Presented by Transportation for Massachusetts | ||
GOOD MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Happy Monday! DELEO’S DOMINO EFFECT — House Speaker Robert DeLeo hasn't left office, but the gears are already turning on Beacon Hill to choose his successor. After rumors flew about his political future, DeLeo filed an official disclosure on Friday that he is discussing a new job with Northeastern University, his alma mater. DeLeo is the longest-serving speaker in Massachusetts history. From there, things moved quickly . Majority Leader Ron Mariano, of Quincy, announced he would be a candidate for speaker if DeLeo leaves office on Friday. Mariano has long been considered the favorite to replace DeLeo, but the statement made his intentions official. Also in the race for speaker: State Rep. Russell Holmes. The Boston lawmaker announced he'd run for speaker on Friday. If Holmes won, he would be the first-ever Black speaker of the House. And if DeLeo does move on, the shakeup would extend through the House, which begins a new session in January. The speaker selects powerful positions like the leadership team and committee chairs. And back in DeLeo's hometown, the race to fill his House seat quickly took shape over the weekend. DeLeo has represented Winthrop and Revere for 30 years. Revere's Juan Jaramillo, the political coordinator for 32BJ SEIU, threw his hat into the ring on Friday. Also running is attorney Jeff Turco of Winthrop. Tino Capobianco and Alicia DelVento, both State House aides who live in Winthrop, say they are looking at running for the seat if DeLeo steps down. Marc Silvestri, the director of veterans services in Revere, is also eyeing a run. FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: HALBERT RAISES $25K — David Halbert, a candidate for Boston City Council, raised more than $25,000 in the days after he launched his campaign. Halbert, who is running for an at-large seat on the council, announced his campaign on Wednesday. This is the second election cycle in a row that Halbert is seeking a seat on the council, and he is pledging not to take campaign contributions from corporate PACs or police unions. PROGRAMMING NOTE: Massachusetts Playbook will not publish Dec. 23 to Jan. 1. I’ll be back in your inbox on Jan. 4. Have a tip, story, suggestion, birthday, anniversary, new job, or any other nugget for the Playbook? Get in touch: smurray@politico.com. TODAY — Boston Mayor Marty Walsh is a guest on WBUR. | ||
A message from Transportation for Massachusetts: Transportation is the largest source of air pollution and carbon emissions in Massachusetts. The Transportation & Climate Initiative is a bipartisan, multi-state approach to limiting pollution based on a proven model from the electricity sector that has reduced costs for consumers and businesses while growing the economy. It’s a smart approach to a big problem, and will improve quality of life for residents across the Commonwealth. Learn more at: www.t4ma.org/tci | ||
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– “Massachusetts reports 4,162 new COVID cases, 60 more deaths Sunday as second vaccine rolls out,” by Benjamin Kail, MassLive.com: “Massachusetts public health officials on Sunday announced another 4,162 residents have tested positive for COVID-19, bringing the estimated number of active cases to 82,617 just as the second vaccine approved for emergency use in the U.S. began to ship to hospitals.” | ||
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– “Mass. Senate votes to expand abortion access, rejects governor’s amendments,” by Stephanie Ebbert, Boston Globe: “The Massachusetts Senate voted overwhelmingly Friday to reject Governor Charlie Baker’s changes to their measure expanding abortion access. With only eight of 40 members voting to adopt the governor’s amendments, the Senate returned the measure in its original form to the governor’s desk.” – “'The bottom fell out': Rodrigues proud of Senate's work amid dire straits created by COVID,” by Sam Drysdale, SouthCoast Today: “Walking through the Boston Common, beneath the shadow of the golden dome that houses some of Massachusetts’ most important decision makers, a somber rendition of the usually-bustling park reflects the atmosphere inside the Statehouse. A ticket inside these days requires verbal confirmation of your good health, a personal escort in and out of the building and of course, a mask.” – “Citing A 'Culture of Corruption' In The Mass. House, Mattapan's Russell Holmes To Oppose Mariano,” by Mike Deehan, GBH News: “Mattapan Rep. Russell Holmes doesn't want "backroom deals" to decide the next leader of the Massachusetts House of Representative, so he's challenging Majority Leader Ron Mariano's bid to become speaker assuming Robert DeLeo departs.” – “Sen. John Velis faces alcoholism one day at a time,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine: “If John Velis has a drink, he can’t stop. Not at one drink, or two, or three. The end doesn’t come until he is blacking out, crazy drunk, the kind of drunk where you wake up the next morning needing another drink. Yet it took two decades of drinking before Velis was ready to confront the truth