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Thursday, October 7, 2021

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: AAPI voters aren’t a monolith

 


 
Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY

‘NO COMMUNITY IS A MONOLITH’ — Michelle Wu could become Boston’s first Asian-American mayor next month, breaking yet another glass ceiling for AAPI representation here.

But the city’s growing AAPI community isn’t necessarily united behind her campaign.

Betty Lim King of the AAPI Action Group, coalition of prominent local Asian Americans, wants to see an Asian mayor in Boston. But she said Wu is “not the right one.”

“We need to have grassroots people, real people, not people who are so polished,” King said of Wu, adding that the Harvard-educated city councilor “doesn’t really understand our concerns.”

King and her group believe Annissa Essaibi George does. King stood behind Essaibi George in Roxbury earlier this week when the mayoral hopeful rolled out her equity, justice and inclusion agenda.

“She doesn’t look like us,” King told me. “But she shares our core values of responsible citizenship, grit, hard work, reason.”

Chinese Progressive Political Action endorsed Kim Janey in the city’s preliminary election and spent money on canvassing in support of the acting mayor.

“The whole pandemic year, the increased attention to police violence, how all of those things came together to increase public awareness and attention to racial equity issues — it just seemed to us like it was really a moment,” said Lydia Lowe of CPPA. “It is a very historic thing to have a progressive Black woman mayor, and it was a really important moment to make a stand for the first Black woman mayor.”

But Janey didn’t make it through the preliminary. Now Chinese Progressive Political Action plans to endorse Wu.

“We’re very happy to support Michelle Wu,” Lowe told me. “We think she’s taken a lot of important stands on issues around rent control and changing the [often-beleagured Boston Planning and Development Agency].”

AAPI leaders cited generational and cultural differences as factors in why their political views and endorsements differ — just as they can and do in other communities of color.

Asked about AAPI groups and leaders endorsing other candidates, Wu said “no community is a monolith” and urged people to vote “no matter where you end up in the election.”

Wu handily won Chinatown in the preliminary, where her purple signs proliferate and where she held her big pre-preliminary rally with Sen. Elizabeth Warren. She continues to be a frequent campaigner in Boston’s predominantly AAPI neighborhoods, and is doing outreach in Mandarin (which she speaks) in her campaign videos and literature.

“In Chinatown, in Little Saigon, we see the excitement,” Wu said.

GOOD THURSDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Massachusetts Playbook will not publish Friday, Oct. 8 and Monday, Oct. 11. I'll be back in your inbox Tuesday, Oct. 12.

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

TODAY — Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito visits Barnstable High School at 11 a.m. and the Chatham Municipal Fish Pier at 1:30 p.m. Essaibi George greets people at Silver Slipper Restaurant in Roxbury at 7 a.m. and visits a Haitian Senior Home in Hyde Park at 9:30 a.m. Wu visits Cape Verdean Adult Day Health with state Rep. Liz Miranda at 11 a.m., hosts a press conference with her new union endorser in Dorchester at 4 p.m. and hosts a virtual phone bank kickoff with Sen. Ed Markey at 5 p.m. Markey and colleagues host a “No Climate, No Deal” press conference at 11 a.m. Janey gives remarks at the groundbreaking for the Justice Edward O. Gourdin Veterans Memorial Park in Nubian Square at 2 p.m. and hosts a Boston Marathon-related press conference at City Hall at 4 p.m. Rep. Richard Neal announces federal funding for Springfield Museums at 3 p.m. Rep. Seth Moulton presents the annual Peter J. Gomes Service Award at 5:30 p.m. on Facebook Live.

THIS WEEKEND — WBZ medical expert Dr. Mallika Marshall discusses local vaccination efforts and other pandemic issues at 8:30 a.m. Sunday on “Keller at Large.” Senate President Karen Spilka is this week's guest on WCVB's "On the Record" at 11 a.m. Sunday.

 

THE MILKEN INSTITUTE GLOBAL CONFERENCE 2021 IS HERE: POLITICO is excited to partner with the Milken Institute to produce a special edition "Global Insider” newsletter featuring exclusive coverage and insights from one of the largest and most influential gatherings of experts reinventing finance, health, technology, philanthropy, industry and media. Don’t miss a thing from the 24th annual Milken Institute Global Conference in Los Angeles, from Oct. 17 to 20. Can't make it? We've got you covered. Planning to attend? Enhance your #MIGlobal experience and subscribe today.

