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Showing posts with label ANTISEMITISM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ANTISEMITISM. Show all posts

Saturday, December 18, 2021

Rick Perry caught spearheading coup attempt

 


Biden's vaccine mandate for large companies reinstated by appeals court, setting up Supreme Court showdown

Today's Top Stories:

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Rick Perry's phone used to send original coup plot text message, the day after Biden's election

The previously unnamed source of a text outlining "aggressive tactic" to overturn election was confirmed to be the ex-Texas governor by people with his phone number. Oops.



Report confirms Trump deliberately sabotaged COVID-19 response for political gain
His own health officials implored him to act aggressively and transparently, but Trump instead sought advice from crackpot doctors and ordered testing guidance altered so fewer cases would be reported to the public.


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Republicans' secret plot to rig election FINALLY exposed

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: Whoa.


New Trump anti-semitic tirade caught on tape
The former president invoked an age-old racist trope about Jews controlling congress and attacked American Jews for abandoning Israel, saying American evangelicals "...love Israel more than the Jews."


Senate Democrats launch new bid to pass pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants
Senate parliamentarian ruled three previous attempts violated the byzantine rules in the upper chamber, but Democratic leaders appear to have a way around this time.



Ron Desantis' hand-picked "CRT tsar" outed as rabid QAnon conspiracy theorist
The local Miami MAGA activist is well known for spreading anti-vaxx misinformation as well, yet the Florida governor and presidential wannabe keeps giving her a platform.



Trump supporter sentenced to longest prison term yet for January 6th insurrection
Robert Palmer of Florida will serve 5 years in federal prison for attacking police with a fire hydrant and a wooden plank during the attack on the capitol.


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Richard Ojeda FLAMES GQP over TikTok School Shooter Challenge

No Dem Left Behind: The Democratic star blames gun-toting politicians, NRA for TikTok "School Shooter Challenge."


Republicans reach million-dollar deal to bail out Trump amid legal woes
The self-proclaimed billionaire apparently can't pay his bills and has gone running to the GOP for up to $1.6 million to help cover mounting legal expenses.


Ex-Fox News pundit says "screw it" and pens scathing essay about network
Jonah Goldberg, one of two conservative commentators who resigned from Fox News last month, ripped the network for whitewashing Trump's culpability in and downplaying the severity of the MAGA insurrection.


Kamala Harris goes to bat for Biden in contentious interview
Host Charlamagne Tha God tried to blame the president for apparent inaction on his agenda, but Vice President Harris wasn't having it.


Senate confirms first ever Muslim as religious freedom ambassador
Rashad Hussain will lead the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, the State Department office that monitors religious freedom abroad.


Oh for vax sake...

Something to hide?

Hope...






Friday, December 17, 2021

POLITICO NIGHTLY: What impeachment taught the 1/6 commission

 



 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY KYLE CHENEY

Presented by

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With help from Myah Ward

Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), chair of the select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, speaks as Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), vice-chair, Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) and Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) listen during a committee meeting on Capitol Hill.

Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), chair of the select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, speaks as Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), vice-chair, Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) and Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) listen during a committee meeting on Capitol Hill. | Drew Angerer/Getty Images

AND WHAT MCCARTHY DIDN’T LEARN — It’s an immutable law on Capitol Hill: If you have power, wield it. If you don’t, do whatever it takes to be in the room with those who do.

House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy violated that principle on July 21 when he boycotted the Jan. 6 select committee. It turns out, that was the most important development of the entire investigation.

Since then, the members of the panel have operated with a harmony — and secrecy — rarely seen in modern Washington. They’ve interviewed 300 witnesses, only about 50 of whom have been publicly identified. They’ve blanketed Donald Trump’s allies with subpoenas, referred three key witnesses for contempt of Congress prosecution and exerted pressure like few committees ever have. By all accounts, they’re making inroads into the depths of the Trump White House and unearthing evidence that will make that dark day look even darker.

All, we might add, without fear of a hostile minority raising procedural objections or acting as spies and defenders for Trump-world.

“We will tell this story to the American people. But we won’t do it piecemeal,” Chair Bennie Thompson said this week. “We’ll do it when we can tell the story all at once, from start to finish.”

