Search This Blog

Showing posts with label GIG WORKERS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GIG WORKERS. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 7, 2021

RSN: Bernie Sanders | Look Around

 


 

Reader Supported News
06 September 21

Live on the homepage now!
Reader Supported News

YOU ARE STILL HERE — If you are reading this then you did not depart, and from this morning’s readership numbers most people did not. We are glad you are still here. We need you to GET SERIOUS about RSN. When you donate you take an ownership stake. You should do that, and you should have that.
Marc Ash • Founder, Reader Supported News

Sure, I'll make a donation!

 

Bernie Sanders. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
Bernie Sanders | Look Around
Bernie Sanders, Reader Supported News
Sanders writes: "California is burning. Oregon is burning. Greece is burning. Siberia is burning. One of the most powerful hurricanes ever made landfall in the Gulf Coast just days ago."

California is burning. Oregon is burning. Greece is burning. Siberia is burning. One of the most powerful hurricanes ever made landfall in the Gulf Coast just days ago. There is horrific drought impacting countries throughout the world. And July was the hottest month ever recorded.

Let me say that again. We just experienced the hottest month EVER in the history of the planet.

Now I have never understood how some of my colleagues can look at these events — how they can look at the floods, the rising sea levels, the extreme weather disturbances, the drought, the disease, and the human suffering brought upon us by climate change — and decide that the right answer is to do nothing.

I have never understood how many of the same people can say that it’s too expensive to deal with this issue when economists tell us that the cost of not acting on climate change will total $34.5 trillion in the United States alone in lost economic activity and more than $100 trillion throughout the world by the end of the century.

I have never understood how many of the same people who moan and groan about immigration can choose to do nothing when the World Bank has told us that the effects of climate change could result in the mass migration and displacement of more than 140 million people in Latin America, South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa.

The bad news is that it was a set of human decisions that has gotten us to this point.

The good news is that we can now make the decision to act aggressively in combating climate change and prevent irreparable damage to our country and the planet.

As Chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, I am proud to tell you that we are putting forward a $3.5 trillion reconciliation budget that will be transformative for working families, children, the elderly, the sick and the poor. It will, in my view, be the most consequential legislation for working families in the modern history of our country.

But what I also want you to know is that this Reconciliation Bill constitutes the most aggressive effort ever to combat climate change. It will make massive investments in energy efficiency and retrofitting homes and buildings, it will help transform our energy systems from fossil fuels to wind, solar and other forms of sustainable energy, it will cut carbon emissions in agriculture, it will move us boldly to the electrification of transportation, it will invest heavily in climate justice — and much more.

And let me tell you what else it will do. It will create a Civilian Climate Corps (CCC) — which will put hundreds of thousands of young Americans to work transforming our communities, energy systems, and lands — moving us towards a new, healthy green economy.

At a time when many young people are struggling economically and have the dubious distinction of facing a lower standard of living than their parents, not only will the Civilian Climate Corps provide its members with livable wages and health care, but they will receive substantial educational benefits to enable them to attend college or pay off student debt.

Further, the Civilian Climate Corps will enable young people to receive the job training they need to obtain the many good-paying union jobs in our country that are currently unfilled because of a lack of skilled workers, and will form the backbone of a new American economy that leads the world in clean, green industries. Corps members will learn skills to allow them to pursue meaningful careers after they complete their tenure in the Civilian Climate Corps.

Young corps members will help save the planet by helping to protect and improve our forests, weatherize and electrify housing or be part of a team preparing for and installing a community solar facility. They will be involved in natural climate resiliency improvements, like shoreline and wetlands restoration that protect against rising seas, or environmental remediation that cuts toxic pollution. They will be helping to build new, energy-efficient housing units to combat our housing and climate crisis and improving dilapidated schools.

There is an enormous amount of work to be done as we transform our energy system away from fossil fuel and cut carbon emissions, and the hundreds of thousands of members of the Civilian Climate Corps will be in the forefront of that struggle.

There is a lot of support in Congress for the Civilian Climate Corps, but it is far from unanimous. We need your help.

Please add your name to tell Congress you support vigorous action on climate change and a Civilian Climate Corps that will put hundreds of thousands of people to work saving our planet.