 
 
THE LATEST NUMBERS

– “Massachusetts coronavirus cases up 1,492, positive test rate stays lower,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “The single-day average of COVID-19 cases is now 970, compared to 1,895 cases three weeks ago. The average percent positivity is now 1.83%. The rate has been coming down from 2.98% last month.

– “COVID booster shots in Massachusetts up to 152,477 as average age of virus deaths decreases to 72,” by Noah R. Bombard, MassLive: “With more than 4.6 million Bay Staters now fully vaccinated against the virus, booster shots are continuing to roll out to eligible people. According to data from the state, a total of 152,477 COVID booster shots have now been administered in Massachusetts. Another 7,122 were reported on Wednesday.

DATELINE D.C.

– “Massachusetts Senate passes ‘groundbreaking’ voting reforms,” by Erin Tiernan, Boston Herald: “State senators passed a ‘groundbreaking’ package of voting reforms — including making mail-in voting permanent, expanding early voting access and introducing same-day registration — bringing the state one step closer to enshrining pandemic-era expansions in voter access into state law.

– “App-based companies say drivers want to be contractors. Opponents say that strips workers' rights,” by Laney Ruckstuhl, WBUR: “Marcus Cole was among those who signed the letter [supporting app-based drivers as independent contractors]. He has been driving for Lyft for six years, and said during a webinar held by the coalition Wednesday that legislators should listen to the needs of drivers directly. … But not all drivers agree, and many were joined by legislators and labor advocates who rallied outside of the State House ahead of the hearing Wednesday morning, painting a very different picture of the bill's impacts.

– “Fearing egg shortages, Legislature updates ballot question,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine: “A high-stakes game of chicken between national interests may threaten Massachusetts’s supply of eggs and pork. The Legislature is attempting to resolve the dilemma through some Beacon Hill sausage-making, by updating a 2016 ballot question regulating the treatment of hens, calves, and pigs.

– "Baker Plugs UI Rate Relief For Small Biz," by Matt Murphy, State House News Service (paywall): "With tax collections continuing to exceed expectations, Gov. Charlie Baker on Wednesday pushed lawmakers to act on his plan to use part of the surplus from last year to deliver unemployment insurance relief to small businesses."

VAX-ACHUSETTS

– “Mass. hospitals prepare to fire hundreds of employees who refuse COVID vaccine,” by Priyanka Dayal McCluskey, Boston Globe: “Hospitals across Massachusetts are preparing to fire hundreds of employees who refuse to be vaccinated for COVID as the institutions seek to balance patient safety and ongoing workforce shortages.

– ICYMI: “As vaccination deadlines loom, Mass. hospitals brace to lose hundreds of workers,” by Jessica Bartlett, Boston Business Journal: “Mass General Brigham is preparing to replace those who don't get their shots in time, particularly those with critical roles as nurses or nursing supports. Those replacement plans are complicated by staffing shortages, however, as well as the state's family medical leave laws, which have increased the number of employees out on leave and the amount of time they can take.

FROM THE HUB

– “Kim Janey signs executive order to replace Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples Day in Boston,” by Nik DeCosta-Klipa, Boston.com: “The city of Boston has seen its last Columbus Day. Acting Mayor Kim Janey signed an executive order Wednesday afternoon to recognize the second Monday in October as Indigenous Peoples Day — beginning this upcoming Monday, Oct. 11.

– More from the Boston Herald’s Sean Philip Cotter: “Diane Modica, a former city councilor now with the Sons and Daughters of Italy in America, put out a statement decrying ‘Acting Mayor Janey’s erasure of Italian Americans,’ and saying that while the suffering of Natives should be acknowledged, doing so shouldn’t involve taking away a source of pride for the Italians.

 “Boston Superintendent Cassellius announces group to tackle busing woes, school assignment, start times,” by Naomi Martin and James Vaznis, Boston Globe: “Boston Public Schools Superintendent Brenda Cassellius announced Wednesday a new working group to tackle longstanding transportation issues plaguing the district, including late or no-show buses, student assignments to schools, and school start times.

– “Cautious optimism following Charlie Baker-organized Mass and Cass meeting,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “Area officials are expressing some cautious optimism after Gov. Charlie Baker convened the powers that be for the first of what are believed to be multiple meetings about the situation at Mass and Cass. … ‘For the first time in the last three years, I really feel that there is a concerted effort to get something done,’ [Suffolk County Sheriff Steve Tompkins said].

