Firebrand Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is back in the headlines for hamming up her ‘Bronx girl’ past in an attempt to make herself seem tougher.
The Democrat lawmaker, who is nicknamed AOC, was recently forced to defend her upbringing after picking a fight with President Trump and calling for his impeachment.
‘I’m a Bronx girl. You should know that we can eat Queens boys for breakfast,’ she said in reference to the president’s upper-crust childhood in the neighboring New York City borough.
But the lawmaker omitted to mention that she’d actually spent most of her childhood in the famously ritzy Westchester County, in the quaint community of Yorktown, an hour upstate from NYC.
Republican State Assemblyman Matt Slater even went as far as to share AOC’s high school yearbook from her top-ranked public school Yorktown High School.
The teen’s goofy grin and geeky outfit perfectly encapsulate her well-behaved, high-achieving schooldays.
While a student in Yorktown, the future liberal leader went by ‘Sandy’, it was revealed in 2018.
After AOC’s Westchester past was exposed, she pivoted to claim that her middle class childhood still served to expose unfair gaps between rich and poor.
AOC’s congressional biography describes her childhood upstate as a reason why she better understands the challenges of New York City, because she ‘traveled regularly to The Bronx to spend time with her extended family.’
‘From an early age, the stark contrast in educational opportunities available to her and her cousins, based on their respective zip codes, made an impression on her,’ the bio reads.

New York firebrand Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is facing growing scrutiny over her background after hamming up her ‘Bronx girl’ image, despite growing up in an affluent upstate community (pictured as a teenager at Yorktown High School)

The congresswoman reportedly went by ‘Sandy’ during her childhood upstate, but now touts her deep ties to The Bronx and often portrays herself ‘one of their own’

AOC spent the first five years of her life in this apartment building in the Bronx’s Parkchester planned community. The middle-class neighborhood was all condos by 1986 – three years before AOC was born. AOC’s dad held onto this property after the move and she later registered it as her official address

The Ocasio-Cortez family then moved to this three bed home in Yorktown, Westchester County

While she was born in The Bronx, AOC moved to the upstate neighborhood of Yorktown Heights when she was five, which is almost an hour’s drive from the city
When Slater questioned AOC’s background, he said in an X post that ‘if you’re a [Bronx] girl then why are you in my Yorktown yearbook? Give it up already.’
AOC did begin her life in the Bronx, at a planned community called Parkchester. Parkchester’s 171 mid-rise brick buildings were originally constructed in the 1930s as rentals for middle-class white families.
Black families were banned from renting there, with MetLife chairman Frederick H. Ecker, whose firm built the community, claiming that the two races ‘don’t mix.’
The entire complex had been converted to condos by 1986 – three years before AOC was born. It has long enjoyed a reputation as being a safe, comfortable place to live.
AOC, her parents and brother Gabriel moved from Parkchester to a three-bedroom bungalow in Westchester County around 1994, when she was five.
But it appears the family kept the Parkchester property too.
AOC used the Bronx condo as her registered address from 2012, four years after her father died of lung cancer.
Neighbors and local businesses told the New York Post that they had never seen her there and she ran away from a Post reporter who’d approached her with questions about where she actually lived.

In 2019, it was reported that AOC had used her deceased father (pictured together) Sergio’s apartment in the Bronx as her voter registration since 2012, four years after he passed away from lung cancer

The congresswoman, known by her moniker AOC, was recently forced to defend her upbringing after picking a fight with President Trump and calling for his impeachment. ‘I’m a Bronx girl. You should know that we can eat Queens boys for breakfast,’ she said
The congresswoman invoked her father’s death shortly before she defeated Crowley, telling The Intercept that she was forced into bartending when she graduated from Boston College in 2011 as her family struggled to make ends meet.
Referring to their upstate home in Westchester, she said ‘we just couldn’t afford to keep our home, and we had bankers going up to the curb of our home and taking photos of our house.’
Her family went on to sell the upstate home for $300,000 in 2016, however it is unclear what happened to her father’s home in The Bronx that the Post said she claimed to be living in years later.
Those that knew AOC during her high school days told Halston Media that AOC’s political future was already on the horizon during her adolescence, with teacher Michael Bluegrass saying she ‘always wanted to make a difference.’
‘She was just one of the most amazing presenters,’ he said.

Ocasio-Cortez, seen with her brother before she became a national liberal icon, has faced questions over her background in the past and has said she is ‘proud of how I grew up’

In 2007, the congresswoman graduated from Yorktown High School before attending Boston University, where she studied economics and international relations—and briefly engaged with establishment politics – before returning to the Bronx.
Although critiques of her ‘Bronx image’ were nothing new, they were reignited this month after she called for Trump’s impeachment in response to his strikes on Iran.
After her high school yearbook emerged, the congresswoman addressed her critics and responded to allegations she grew up ‘privileged.’
‘I’m proud of how I grew up and talk about it all the time! My mom cleaned houses and I helped. We cleaned tutors’ homes in exchange for SAT prep,’ she wrote to social media.
‘Growing up between the Bronx and Yorktown deeply shaped my views of inequality & it’s a big reason I believe the things I do today!’

The congresswoman, seen with her mother and brother, has described her childhood upstate as a reason why she better understands the challenges of the city, because she ‘traveled regularly to The Bronx to spend time with her extended family’
In response, Slater told the New York Post the left-wing congresswoman was just continuing to double down on her inconsistent story.
‘She’s embarrassing herself for doing everything possible to avoid saying she grew up in the suburbs instead of the Bronx.’
‘She has said she visited extended family, she has said she commuted,’ Slater said. ‘Now she’s in between. It’s clearly desperate attempts to protect the lie that she is from the Bronx.’
Slater also mocked AOC for seemingly forgetting her past life as ‘Sandy’, and said the ‘AOC-Bronx mythology’ is as ‘laughable’ to him as it is to the 36,000 residents in the Westchester community.
‘The truth is AOC is Sandy Cortez who went to Yorktown High School and lived at the corner of Friends Road and Longvue Street,’ Slater told the outlet.
‘She may think it makes her look tough or like some kind of champion for the radical left who voted for Zohran Mamdani, but she really needs to come clean and drop the act,’ he added.