In solidarity,

Bernie Sanders

READ MORE


Republicans in Crosshairs of January 6 Panel Begin Campaign of IntimidationThe House minority leader, Kevin McCarthy, claimed it would be illegal for telecom companies to comply with the investigation's records requests. (photo: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA)

Republicans in Crosshairs of January 6 Panel Begin Campaign of Intimidation
Hugo Lowell, Guardian UK
Lowell writes: "Top Republicans under scrutiny for their role in the events of January 6 have embarked on a campaign of threats and intimidation to thwart a Democratic-controlled congressional panel that is scrutinizing the Capitol attack and opening
 an expanded investigation into Donald Trump."

House leader Kevin McCarthy threatened retaliation against tech companies that share records with the committee


Top Republicans under scrutiny for their role in the events of 6 January have embarked on a campaign of threats and intimidation to thwart a Democratic-controlled congressional panel that is scrutinizing the Capitol attack and opening an expanded investigation into Donald Trump.

The chairman of the House select committee into the violent assault on the Capitol, Bennie Thompson, in recent days demanded an array of Trump executive branch records related to the insurrection, as members and counsel prepared to examine what Trump knew of efforts to stop the certification of Joe Biden’s election win.

House select committee investigators then asked a slew of technology companies to preserve the social media records of hundreds of people connected to the Capitol attack, including far-right House Republicans who sought to overturn the results of the 2020 election.

The select committee said that its investigators were merely “gathering facts, not alleging wrongdoing by any individual” as they pursued the records in what amounted to the most aggressive moves taken by the panel since it launched proceedings in July.

But the twin actions, which threatened to open a full accounting of Trump’s moves in the days and weeks before the joint session of Congress on 6 January, has unnerved top House Republicans, according to a source familiar with the matter.

The House minority leader, Kevin McCarthy, decried the select committee’s investigation as a partisan exercise and threatened to retaliate against any telecommunications company that complied with the records requests.

“A Republican majority will not forget,” he warned, in remarks that seemed to imply some future threat against the sector.

The warning from the top Republican in the House amounted to a serious escalation as he seeks to undermine a forensic examination of the attack perpetrated by Trump supporters and domestic violent extremists that left five dead and nearly 140 injured.

But his remarks – which members on the select committee privately consider to be at best, harassment, and at worst, obstruction of justice – reflects McCarthy’s realization that he could himself be in the crosshairs of the committee, the source said.

Most of McCarthy’s efforts to undercut the inquiry to date, such as sinking the prospects of a 9/11-style commission to scrutinize the Capitol attack, have been aimed at shielding Trump and his party from what the select committee might uncover.

But deeply alarmed at the efforts by House select committee investigators to secure his personal communications records for the fraught moments leading up to and during the Capitol attack, McCarthy went on the offensive to pre-emptively protect himself, the source said.

McCarthy was among several House Republicans who desperately begged Trump to call off the rioters as they stormed the Capitol in his name, only to be rebuffed by Trump, who questioned why McCarthy wasn’t doing more to overturn the election.

Thompson previously told the Guardian in an interview that such conversations with Trump would be investigated by the select committee, raising the prospect that McCarthy could be forced to testify about what Trump appeared to be thinking and doing on 6 January.

The statement from McCarthy asserted, without citing any law, that it would be illegal for the technology companies to comply with the records requests – even though congressional investigators have obtained phone and communications records in the past.

The threat is unlikely to be viewed as a violation of federal witness tampering law, which, as part of a broader obstruction of justice statute, makes it a felony under some circumstances to try to dissuade or hinder cooperation with an official proceeding.

Congressman Jamie Raskin, a member of the select committee and the former lead impeachment manager in Trump’s second trial, said that he was appalled by McCarthy’s remarks, which he described as tantamount to obstruction of justice.

“He is leveling threats against people cooperating with a congressional investigation,” Raskin said. “Why would the minority leader of the House of Representatives not be interested in our ability to get all of the facts in relation to the January 6th attack?”

Meanwhile, other members on the select committee have also seized on McCarthy’s threat as a reminder that Republicans could not be trusted to engage in the inquiry in good faith, according to a source connected to the 6 January investigation.

It also underscored to them, the source said, the nervousness among top Republicans as the select committee ramps up its work, even though the inquiry is still in its early days and has yet to sift through thousands of pages of expected evidence.

