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Friday, February 4, 2022

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Palfrey’s in as the caucuses begin

 


 
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BY LISA KASHINSKY

NEW: PALFREY MAKES THREE FOR AG — Half a year after he first expressed interest in the seat, Quentin Palfrey is officially launching his campaign for state attorney general today with pledges to protect consumers' rights and tackle climate change.

“The three major priorities that we’ve focused on in this campaign are consumer protection, the climate crisis and protecting our democracy,” Palfrey told me in an interview. “But there are also huge issues around racial justice, reproductive rights, workers’ rights, gun violence and student loan debt that the office is really in a great position to lead on.”

Palfrey’s worn many hats over the years. The 2018 Democratic lieutenant governor nominee has served in both the Obama and Biden administrations and founded the Voter Protection Corps.

He also brings experience in the state AG’s office. Palfrey served as the agency’s first health care division chief as the state's universal health care law was being rolled out, and he worked as an assistant attorney general in the insurance division before that.

“The attorney general’s office is a place that touches on so many different issues,” Palfrey said. And with all the gridlock in Washington over voting reforms and climate issues, Palfrey said state attorneys general are “in a really good position to take on those challenges.”

The timing of Palfrey’s long-anticipated launch coincides with the start of the state Democratic caucuses, an intense five-week stretch in which candidates dash from event to event — or in some cases, Zoom to Zoom — to win over delegates for the June convention. There are eight caucuses scheduled for Saturday alone, according to the party’s public list.

And everyone wants that coveted “momentum” heading into the caucuses, whether that’s from a campaign launch, an impressive fundraising haul, a new slate of endorsements or a decent showing in an early poll. Candidates are holding events to pump up their supporters (i.e. Salem Mayor Kim Driscoll’s volunteer Zoom last night). And they’re showing face in every corner of the state: Palfrey, Driscoll and nearly every other statewide candidate are scheduled to schmooze with potential delegates and party leaders at the Plymouth County Democratic League chair’s breakfast on Saturday in Middleborough.

Palfrey starts his new bid with an existing network from his run for lieutenant governor. But he’ll still need to up his name recognition. A recent MassINC Polling Group survey showed Palfrey with 2 percent support, compared to 3 percent for rival Shannon Liss-Riordan and 31 percent for Andrea Campbell, the former Boston city councilor and mayoral hopeful who entered the AG race earlier this week. Palfrey is also the last to launch of the statewide candidates who filed with MassDems.

GOOD FRIDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. TGIF and stay off the roads!

TODAY — Rep. Ayanna Pressley joins Boston Mayor Michelle Wu live on her @MayorWu Instagram account at 2:30 p.m.

THIS WEEKEND — State Sen. Sonia Chang-Díaz discusses the governor’s race and pandemic policymaking at 8:30 a.m. Sunday on WBZ’s “Keller @ Large.” Rep. Jim McGovern is on WCVB’s “On the Record” at 11 a.m. Sunday.

Tips? Scoops? Email me:  lkashinsky@politico.com. Also, we’re aware that some links may be missing from Playbook when we publish. Our engineers are working on it.

 

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ON THE STUMP

 FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Former Boston city councilor and mayoral hopeful Andrea Campbell has raised more than $100,000 since launching her campaign for state attorney general, her team said.

— FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Dan O’Connell and Greg Bialecki, two former secretaries of housing and economic development under the Patrick administration, are hosting a virtual fundraiser for state Sen. Eric Lesser’s campaign for lieutenant governor on March 2, per an invitation shared with POLITICO. Suggested contributions range from $500 to $1,000.

 GETTING IN: James Arena-DeRosa , a Holliston Democrat and 2014 lieutenant governor hopeful who served as northeast regional administrator for USDA Food and Nutrition during the Obama administration, is running for the state representative seat being vacated by Carolyn Dykema.

— DON’T CALL HER A MODERATE: State Attorney General Maura Healey is pushing back on the idea she’s taking a more moderate tack in the governor’s race.

“I’m a proud progressive,” Healey said on WBUR’s “Radio Boston” yesterday . “I understand that there are those who want to ascribe labels to me. Frankly, I don’t know that voters or ordinary people care much about labels.”

