In the Boston mayoral election that has just come to an end, 36-year-old Chinese female congressman Wu Mi was elected, becoming the first female mayor, the first mayor of color, the Asian mayor, and the Chinese mayor in the history of the capital of Massachusetts!

Today, Chinese women have created history!

In the Boston mayoral election that just came to an end, 36-year-old Chinese female congressman Wu Mi (Michelle Wu) was elected, becoming the first female mayor, the first mayor of color in the history of the capital of Massachusetts , the first mayor of color, the Asian mayor, and the Chinese mayor! After winning the election, Wu Mi's joy was unspeakable and she dressed in red and delivered a victory speech to her supporters.

In her speech, she mentioned her child:

"One day my son asked me, can a boy be the mayor of Boston ?"

When it comes to family, Wu Mi smiled as gentle as all Chinese who value family, but her answer was full of sonorous and powerful belonging to women:

"They used to be, and they will, but not tonight. Because today, Boston chose your mom."

INSIGHT Horizon ,

first female mayor in Boston! On November 2, Wu Mi, a Chinese-American woman, was elected mayor of Boston, setting a city's history. The mayor of Boston has been a white male for more than 200 years. Wu Mi expressed his speech on winning the election, saying: "My son asked me one night if a boy can be elected mayor of Boston. They have always been able to do so, and may also be elected in the future, but not tonight." The media said that his victory was a double victory for women and Asians, breaking a national barrier in the United States. Let’s take a look at Wu Mi’s victory speech with your homepage~ #36-year-old Chinese woman was elected Mayor of Boston

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In 1983, Wu Mi’s parents immigrated from Taiwan Province, China to Chicago, USA.

However, parents who successfully immigrated as engineers are not very good at English, so Wu Mi, born in the United States, has to speak English to her friends at school, and at the same time, she has to go home and speak Chinese to her parents.

When in public, Wu Mi became a "temporary translator" of her parents, helping them interpret and translate.

And her parents' expectations for her are almost the same as all Chinese families: study hard, find a good job, and make money to support the family.

Under such strict "Chinese family education", Wu Mi has been "other people's children" since childhood.

In 2003, Wu Mi, who was in the twelfth grade, won the "U.S. Presidential Scholarship" with his outstanding results, and was elected chairman of the "American High School Students Alliance" for his outstanding leadership. After

, she received an offer from the world's top university - . Harvard University's economics major.

At the high school graduation ceremony, "Quick Harvard freshman" Wu Mi gave a graduation speech as an outstanding student representative.

At that time, Wu Mi may not have expected that the podium that belonged to her could be paved from the high school auditorium to Boston City Hall. After graduating from

, she came to Boston from Chicago and started her college career with anticipation.

However, during college, fate played a huge joke with her.

Her parents divorced, and her father and her adult younger brother left them, leaving only her, her mother, and two unadulterated sisters to depend on each other.

At first, her mother was able to take care of two sisters, but as time went by, Wu Mi was told by her sisters that her mother's mental state was becoming more and more unstable.

Once, she even ran away from home on a rainy night. Wu Mi, who was at home, chased her out and saw her mother standing by the roadside with an umbrella in one hand and a suitcase in the other, insisting that a driver would come to pick her up at a secret meeting.

Seeing Wu Mi coming in a hurry, she spoke coldly: "You are no longer my daughter, and I am not your mother."

After diagnosis, Wu's mother suffered from delayed schizophrenia.

During that time, Wu's mother was in the hallucination of being monitored for a long time. She dared not go out, did not dare to eat or sleep. She even called 911 in the middle of the night and called the police and said that she heard someone calling for help...

In order to support the entire family, 23-year-old Wu Mi had to give up working in a wealthy consulting company in Boston and return to Chicago to start from scratch.

In order to make your family live a better life, Wu Mi almost tried his best. She ran around the Taxation and Food and Health Bureau and tried to run a tea restaurant alone. She walked over an hour a week to Barnes and Noble to tutor students so she could earn some pocket money.

At the same time, she also had to take on the custody of her two sisters, participated in the city-wide parent committee, and participated in the sister's parent meeting with various weird eyes, patiently explained to the school that she was just an older sister, not a mother.

Until 2009, her mother's illness gradually stabilized, and Wu Mi no longer needed to take care of her family wholeheartedly. She finally had the opportunity to think of her studies - she returned to the Harvard campus again.

Because while taking care of her family, she was rushing around the family, hospitals and government departments, she felt that there were too many shortcomings in public services, so this time, she chose to study for Harvard Law Ph.D. .


In 2012, Wu Mi, who graduated from Harvard University's Ph.D. in law, chose the most difficult path - to enter politics.