Emboldened by McCarthy’s combative stance, Trump denounced the select committee as a “partisan sham”, while Republicans under scrutiny by the panel such as Marjorie Taylor Greene threatened any companies that complied with the records requests would be “shut down”.

The chairman of the House Freedom Caucus, Andy Biggs, is now also asking McCarthy to remove from the Republican conference Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger – the two vocal critics of Trump appointed to the select committee – whom he called “spies” for Democrats.

Biggs on Thursday suggested in a letter, first reported by CNN, that Cheney and Kinzinger should be ejected because they are involved in investigating Republicans over 6 January and the party should be able to strategize without having the pair present at conference meetings.

Still, McCarthy remains unable to shape an investigation likely to prove politically damaging to Trump and to Republicans at the ballot box at the midterms next year, a reality that has come largely as a result of his own strategic miscalculations.

The proposed 9/11-style commission into the Capitol attack had envisioned a panel with equal power between Democrats and Republicans, and McCarthy’s decision to boycott the select committee in a flash of anger inadvertently left Trump without any defenders.

READ MORE


Millions in US Lose Jobless Benefits as Federal Aid Expires, Thrusting Families and Economy Onto Uncertain PathA hat store advertises that they are hiring in Annapolis, Md., on May 12. (photo: Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images)



Millions in US Lose Jobless Benefits as Federal Aid Expires, Thrusting Families and Economy Onto Uncertain Path
Yeganeh Torbati, Andrew Van Dam and Alyssa Fowers, The Washington Post
Excerpt: "More than 7 million out-of-work people across the United States are set to lose all of their jobless benefits this week as three federal programs expire on Monday, in what several experts described as one of the largest and most abrupt ends to government aid in U.S. history."
READ MORE


An Astonishing One in Three US Workers Does Gig Work NowCarlos Ramos of Bakersfield, a Lyft driver and an organizer from Gig Workers Rising, speaks during a rally in front of the home of Bill Gurley, an early Uber investor, on Nov. 6, 2019, in Atherton, Calif. (photo: Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group)

An Astonishing One in Three US Workers Does Gig Work Now
Rani Molla, Vox
Molla writes: "More people are turning to gig work than ever before, but since these jobs usually don't come with employer benefits, their proliferation could worsen inequality for millions of Americans."
READ MORE


Guinea President Alpha Conde Detained in Military CoupMilitary forces in Guinea said Sunday that they had detained President Alpha Conde (center) and suspended the country's parliament and constitution in a coup. (photo: Guinea Military/EPA-EFE)

Guinea President Alpha Conde Detained in Military Coup
Daniel Uria and Darryl Coote, United Press International
Excerpt: "An elite national army unit in Guinea on Sunday said it has detained the country's president and seized power following reports of gunfire near the capital."
READ MORE


Jair Bolsonaro's Pro-Coup Rally: September 7 Is Shaping Up to Be Brazil's January 6Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro is surrounded by security agents as he waves to supporters while leaving the Chamber of Deputies headquarters in Brasília, Brazil, on Aug. 9, 2021. (photo: Eraldo Peres/AP)



Jair Bolsonaro's Pro-Coup Rally: September 7 Is Shaping Up to Be Brazil's January 6
Andrew Fishman, The Intercept
Fishman writes: "With his reelection prospects dimming, Bolsonaro's supporters are ramping up their version of the pro-Trump rally that led to the Capitol riot."
READ MORE

Divers Point to a Broken Pipeline as the Source of Ongoing Gulf Oil SpillIn a satellite image, an oil slick is shown on Sept. 2, south of Port Fourchon, La., following Hurricane Ida. (photo: Maxar Technologies/AP)

Divers Point to a Broken Pipeline as the Source of Ongoing Gulf Oil Spill
Associated Press
Excerpt: "Divers at the site of an ongoing oil spill that appeared in the Gulf of Mexico after Hurricane Ida have identified the apparent source as one-foot diameter pipeline displaced from a trench on the ocean floor and broken open."

Divers at the site of an ongoing oil spill that appeared in the Gulf of Mexico after Hurricane Ida have identified the apparent source as one-foot diameter pipeline displaced from a trench on the ocean floor and broken open.

Talos Energy, the Houston-based company currently paying for the cleanup, said in a statement issued Sunday evening that the busted pipeline does not belong to them.

The company said it is working with the U.S. Coast Guard and other state and federal agencies to coordinate the response and identify the owner of the ruptured pipeline.

