On July 4th, Boston will rid its city council of another foreign enemy occupier. It took a while.
In 2019, future Councilwoman Tania Fernandes Anderson, a former illegal alien, became an American citizen. In 2021, she was elected to Boston’s city council. In 2022, she began complaining that there were too many white officials in Boston. “The Majority of Boston is BROWN & BLACK”, the Muslim immigrant married to a murderer complained.
In 2024, the first ex-illegal alien Muslim elected official in Massachusetts was arrested and indicted in a kickback scheme. That did not stop her from continuing to serve on the city council.
By April 2025, Anderson still hadn’t resigned despite planning to plead guilty to several of the charges that would entail serving a year in prison, leaving open the possibility that the Boston City Council would soon have the first Muslim illegal alien imprisoned city councilwoman.
Boston City Council President Ruthzee Louijeune, the first Haitian councilwoman, initially proposed waiting until November 2025 to see what developed and then promised “to continue working in partnership, as well, with the mayor’s office to make sure that Roxbury residents, and the residents of all of District 7, have their representation during this challenging time.”
Finally in early June, Anderson agreed to resign… and went on serving. On June 25, a month before she faces sentencing, the criminal councilwoman finally attended her last session, sponsored resolutions, and promised to continue “fighting, not from this chamber but from the community” by going back “to the base, to the roots, where real power lives” until the day comes when “we live in a society that doesn’t just say Black Lives Matter, that proves it.”
While Boston’s surviving residents will lose Anderson’s services (and those of the family members she employed), she has left a permanent mark on the revolutionary city.
Based on the final resolution proposed by Anderson, July will not be the month when Boston remembers the American Revolution, it will be a month “to recognize and to celebrate the independence of Cabo Verde and to declare July as Cabo Verdean Heritage Month.”
Forget America. July in Boston will be the month to remember the political independence of the West African island an illegal alien criminal who hates America and stole from it came from.
The resolution was part of a goodbye party thrown for Anderson by her leftist colleagues during her final session before she breaks through the final glass ceiling, leaving the home of the unconvicted criminals of the council for that of the less successful criminals of the penal system.
The former illegal alien urged her fellow council members to “celebrate all we’ve built together” and the radical leftist wing of the council lavishly praised their corrupt colleague as an example..
Councilwoman Liz Breadon (D), the first lesbian immigrant to serve on the city council, worryingly hailed the “example in many ways that Tania Fernandes Anderson has made to us.”
The “example” in question was hiring her son and sister to serve on her staff, then getting hit with a $5,000 ethics fine for hiring them, then trying to pay the ethics fine by hiring another family member, lying about their familial relationship to the ethics commission, then giving her a large bonus (at taxpayer expense) and getting a $7,000 kickback from her in the bathroom.
“You are an ally in the fight for equity, and you are Boston’s Harriet Tubman,” Councilman Brian Worrell (D), the first second generation Jamaican immigrant, claimed. “Thank you for your service.”
History does not dwell on the time that Harriet Tubman got a kickback in the bathroom. That’s usually something Boston city council members do. It’s unknown if like Tania Fernandes Anderson, Harriet racked up 70 audit letters. Or if she ever equaled Anderson’s feat of hiring her son as her treasurer or allegations that her expenses were one giant slush fund.
Councilwoman Julia Meija (D), who tends to wear revolutionary berets and is the first Dominican immigrant councilwoman, hailed Anderson’s “courage”. Meija is presumably referring to the time the Muslim ex-illegal alien called the Hamas atrocities of Oct 7 a “military operation”. Mejia had also worked to block a resolution condemning the mass murder of Jews by Islamic terrorists.
Councilwoman Sharon Durkan (D), the first blonde campaign consultant elected to the council, who had also opposed the resolution condemning the murder of Jews, sympathetically told her corrupt colleague, “this time has not been easy.” The only ones it’s been harder on is Hamas.
True to form, Anderson blamed her downfall on a conspiracy by the “system” to get her for being too outspoken. “The system is set up to accommodate politeness, not truth. It tolerates performance, not integrity, and anyone who dares to step outside of that theater risks being ostracized or worse.” Also anyone who dares to accept toilet kickbacks.
How the ‘system’ compelled Anderson to hire family members is still unknown.
“I’d be so grateful to share this closing chapter with you,” she told her colleagues.
Many Bostonians only wish that she could fully share the chapter with many of their ‘representatives’.
But as Anderson heads off into the sunset for Cabo Verdean Heritage Month, she, like so many of her ‘first’ colleagues, remains a shining example of how diversity has strengthened Boston and turned it from a boring old American city full of Irish immigrants into the third world.
A statue of her can’t be far off in the making.
On the romantic side though, if Anderson does go to prison, she may be reunited with her husband Tanzerius Anderson who is already in prison for armed robbery and murder.
Tania Anderson hadn’t managed to get her husband out. Maybe now she’ll join him.
Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. This article previously appeared at the Center's Front Page Magazine.
Comments
Post a Comment