She first went to the Boston City Council for an internship, and then in 2013, when she was only 28 years old, she began to try to run for Boston City Council.

Almost everyone told her about this decision: You can't.

Because She is a person of color, Chinese, female, and is too young, and is not a native Bostonian , which is obviously incompatible with the political world dominated by white men.

But this did not scare Wu Mi.

In order to promote her campaign philosophy, she went door to door to voters' houses and knocked on the door, explaining her political promises over and over again: she will promote food truck in Boston, allow customers to bring their own drinks at small restaurants...Everything starts from the perspective of working class, helping the city of Boston become the home of every citizen.

There will always be rewards for your efforts.

In 2013, Wu Mi was elected with the second highest vote among the eight candidates for non-district city council members, and was successfully re-elected three times in 2015, 2017 and 2019.

Until now, she has created enough history:

Boston's first Chinese female city councillor, the first woman of color to serve as speaker in the United States, and the third female speaker in the 106-year history of the city council.

In 2020, Wu Mi, who already had enough political experience, set a bigger challenge for her political path -

She decided to compete for the mayor of Boston.

You should know that in the past 199 years, all those who can sit in this position were white men.

Not to mention Chinese women, even white women have never served as mayor.

Wu Mi and his campaign team implemented a systematic and detailed political program, committed to building Boston, which was originally surrounded by universities, into a greener, livable, more comfortable, convenient and more inclusive city.

Historical Boston has established the first public school in the United States, the first park, and the first subway rail transit, but over time, the once advanced infrastructure has aging.

And she wants to rejuvenate this slightly old city:

Ensure that every child of the right age can get the corresponding education, strictly control rent increases, provide free public transportation, strengthen social assistance to the homeless, mentally ill, and drug addicted patients...

All this is difficult, but Wu Mi feels that this is not just her own political concept, but it should be from the whole of Boston, because she believes:

"In Boston, that anything is possible when we do it "

Perhaps, in the eyes of many people, the "American Dream" that once inspired countless people has slowly broken down, and Boston, which is full of tall buildings, is no longer glamorous, but Wu Mi feels that as a second-generation immigrant, everything he has done for the United States and for Boston is worth it.

After all, her father came to the United States for a better life and a better opportunity, so she should also work hard to correct the current shortcomings of the United States and let the United States keep its promise of the "American Dream".

On the evening of October 2, US time, the election results were announced:

Wu Mi defeated his competitor - Annissa George, who grew up in this city, became the first Chinese female mayor in Boston!

What is more worth mentioning is that she is only 36 years old this year.

Her victory was the victory of Chinese, and it also broke the barriers of women that had been lying across the United States for many years.


We all know that people’s views on Chinese women for a long time have been: quiet, obedient, and gentle.

In American politics, white men still control most of this voice. Even if women's voice is gradually increasing, there are still few Chinese women.

But this time, Boston made history.

As a city with more than 100 universities, perhaps every international student has a university located in Boston on the list of dream schools.

And Boston has always attracted people of all races, classes and genders with a unique academic and elite atmosphere.

complement each other, and the people who come to Boston also make the city more inclusive and diverse.

As Wu Mi, a second-generation immigrant, said in his victory speech:

We are already to become a Boston for everyone.

We’re ready to welcome all who call our city home.

She was wearing a red lipstick and stood on the victory-election podium and laughed happily, which severely shattered the American society's stereotype of Chinese and women :

Chinese are restrained and hard-working, Only good at learning; Chinese women should take care of their husbands and children at home. Even if they go out to work, they are only suitable for being clerks, secretaries, waiters, nurses, teachers...

On Wu Mi, it shines with more characteristics of Chinese and women:

optimistic, cheerful, dare to take responsibility, pay attention to career, have people's livelihood, love challenges, and never admit defeat!

Over the years, "female power" has frequently appeared in the public eye.

In China, we learned about the mother of ten thousand infants Lin Qiaozhi , saved millions of lives Tu Youyou , free lawsuits for women who were raped by domestic violence Guo Jianmei , sending thousands of girls from mountain villages to college Zhang Guimei ...

In foreign countries, the figures of Chinese women are also seen on the top stages in various fields.

In the historical community, there are Zhang Chunru who exposed the atrocities of the Japanese invasion of China; in the field of science and technology engineering and business circles, there are AMDbillion-long-term and creating wealth of hundreds of millions of yuan; In the art circle, there are Liu Yuling ...

And today, in Boston political circle, Wu Mi lets us see again that the characteristics of Chinese women are not only quiet, obedient, and gentle, but also tenacity, ambition, and responsibility .

Everyone of them is telling us with actions-

Every woman, no matter what race, origin, and background, has endless possibilities!