Two additional 4-inch pipelines were also identified in the area that are open and apparently abandoned. The company's statement did not make clear if oil was leaking from the two smaller pipelines, but satellite images reviewed by The Associated Press on Saturday appeared to show at least three different slicks in the same area, the largest drifting more than a dozen miles (more than 19 kilometers) eastward along the Gulf coast.

The AP first reported Wednesday that aerial photos showed a miles-long brown and black oil slick spreading about 2 miles south of Port Fourchon, La. The broken pipe is in relatively shallow water, at about 34 feet of depth.

Talos said the rate of oil appearing on the surface had slowed dramatically in the last 48 hours and no new heavy black crude had been seen in the last day.

So far, the spill appears to have remained out to sea and has not impacted the Louisiana shoreline. There is not yet any estimate for how much oil was in the water.

The Coast Guard said Saturday its response teams are monitoring reports and satellite imagery to determine the scope of the discharge, which is located in Bay Marchand, Block 4. Talos previously leased Bay Marchand, Block 5, but ceased production there in 2017, plugged its wells and removed all pipeline infrastructure by 2019, according to the company.

The area where the spill is located has been drilled for oil and gas for decades. Federal leasing maps show it contains a latticework of old pipelines, plugged wells and abandoned platforms, along with newer infrastructure still in use.

With the source of the oil unclear, Talos hired Clean Gulf Associates to respond to the spill. Clean Gulf, a nonprofit oil-spill response cooperative that works with the energy exploration and production industry, has had two 95-foot vessels at the scene of the spill since Wednesday attempting to contain and recover crude from the water.

The Bay Marchand spill is one of dozens of reported environmental hazards state and federal regulators are tracking in Louisiana and the Gulf following the Category 4 hurricane that made landfall at Port Fourchon a week ago. The region is a major production center of the U.S. petrochemical industry.

The AP also first reported Wednesday on images from a National Atmospheric and Oceanic Survey that showed extensive flooding and what appeared to be petroleum in the water at the sprawling Phillips 66 Alliance Refinery located along the Mississippi River south of New Orleans.

After AP published the photos, the Environmental Protection Agency tasked a specially outfitted survey aircraft to fly over that refinery on Thursday, as well as other industrial sites in the area hardest hit by the hurricane's 150-mph winds and storm surge.

The Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality said a state assessment team sent to the Alliance Refinery observed a spill of heavy oil being addressed with booms and absorbent pads. A levee meant to protect the plant had breached, allowing floodwaters to flow in during the storm and then back out as the surge receded.

State environmental officials said there was also no estimate yet available for how much oil might have spilled from the Phillips 66 refinery.

READ MORE

 

Contribute to RSN

Follow us on facebook and twitter!

Update My Monthly Donation

PO Box 2043 / Citrus Heights, CA 95611









Monday, August 23, 2021

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: JANEY'S first AD — CLARK'S stock disclosure WOES — Baker admin shifts on SCHOOL MASK MANDATE

 



 
Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY

NEW THIS MORNING: JANEY JUMPS ON AIR — Boston Acting Mayor Kim Janey wants a full term in office, and she’s betting her “experience” will convince voters to give her that shot.

That’s the logic behind — and the title of — Janey’s first television ad, a 30-second spot that will begin airing Tuesday. The campaign doled out $164,000 to air the ad this week alone, and is planning additional buys through the Sept. 14 preliminary election.

An increasingly familiar face through her press conferences and the associated media coverage, Janey’s ad is less an introduction to voters and more a glimpse of how she believes her experiences with busing, raising a child as a teen mom and spending a brief period in a shelter inform her actions as mayor — like pumping tens of millions of dollars toward affordable housing.

She also works to flip the script on her handling of the coronavirus resurgence, highlighting her vaccine mandate for city workers while ignoring the pummeling she took from several of her competitors for not moving faster to issue one.

Janey’s campaign is airing versions of the ad in both English and Spanishfollowing a similar move by City Councilor Michelle Wu last week, as the candidates work to reach as many voters as possible in an increasingly diverse city with just three weeks left until the preliminary election. More than a third of the city’s residents speak a language other than English at home, including 16% who speak Spanish, followed by 4% who speak Chinese and just under 4% who speak Haitian, according to the most recent statistics from the city.

