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Thursday, January 13, 2022

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Sullivan eyes secretary of state run

 


 
Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY

Presented by Associated Industries of Massachusetts

NEW: SULLIVAN MULLS SECRETARY BID — Tanisha Sullivan, an attorney and president of the NAACP Boston Branch, is considering running for secretary of state, according to three people familiar with her thinking.

Sullivan is “taking a serious look at this race" and is "weighing this critical moment for our democracy and our commonwealth, and the vital work to preserve and expand voting rights,” according to one person who is advising Sullivan on a potential bid. Sullivan did not return calls for comment.

Sullivan’s interest in serving as the state’s top elections official wouldn't be coming out of left field: She was an honorary co-chair of the 2020 ballot campaign for ranked-choice voting; advocated alongside Rep. Ayanna Pressley to pass the For the People Act, and has been vocal online about the need to “remove barriers to the ballot box ." The NAACP Boston Branch was also active in the Boston mayor's race without endorsing a candidate.

Secretary of State Bill Galvin has been coy about his 2022 intentions. Galvin continues to push voting reforms in Massachusetts and nationally, but he declined to say last month whether he was running for another term, telling WCVB’s “On the Record” only that “I enjoy what I do.” Republican Rayla Campbell is running for the seat.

GOOD THURSDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. As Boston Mayor Michelle Wu works to expand a fare-free bus pilot program to help low-income riders in three neighborhoods, new polling from the MassINC Polling Group and the Barr Foundation shows 71 percent support statewide for free buses in low-income neighborhoods.

In fact, the statewide poll of 1,026 registered voters from late December showed majority support for several types of free or discounted public transportation:

— 61 percent support for free buses;
— 58 percent support for free subways;
— 53 percent support for free commuter rail trains and ferries;
— 79 percent support for low-income fare discounts.

One of the biggest questions around reduced-fare or fare-free public transit is how to fund it. Wu, for instance, is looking to tap into federal aid to expand the city’s pilot program.

There could be another option coming down the pike: the so-called millionaires tax headed for the ballot this fall as a constitutional amendment. It would slap a 4 percent surtax on the portion of a person’s annual income over $1 million, and proponents say the money would be funneled toward education and transportation.

Seventy percent of voters said they support the millionaires tax. As for how they’d like the tax revenue to be split, 39 percent preferred to share it evenly between transportation and education, 19 percent said they wanted more for transportation and 26 percent wanted more for education. MassINC Polling Group Research Director Rich Parr breaks it all down on this week’s episode of The Horse Race.

TODAY — Wu shares an update on Mass and Cass at 10 a.m. at the Women’s Inn at Pine Street, and is on WBUR’s “Radio Boston." State AG Maura Healey announces a settlement with a student-lending conglomerate at 12:30 p.m. Sen. Ed Markey and Rep. Cori Bush (D-Mo.) host a Twitter Spaces event at 3:30 p.m. to discuss abolishing the filibuster to protect voting rights. U.S. attorney Rachael Rollins is on GBH’s “Greater Boston” at 7 p.m. Assistant House Speaker Katherine Clark will preside over the House floor during the debate over the Freedom to Vote: John R. Lewis Act.

Tips? Scoops? Email me: lkashinsky@politico.com.

 

A message from Associated Industries of Massachusetts:

The 2022 State of Massachusetts Business Address will look at all the challenges and opportunities that employers face at the dawn of a new year. Join us as AIM President and CEO, John Regan, summarizes the Massachusetts business economy in 2021, comments on what it will mean for 2022, and gets feedback from some of the region’s top business executives. Register here

 
ON THE STUMP

 GETTING IN: Veteran Democratic activist and volunteer Kate Donaghue is running for state representative in the new 19th Worcester District.

“As a mother to a son who died of an overdose, and a caregiving spouse who recently lost my husband to cancer, I have experience and insights into the challenges with our health care system that plague too many families” in the district, Donaghue said. “I intend to use my voice to fight for our communities on health care, tackling climate change and supporting public education.”

Donaghue, who filed a candidate committee with the state last week, is running in an incumbent-free district created during last year’s redistricting process. Mapmakers said at the time that the district — which is built around parts of Northborough, Southborough, Framingham and Donaghue’s longtime home of Westborough — could be an opportunity for the GOP based on voting patterns.

— FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Suffolk County sheriff candidate Sandy Zamor Calixte has been endorsed by former state Rep. Marie St. Fleur, former Boston city councilor Matt O’Malley and community leaders Anthony Seymour, Marilyn Forman and Jose Ruiz, per her campaign.

— FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Labor attorney Shannon Liss-Riordan is continuing to build out her team for a potential run for state attorney general. Liss-Riordan has brought on the firm Bryson Gillette to provide strategic communications counsel. That team includes Rebecca Pearcey, a former political director for Sen. Elizabeth Warren; Kasey Poulin, another Warren alum, and Tess Seger.

— “Gubernatorial hopeful Sonia Chang-Díaz secures more endorsements as waiting continues for AG Maura Healey to enter race,” by Alison Kuznitz, MassLive: “State Sen. Sonia Chang-Díaz released a new slate of endorsements Wednesday afternoon in her bid for governor, as the gubernatorial field remains in flux.”

THE LATEST NUMBERS

— “Massachusetts reports 22,184 new coronavirus cases, COVID hospitalizations top 3,000 patients,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “COVID-19 hospitalizations on Wednesday surpassed 3,000 patients for the first time since the start of the pandemic as local hospitals get packed to the brim. The state Department of Public Health on Wednesday reported 22,184 daily coronavirus cases.”

 

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DATELINE BEACON HILL

— SAVE THE DATE: Gov. Charlie Baker has confirmed his State of the Commonwealth address will be Jan. 25 at 7 p.m. at the Hynes Convention Center.

— “Baker approves commutation requests for two convicted of murder,” by Matt Stout and Shelley Murphy, Boston Globe: “Governor Charlie Baker on Wednesday approved commutation requests for two men serving life sentences for murder, marking the first such recommendations of his tenure and the first time a sitting Massachusetts governor has agreed to commute a life sentence in a quarter-century. Baker’s decision to grant the clemency petitions of Thomas E. Koonce and William Allen won praise from both advocates and the district attorney offices that once prosecuted them, and could clear the way for both men to be released after nearly three decades apiece in prison.”

— “Sweeping offshore wind bill headed toward House,” by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Magazine: “The Legislature’s energy committee approved a bill Wednesday evening that would give the state’s Clean Energy Center a major role in the development of the offshore wind industry and tap consumer electricity and natural gas bills to pay for tax credits, grants, and investments to make it happen.”

— “Massachusetts higher education commissioner to step down,” by The Associated Press: “Commissioner Carlos Santiago, who works with leadership and helps shape state-level policies to benefit the state’s public community colleges and universities, has held the job since 2015.”

VAX-ACHUSETTS

— “New measure of COVID hospitalizations may obscure strain on system, but will help with planning,” by Kay Lazar, Boston Globe: “The Baker administration said that beginning next week, it will break the hospitalization numbers it publishes into two sets: one that records those patients being treated primarily for COVID-19, and a second for those patients who were hospitalized for other reasons but happened to test positive upon admission.”

— “As state ignores at-home COVID test data, boards of health come up with their own solutions,” by Sarah Betancourt, GBH News: “Residents and public health workers are frustrated by the barriers to report results from home rapid tests, and count those numbers in a tangible way so the public has a greater understanding of the pandemic in their communities. Some towns have launched their own forms for collecting at-home test results.”

— “Forced to improvise COVID policies, school nurses are reaching a ‘ breaking point’,” by Gabrielle Emanuel, WBUR: “Surging COVID numbers have made for a sometimes-disorganized return to school after winter break. There are record case counts and changing guidelines for testing and isolation. A heavy burden has fallen on school nurses, who say they feel overwhelmed and under-supported.”

— "Massachusetts’ digital vaccine passport leaves some residents frustrated: ‘Couldn’t find anything for me’," by Alison Kuznitz, MassLive: "[S]cores of Massachusetts residents hoping for an easy process to obtain their electronic vaccine records encountered glitches as they entered their information on a state government website. The most common issued seemed to be missing COVID booster shot information."

— “Boston will roll out a vaccine certificate app on Jan. 15,” by Hiawatha Bray, Boston Globe: “Boston is going with a smartphone app called B Together that lets the user simply display a photograph of the white CDC card issued at the vaccination center.”

— SHOT: “Needham COVID-19 testing site reported to Attorney General,” by John Monahan, Boston 25 News.

— CHASER: “Worcester ‘looking into’ free COVID testing site on Grafton Street that’s run by company under investigation in other U.S. locations,” by Michael Bonner, MassLive.