Healey, who’s declined opportunities to ideologically link herself to progressives like Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Rep. Ayanna Pressley since entering the governor’s race, said she’s “not trying to do anything other than speak to what I see as the real issues and the real concerns that voters have.”

Here's a hot take from Healey: The AG told WBUR she drinks hot coffee in the winter, not iced.

THE LATEST NUMBERS

— “Boston-area coronavirus wastewater data continues plunge, Massachusetts reports 4,829 daily COVID cases,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “The south of Boston and north of Boston COVID wastewater data have now plummeted by 97% and 96%, respectively, since the omicron peak in early January. … Thursday’s daily count of 4,829 new virus cases in Massachusetts was significantly down from last Thursday’s report of 8,616 infections.”

— “11,986 new coronavirus cases reported in Massachusetts schools in past week,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “The total of 11,986 staff and students testing positive is a 45% drop from 21,686 positive K-12 tests in the previous week.”

— “Town-by-town COVID-19 data in Massachusetts,” by Ryan Huddle and Peter Bailey-Wells, Boston Globe.

DATELINE BEACON HILL

— WHERE ARE YOU NOW: Lawmakers sifted through thousands of bills this Joint Rule 10 week, giving some a thumbs-up, some a thumbs-down and issuing a lot of extensions. It was so busy out there, but here's where a few key bills stand:

— A bill Playbook mentioned earlier this week that would let app-based drivers unionize has been extended for 60 days.

— The Tenant Protection Act that would bring back local-option rent control has been extended through May 9, per state Reps. Mike Connolly and Nika Elugardo. Last session’s rent control bill was also extended before being reported favorably out of committee.

— Legislation filed by Connolly, Elugardo and state Sen. Jamie Eldridge that would create a state-owned public bank received an extension through April 30. The bill is also backed by Rep. Ayanna Pressley, the Massachusetts Public Banking Coalition and the Metro Mayors Coalition.

— State Rep. Lindsay Sabadosa and state Sen. Jason Lewis's legislation that would require public universities in Massachusetts to provide medical abortion services also got an extension.

— ONE OF THESE DAYS: We have a conference committee on voting reforms, but it's unclear how quickly lawmakers will hash out the differences between the House and Senate bills. That'll be up to state Reps. Mike Moran, Dan Ryan and Shawn Dooley, and state Sens. Barry Finegold, Cindy Creem and Ryan Fattman, per State House News Service’s Chris Lisinski (paywall).

— WHAT IS THE CHANCE: Same-day voter registration will likely be a major sticking point in the conference-committee negotiations. The Senate passed same-day registration, but the House voted to have Secretary of State Bill Galvin study its impacts — which Galvin, who supports the concept, says isn’t necessary. It’s unclear how quickly the conference committee plans to move.

— “Baker sketches plan for $9.5b in fed infrastructure spending,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine: “Gov. Charlie Baker on Thursday laid out in broad strokes his plan for spending $9.5 billion in federal infrastructure money, which the state is expected to receive over the next five years. … Baker’s plan for spending the money will not concentrate on a few transformative projects but rather involves a meticulous distribution to hundreds of highway, culvert, bridge, rail, and other projects from one end of the state to another.” See the Baker administration’s list of proposed bridge repair projects.

— “Construction industry group calls on Massachusetts Legislature to invest in bridges, despite $3 billion investment from federal government,” by Amy Sokolow, Boston Herald: “After a harrowing close call in Somerville last week, the Construction Industries of Massachusetts is calling on lawmakers to shore up funds for the state’s failing infrastructure.”

— “Senate To Make Another Run At Drug Cost Control,” by Katie Lannan, State House News Service (paywall): “A bill targeting drug costs that the Senate plans to take up next week would cap the cost of insulin at $25 a month for consumers, one of a series of measures that a senator behind the legislation said are aimed at boosting access and accountability in the pharmaceutical system.”

 “Tax Receipts Already Running $1.5 Bil Above Revised Estimate,” by Colin A. Young, State House News Service (paywall): “The Department of Revenue reported Thursday that it collected $4.026 billion in state tax revenue from people and businesses last month, a haul that surpassed expectations by $856 million or 27 percent and has helped to put the state nearly $1.5 billion ahead of its end-of-fiscal-year target.”