THE RACE FOR CITY HALL

– “WAKANDA II, other leaders of color come out for Michelle Wu in slew of endorsements reminiscent of 2013 mayoral race,” by Meghan E. Irons, Boston Globe: “State Representative Martin J. Walsh, barely known outside his Dorchester community, emerged from the 2013 preliminary election in a tight battle with City Councilor John Connolly from West Roxbury. Walsh had to break free. He did so by quickly and steadily rolling out endorsements from a diverse array of politicos — all aimed at illustrating that he would be a leader for the whole, changing city. … Walsh, of course, won that race. Now, eight years later, a similar situation is playing out as leaders of the city’s Black and Latino communities put their weight behind mayoral candidate Michelle Wu in her race against Annissa Essaibi George.

– Wu was also endorsed yesterday by state Rep. Nika Elugardo. WAKANDA II backed Janey in the preliminary. So did Elugardo, who’s also the latest progressive politician to line up behind Wu.

– And FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: The Planned Parenthood Advocacy Fund of Massachusetts is endorsing Wu as well.

– Essaibi George told Bloomberg Baystate Business that she’s “not super thrilled about” Sen. Ed Markey endorsing her rival after she cut an endorsement video for him early on in his Senate primary battle against former Rep. Joe Kennedy III.

“I was disappointed when I received word from him that he was not going to be endorsing me, for sure, and I let him know that I was very disappointed to not have that support. And then I was done with the phone call and got back to work,” she said. “I don’t have and didn’t have much time to waste on a conversation that wasn’t working in my favor.”

– Essaibi George expanded on that to my POLITICO colleague Brakkton Booker, saying that her opponent “did not have the courage to stand and endorse” Markey. “I don’t know whether she was afraid of the Kennedy factor, or something like that, in that race. I’m not afraid.”

– Essaibi George also talks to Booker for Friday’s edition of The Recast about being Arab American and having to defend questions about being a person of color, closing the racial wealth gap in Boston and more. Sign up now .

– "Worrell, Carvalho push messages in District 4 council contest," by Seth Daniel, Dorchester Reporter: "Two finalists for the District 4 seat on the Boston City Council — Brian Worrell and former state Rep. Evandro Carvalho — are busy on the campaign trail this month as they seek to replace Andrea Campbell...More on this race from the Boston Globe's Tiana Woodard.

THE LOCAL ELECTIONS ROUNDUP

– “Easthampton sued mayoral candidate Eric Berzins over unpermitted work,” by Brian Steele, Daily Hampshire Gazette: “Mayoral candidate Eric Berzins, owner of Fort Hill Brewery, is in talks to settle a lawsuit filed by the city against his businesses over the unpermitted construction of a private BMX bicycle track and the addition of dozens of parking spaces at two adjacent sites on Fort Hill Road.

DAY IN COURT

– “Judge denies motion for new trial in state drug lab case that could have led to thousands of dismissals,” by Andrea Estes, Boston Globe: “A superior court judge Wednesday rejected the motion for a new trial brought in a case that Suffolk County District Attorney Rachael Rollins believed could set the stage for the dismissal of tens of thousands of criminal cases where drugs had been tested at the now closed William Hinton state drug lab.

– “College Admissions Cheating Case Heads to Jury,” by Jennifer Levitz and Melissa Korn, Wall Street Journal: “A federal jury is set to begin deliberations Thursday in the Varsity Blues college-admissions case, following a nearly four-week criminal trial for two parents accused of committing fraud and bribery to get their children admitted to the University of Southern California as recruited athletes.

– “Green Line driver involved in July crash pleads not guilty, is ordered not to drive personal vehicle except for family errands,” by Andrew Brinker, Boston Globe: “The Green Line driver blamed for a trolley crash in Boston in July that injured dozens of passengers pleaded not guilty Wednesday to two criminal charges and was banned from driving his personal vehicle except to run family errands.

TRUMPACHUSETTS

– “Trump endorsed his GOP primary rival. Charlie Baker yawned,” by Lisa Kashinsky and Stephanie Murray, POLITICO: “Former President Donald Trump took his score-settling tour to Massachusetts this week in the hope of sticking it to Republican Gov. Charlie Baker. He might have done Baker a wicked huge favor. … ‘Sometimes it is good to have a foe,’ said former GOP Gov. Jane Swift. ‘Trump does not appeal to Massachusetts independents, so it will not help [defeat Baker]. It will actually likely help to define [the Baker ticket] as ‘not that type of Republican.’’

