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March 19, 2019

Wilmington mayor 'inadvertently retweeted' offensive post about Irish slavery

Politics Twitter
Mike Purzycki st patricks day Mike Purzycki - Mayor of the City of Wilmington/Facebook

Wilmington Mayor Mike Purzycki at the St. Patrick's Day parade.

The official Twitter account of Wilmington Mayor Mike Purzycki shared an offensive tweet during St. Patrick's Day Weekend that echoed common White Nationalist ideals.

The situation began with a tweet from the mayor's account of a photo of Purzycki with Sen. Chris Coons and Gov. John Carney at Wilmington's St. Patrick's Day parade.

Another Twitter user then replied to the photo, adding the message "Shout out to all the Irish people who's (sic) families were enslaved, came to the US for a better life, worked in factories and then got called 'privileged' & blamed for slavery by beta male, soy drinking hypocrites & depressed feminists."

That tweet was retweeted by Purzycki's account.


RELATED: Twitter wants to hide how many retweets, likes your tweets receive


The offensive reply came from Twitter user An0maly who has since clarified to Delaware Online, and throughout his Twitter feed, that he is not a nationalist and posted the photo and caption as a joke.

Nonetheless, the sentiment echoes a false historical narrative often pushed by white nationalists, which claims that many Irish immigrants came to the U.S. as slaves. In reality, many Irish immigrants came to the country as indentured servants, offered rights under a contract that was never available to slaves.

Purzycki's office addressed the issue Monday afternoon. John Rago, the chief of staff for policy and communications, told Delaware Online that "someone not associated with our office intentionally set out to connect the mayor to an offensive post. Our office retweeted the original tweet not knowing that the offensive post was attached." 

Rago also said the social media manager for the city of Wilmington was in charge of all tweets posted during St. Patrick's Day weekend, including the one in question.

The mayor's office has since described the incident as an "innocent mistake" and that the message was "inadvertently retweeted." Purzycki continued to address the matter on Twitter.



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