close
close

Michelle Wu aimed at the Haus GOP video in front of Sanctuary City hearing – NBC Boston

In a “Hype” video that will be published on Wednesday by the Republican's home supervisory committee for the Republican, the mayor of Boston, Michelle Wu, is a player presented.

The video will deal with the hearing of the congress next Wednesday about sanctuary cities that WU will testify.

“It looks like building a sporting event,” said Ken Cosgrove, professor of Suffolk University, an expert in political marketing.

He says the video is an effective instrument to increase the interest in a hearing in the congress.

“It is a fairly interesting approach and tries to raise the public,” said Cosgrove. “The attempt to position the Democrats as on the side of criminal migrants and try to ask questions whether we were so compassionate that we lost the country or not.”

WU and the mayors of New York, Chicago and Denver were given their guidelines for sanctuary cities next week and whether they work with President Donald Trump's deportation plans.

“For the American taxpayers, taxpayers here in the Commonwealth, it is not fair to accommodate people who come from countries where we don't even know where they come from,” said Janet Fogarty, Republican National Committee woman from Massachusetts. “They come in without papers and they come directly to Massachusetts, where they know that they can achieve free advantages.”

Sanctuary cities are usually municipalities that restrict cooperation with the federal authorities in relation to residents without papers.

With the city in the city in the city in the city examined by the Trump administration and the Republican majority in the house, Mayor Michelle Wu rose from the city and visited the prominent self -help group La Colaborativa in Chelsea. Follow NBC10 Boston:

The committee says that the city's mayor wants to blame it for its actions.

“Well, unfortunately this is transformed into a kind of circus,” said Rep. Stephen Lynch, a democrat from Massachusetts who sits in the House supervisory committee.

He says that a significant hearing of sanctuary cities needs, but does not believe that it will happen next week.

“You have done that in the past,” said Lynch. “They are ginting, it becomes more of a show and more entertainment than a serious supervision.”

NBC10 Boston has contacted WU's office to get a comment on the video, but not yet heard.