop cutting lifesaving research and funding? Then sure,” she said. “I would be open to a conversation at that point.”
This article was originally published on November 24, 2025.
