Voters in Boston elected City Councilor Michelle Wu, a 36-year-old Democrat and the daughter of Taiwanese immigrants, to be their mayor on Tuesday.
Wu defeated fellow Democratic City Councilor Annissa Essaibi George, a self-described first-generation Arab-Polish American who was born and raised in Boston. Essaibi George's father was a Muslim immigrant from Tunisia and her mother, a Catholic, immigrated from Poland.
Another of Wu’s top campaign promises was to create a "fare free" public transit system, noting that, "safe, reliable, affordable, and sustainable transportation is the foundation for shared prosperity and health."
Wu, who has a close relationship with Massachusetts U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren, moved to the city from Chicago, and attended Harvard University and Harvard Law School.
She received a number of high-profile endorsements, including support from acting Mayor Kim Janey, Edward Markey, and U.S. Rep. Ayanna Pressley, a former Boston city councilor, as well as Warren.
Essaibi George conceded the race moments before Wu's Tuesday night speech.

"I recognize the ways in which I’m not the typical mold of a Boston politician, but it’s really not just gender and ethnicity or age necessarily, although [it’s] all of those things," she said.
Boston's previous elected mayor, Democrat Marty Walsh, stepped down earlier this year to become U.S. Secretary of Labor under President Joe Biden.
Wu was first elected to the council in 2013 at age 28. She will be sworn in on Nov. 16.
