Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown, the city’s first Black elected leader, was alongside President Biden today as he visited a memorial for the victims of the Buffalo mass shooting and laid flowers there. Biden thanked the mayor and law enforcement during remarks later Tuesday, saying Brown has been “wonderful.”
Brown, who was also the first Black politician elected to the New York state Senate from outside New York City, told CNN on Monday night he would speak to Biden about the easy availability of guns, hate speech, especially by public figures, and its amplification on social media.
The mayor won reelection as a write-in candidate last year after losing the Democratic primary to democratic socialist India Walton. Brown has at times been a divisive figure among Buffalo Democrats, but in the aftermath of the killings he has emerged as powerful voice against the far-right conspiracy theories, including one cited in an online diatribe by the alleged Buffalo gunman, that are increasingly animating conservative political commentary and Republican Party rhetoric.
Brown was first elected as a state lawmaker in 2000. His 2005 mayoral triumph was a breakthrough for Black political leaders in Buffalo, which had seen a string of Black Democrats defeated in their attempts to win the city’s top job.
Considered a rising star in the party, Brown in 2008 was briefly considered a potential replacement for Hillary Clinton in the Senate after then-President-elect Barack Obama signaled he would nominate her for secretary of state. But then-Gov. David Paterson ultimately appointed Kirsten Gillibrand, then a House member from upstate, to the post, which she held ever since.
Brown, too, has kept hold of his job, winning re-election four more times. He recently became the city’s longest-serving mayor.
On Tuesday morning, before the Bidens arrived in Buffalo, Brown told CNN that two more people have been arrested after making threats in the aftermath of the attack.
“There have been a number of internet messages about crimes potentially being committed, phone calls made already yesterday and the day before,” Brown said.
In spite of the threats, Brown has encouraged the CEO of Tops Friendly Markets, the scene of the shootings, to quickly re-open the store, he said.
“The Tops Supermarket on Jefferson Avenue is a center for this community,” Brown told CNN Monday. “The community is loyal to the market. It is a center of community. People come here to shop. People come here for information. They come here to connect with each other.”
Brown also singled out far-right public figures promoting “White Replacement Theory” in an interview with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer, saying they were complicit in deadly violence that rocked his city over the weekend.
“Yes they are partially to blame for the radicalization of people in this country and indoctrinating them into attitudes and feelings of hatred towards others,” Brown said.