Thompson wouldn’t have that luxury if the committee had an opposition building a counternarrative from within.

McCarthy’s decision was understandable at the time. He was reacting to Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s decision to veto two of his five picks — the Jims: Jordan and Banks. Both men, Pelosi determined, were too intertwined with Trump to be credible investigators, justifying what she described as an “unprecedented” decision to block them from the committee. The revelation this week that Jordan forwarded a legal strategy for overturning the election to Trump’s chief of staff in the run-up to Jan. 6 has bolstered Democrats’ confidence in Pelosi’s decision.

In deciding to boycott, McCarthy rejected the lessons of the 2019 Trump impeachment, when Republicans used their access to evidence and witnesses to push back on the probe and build a defense.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s author at kcheney@politico.com, or on Twitter at @kyledcheney.

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U.S. Capitol Police officers Sgt. Aquilino Gonell and Harry Dunn listen as Rep. Adam Kinzinger speaks remotely during a business meeting with the select committee on Capitol Hill.

U.S. Capitol Police officers Sgt. Aquilino Gonell and Harry Dunn listen as Rep. Adam Kinzinger speaks remotely during a business meeting with the select committee on Capitol Hill. | Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

THE IMPEACHMENT LESSONS — Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), who led the first impeachment, sits on the Jan. 6 panel and has clearly applied that experience to the new, even weightier probe. A slew of factors — beginning with the absence of any real pushback — have given the Jan. 6 panel an edge that Democrats didn’t have in the impeachment years. Here’s a look at some of them:

A friendly executive branch: During Trump’s first impeachment, Democrats peppered his administration with documents requests and subpoenas. They got a sum total of zero pages. Trump so thoroughly stonewalled the committee, that investigators were left making inferences and educated assertions where documents might have told the full story. Trump’s second impeachment, for “incitement of insurrection” came just days before he left office.

The Biden White House has taken its own unprecedented steps to aid the Jan. 6 committee. Most significantly, Biden has waived any executive privilege over key tranches of documents sought by the panel. Trump is fighting that decision in court but has so far lost at every stage. And the panel has already accessed a subset of White House records that Trump did not contest.

The committee has also benefited from a supportive Justice Department. DOJ, which is prosecuting hundreds of people who breached the Capitol, supported the panel’s call to prosecute Trump ally Steve Bannon for refusing to comply with a subpoena. The criminal charges put Trump world in a pincer grip, sending a stark warning to other witnesses that they could face jail for stonewalling.

Message discipline: During the first impeachment, three full committees of the House — Intelligence, Oversight and Foreign Affairs — directed the initial investigation. The inquiry later went to the Judiciary Committee to craft impeachment articles. The panels included dozens of members, which led to an often chaotic (and unsuccessful) scramble to keep evidence contained and confidential. And those members didn’t always see eye to eye about the nature of the case against Trump, with that fractiousness sometimes spilling into public view.

Pelosi’s decision to keep the Jan. 6 panel small has enabled her to populate it with members who stay relentlessly on message. Schiff and Rep. Zoe Lofgren are former prosecutors. Rep. Jamie Raskin is a constitutional law professor, and Rep. Liz Cheney – one of two Republicans Pelosi placed on the panel — has become a singular, and singularly disciplined, force. Cheney’s allies regularly indicate she doesn’t say anything without intention — and so her recent comments suggesting Trump may have violated criminal obstruction law were of particular note.

Transcripts: The 2019 impeachment committees released periodic transcripts of witness interviews and depositions. Those transcripts kept the public apprised of the progress of the investigation — and the types of questions Democrats and Republicans were asking — but also clued in other witnesses about the substance of the case the House was building in real time. In that case, there were only a few dozen witnesses who ultimately testified, a fraction of those appearing before the Jan. 6 panel.

The Jan. 6 committee has released just one witness transcript: the deposition of former DOJ official Jeffrey Clark, who appeared but refused to answer any substantive questions about his role in Trump’s quest to overturn the election. Thompson’s promise to keep the evidence close is double edged: It keeps the public relatively in the dark — but it also will maximize the impact of the voluminous new evidence when they do decide to go public.