 

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FROM THE HUB

 “Boston clears tents from Mass. and Cass,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “The day dawned over the troubled streets of Mass. and Cass lined with dozens of tents — but by dinnertime, crews were hauling pieces of the last sidewalk structure away. ‘Today was really a transition,’ Mayor Michelle Wu told reporters after dark in the middle of an almost unrecognizably barren Atkinson Street. ‘Today was not the first day of work here, and it’s certainly not the last day.’”

— More: “‘ Nothing is different’: People struggle to find housing after city clears tents at Mass. and Cass,” by Tori Bedford, GBH News: “Wu emphasized that her administration would deviate from previous attempts by city officials to clear the area by focusing on housing and ‘meeting each person where they are,’ identifying specific health or housing needs and ensuring that congregate shelter would not be the only option. … But [Wilnelia Reabyng] and [Avalberto Delbrey], along with several others living in encampments in the area, were not provided permanent housing, and were instead told to stay at nearby shelters.”

— And more: “Exclusive look at new housing for people who lived at Mass & Cass in Boston,” by Karen Anderson and Kevin Rothstein, WCVB: “Two weeks after moving out of a tent on the street, one woman is using a small cottage to serve as a temporary shelter home, full of her makeup, clothes and all kinds of personal items.”

 “Anti-vaccine mandate protesters bring their opposition to Mayor Wu’s Roslindale doorstep,” by Saraya Wintersmith, GBH News: “Most mornings in the past week or so, a small band of protesters stationed themselves outside the modest two-family house where Boston Mayor Michelle Wu lives with her husband and two school-age sons. Her elderly mother lives on the first floor. The clutch of activists have a mission: to stop Wu's vaccination mandate that is scheduled to go into effect Saturday.”

— “Judge won’t stop Boston coronavirus vaccine mandate ahead of deadline,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “Mayor Michelle Wu’s worker vaccine mandate will move ahead, a judge ruled just days before enforcement is due to begin. … Suffolk Superior Judge Jeffrey Locke said following a Wednesday hearing ‘I think the public health emergency now is of such a nature that it outweighs the competing claims of harm by the plaintiff.’”

— “As Boston schools grapple with COVID surge, Cassellius says they’re taking every step to avoid remote learning,” by James Vaznis, Boston Globe: “Boston Superintendent Brenda Cassellius said on Wednesday the district is taking every step possible to avoid moving learning online amid a surge in coronavirus cases, while student leaders announced they are planning a walkout [to advocate for remote learning].”

WHAT CITY HALL IS READING

— Mayor Wu is creating a new cabinet role: chief of planning,” by Catherine Carlock, Boston Business Journal: “Boston Mayor Michelle Wu’s administration is finalizing the job posting for a chief of planning role, a newly created cabinet-level position that could ‘help oversee’ the Boston Planning and Development Agency.”

— “Who will take Lydia Edwards’ Boston City Council seat?,” by Christopher Gavin, Boston.com: “Under the city charter, officials must hold a preliminary election on a Tuesday within 62 to 76 days after a City Council election order is approved. The general election would then follow, 28 days later. ... There are a few candidates expected to run, and many more who are apparently weighing a run for the council seat, which represents the North End, Charlestown, and East Boston.”

PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

— “Regional bus ridership down 52 percent from pre-pandemic levels,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine: “Ridership has rebounded at Regional Transit Authorities, according to a new report, but ridership still remains well below normal and is spread unevenly throughout the system.”

— “A deal with implications for passenger rail was rejected last year but gets a new hearing Thursday. Elected officials weigh in,” by Danny Jin, Berkshire Eagle: “Though a federal board rejected a proposed railroad merger last year, the deal, which has implications for Western Massachusetts passenger rail projects and freight service, gets a new hearing Thursday.”

THE PRESSLEY PARTY

— “Pressley to Biden: Forgive student loans immediately,” by Rebecca Tauber, GBH News: “U.S. Rep. Ayanna Pressley is calling on President Joe Biden to take executive action on canceling student debt, emphasizing that student loans are a racial justice issue as well as a socioeconomic one.”

Pressley also slammed the state’s Covid-19 response, saying “voluntary mask advisories or other half measures are just simply inexcusable.” Pressley, who recently got a breakthrough case, called for an “aggressive, comprehensive statewide plan” including an indoor mask mandate. Asked if there should be a statewide vaccine requirement for some indoor venues like Boston’s pending mandate, Pressley replied, “I don’t see why not.”