MOULTON MATTERS

– “Moulton facing ethics complaint,” by Christian M. Wade, CNHI/Eagle-Tribune: “U.S. Rep. Seth Moulton is among several lawmakers hit with an ethics complaint by a watchdog group, which is calling for an investigation into whether they violated House rules by spending campaign funds on travel, lavish hotels and sporting events. The complaint filed Wednesday by the Washington, D.C.-based Campaign Legal Center alleges that Moulton, D-Salem, may have broken ethics rules by improperly spending a majority of the money collected by his leadership political action committee, Serve America PAC, for personal use.

DATELINE D.C.

– A bipartisan group of 66 elected prosecutors is calling on the Senate to confirm Suffolk District Attorney Rachael Rollins as the next U.S. attorney for Massachusetts. She currently awaits more votes after the Senate Judiciary Committee deadlocked on her nomination.

“[Rollins] has worked tirelessly to counter racial discrimination, end the criminalization of poverty and promote fairness in Boston’s justice system. The misguided opposition to her confirmation is nothing but fear-mongering by some still wedded to failed ‘tough-on-crime’ policies of the past,” said Miriam Krinsky, executive director of Fair and Just Prosecution, which organized the joint statement sent to lawmakers this week from district and county attorneys across the country, and the attorney generals of Vermont, Delaware, Illinois, Minnesota, D.C. and Guam.

– “Biden closes in on pick to lead Food and Drug Administration,” by Adam Cancryn, Sarah Owermohle, David Lim and Lauren Gardner: “Among the names being floated is that of Laurie Glimcher, the president and CEO of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. … Her son, Rep. Jake Auchincloss (D-Mass.), last year won the general election for Rep. Joe Kennedy’s vacated seat.

THE LOCAL ANGLE

– “Striking Saint Vincent Hospital nurses no longer entitled to unemployment, some may have to repay benefits, state rules,” by Michael Bonner, MassLive: “The Department of Unemployment Assistance sided with Saint Vincent Hospital meaning the striking nurses in Worcester are no longer entitled to unemployment benefits, according to the Massachusetts Nurses Association and the hospital. The ruling stated that benefits should be discontinued effective the week ending Aug. 7. Any striking nurse who has collected unemployment since then must refund the full amount to the state.

– “Mass. elected officials praise federal judge who ruled against Texas abortion law,” by Jeremy C. Fox, Boston Globe. State Attorney General Maura Healey, Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Rep. Ayanna Pressley weighed in.

– “Boston Marathon for the 1st time will take place in the fall: Here’s what will be different this year,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald.

– “Herd of Cattle Wanders Through Mass. Neighborhood, ‘Mooing' and ‘Pooing',” by Alysha Palumbo, NBC10 Boston.

SPOTTED – at the UMass Club Wednesday, GovCharlie Baker and Rep. Richard Neal (separately), and state Rep. Josh Cutler meeting with BECMA Director of Policy and Public Affairs Samuel Gebru, per a Playbook tipster.

ALSO SPOTTED – at state Rep. Jake Oliveira’s fundraiser at the Iron Duke: state Reps. Orlando Ramos, Pat Duffy, Brian Ashe, Jessica Giannino, Jeff Turco, Mike Kushmerek, Ted Philips and Meg Kilcoyne (h/t Matt Szafranski). Tweet.

TRANSITIONS – Symone Crawford has been appointed as the next executive director of the Massachusetts Affordable Housing Alliance.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY – to GBH’s Peter Kadzis, Joe Kriesberg and Mark Orlowski.

HAPPY EARLY BIRTHDAY – to Samantha Riemer, finance director and senior adviser to Rep. Ayanna Pressley ; Ryan Markham and Don Seiffert, managing editor of the Boston Business Journal, who celebrate Friday; Paolo DiFabio, Pon Hunter, Peter Billerbeck, Kristin Palpini Hale, Olivia Paulo, Victoria Danberg and Amy Dacey, who celebrate Saturday; Sunday birthday-ers state Rep. Jim Hawkins, former state Rep. Jen Benson, president of the Alliance for Business Leadership; Brilee Weaver, Algirde Pipikaite, Tanveer Kathawalla and Megan McCafferty; and Monday birthday-ers David Halbert and Conor Yunits.

THIS WEEK ON THE HORSE RACE: CAN THE T EVER BE FREE? – Hosts Jennifer Smith and Steve Koczela talk with Lizzi Weyant of the Metropolitan Area Planning Council and Marie-Frances Rivera of the Massachusetts Budget and Policy Center about the push for a fare-free MBTA. 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.