Public hearings: The impeachment hearings in 2019 were high-drama but were often bogged down by procedural infighting with Republicans, who used the forum to kick as much sand into the gears as possible. The case Democrats were making at the time was complicated — providing evidence that Trump withheld security funds from Ukraine to pressure the European ally to launch an investigation into Joe Biden. The testimony centered on Trump’s involvement in directing budget officials to withhold the funding and State Department officials’ interactions with a cast of senior Ukrainian leaders.

The Jan. 6 hearings, in contrast, will be free of the on-screen bickering and delay tactics that marked the 2019 hearings. Panel members will be free to choreograph the exact presentation they want without fear of interruption, selecting only the witnesses who will most clearly underscore the case they end up making. Cheney has indicated that the panel intends to hold “multiple weeks” of public hearings in the spring.

 

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FROM THE HEALTH DESK

A sign indicating canceled performances hangs at the front entrance of

A sign indicating canceled performances hangs at the front entrance of "Hamilton" at the Richard Rodgers Theatre in New York City. | Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images

CLOSING TIME, AGAIN  A friend texted me today and asked if I thought we were headed for another Covid lockdown.

I said, “no,” and asked why it was on her mind, even though I already knew. Her family had canceled their Christmas party — another Omicron casualty that adds to the long list of shutdown universities, canceled Broadway shows and postponed professional sports games as the virus sidelines players, writes Nightly’s Myah Ward.

President Joe Biden is probably right in saying we won’t have another nationwide lockdown like spring of 2020.

But we’re not yet free of smaller-scale shutdowns at places like universities, Abraar Karan, an infectious disease fellow at Stanford University, told Nightly.

Cornell, with roughly 97 percent of its student population vaccinated, reported 1,567 new cases from Dec. 10 through 16. The university, which requires students to be tested weekly and has a robust contact tracing system, saw the virus begin to spread among student populations last week, Peter Frazier, a Cornell engineering professor in charge of the university’s Covid response modeling, told Nightly. On Monday, additional lab tests showed 90 percent of samples were missing one of three target genes, known as S gene dropout, a key marker for Omicron.

Further sequencing from the Tompkins County Health Department in New York confirmed their suspicions today. Of 115 student samples sequenced by the department, all 115 are Omicron, the health department said. There have been no reports of severe disease.

“When you have a big outbreak happening in a very close compartment like a university, you’re sort of pressed to do something about it. I don’t think we’re quite there yet to say, ‘Do nothing,’” Karan said. “Maybe next year, if we keep running into this and we say we’ve answered some questions.”

Those answers might be knowing exactly how many Covid vaccine doses are enough. Or learning that the incidence of long Covid is really small.

Lingering uncertainty is part of why Cornell shut down its New York campus on Tuesday, Frazier said, moving final exams online. The spread was rapid, and there’s still a lack of U.S. data on Omicron. The disruption to learning was low given it was already exam week and winter break was on the horizon.

Some Cornell students will take Covid home with them. The university recommended students have a negative test before traveling home, Frazier said, though not all have complied.

Cornell can’t reverse the damage already done, but the university did stop Omicron from proliferating even more on campus, Karan said. Had the university stayed open another week for in-person exams and end-of-semester parties, students could have disseminated even more virus across the country once they went home, spreading through malls and nursing homes.

Remote exams in December doesn’t mean things will look the same in Ithaca, N.Y., when students return in January, Frazier said. He’s optimistic that this next month will give time for more Omicron data to roll out and for the university to make decisions about how to protect students while maintaining an open campus, whether that means increased testing or limits on social gatherings.

“You want to put measures in place that are strong enough that you’re making everybody safe, but that still allows students to get a lot out of college,” he said. “To make things as normal as possible.”

WHAT'D I MISS?

— Southwest CEO tests positive for Covid-19: Southwest CEO Gary Kelly has tested positive for Covid-19 days after he testified before the Senate Commerce Committee . While Kelly tested negative “multiple times prior to the hearing” he ultimately “tested positive for Covid-19 after returning home, [is] experiencing mild symptoms, and taking a PCR test,” a Southwest spokesperson said today, adding Kelly has been fully vaccinated and received the booster earlier this year.

