Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson is backing away from earlier calls to boycott Starbucks after drawing criticism for attacking one of the city’s most iconic employers amid growing concerns about Seattle’s business climate.
Wilson, a 43-year-old democratic socialist who took office earlier this year, acknowledged in comments to the New York Times that her previous remarks targeting Starbucks were counterproductive.
“Those comments were not productive in the sense that they caused more harm than good,” Wilson told the outlet.
The mayor created controversy last November while appearing at a barista union rally shortly after being elected, where she publicly urged residents to stop supporting the Seattle-based coffee giant.
“I am not buying Starbucks, and you should not either,” Wilson said at the time, according to KUOW.
Her comments immediately fueled criticism from business leaders and moderates who argued Seattle’s increasingly hostile political climate was driving employers and investment away from the city.
The controversy has intensified following Starbucks’ recent announcement that it plans to build a major new corporate office in Nashville, Tennessee, capable of housing roughly 2,000 employees.
The expansion outside Washington state reignited anxieties that more major companies may choose to grow elsewhere rather than expand in Seattle, where businesses have faced rising taxes, crime concerns, homelessness issues and increasingly progressive labor policies.
Seattle City Councilmember Rob Saka told the New York Times he is “gravely concerned” about the possibility of continued business losses.
“This is real,” Saka said.
Wilson now appears to be trying to recalibrate her relationship with Seattle’s corporate sector while maintaining support from the city’s progressive political base.
She told the Times she recognizes that her public comments can easily be interpreted as anti-business attacks and said city leaders must maintain a “multidimensional relationship” with major corporations like Starbucks.
“I want them here, and I believe they want to be here,” Wilson said.
Starbucks has reportedly insisted the Nashville expansion is part of a broader national growth strategy rather than a retreat from Seattle specifically.
The company has also continued participating in local civic initiatives, including sponsorship of a newly announced tiny-home homeless shelter project in Seattle earlier this month.
Still, Wilson’s reversal highlights growing tensions within progressive cities nationwide as left-wing politicians attempt to balance activist priorities with mounting fears about economic decline, corporate departures and shrinking tax bases.
Seattle has become a focal point in national debates on progressive governance, homelessness, crime, taxation and business retention.
Critics argue years of anti-corporate rhetoric and far-left policies have contributed to worsening affordability problems and encouraged wealthy residents and employers to look elsewhere.
Wilson herself drew headlines last month after dismissing concerns about wealthy individuals leaving Washington state over tax proposals.
“I think the claims that millionaires are going to leave our state are, like, super overblown,” Wilson said during a Seattle University forum. “And if — the ones that leave, like, bye.”
Those comments intensified criticism from moderates and business advocates who argue Seattle’s political leadership treats economic success and wealth creation with hostility.
Wilson remains popular among many progressive activists who view corporate influence and wealth inequality as central drivers of Seattle’s housing crisis and broader economic struggles.
Her attempt to soften tensions with Starbucks may reflect growing recognition among city leaders that even the furthesst left municipalities still depend heavily on large employers to sustain jobs, tax revenue and long-term economic stability.
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Do you really expect Democrat/Commie to think?They have nothing to think with,just hate and envy lives in their brains