 

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VAX-ACHUSETTS

— “COVID spending bill grows to $101m, passes within hours,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine: “A $55 million Covid-related spending bill ballooned into a $101 million bill under an agreement reached between House and Senate negotiators, which lawmakers sent to Gov. Charlie Baker’s desk just hours after the compromise was announced. … The final bill includes both bodies’ priorities, plus another $25 million to continue the state’s COVID-19 paid sick leave program.”

— “Children ages 5-11 are lagging behind other age groups in Mass. COVID-19 vaccinations,” by Martin Finucane, Boston Globe: “Only 51 percent of children in that group, or about 264,000 out of 515,000 children, had gotten at least one shot, according to Department of Public Health data released Thursday. That number is higher than the national mark, which is about 31 percent, according to the DPH data.”

— “The science behind the state’s school mask policy is outdated, some experts say. Should the benchmarks change?” by Kay Lazar, Boston Globe: “[S]ome some experts noted that the flood of breakthrough infections during the Omicron surge indicates that vaccination rates alone are not a good enough benchmark for deciding when to mask or unmask.”

FROM THE HUB

— “City to tackle plight of Black men, boys with new office,” by Tiana Woodard, Boston Globe: “The cheers, claps, and amens of more than 40 Black men and allies filled Bruce C. Bolling Municipal Building in Roxbury Thursday morning as Mayor Michelle Wu unveiled the Office for Black Male Advancement, a new entity aimed at addressing the challenges Black men and boys face. … The new office plans to advise Wu on creating policies to improve educational, economic, and health outcomes for the city’s Black men and boys. Frank Farrow, executive director of Elevate Boston Foundation, a nonprofit assisting local families facing hardships, will serve as the office’s executive director.”

— “Flashes still of violence, guns, drugs, and vandalism at Mass. and Cass,” by Milton J. Valencia, Boston Globe: “[Residents and business owners] warned the ongoing problems will undermine the city’s efforts and even invite a return of the crisis if the area isn’t rid of the drug dealers and the toxic environment they instigate."

— “After Globe probe, BPS member asks for new audit of city graduation rates,” by Bianca Vázquez Toness, Boston Globe: “After a Tuesday Globe story showing city auditors found Boston may have overstated its graduation rate for five of the last seven years, a newly appointed School Committee member on Wednesday called for an expanded audit of students the district claimed had left BPS but didn’t drop out.”

FROM THE DELEGATION

— “Lynch Returns To Feds With New Compressor Station Appeal,” by Chris Lisinski and Michael P. Norton, State House News Service (paywall): “Citing emergency shutdowns and recent admissions from federal regulators, Congressman Stephen Lynch is trying to revive efforts to shutter a natural gas compression station in Weymouth.”

DATELINE DC: Rep. Jim McGovern has hung a replica of the iconic portrait of the late Rep. Shirley Chisholm (D-N.Y.) in the House Rules hearing room. McGovern released a video on Chisholm’s trailblazing legacy and recounted the time he drove Chisholm, “one of my personal heroes,” back and forth to the Capitol for a speaking gig at American University.

FROM THE 413

— “Massachusetts AG, candidate for governor Maura Healey called Springfield the ‘asthma capital of the country’ — but it’s not anymore,” by Alison Kuznitz, MassLive: “While Springfield was deemed the ‘most challenging place’ for asthma in 2019, it dropped to No. 12 in the 2021 report from the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America. Worcester ranked No. 11 and Boston was No. 18, according to the report. Allentown, Pennsylvania is now the asthma capital.”

— “Report examines exodus of Amherst school leaders,” by Scott Merzbach, Daily Hampshire Gazette: “With interim principals currently at two schools and extensive turnover in building leadership in recent years, a consultant is advising the Amherst-Pelham Regional Schools to better support those who are hired, and to find ways to address a community culture that questions decision-making. … [T]he report notes that Amherst is a place where reputations can be made quickly and ‘the intense following of local politics by members of the community may be contributing to the challenge.’”