— Trump invokes antisemitic tropes while discussing his support for Israel: Trump veered into several antisemitic tropes in a recent interview, claiming that Israel used to have “absolute power over Congress” and saying that American Jews — the majority of whom vote Democratic — “either don't like Israel or don't care about Israel.” Trump’s comments to Israeli journalist Barak Ravid are not the first time he's used language that skews toward biased stereotypes about Jews: In 2019, the then-president said Jews who vote Democratic are “being very disloyal to Israel.” His most recent remarks come, however, as Republicans on Capitol Hill remain highly critical of progressive Democrats’ increasing support for Palestinian rights and burgeoning criticism of Israeli government policies toward Palestinians.

 

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— New York City employees say they fear working from their offices as Covid-19 cases rise: City officials and workers are sounding the alarm over Mayor Bill de Blasio’s mandate for in-person work amid the explosive spread of the Omicron variant. Covid-19 test positivity has doubled within a three-day period — a speed that New York has not reported during the pandemic, according to former City Hall aide Jay Varma. According to the most recent City Hall data, 6.5 percent of Covid-19 tests were positive, as of Dec. 13. “Given what we are seeing right now, I think it would be wise for the City & other large employers to let non-essential employees work remotely through the end of the year,” Comptroller-elect Brad Lander tweeted today. “Especially as people are in & out over the holidays, the more we can reduce unnecessary contact the better.”

— Judge: Lack of charges for Trump over Jan. 6 is no basis for leniency for others: A federal judge has rejected arguments from a Capitol Riot participant that he should get a more lenient sentence because Trump and other organizers of election-fraud protests on Jan. 6 have not been held accountable for their conduct . “I don’t think that fact means that you should get a lower sentence,” U.S. District Court Judge Tanya Chutkan said today, before sentencing Florida resident Robert Palmer to the lengthiest prison term imposed thus far in a Capitol riot case: five years and three months behind bars.

AROUND THE WORLD

FRENCH HOPE TO TURN COVID PASS TO VAX PASS — The French government wants to make its Covid pass available only to people who have been vaccinatedGiorgio Leali writes.

The government will submit a bill at the beginning of January “to transform the health pass into a vaccination pass and to tighten the conditions of control and sanction against false passes,” Prime Minister Jean Castex said this evening.

At present, health passes — which are needed to enter restaurants, bars and to access a number of cultural activities — can be obtained if people provide a negative test or if they have been vaccinated. But Castex said he wants “only the vaccination ... to be valid,” adding that “the intensive care ... units of our hospitals are filled for the most part with unvaccinated people.”

Castex also announced that the waiting time before getting a vaccine booster will be reduced from five months to four months as of Jan. 3 and he invited French citizens to take a Covid test before attending Christmas and New Year’s gatherings.

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING: What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president’s ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today.

 
 
NIGHTLY NUMBER

844

The number of daily positive Covid cases reported by Washington D.C. today, a single-day record for the city.

PARTING WORDS

BLUE CHRISTMAS CONTINUES AT DOWNING STREET — The U.K.’s most senior civil servant stood down from his investigation into alleged Christmas parties at Downing Street after claims that he also broke Covid rules, Esther Webber writes.

Cabinet Secretary Simon Case has been tasked by Prime Minister Boris Johnson with investigating whether a series of alleged Christmas parties broke Covid restrictions in late 2020.

But Case himself has been accused of attending two parties in December last year at the Cabinet Office.

A No. 10 spokesperson said late today: “To ensure the ongoing investigation retains public confidence the cabinet secretary has recused himself for the remainder of the process.”

The inquiry will now be taken on by Sue Gray, former head of propriety and ethics at the Cabinet Office and now a senior official at the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities.

Case was said to have shared drinks with a group of 15 to 20 staff at his office and in the waiting room outside at 70 Whitehall in mid-December 2020 by two officials present who spoke to POLITICO and the Independent. At the time, London was in Tier 2 restrictions, meaning people were not allowed to socialize indoors and were told to work from home where possible.

