Newly elected Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is keeping it real in the projects.

She snapped some snaps to commemorate the occasion.

PIX 11 reports:

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez visited the Throggs Neck Houses and met with Tenant Association President, Monique Johnson and other public housing officials.

Johnson, who posted photos of Ocasio-Cortez on Facebook, said the congresswoman was “listening to the concerns of the residents.”

One image shows the representative from New York’s 14th congressional district puckering up for the camera with a New York Community Housing Authority hat alongside Johnson, who struck a similar pose in an NYPD cap.

Other pictures show Ocasio-Cortez strolling the grounds with Johnson and about a dozen others during the “low key visit … in the Bronx on Friday.”

Ocasio-Cortez, the youngest person ever elected to Congress, hasn’t actually spent a day on the job that the government wasn’t shut down. Since taking office in January, the self-described “Alex from the Bronx” has worked to build support for a Green New Deal to shift America towards socialism through television appearances, social media stunts, and public photo opportunities, from a protest at House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office to the tour of the Bronx projects.

In just the last week, the freshman congresswoman has appeared The Late Show with Stephen Colbert to declare she gives “zero” f**ks about her fellow Democrats, injected herself into a celebrity Twitter feud to defend a foul-mouthed rapper, and signed in to a Twitch livestream of “Donkey Kong 64” to steal the thunder from an online gamer raising money for a transgender charity.

PIX 11 attempted to discuss Ocasio-Cortez’s recent trip to the Bronx with a NYCHA spokesperson and the congresswoman’s office “but didn’t hear back.”

That may be because the visit raises obvious questions about the socialist’s background, which is a far cry from the poverty and struggles facing her constituents at the Throggs Neck Houses.

In December, Ocasio-Cortez tweeted a little ditty inspired by Jennifer Lopez’ “Jenny from the Block.”

“Don’t be fooled by the plaques that we got, I’m still/ I’m still Alex from the Bronx,” she wrote.

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Folks online, however, quickly set the record straight and pointed out that the newly elected lawmaker isn’t actually from the Bronx, or even the city.

She grew up in Westchester, an affluent and mostly white suburb where the average home costs $1.2 million.

“You grew up in Westchester then lied abt it then changed your bio when the lie was exposed,” Michael Knowles responded to the “Alex from the Bronx” tweet.

“She grew up in a small, homogeneous, affluent suburb, where she attended excellent schools before pretending she grew up in the Bronx,” he wrote.