In a city that can barely breathe, Mayor Brandon Scott just bought himself a brand-new ride a 2025 Jeep Grand Wagoneer worth $163,495. The money, of course, comes from taxpayers. The same taxpayers battling high food prices, dirty streets, bad roads, and schools without working fans.
While Baltimore struggles to fix broken things, the mayor’s priority seems to be fixing his comfort. In a time when the city can’t keep up with rent, repairs, or crime, this looks less like leadership and more like luxury.
A Car Too Expensive for a City This Broken
The new SUV costs twice as much as the mayor’s last one. It’s fully loaded with police lights, sirens, and microphones because apparently, being mayor now needs the same setup as a movie star on tour. The base price was around $98,000, and the rest went into upgrades no one asked for.
Meanwhile, Baltimore kids are learning in hot classrooms because schools don’t have proper air conditioning. Streets are filled with trash and drug needles. Homeless people sleep under bridges, but the mayor rides around in comfort that even most governors wouldn’t dare to flaunt.
This isn’t about safety. It’s about sense and clearly, there’s none left.
A Mayor Defending the Indefensible
When asked why he needed such an expensive car, Scott said it’s for transportation, like that made it better. He added that other officials have vehicles too. But Baltimore isn’t other cities. The difference is, other cities aren’t gasping for survival like this one.
He even brought up former Governor Larry Hogan, saying no one questioned his car. That’s not the point. Hogan didn’t lead Baltimore. Scott does, a city with rising crime, decaying buildings, and a budget deficit that just got closed with new fines and fees dumped on residents.
How do you tell struggling people to pay more while you spend more?
‘Not Common Sense,’ and Everyone Knows It
A government watchdog group called it exactly what it is, not common sense. Spending more than $160,000 for a vehicle when the city can’t stay clean or safe is insulting. People sacrifice daily, yet their mayor doesn’t seem to know what that means.
He could have chosen a cheaper car and still been safe. But no, Baltimore’s top official wanted a statement car. A vehicle that screams importance while the city whispers for help.
Climate Promises, Gas Reality
To make things worse, Scott once signed a law pushing the city toward electric cars by 2030. Guess what? His new ride isn’t electric. It’s a gas guzzler, a so-called “mild hybrid” that only saves fuel when parked. It gets just 14 miles per gallon in the city.
Other mayors, like Boston’s Michelle Wu, drive electric vehicles that cost a third of that price. Scott’s version of going green apparently means going green in cash.
When Comfort Replaces Compassion
Everything about this story shows how far disconnected leadership can be from real life. Baltimore is a city begging for care, not for a mayor who cruises past its problems. His comfort comes before the city’s pain.
This isn’t leadership. It’s privilege on wheels. And the people paying for it aren’t inside the car, they’re outside, walking on cracked roads, sweating through failing schools, and wondering when their city will finally come first.