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Wu shows commanding lead in mayoral preliminary

Nicole Abrams and Yawu Miller
Wu shows commanding lead in mayoral preliminary
Mayor Michelle Wu speaks to reporters outside the Lila Frederick School on Columbia Road in Dorchester Tuesday. PHOTO: YAWU MILLER

In a lopsided victory that underscores the power of incumbency in Boston, Mayor Michelle Wu bested challenger Josh Kraft with a 48-point lead, winning 71% of the preliminary vote in unofficial results posted by the city’s Election Department.

Challenger Josh Kraft won just 21,324 of the more than 92,000 votes cast in Tuesday’s preliminary while Wu secured 66,398 votes, winning in each of the city’s 22 Wards. Domingos Darosa finished a distant third place with just 2,409 votes. Robert Cappucci finished with 2,074 votes.

During her speech, Wu highlighted the magnitude of her campaign.

“Over the last five months of this campaign, we held nearly 500 events to connect to our communities, knocked on 80,000 doors across every neighborhood, made 200,000 calls and won by a margin money can’t buy.”

Wu’s volunteers — including city workers, union members and members of progressive community-based organizations — covered nearly all 275 of the city’s polling places. Turnout was down from the 2021 mayoral preliminary, where four candidates garnered more than 20,000 votes with a total of 108,731 ballots cast.

Ana Gonzalez, an office cleaner and 32BJ labor union member, said at Wu’s event that her union has supported the mayor since the beginning of her campaign because of her help in getting them a better contract in September 2023.

“I decided to be here today, and I’ve been the whole day making phone calls to make sure that Michelle would win the re-election, because we are in a difficult time, and we are clear that we need Michelle Wu still to be in office,” said Gonzalez.

Vaughn Goodwin, an organizer with the 1199 SEIU United Healthcare Workers Eastern Massachusetts labor union, said that he supports Mayor Wu for a variety of reasons.

“She supports affordable housing, she supports Boston being open and welcoming to all, she supports public transportation being accessible, and she’s a mother who takes care of her mother,” said Goodwin.

He decided to support Wu instead of Kraft because, “One is a billionaire. One is a mayor of the city.”

In the race for the four at-large seats on the City Council, incumbent councilors finished in the top four: Council President Ruthzee Louijeune finished in first place with 45,500 votes, followed closely by Julia Mejia who garnered 42,245 votes. Erin Murphy had 38,981 votes and Henry Santana finished with 30,670. Four challengers will advance to the general election: Frank Baker, who garnered 26,240 votes; Alexandra Valdez, who received 18,930 votes; Marvin Mathalier who had 13,826 votes and Will Onuoha who finished with 11,216 votes.

If the incumbents maintain their lead in the general election, which appears likely, given the 4,000-vote gap between Santana and Baker, the current makeup of the Council will remain unchanged, but for the District 7 race, where Said “Coach” Ahmed and Miniard Culpepper will advance to the general election. In that race, just 102 votes separated the top five finishers, all of whom garnered more than 1,000 votes. Six other candidates each had less than 600 votes.

The results of the Council races were somewhat of a second victory for Wu. None of her allies on the Council lost a seat. Santana, who struggled to collect 1,500 nomination signatures by the May 20 deadline and received help from the Wu administration, appears safe in 4th place, 4,000 votes ahead of Baker.

At her campaign event, Wu urged her supporters to continue working through the November 4 election.

“This fight is not over,” she said. “It’s not over for workers fighting for fair wages, for immigrants fighting for a chance to make it here, for seniors fighting to stay in the neighborhoods they have built, for small businesses and neighbors fighting to build opportunity and to build community. And it’s not over for each and every one of us who believes that an American president should never declare war on an American city.”

This story originally appeared on flipsidenews.net.

Boston mayoral preliminary, Josh Kraft, Mayor Michelle Wu

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