 

HAPPENING TODAY – POLITICO’S FIRST EVER DEFENSE FORUM : President Joe Biden is making critical shifts in the Pentagon’s priorities, including fully withdrawing all U.S. troops from Afghanistan, scaling back U.S. military presence across the Middle East and rethinking the positioning of military forces around the world to focus more on China. Join POLITICO for our inaugural defense forum to talk to the decision makers in the White House, Congress, military, and defense industry who are reshaping American power abroad and redefining military readiness for the future of warfare. REGISTER HERE.

 
 


 

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Monday, July 12, 2021

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Auchincloss’s PRIMARY PROTECTION — GRADING Walsh and Janey — Lawmakers flex MUSCLE over Baker

 


 
Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: PRIMARY PROTECTION PROGRAM — U.S. Rep. Jake Auchincloss is raking in cash and padding his war chest as he looks to ward off potential primary challengers next year.

Auchincloss is expected to report raising more than $700,000 in the second quarter, according to a campaign spokesman, building on the $469,000 he brought in during the first quarter of the year. He’s also expected to report more than $1.4 million in cash on hand. Second-quarter campaign finance reports are due to the Federal Election Commission by Thursday.

The first-term congressman is hoarding cash amid rumblings that Democrats he defeated in last year’s 4th Congressional District primary may step up to challenge him again. Auchincloss won the hotly contested primary to replace then-Rep. Joe Kennedy III by a razor-thin margin over second-place finisher Jesse Mermell and other Democrats who were largely perceived as more progressive than him.

Auchincloss has since voted with his caucus 100% of the time in Washington — and that party fealty likely helped him land a plum perch as vice chair of the House Financial Services Committee. He's not as outspoken on progressive issues as some of his first-year counterparts, like Reps. Cori Bush (D-Mo.) and Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.) — and has even been at odds with “Squad” members, including fellow Massachusetts Rep. Ayanna Pressley, over the recent Israeli-Palestinian conflict and whether the Justice Department should push to reinstate the death penalty against Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev.

Auchincloss’s more establishment-aligned politics aren’t currying him much favor with progressives in his district who might rise to challenge him — or back a primary opponent against him — in 2022. But his continued fundraising prowess is making it harder for them to organize a bid against him.

Plus, Auchincloss is drumming up name recognition through a slew of national media appearances, which have ranged from calls to expel fellow first-year Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) from Congress to the U.S. Marine Corps veteran’s more recent push to ensure Afghan translators and others who worked with the U.S. military are evacuated as troops proceed with their withdrawal.

By not making waves in Washington and working to replenish his coffers, Auchincloss is taking a similar tack to Rep. Lori Trahan. Trahan narrowly defeated Dan Koh — now Labor secretary Marty Walsh’s chief of staff in D.C. — in the open-seat 3rd Congressional District primary in 2018. He almost challenged her again in 2020, citing campaign finance issues she was ultimately cleared ofbefore backing down.

GOOD MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Happy Monday! More Covid-19 restrictions are lifting today for courts and in city halls from Boston to Somerville.

TODAY — Rep. Ayanna Pressley testifies during the state legislative redistricting committee’s hearing regarding the 7th Congressional District at 10 a.m. Boston Acting Mayor Kim Janey offers remarks alongside Boston Housing Authority Administrator Kate Bennett at a ribbon cutting ceremony for Harbor125 Apartments at 10:30 a.m. and at a ground-breaking ceremony for new land at Eastie Farm at 6 p.m. Rep. Lori Trahan joins UMass President Marty Meehan and UMass Lowell officials to discuss Covid-19 relief funding at 11 a.m. at University Crossing in Lowell. Sen. Adam Hinds leads a legislative “Reimagining Committee” hearing on post-pandemic transportation needs at 1 p.m.

 

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.

 
 
DATELINE BEACON HILL

– “Lawmakers approve $48B late budget,” by Christian M. Wade, CNHI/Eagle-Tribune: “Lawmakers on Friday signed off on a $48.1 billion late budget buoyed by an unexpected surge in revenue. … The budget doesn't raise taxes and scraps a planned $1.5 billion drawdown from the state's 'rainy day' fund. Instead it calls for another $1.1 billion in capital gains taxes to be pumped into the reserves, bringing the fund to a record $5.8 billion by next year. The state's pension system would get a $250 million supplemental deposit under the spending plan. Chapter 70 school aid would increase by $219.6 million to $5.5 billion. The plan also sets up a $350 million trust fund for the Student Opportunity Act, a law that requires the state to spend an additional $1.5 billion in K-12 education over the next seven years.”