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Friday, November 12, 2021

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Karyn Polito’s busy schedule

 



 
Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY

ON THE ROAD AGAIN — Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito is keeping an aggressive fall schedule as 2022 looms — in just the first two weeks of November, she’s logged twice as many public events as Gov. Charlie Baker.

Polito's attended 16 public events so far this month, while Baker's been to eight. Widen the lens to the past 30 days, and the trend still holds — she’s attended nearly twice the number of events as Baker, according to a Very Scientific Playbook Review (reading their schedules from the governor’s office). This tally includes events they’re both at. It doesn’t count fundraisers or the governor’s TV and radio appearances, which usually aren't on his official schedule.

Polito’s events look like a Republican roadmap for shoring up support ahead of next year’s election, whether that’s for her or for the Baker-Polito team. While the handful of stops in Worcester over the past month are typical for Polito, who’s from neighboring Shrewsbury, she’s also swung through cities including Weymouth, Dartmouth, Attleboro, Taunton, Gloucester, Chicopee, Westfield, New Bedford and several communities on or near Cape Cod that have Republican pockets and/or administration-friendly mayors.

Crisscrossing the state is nothing new for Polito. She traveled to all 351 cities and towns as part of the administration’s Community Compact push in 2018. She’s often tapped to dole out grants on the administration’s behalf, and has done so at six of her 16 events in November. Baker’s office said both his and Polito’s schedules these days look similar to their pre-pandemic calendars.

And yet… it’s still "maybe season" in the governor’s race. Donors and politicos are clamoring for any sort of hint as to what Baker and Polito are doing in 2022 (not to mention Democratic state Attorney General Maura Healey, but that’s for another day) , so read the tea leaves as you will.

GOOD FRIDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Happy Red (Taylor’s Version) Day to all who celebrate.

TODAY — Rep. Lori Trahan is at UMass Lowell’s HEROES Day at 9:30 a.m. Rep. Richard Neal and U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai talk trade at 10:30 a.m. at the UMass Club. Sen. Elizabeth Warren and National Climate Advisor Gina McCarthy talk Build Back Better at 11:45 a.m., Benjamin Franklin Institute of Technology. Rep. Jake Auchincloss tours Dighton at 12:30 p.m. LG hopeful state Rep. Tami Gouveia hosts a 6 p.m. virtual fundraiser.

THIS WEEKEND — Auchincloss joins state Rep. Claire Cronin at Easton's library, 10 a.m. Saturday. Governor hopeful Geoff Diehl has a 2 p.m. Saturday fundraiser, Lowell American Legion. SHNS’s Matt Murphy and Katie Lannan are on WBZ’s “Keller at Large” at 8:30 a.m. Sunday. Warren is on WCVB’s “On the Record” at 11 a.m. Sunday. Sen. Ed Markey and state Rep. Nika Elugardo join A Livable Future: How Can Massachusetts Lead on Climate” at 7 p.m. Sunday.

Have a tip, story, suggestion, birthday, anniversary, new job, or any other nugget for the Playbook? Get in touch: lkashinsky@politico.com.

 

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DATELINE BEACON HILL

– “With nearly 100 Saint Vincent Hospital beds closed during COVID and strike, state Rep. Mary Keefe calls for emergency public hearing,” by Melissa Hanson, MassLive: “State Rep. Mary Keefe has called for an emergency public hearing related to bed closures at Saint Vincent Hospital as a nurses’ strike drags on through the COVID-19 pandemic. Nearly 100 beds at the Worcester hospital have been closed following a strike that began in March, as nurses called for safer staffing levels, and other services have been halted. Keefe has written a letter to Marylou Sudders, the secretary of the Executive Office of Health and Human Services, requesting the hearing.

– “Bunte Portrait Pitched To Recognize Trailblazer,” by Colin A. Young, State House News Service (paywall): “Doris Bunte was the first to do a lot of things, like being a Black woman elected to the Massachusetts Legislature. Though she died earlier this year, a group of Black women who said they follow in her footsteps as reps want for Bunte to claim another first -- being the first Black woman to have an official portrait hung in the Massachusetts State House.