Janey speaks Spanish and her campaign is doing multilingual outreach through television, radio, mail, print advertising and signs, as well as through its field program.

Wu speaks Spanish and Mandarin, and her campaign is printing literature in six languages and doing digital, radio and print advertising in Haitian, Chinese, Vietnamese and Brazilian outlets.

Former city economic development chief John Barros is conversational in Spanish, and is fluent in Cape Verdean Creole and Portuguese, according to his campaign, which is distributing literature in English, Spanish, Cape Verdean and Haitian Creole, Chinese and Vietnamese, and is spending on ethnic radio and newspaper ads, and digital ad buys on Univision and YouTube.

City Councilors Annissa Essaibi George and Andrea Campbell don’t speak other languages. But both campaigns have literature in Spanish, Vietnamese, Mandarin and Haitian Creole. Essaibi George is running digital and radio ads in those languages as well as Portuguese and Cape Verdean Creole. Campbell has included foreign-language captions in major campaign videos, like her announcement, and is doing multilingual outreach in key neighborhoods.

GOOD MONDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTSHenri isn't done with us yet. While the storm knocked out power across southern New England, sent trees crashing into homes and toppled one man to the ground, a couple folks told WBZ: "I've seen worse."

TODAY — State Attorney General Maura Healey participates in “Ask the AG” on GBH’s “Boston Public Radio” at 11 a.m. Campbell is a guest on WBUR’s “Radio Boston” at 3 p.m. and participates in an Allston Brighton Virtual Town Hall at 6 p.m. Janey delivers remarks at the Mayor's Garden Contest Awards Ceremony at the Boston Public Garden, 5:30 p.m.

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

 

INTRODUCING OTTAWA PLAYBOOK : Join the growing community of Politicos — from lawmakers and leaders to pollsters, staffers, strategists and lobbyists — working to shape Canada’s future. Every day, our reporting team pulls back the curtain to shed light on what’s really driving the agenda on Parliament Hill, the true players who are shaping politics and policy across Canada, and the impact it all has on the world. Don’t miss out on your daily look inside Canadian politics and power. Subscribe to Ottawa Playbook today.

 
 
DATELINE BEACON HILL

– “Rep. Hill appointed to Gaming Commission,” by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Magazine: “Rep. Brad Hill a Republican from Ipswich, is leaving the Legislature after nearly 22 years to become a member of the Massachusetts Gaming Commission. Hill is a joint appointment of Gov. Charlie Baker, Attorney General Maura Healey, and Treasurer Deborah Goldberg. He is replacing Bruce Stebbins, who left the Gaming Commission to join the Cannabis Control Commission, and will serve the remainder of his term through 2025.

Jamie Zahlaway Belsito, who unsuccessfully challenged Rep. Seth Moulton in the Democratic primary for the 6th Congressional District seat last year, is exploring a bid for Hill’s seat. Belsito is a nonprofit leader who founded the Maternal Mental Health Leadership Alliance.

– “July Jobless Rate Stays at 4.9 Percent,” by Chris Lisinski, State House News Service (paywall): “Massachusetts employers added jobs at a robust pace in July, while the statewide unemployment rate held flat at 4.9 percent for the second month in a row, labor officials announced Friday. Based on a survey of employers, the Bureau of Labor Statistics estimated that the state added 43,400 jobs in July to push total employment above 3.5 million for the first time since the pandemic hit.

– “MassCOSH leads call for revision of workplace safety standards as state plans for full repeal,” by Danny Jin, Berkshire Eagle: “The state Department of Labor Standards stopped enforcing COVID-19 safety standards when the state of emergency expired in June. Yet, the delta variant has led COVID-19 transmission in the state to surge once more. Public health and labor leaders say the lack of enforcement leaves workers without a key line of defense against working conditions that may increase their exposure to the virus.

VAX-ACHUSETTS

– “In shift, Baker administration moves to impose K-12 school mask mandate this fall,” by Nik DeCosta-Klipa, Boston.com: “After resisting calls for a K-12 school mask mandate this fall for weeks, Gov. Charlie Baker’s administration is changing course. In a press release Friday, state Education Commissioner Jeff Riley said he will ask the Massachusetts Board of Elementary and Secondary Education for the authority to mandate masks for all public K-12 students, educators, and staff through at least Oct. 1.