– “Massachusetts Teachers Association says lack of funding in fiscal 2022 budget creates disproportionate negative effect on students of color,” by Melissa Hanson, MassLive.com: “The Massachusetts Teachers Association has said the Legislature passed a ‘status quo’ budget for fiscal 2022 and that the lack of funding creates a disproportionate negative effect on working-class students and students of color. … ‘While maintaining the provisions of the Student Opportunity Act and establishing a special fund for school spending are positive steps, we must remember that our public schools — and our public colleges and universities — have been grossly underfunded for decades,’ [MTA President Merrie] Najimy said.

– "Massachusetts lawmakers take action to close rape kit testing loophole," by Karen Anderson and Kevin Rothstein, WCVB: "The Massachusetts state budget now sitting on Gov. Charlie Baker's desk includes language with a strong message from House Speaker Ron Mariano to the State Police Crime Lab and the Baker Administration: Test all rape kits in Massachusetts once and for all."

– "Under Mass. law, 1.2 million women qualified for free birth control; So, why did only about 300 take advantage of it?" by Sarah Betancourt for MassLive.com: "As Beacon Hill considers approving $500,000 of state funds for an educational campaign to inform the public they might have access to a year of free birth control all at once, the state’s Department of Insurance has been making moves to clarify the so-called Access Law to insurers. The move comes after an investigation revealed that only about 300 women obtained a 12-month supply of birth control in 2020 through the state’s largest insurers under a 2017 law that permits them to do so, although at least 1.2 million qualified."

– "As Pandemic Fades, Massachusetts Lawmakers Take More Active Role," by Steve Brown, WBUR: "[Gov. Charlie Baker] spent billions of dollars in federal aid with little oversight from the state Legislature. But as the pandemic recedes, lawmakers are reasserting their control. ... The shift has been on full display in recent weeks as the governor pressed the Legislature to give him permission to swiftly spend more than $2 billion dollars in new federal aid on everything from more affordable housing to job training to environmental projects."

VAX-ACHUSETTS

– “Slowly, Mass. Is Closing The Racial Gap In Vaccination Rates,” by Angus Chen, WBUR: “Back in May, only 37% of Black residents and 33% of Hispanic residents had at least one shot compared to 55% of white residents. Today, that near 20-point chasm has shrunk to 14 percentage points. As of Thursday, roughly 50% of both Hispanic and Black residents have received at least one dose, whereas 64% of white residents shared the same security.

– “'In the dark' Local COVID variant data no longer available to Cape Cod health officials, by Cynthia McCormick, Cape Cod Times: “Even as federal funds have poured into efforts to genomically sequence positive cases of coronavirus to identify variants, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has taken to releasing the information only on a state and regional level, which in this geographic area is New England. ... Some COVID-19 experts say regional reporting waters down data and robs communities of the opportunity to quickly react to situations like the P.1 variant showing up on Cape Cod.

FROM THE HUB

 “Acting mayor offers reprieve to some city employees on return to work,” by Stephanie Ebbert, Boston Globe: “Acting Mayor Kim Janey offered a last-minute reprieve to city employees whose union filed an unfair labor practice over her order to return to work immediately following the July Fourth weekend. Janey’s administration has agreed to let some SEIU Local 888 employees delay their return to work, if a review of their individual circumstances warrants it. The union then agreed to drop the complaint it filed last month with the state’s Division of Labor Relations. … But it’s unclear exactly what that means for the rest of the city’s work force.

– “Boston School Committee unanimously approved 95 of 99 agenda items in last year and a half,” by Alexi Cohan, Boston Herald: “Members of the Boston School Committee have unanimously approved 95 of 99 action items in the last year and a half, raising concerns of ‘rubber stamping’ among the community, which one [school committee] member called ‘insulting.’

– “Boston Pride announces closing amid controversy over inclusion,” by Jeremy C. Fox, Boston Globe: “Boston Pride, which for a half-century advocated for the rights of the LGBTQ community, is dissolving amid a controversy over inclusion, the group’s board of directors announced Friday, threatening the future of New England’s largest Pride parade.

THE RACE FOR CITY HALL

– “How do Boston mayoral candidates grade Walsh, Janey?” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “The Herald asked the six major mayoral candidates to give letter grades for both former Mayor Martin Walsh and Acting Mayor Kim Janey, and then to briefly explain their reasoning for each.