– “Senate approves plan to spend relief money,” by Christian M. Wade, CNHI/Eagle-Tribune: “The Senate bill approved on Wednesday includes $1 billion for the state’s health care systems, $1.7 billion for workforce development, $600 million to expand housing options and $450 million to address climate change adaptation. … scores of non-pandemic related earmarks were added to the bill through the amendment process, including $50,000 for a private youth soccer program in Lawrence, $100,000 for sidewalks in Tewksbury and $8 million to help support Haitians relocated to the state following a major earthquake earlier this year.

– More: “Senate passes its $3.8 billion ARPA package: What’s in it for western Massachusetts?” by Claudia Chiappa, BU Statehouse Program/Daily Hampshire Gazette: “In western Massachusetts, there is money to improve local public health systems, provide storm damage disaster relief, and fund environmental work and internet infrastructure.

– “Baker urged to clear up unemployment insurance fund confusion,” by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Magazine: “A senior analyst at the Massachusetts Budget and Policy Center who is following the debate over the solvency of the state’s unemployment insurance trust fund urged the Baker administration on Thursday to clear up confusion about the fund’s financial status."

– “Reps Urge Adoption Of COVID-19 Remembrance Day,” by Colin A. Young, State House News Service (paywall): “The first Monday of each March would be set aside under legislation considered Wednesday as COVID-19 Remembrance Day in Massachusetts to honor those who have died of the disease, everyone who is battling the coronavirus or its long-term effects, and the essential workers on the front lines of the state's response to the pandemic. Reps. Natalie Blais and Mindy Domb filed [the] resolution…

VAX-ACHUSETTS

– “‘The pandemic is not over’: In a worrisome trend, COVID-19 cases are rising again in Mass.,” by Martin Finucane and Ryan Huddle, Boston Globe: “Massachusetts coronavirus case numbers have lurched upward in recent days, in a worrisome development that experts say underlines the need for people to get vaccinated and to take precautions such as wearing masks in indoor public spaces. Case numbers began rising from rock-bottom levels in early July, hit a peak in mid-September, and then declined until early this month. But in the past week or so, they began to rise again. The seven-day average of reported cases was 1,182 on Nov. 3. A week later, as of Nov. 10, it had jumped to 1,481.

– “Barnstable County to workers: Get vaccine, weekly testing, or face penalty,” by Jeannette Hinkle, Cape Cod Times: “Employees who don’t comply with the policy, by providing proof they’ve had at least one dose of an approved COVID-19 vaccine or weekly testing results by Nov. 30, will be suspended without pay for five days. If employees are not in compliance at the end of the suspension, they will be fired. Workers who chose to be vaccinated must be fully vaccinated by Dec. 31, according to the policy.

WU TRAIN

– "Wu will be Boston's first millennial mayor, part of a growing wave nationally," by Callum Borchers, WBUR: "Boston Mayor-elect Michelle Wu is making history on several fronts. She is the first woman and first person of color elected to lead the city. But at 36, she is also about to become Boston's first millennial mayor. ... When Wu assumes office Tuesday, she'll take from [Fort Worth Mayor Mattie] Parker the distinction of youngest mayor among America's 25 largest cities."

 “Recent violence involving Boston police could complicate Michelle Wu’s plans to reform the department,” by Danny McDonald, Boston Globe: “A recent pair of confrontations that left two suspects dead and sent four Boston police officers to the hospital could further complicate one of the thorniest policy problems Mayor-elect Michelle Wu will face after being sworn in next week: Making good on her campaign pledge to substantially overhaul the city’s approach to policing.

– “Wu calls Tuesday’s police shooting an example of large, systemic failure,” by Saraya Wintersmith, GBH News: “Boston Mayor-elect Michelle Wu called this week's police shooting a result of systemic failure Thursday. The shooting, which occurred in Dorchester Tuesday afternoon, left the alleged shooter dead and three police officers wounded.

WHAT CITY HALL IS READING

– “Three Boston city councilors eyeing council presidency,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “City Councilors Ricardo Arroyo, Kenzie Bok and Ed Flynn are all in discussions with their colleagues as they each look to take the reins of the council, sources say. Each is trying to line up support among the other 10 councilors, and has at least a couple in their corner for the presidency, which lasts two years.