— ENDORSEMENT ALERT: Pressley rolled out her first slate of midterm endorsements yesterday, a list of six Democrats that includes fellow Bay Stater Rep. Lori Trahan.

FROM THE DELEGATION

— “Rep. Lori Trahan, Sen. Bernie Sanders reintroduce Masks for All Act to get Americans N95 masks,” by Benjamin Kail, MassLive: “U.S. Rep. Lori Trahan of Massachusetts on Wednesday partnered with Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and dozens of Democrats to reintroduce a plan to ramp up production of protective N95 masks and get at least three to every American during the surge of the omicron COVID-19 variant.”

 

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DATELINE D.C.

— “Walensky’s growing pains,” by Alex Thompson, Max Tani and Tina Sfondeles, POLITICO: “CDC [Director Rochelle Walensky] did not relocate full-time to Atlanta and continues to work remotely from the Boston area, with frequent trips to CDC headquarters and Washington. … Asked if she flies commercial and pays out of pocket for her travel back-and-forth to Boston, as Labor Secretary Marty Walsh’s team says he does when commuting back-and-forth to Boston, a CDC spokesperson asked to talk off the record. Ultimately, they did not respond to our questions.”

FROM THE 413

— “Newly-named Catholic diocesan committee announced, to usher in new era of accountability,” by Stephanie Barry, Springfield Republican: “The Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield on Wednesday announced a new, nine-member Implementation and Oversight Committee in an effort to ensure reforms around the organization’s response to clergy abuse allegations.”

THE LOCAL ANGLE

— “Two WPI students die during winter break marking six student deaths in the past six months for the school,” by Tom Matthews, MassLive: “Since July 2021, six [Worcester Polytechnic Institute] students have died, the school confirmed. Three of those six deaths are known suicides.”

 

A message from Associated Industries of Massachusetts:

Where does the Massachusetts economy go now, almost two years into an unprecedented public health crisis that has scrambled the job market, disrupted global supply chains and redefined the very nature of work? Associated Industries of Massachusetts (AIM), the state’s largest business association, serves more than 3,300 businesses representing 150 different industries in the Commonwealth. We hear from our members daily about their challenges and opportunities which gives us an extraordinarily unique perspective on the Massachusetts business community. Join us Friday January 21st at 7:30 for the State of Massachusetts Business address as AIM President and CEO, John Regan, summarizes the Massachusetts business economy in 2021, comments on what it will mean for 2022, and gets feedback from some of the region’s top business executives. Register here

 
MEDIA MATTERS

— After 2020 surge, Boston Globe digital subscriptions plateau,” by Don Seiffert, Boston Business Journal: “After a pandemic- and politics-fueled increase in online subscribers in 2020, the Boston Globe’s digital subscriptions leveled off, and even declined last year for the first time, according to the newspaper’s filings with a nonprofit that tracks newspaper circulation. The Globe continues to enjoy one of the widest online readerships of any regional daily newspaper in the U.S., and the slowdown last year is part of an industry-wide trend.”

—  Gannett to stop Saturday print editions at 136 newspapers nationwide,” by Don Seiffert, Boston Business Journal: “Sources told the Business Journal that while the chain’s two largest dailies, The Providence Journal and the Worcester Telegram and Gazette, will not be affected, most others will, including the Cape Cod Times, the Fall River Herald News and the New Bedford Standard Times. Some of Gannett’s dailies, such as the Patriot Ledger in Quincy, have already discontinued Saturday print editions.”

TRANSITIONS — Paulina Mangubat is digital director for Boston Mayor Michelle Wu.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to Gina Christo of Rivera Consulting and GBH’s Paul Singer.

NEW HORSE RACE ALERT: THE LONG INTERMISSION — Michael Bobbitt, executive director of the Massachusetts Cultural Council, joins hosts Jennifer Smith and Lisa Kashinsky to discuss the challenges Covid-19 still presents for the arts community. MassINC Polling Group Research Director Rich Parr breaks down the latest polling on transportation. Subscribe and listen on iTunes and Sound Cloud.

Want to make an impact? POLITICO Massachusetts has a variety of solutions available for partners looking to reach and activate the most influential people in the Bay State. Have a petition you want signed? A cause you’re promoting? Seeking to increase brand awareness among this key audience? Share your message with our influential readers to foster engagement and drive action. Contact Jesse Shapiro to find out how: jshapiro@politico.com.

 

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Lisa Kashinsky @lisakashinsky

 

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