– “Mayoral candidates press the flesh as in-person campaigning makes a return,” by Jack Lyons and Ivy Scott, Boston Globe: “Boston’s mayoral candidates took to the streets Saturday to give hugs, pet dogs, and knock on doors, signaling a return to traditional, in-person campaigning in the waning days of the coronavirus pandemic, as the six face off in the hotly contested race.

– FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Bridget Nee-Walsh has been endorsed by the Laborers Local 151 in her campaign for Boston City Council at-large, per her campaign. “Bridget will be a champion for working families on the City Council, and will fight every day for fair wages, benefits, and workplace protections,” Allen Boyer, Business Manager of Local 151, said in a statement through the campaign.

PARTY POLITICS

– Republican state Sen. Ryan Fattman has a new legal defense fund.

The fund, filed with the state Office of Campaign and Political Finance at the start of the month, is meant to help pay for outstanding legal fees associated with the lawsuit Fattman, his wife and others filed in March in hopes of blocking OCPF from potentially forwarding an investigation into their campaign finances to the state attorney general’s office. A judge denied their request for a preliminary injunction, and outgoing OCPF head Michael Sullivan referred the investigation to the AG days before his departure in April.

The Fattmans withdrew their lawsuit, which alleged that Sullivan was acting with “bias," at the end of June. “Due to this bias, we asked the court to stop Michael Sullivan from referring a matter to the attorney general in violation of OCPF’s own statute,” Fattman said in a statement to POLITICO. “But since Sullivan decided to do so anyway, this matter moves out of the court system, which is why the matter is dismissed and now must be paid for. I will always stand up against political prejudice and fight for my family, and what is right.”

Fattman’s legal defense fund, which can raise unlimited sums, was created weeks after the Boston Globe reported the state Republican Party had asked state campaign finance regulators if it could dip into its own fund to pay attorney fees for an unnamed GOP candidate facing “legal actions” by the state.

DAY IN COURT

– “Federal judge withdraws Boston exam school opinion, says he was ‘misled’ by school committee text messages,” by Alexi Cohan, Boston Herald: “A federal judge has withdrawn his opinion that had ruled in favor of a zip-code-based temporary Boston Public Schools exam school admissions policy, saying the district ‘misled’ him by leaving out text message records that included now-controversial disparaging comments.

– “Rollins moves to overturn thousands of convictions based on testing at now-closed state drug lab,” by Andrea Estes, Boston Globe: “Suffolk County District Attorney Rachael Rollins on Thursday moved to overturn tens of thousands of drug convictions that were based on testing conducted at the scandal-plagued William A. Hinton State Laboratory Institute, which closed in 2012. In court papers filed Thursday, Rollins’s office asked that the Supreme Judicial Court decide whether new trials should be granted to anyone whose evidence was tested at the lab — regardless of whether the chemist who did the analysis has been implicated in wrongdoing. If the court agrees, the DA would then likely drop the charges against most of the defendants.

– More: “Hearing Officer Finds Misconduct Against Former Drug Lab Prosecutors,” by Deborah Becker, WBUR: “Three former Massachusetts assistant attorneys general, accused of withholding information that evidence was tainted in thousands of drug cases, engaged in professional misconduct, according a report by a state hearing officer released last week.”

WARREN REPORT

– “The enduring appeal of U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren among progressives on display at Springfield ‘meet and greet’,” by Stephanie Barry, Springfield Republican: “A ‘meet and greet’ event outside U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s local office in downtown Springfield drew primarily progressives and Democratic elected officials eager to rub elbows with the lawmaker loved by the left and reviled by the right."

MARKEYCHUSETTS

– “OTR: Sen. Ed Markey finds Massachusetts Interstate 95 standoff 'disturbing',” by Ed Harding and Janet Wu, WCVB: “The U.S. senator from Massachusetts says extremism is on the rise on the left and right, he is calling upon Facebook to pull down extremist pages.

IT'S NOT EASY BEING GREEN

– “Efforts to pursue climate goals in Mass. clash with incentives offered that promote fossil fuels,” by Sabrina Shankman, Boston Globe: “The state’s climate plan demands that 1 million households be converted from fossil fuels to electric heat by the end of the decade, part of a sweeping transition meant to help stave off the worst of climate change’s consequences. And yet the state’s only incentive program, and its best tool for helping convince businesses and homeowners to make that switch, is sticking with rebates for new carbon-emitting systems likely to remain in service long past that deadline.