– “MBTA, Massachusetts law enforcement unions push back on Charlie Baker vax mandate,” by Erin Tiernan, Boston Herald: “MBTA workers and Massachusetts law enforcement unions are pushing back against Gov. Charlie Baker’s recent order mandating coronavirus vaccines for all public workers as education officials mull a student mask mandate.

– “A stark choice: COVID-19 fall forecasts show deaths increase, but toll depends on path taken,” by Kay Lazar, Boston Globe: “One respected disease modeler from the University of Washington said that simply adopting universal mask mandates now could avoid roughly 1,300 deaths in Massachusetts by Dec. 1 and 50,000 deaths nationwide.

– “Massachusetts resumes reporting racial COVID-19 hospitalization data, as rates continue to rise,” by Nik DeCosta-Klipa, Boston.com: “Following pushback from local Democrats and a rebound in COVID-19 rates, Gov. Charlie Baker’s administration resumed reporting demographic data on hospitalizations due to the virus in Massachusetts this week.

FROM THE HUB

– “Janey Reinstates Indoor Mask Mandate For Boston,” by Saraya Wintersmith, GBH News: “Acting Mayor Kim Janey announced Friday a city-wide mandate requiring people to wear face masks in indoor public spaces, regardless of vaccination status, beginning August 27.

– More from the Boston Herald’s Sean Philip Cotter: “...the Massachusetts Restaurant Association worries this ‘step backwards’ will hurt the industry. … The administration said masks must be worn indoors in public spaces at all times except while eating and drinking, and in spots ‘including but not limited to retail establishments, restaurants, bars, performance venues, social clubs, event spaces and municipal buildings.’”

– “Boston woman sets record for fastest subway trip to every T station,” by Meghan Ottolini, Boston Herald: “With a time of 7:04:29 (7 hours, 4 minutes, 29 seconds), a Boston woman shattered the world record for the fastest subway trip to every T station on the map. Boston commuters know getting from point A to point B on the train can come with delays and diversions, but 29-year-old Maya Jonas-Silver executed her plan to a T.

 “Two city councilors want a ‘Towing Bill of Rights.’ Here’s what that means,” by Christopher Gavin, Boston.com.

THE RACE FOR CITY HALL

– “Amazon wants to get even bigger in Boston. The five would-be mayors are wary,” by Jon Chesto and Pranshu Verma, Boston Globe: “For at least the last couple of years, the e-commerce giant has wanted to build a distribution center in Boston. So far, its efforts have fizzled amid concerns about traffic and lower-wage, non-union jobs. But Amazon’s not giving up, and has recently hired two top Walsh administration officials to help with its expansion efforts. Whoever wins the mayor’s race in November will need to grapple with Amazon before long. None of the five major candidates say they would shut the company out entirely, but all expressed wariness about a new distribution facility — particularly about wages and working conditions.

– “Where Boston’s mayoral candidates stand on renaming Faneuil Hall,” by Marcus E. Howard, Boston.com: “For years protesters have called on the city to rename Faneuil Hall, a historic marketplace and meeting hall that traditionally draws about 20 million annual visitors, because its namesake profited in the ownership and trade of Africans.

– “As preliminary election looms, City Council candidates race to introduce themselves,” by Jasper Goodman and Jack Lyons, Boston Globe: “For the candidates running in this fall’s Boston City Council elections, breaking through the noise of a historic mayoral election, never-ending COVID-19 news, and volatile national politics has proven difficult."

– FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Boston City Councilors Julia Mejia and Ricardo Arroyo, who are both running for reelection, will host a relational organizing training Sunday afternoon for Latino leaders and residents. They hope to engage more of the city's growing Latino population through GOTV efforts surrounding the upcoming municipal elections.

– "Push To Unite Black Vote Behind Janey Prompts Pushback In Boston Mayoral Race," by Anthony Brooks, WBUR.

– “Essaibi George accuses Janey of ‘weaponizing’ mayor’s office,” by Gintautas Dumcius, Dorchester Reporter.

– "A new generation of leaders is pushing a city-level Green New Deal and cuts to the police budget. Can Boston's next mayor transform the city?" by David Scharfenberg, Boston Globe.

– “Matt O’Malley endorses Mary Tamer to replace him on Boston council,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald.