EX-PATS

— ARE YOU HAPPY NOW: Tom Brady didn’t totally snub us. The Patriots featured prominently in Brady’s latest video , which also included a snippet of his post-Bucs-Pats-game “my kids were born here, I’ll be part of this community for a long time” interview. Gov. Charlie Baker said he has “no hurt feelings" over Brady. And Mark Wahlberg is already laying claim to playing Bill Belichick in a Brady biopic.

THE LOCAL ANGLE

— “‘Crippling’ ambulance worker shortage impacting care and response times,” by Ted Daniel, Boston 25 News: “A 71-page report, obtained through a public record request at the state’s Department of Public Health (DPH), shows Brewster Ambulance — the state’s largest private medical transport company — sent two brand new Emergency Medical Technicians (EMT) in an ambulance they were not familiar with.”

— “Truro house that was on brink of collapse has been moved back to safety,” by Emily Sweeney, Boston Globe: “This isn’t the first time the building has had to relocate due to erosion. According to the Cape Cod Times, the former boathouse was moved in 2015.”

— FRIDAY FUN PART I: “Robots pouring beer? Two Boston companies team up for Super Bowl ad,” by WCVB: “After years of unnerving dance moves and other demonstrations, the animal-like robots from Boston Dynamics are finally serving mankind properly. They’re pouring beer. Waltham-based Boston Dynamics is partnering with Samuel Adams for an upcoming Super Bowl commercial.”

— FRIDAY FUN PART II: “‘Give It A Wam! And A Bam!’, Andy The Snow Plow Driver Weighs In On Friday Sleet Storm,” by Anna Meiler, WBZ: “From the blustery, cold blizzard last weekend emerged a viral sensation we didn’t know we needed — snow plow driver Andy Barr.”

MEANWHILE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE

— “Trump wants Chris Sununu out of office as New Hampshire governor, asks GOP candidates to step up,” by Erin Tiernan, Boston Herald: “Former President Donald Trump is asking GOP candidates to step up and get New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu out of office, according to longtime adviser Corey Lewandowski.”

MEDIA MATTERS

— "These Local News Stars Bounced From Scandal to the Newsmax Anchor Desk," by Justin Baragona and Diana Falzone, Daily Beast: "Bianca de la Garza, a former Boston news anchor who gained notoriety for being a central figure in a high-profile embezzlement case, is now a co-host of one of the network’s weekday afternoon broadcasts."

— “Richmond native Michael Bass named one of three interim heads of CNN,” by the Berkshire Eagle: “Michael Bass — son of Berkshire Eagle columnist Ruth Bass and the late longtime Eagle entertainment editor Milton Bass — has been named an interim chief of CNN.”

ON BOARD — The Massachusetts Women’s Political Caucus elected seven new board members at its annual meeting this week: Former Framingham Mayor Yvonne Spicer; Nicole Caravella; Ellen Fleming Clark; Martina Jackson; Christie Lindor; Jacquetta Van Zandt and Antigoni Woodland.

CONGRATS — to Anisha Chakrabarti and Nick Sullivan, who got engaged Wednesday night. Sullivan and Chakrabarti, Gov. Charlie Baker’s deputy communications director, grew up together in Canton.

TRANSITIONS — Molly Kepner has joined Project Bread as their new assistant director of federal policy. She was previously at The Greater Boston Food Bank.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to David Edelman, Ropes & Gray’s Abby Cable, Baker senior adviser Tim Buckley and Baker associate comms and digital director Maura Driscoll. 

HAPPY BIRTHWEEKEND — to former state Rep. John Businger, Bristol County Sheriff Thomas Hodgson, Trevor Kincaid and Matt Bonaccorsi, comms director for Rep. Jim McGovern, who celebrate Saturday; and to Webster state Rep. Joseph McKenna and Pamela Esler, who celebrate Sunday.

NEW HORSE RACE ALERT: VOTING REFORMS & EVERYBODY’S RUNNING — Secretary of State hopeful Tanisha Sullivan talks voting reforms with host Steve Koczela. Koczela, Jennifer Smith and Lisa Kashinsky take stock of the latest developments in statewide races. 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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