– “ACLU Boston Methadone Mile suit heads to lower court as tent city moves,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “The ACLU’s lawsuit aimed at stopping the city from dismantling the tent city in the South End’s Methadone Mile will head to lower courts with instructions to make decisions quickly as enforcement continues — and the encampments migrate to a new location.

FROM THE HUB

– “Parents raise alarms over Boston Public Schools’ handling of COVID outbreaks,” by Gabrielle Emanuel, WBUR: “Shortly before Halloween, Kate Mitchell got an email from her children’s school, Manning Elementary in Jamaica Plain, letting her know that someone had ‘recently accessed the building and has tested positive for COVID-19 … it does not appear that anyone will need to quarantine.’ … She's one of many parents who expressed alarm about what they see as gaps in the district’s planning for school outbreaks.

– “MFA union votes to hold one-day strike next week,” by Jeremy C. Fox, Boston Globe: “The union representing about 200 workers at Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts voted Wednesday to hold a one-day strike next week, with union officials saying management refuses to budge over wages and other issues after more than seven months of contract negotiations.

FEELING '22

– FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Sandwich Republican Jack Carey is launching his campaign for the Plymouth and Barnstable state Senate seat currently held by Democrat Susan Moran. Moran flipped a Republican seat when she won the special election to succeed former state Sen. Viriato deMacedo in 2020; she was reelected that fall. Carey, a 53-year-old attorney and U.S. Navy veteran, said he’s a “right of center kind of guy, a fiscal conservative” who wants to help rebuild Republicans’ dwindled ranks in the Senate. The political newcomer says in his launch video he’ll represent the district’s “moderate and mainstream values.”

– NEW THIS AM: State Rep. Paul Mark has been endorsed by state Reps. Lindsay Sabadosa and Natalie Blais and former state Rep. Steve Kulik in his bid for the Berkshire, Hampden, Franklin, and Hampshire state Senate seat, per his campaign.

TODAY'S SPECIAL (ELECTION)

– ENDORSEMENT RECAP: Boston City Councilor Lydia Edwards has been endorsed by state Sens. Sonia Chang-Díaz, Julian Cyr, Jamie Eldridge, Becca Rausch, Cindy Friedman and Eric Lesser in her bid for the open 1st Suffolk and Middlesex state Senate seat, per her campaign.

FROM THE DELEGATION

– “Rep. Jake Auchincloss warns of ‘casual mainstreaming of antisemitism’,” by Marc Rod, Jewish Insider: “The Republican and Democratic parties need to be 'on guard' against the 'causal mainstreaming of antisemitism' lest it become as pervasive as it has within the U.K.’s Labour Party, Rep. Jake Auchincloss (D-MA) warned on Wednesday. The freshman congressman, whose Boston-area district includes a sizable Jewish population, made the remarks Wednesday during a virtual event hosted by the Jewish Community Relations Council of Boston.

– “Black WWII veterans would get G.I. benefits under Seth Moulton bill,” by Amy Sokolow, Boston Herald: “The benefits of the G.I. Bill, often thought of as the path to the middle class for millions of WWII veterans, were largely denied to Black veterans. U.S. Rep. Seth Moulton, D-Salem, hopes to change that with a new bill.

FROM THE 413

– “Chicopee to fly flags at half-staff in memory of police officer Michael Dion, who died of a heart attack on duty,” by Jeanette DeForge, Springfield Republican: “Flags will be flown at half-staff on Friday to honor the city’s longest-serving police officer, who died Wednesday after suffering a heart attack while on duty. Detective Michael J. Dion had been a police officer for 39 years and had been wearing Badge 1, assigned to the senior patrolman in the department, since Dec. 30, deputy chief Jeff Gawron said in a written statement.

– “West Springfield mayor to head town’s cryptocurrency exploratory board,” by Aprell May Munford, Springfield Republican: “Mayor William Reichelt will chair an ad hoc Cryptocurrency Exploratory Committee that will examine the benefits and risks of the rising cryptocurrency market. The committee will help determine opportunities for municipal investment, growth, and increased forms of payment options for residents and employees.