BALLOT BATTLES

– “Uber-backed group says California ruling won't affect Mass. ballot drive,” by Don Seiffert, Boston Business Journal: “The group behind a Massachusetts ballot initiative stipulating that app-based workers such as Uber and Lyft drivers shouldn't be entitled to the benefits full-time employees receive says a California court ruling striking down a similar measure will have no effect on its plans in the Bay State. On Friday, Alameda County Superior Court Judge Frank Roesch in California declared that Proposition 22 is ‘unenforceable,’ according to the Washington Post, because several sections of the measure are unconstitutional under California state law. Proposition 22 is a ballot measure passed by 59% of voters in November that defines Uber and Lyft drivers as independent contractors.

PARTY POLITICS

– “Nearly a year on, Berkshire Democrats continue push for Massachusetts Democratic Party to address complaints,” by Danny Jin, Berkshire Eagle: “Nearly a year ago, hundreds of Democrats lodged complaints against state party leaders for their involvement in the 2020 Democratic primary between U.S. Rep. Richard Neal and then-Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse. After the party’s rules committee dismissed those complaints, several Berkshire County Democrats have continued to call for Massachusetts Democratic Party leaders to apologize for actions that a party-ordered investigation found violated one of its bylaws.

– Rising Covid-19 cases drove MassDems members to vote over the weekend to make their Sept. 25 platform convention entirely virtual after initially planning to hold a partially in-person event at the Tsongas Center in Lowell. “We must protect the health of our individual delegates and alternates, guests, and staff, and the public health of our host city, Lowell, and the Merrimack Valley,” the group tweeted.

DAY IN COURT

– “'Completely shattered': Gannon family speaks out on second-degree murder conviction,” by Jessica Hill, Cape Cod Times: “On Friday morning, a jury convicted 33-year-old Thomas Latanowich of second-degree murder in the 2018 killing of [Yarmouth Police Sgt. Sean] Gannon who was shot while helping to serve an arrest warrant at 109 Blueberry Lane in Marstons Mills. Before sentencing, through tears and with voices choked with emotion, Gannon's family told Judge Locke what his loss meant to them.

FROM THE DELEGATION

– “Rep. Katherine Clark, a potential Pelosi successor, failed to properly disclose stock trades worth as much as $285,000,” by Dave Levinthal, Insider: “Assistant Speaker Katherine Clark of Massachusetts, the fourth-highest-ranking Democrat in the US House and a potential candidate to succeed Nancy Pelosi as speaker, violated the federal STOCK Act by failing to properly disclose 19 stock trades, according to an Insider review of newly filed congressional records. Taken together, the trades are worth at least $19,019 — and as much as $285,000. Among the trades Clark disclosed after the 45-day deadline were shares of the Google parent company Alphabet, Best Buy, First Solar, the investment-management firm BlackRock, the pharmaceutical company GlaxoSmithKline, the data and records management company Iron Mountain, and the water technology company Xylem. Clark's untimely disclosures involve stock trades by her husband…

Clark is the second member of the Massachusetts delegation who appears to have violated the STOCK Act, and Insider said Friday that her late reporting could prompt an ethics investigation or a fine starting at $200. Insider previously reported that Rep. Lori Trahan also violated the STOCK Act.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren tweeted Saturday morning: “I’ve said it before: Members of Congress should not be allowed to own individual stock. Period. #EndCorruptionNow.” She didn’t name names, and appeared to be referring to her bill that would prevent lawmakers from making individual stock trades.

– State Senate President Karen Spilka said she's "proud to be an early supporter" of Rep. Jake Auchincloss’s reelection bid in an email to supporters Friday as the first-term congressman looks to ward off potential challengers — particularly from within his own party — next year. “If I can say one thing about Jake Auchincloss it's that he delivers," Spilka wrote in the endorsement email.

IT'S NOT EASY BEING GREEN

– “Massachusetts should be converting 100,000 homes a year to electric heat. The actual number: 461,” by Sabrina Shankman, Boston Globe: “According to the state’s own plan, Massachusetts should be converting 100,000 homes a year from fossil fuels to electricity for heating and cooling. The reality is much different: Just 461 homes made the switch last year, according to data reviewed by the Globe.