FROM THE 413

– “Across the country, families are reuniting. For immigrants, it’s more complicated,” by Francesca Paris, Berkshire Eagle: “As vaccines have allowed life in Berkshire County to return to a relative normal, with restaurant dining, weddings and Fourth of July gatherings, some residents with family across international borders have yet to experience that glee of post-vaccine reunions. Some cannot return because their home countries still have significant restrictions, including mandated quarantines, while others worry about the major COVID-19 outbreaks, significant variant presence and low vaccination rates.

– “Easthampton business owner signals mayoral run against LaChapelle,” by Jacquelyn Voghel, Daily Hampshire Gazette: “The owner of Fort Hill Brewery, Eric Berzins, has pulled nomination papers to run for mayor, though he said he will likely remove himself from the race if another qualified candidate runs against incumbent Mayor Nicole LaChapelle. Berzins, 35, believes that contested elections are healthy for democracy, and he also thinks that several aspects of city leadership should be improved.

THE LOCAL ANGLE

– “Face-to-face talks Friday between nurses, St. Vincent Hospital fail to end strike,” by Kim Ring, Worcester Telegram & Gazette: “After spending an extended day at the bargaining table, striking nurses and negotiators from St. Vincent Hospital left their face-to-face session Friday evening with no resolution.

– “Cluster of violent crimes in Massachusetts leaves cops on high alert,” by Marie Szaniszlo, Boston Herald: “Crime has taken a feverish turn this summer leaving experts puzzled, suggesting social isolation from the pandemic or copycat attacks could be behind the surge of random hostility. One thing is sure, the bizarre string of hate has Bay State law enforcement officials on alert.

– “Parents group launches campaign for ‘true diversity of thought’ in New England private schools,” by Jenna Russell, Boston Globe: “A group of parents whose children attend New England private schools has mobilized to fight for ‘true diversity of thought’ in classrooms, an effort resembling those launched elsewhere in the country in the spring by conservative groups and families against what they describe as the ‘indoctrination’ of students with ‘woke’ ideas about race and social issues.

– “Aly Raisman reunited with her dog Mylo: ‘I’m just really grateful he’s safe’,” by Alexi Cohan, Boston Herald: “Olympic gold medalist Aly Raisman has been reunited with her puppy Mylo thanks to the sharp eyes of two passersby — and told the Herald she’ll do what she can to help others searching for their lost pets.

THE NATIONAL TAKE

– “POLITICO-Harvard poll: Americans sharply divided over vaccine mandates,” by Dan Goldberg, POLITICO: “ Americans are almost evenly divided over whether schools or most private employers should require Covid-19 vaccinations as part of reopening, according to a POLITICO-Harvard survey that shows how politically fraught any kind of mandate would be. Most Democrats support forcing employees and students to be vaccinated before they return to work or the classroom, and approve of government-issued documents certifying their status. Republicans oppose the government or most employers infringing on their individual choice.”

SPOTTED – Former Virginia governor and current gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe at the Nantucket airport (h/t Cole Perry). Tweet. Warren in the audience Saturday night at Jacob’s Pillow dance festival in Becket, where she watched a show by the Contra-Tiempo dance group.

TRANSITIONS – Jane Lytvynenko has left BuzzFeed News to join Joan Donovan’s team at Harvard. TweetGabriela Coletta starts today as the external relations manager for the New England Aquarium’s downtown waterfront planning initiative. She was previously chief of staff to Boston City Councilor Lydia Edwards.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY – to Charlestown state Rep. Dan Ryan, Daily Hampshire Gazette reporter Scott Merzbach and Gregorio Gomez.

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.

 

THE ROAD TO TOKYO 2020 – A TUESDAY CONVERSATION WITH FIRST VICE PRESIDENT OF THE IOC ANITA DEFRANTZ: The Tokyo Olympics kick off July 23, 15 months after being postponed. One problem … Japan's capital city is in a Covid state of emergency and has prohibited fans from attending. With financial pressure to push forward and potential punishment for any athletes involved in protests or demonstrations during the sporting event, these Olympics Games will be unlike any other. Join Global Translations author Ryan Heath for a POLITICO Live conversation with Anita DeFrantz, First Vice President, International Olympic Committee, on what's at stake in the Tokyo Olympics, as a global health crisis, sports and politics all come to a head. REGISTER HERE.

 
 
 

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