– “Who leaked complaints to the press? Scope of Monterey probe grows,” by Heather Bellow, Berkshire Eagle: “A probe into who leaked a slew of internal Town Hall complaints to the press likely will be added to a broader investigation into those same complaints, most of which were filed by town staff and officials against each other. This would bring to 20 the number of complaints, including a sexual harassment claim, about what some say is a hostile and unethical workplace."

THE LOCAL ANGLE

– “No ICU beds: Boston MedFlight's operations severely impacted by capacity, staffing crisis,” by Hadley Barndollar, USA Today Network: “Boston MedFlight paramedic Mark Saia and his colleagues recently could not find a hospital that would take a patient 'actively having a heart attack.' A nonprofit providing critical care medical transportation, Boston MedFlight is now often forced to bring patients out of state – to Connecticut and Rhode Island – because beds aren't available in Massachusetts.

– “Thin ice: Community under scrutiny as toxic hockey culture comes to light,” by Jill Harmacinski and Erin Nolan, Salem News: “The Boston lawyer known for representing sex abuse victims Thursday urged the state Attorney General’s Office to investigate accusations of racism and sexual abuse by the Danvers High School varsity hockey team. Attorney Mitchell Garabedian said news media and other reports make it clear an ‘institutional coverup’ has left the public in the dark about what took place and whether laws were broken.

– “Allegations of misconduct go beyond Danvers boys’ hockey. New MIAA chief says ‘we need to intervene immediately’,” by Bob Hohler, Boston Globe: “Breaking with MIAA history — the organization has long lacked a powerful public voice to campaign against abuses in high school sports — [MIAA Executive Director Bob] Baldwin said in an interview that he plans to take a strong stand to promote civility and the safety of student-athletes, after a series of alarming incidents in his first weeks on the job.

– “Hovan decried weapons used in ‘killing sprees’ but he collected them,” by Anastasia Lennon, New Bedford Light: “Southcoast Health President Keith A. Hovan, who faces a felony charge for allegedly possessing illegal firearm ammunition, penned an impassioned plea for sensible gun policies after the 2012 massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn.

– Region’s recycling workers make progress on living wage front,” by Cole Rosengren, Dig Boston: “For the first time ever, Boston, Cambridge, and Somerville are boosting the pay for the workers who sort their recyclables after resolving a decades-long stalemate with a regional company. Each city requires that workers involved with large municipal contracts earn more money, but Casella Waste Systems — a major, publicly traded company — successfully got exemptions for years.

MEANWHILE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE

– BIDEN’S BACK: President Joe Biden will travel to Woodstock, New Hampshire, on Tuesday to discuss the recently passed bipartisan infrastructure bill. It’s Biden’s first trip to the Granite State since he fled before the polls closed on primary night in 2020 (he won the state in the general election).

– “Former Gov. John Lynch says he’s ‘not even considering’ running for governor again,” by John DiStaso, WMUR: “Former Gov. John Lynch made it clear Thursday he’s not interested in making a political comeback. The moderate Democrat and only governor to have served four terms confirmed that he has been asked by friends and supporters, including Republicans, to return to politics and challenge Gov. Chris Sununu in 2022. But in an exclusive interview, Lynch told WMUR: “Running for governor is not something I’m even considering.’”

HAPPY BIRTHDAY – to Seekonk state Rep. Steven Howitt, Insider’s Haven Orecchio-Egresitz, MassINC alum Winthrop Roosevelt, Tim Urban, Devra First and Playbook superfan Laura Kashinsky.

HAPPY BIRTHWEEKEND — to Gov. Charlie Baker, who turns 65; NECN’s Sue O’Connell; Sudbury state Rep. Carmine Gentile, Monica Scalpato Burke and POLITICO alum Jonathan Topaz , who celebrate Saturday; and to Todd Feathers, a Lowell Sun alum, and Tamika Olszewski, who celebrate Sunday.

NEW HORSE RACE ALERT: THE SENATE'S REVOLUTIONARY MENTAL HEALTH BILL — State Sen. Julian Cyr (D-Truro) joins hosts Steve Koczela and Lisa Kashinsky to discuss the Senate's new bill to treat mental health like physical health. Kashinsky breaks down the South Coast congressional redistricting schism. 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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