FROM THE 413

– “'What the hell's going on downtown?' Pittsfield's North Street retailers want answers. Mayor Tyer says, 'It's a work in progress',” by Felix Carroll, Berkshire Eagle: “Cutting crosswise through the Dunham Mall pedestrian side street to North Street, [Pittsfield’s mayor] has a choice. Turn left, toward the restored commercial space where a cheerful Brooklyn couple hopes to open a brewery next spring, or right, in the direction of a florist whose owners recently posted a photo of their vandalized window splattered with raw egg and who declared they will leave this city because conditions have ‘gotten worse and worse.’

– “Baystate Health, Berkshire Health systems seek bigger ‘safety net’ as state readies 5-year Medicaid plan,” by Jim Kinney, Springfield Republican: “Baystate Health, Berkshire Health Systems and other hospitals outside Boston caring for Medicaid recipients, and losing money doing so, say they risk being further shortchanged as the state prepares to send a new five-year Medicaid waiver plan to the feds.

– “Northampton schools push the envelope with anti-bias proposal,” by Greg Kerstetter, CommonWealth Magazine: “In September, the School Committee will take up a proposal to ban two other symbols of hate — swastikas and nooses — while also establishing a wide-ranging system in which various types of bias can be reported and investigated. It would make Northampton the only community in the state, and possibly the only one outside of Oregon, to enact such a far-reaching, anti-bias policy.

THE LOCAL ANGLE

– “Braintree's Paul Veneto begins his push to honor 9/11 flight attendants,” by Fred Hanson, Patriot Ledger: “The journey began with a pause at Logan Airport's 9/11 Memorial, which bears the names of those who died on the two planes that left Boston and crashed into the World Trade Center nearly two decades ago. Among those names are those of Paul Veneto's fellow flight attendants on United Flight 175, people he had flown with from coast to coast and back again many times. ... He plans to push an airliner drink cart more than 220 miles from Boston to the site of the twin towers of the World Trade Center that were leveled by hijacked American Airlines Flight 11 and United Flight 175. He began his journey Saturday, and hopes to reach ground zero on Sept. 11.

– “Hungry Mass. households doubled during pandemic,” by Tonya Alanez and Jack Lyons, Boston Globe: “The number of Massachusetts households lacking enough food to get by doubled during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a recent study from Project Bread. More than half a million residents, more than a quarter of them children, who are eligible for SNAP, or food stamps, don’t receive benefits for the nation’s No. 1 anti-hunger program, according to the research by Project Bread, a Boston nonprofit that works to end hunger in the state.

TRANSITIONS – Vaira Harik is now assistant county administrator for Barnstable. She was previously deputy director of the Barnstable County Department of Human Services and regularly briefed media on the county's Covid-19 metrics. Ruby Robles has been promoted to be deputy press secretary for Sen. Elizabeth Warren. She most recently was Warren's digital press assistant.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY – to Springfield state Rep. Carlos Gonzalez, Everett state Rep. Joe McGonagle, Joshua Ostroff, George Schadler, Dianne Bagley Smith, Shelley Long (the actress who played ‘Diane Chambers’ in Cheers) , Robert Solow and Yanisa Techagumthorn. Happy belated to Cheryl ChenRafael Reif and Mark Martinez.

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.

 

SUBSCRIBE TO "THE RECAST" TODAY: Power is shifting in Washington and in communities across the country. More people are demanding a seat at the table, insisting that politics is personal and not all policy is equitable. The Recast is a twice-weekly newsletter that explores the changing power dynamics in Washington and breaks down how race and identity are recasting politics and policy in America. Get fresh insights, scoops and dispatches on this crucial intersection from across the country and hear critical new voices that challenge business as usual. Don't miss out, SUBSCRIBE . Thank you to our sponsor, Intel.

 
 


 

Follow us on Twitter

Lisa Kashinsky @lisakashinsky

 

Subscribe to the POLITICO Playbook family

Playbook  |  Playbook PM  |  California Playbook  |  Florida Playbook  |  Illinois Playbook  |  Massachusetts Playbook  |  New Jersey Playbook  |  New York Playbook  |  Brussels Playbook  |  London Playbook

View all our politics and policy newsletters

FOLLOW US


POLITICO, LLC 1000 Wilson Blvd. Arlington, VA, 22209, USA






"Look Me In The Eye" | Lucas Kunce for Missouri

  Help Lucas Kunce defeat Josh Hawley in November: https://LucasKunce.com/chip-in/ Josh Hawley has been a proud leader in the fight to ...