about who he is. Velis is a Democratic state senator from Westfield, a US Army Reserve major, and the nephew of a retired judge. Velis is also, he now will say, an alcoholic.” – “Senate investigation finds Bristol sheriff’s office broke law in denying state senator access to jail,” by Jeremy C. Fox, Boston Globe: “Bristol County Sheriff Thomas M. Hodgson’s office broke a Massachusetts law when it refused in May to allow a state senator inside its North Dartmouth jail, one day after staff violently subdued immigration detainees in a confrontation over COVID-19 testing, according to a state Senate investigation released Friday.” – “Mass. COVID-19 numbers continue to climb as Moderna vaccine added to state pandemic arsenal,” by John Hilliard, Boston Globe: “Due to arrive just days before Christmas, the Moderna vaccine comes as Governor Charlie Baker and Boston Mayor Martin J. Walsh renew calls for residents to avoid large, holiday gatherings to avoid opportunities for the often-deadly virus to spread.” – “Feds cut Massachusetts' Pfizer vaccine allocation by 20%” by Allison DeAngelis, Boston Business Journal: “The federal government has cut the number of Pfizer vaccine doses that Massachusetts will receive by 20%, Gov. Charlie Baker said Friday. The state is now expecting to receive 145,000 doses of the vaccine produced by Pfizer Inc. (NYSE: PFE) and BioNTech SE (Nasdaq: BNTX) for the month of December. That's down from initial estimates of 180,000 doses.” – “Baker wants freeze on unemployment insurance rate,” by Christian M. Wade, Eagle-Tribune: “Gov. Charlie Baker is pushing to freeze unemployment insurance rates to help businesses facing massive increases next year as a result of record claims. On Friday, Baker filed legislation to halt planned increases in the contributions paid by employers to the state's unemployment trust fund.” – “Faith groups rally for racial justice at state leaders’ homes,” by Breanne Kovatch and Jeremy C. Fox, Boston Globe: “Members of faith groups gathered Saturday evening at the homes of top state legislative leaders and Governor Charlie Baker to urge passage of a police reform bill that protects people of color from racial profiling and sets standards for police accountability.” | ||
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– “Bodycam Video Shows ‘mob Mentality’ Of Boston Police Who Responded To George Floyd Protests, Lawyer Says,” by Eoin Higgins, The Appeal: “Hours of video given exclusively to The Appeal show police officers bragging about attacking protesters and multiple instances of excessive force and the liberal use of pepper spray. As demonstrations against police brutality and abuse of Black Americans spread across Boston on the night of May 31 and early morning of June 1, the city’s police department was out in force.” – “An off-duty officer crashed into a disabled grandmother. A year later, she’s still fighting City Hall,” by Andrew Ryan and Evan Allen, Boston Globe: “The blue line that protects problem cops ― even when they break the rules, even when they leave an elderly woman thanking God she is still alive ― is a powerful force. And City Hall’s maddening bureaucracy can make it worse. Often, the meek and unconnected pay the price. In Castor’s case, neither the off-duty officer who ran the light and T-boned her car nor the city has offered a penny to help her ― or even apologized.” – “Democrats lining up to replace Andrew Lelling as Massachusetts U.S. attorney,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “Democrats in Massachusetts have their eyes set on an important local part of the Biden administration: the U.S. Attorney’s Office, for which applications are now open to replace Andrew Lelling, one of the few conservative forces in the state — and at least five serious candidates are taking aim at it.” – “Boston city councilors, education advocates push for voting rights for student School Committee representative,” by Alexi Cohan and Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “Boston city councilors and education advocates are pushing for voting rights for the only member of the city’s School Committee not appointed by the mayor — the student representative, a change that could only come via home-rule petition.” – “One Block, One World,” by Janelle Nanos and Shirley Leung, Boston Globe: “On Water Street in downtown Boston, the sound of silence is deafening these days — no office workers chirping into iPhones as they pursue their Starbucks fix, no unkempt men heading to the upscale barber, nobody chatting in what used to be the daily lunch line that stretched outside of Casa Razdora for its handmade pasta.” – “Encore Boston Harbor not for sale, casino President Brian Gullbrants writes to employees,” by Melissa Hanson, MassLive.com: “The president of Encore Boston Harbor has assured employees that the Everett casino is not for sale. ‘It has been falsely reported that Encore Boston Harbor is for sale. I want to assure you that our company has not engaged in any conversations about the sale of the property,’ Brian Gullbrants wrote in a message dated Saturday, which was obtained by MassLive.” – “Some Mass. Charities Struggle, Others See Surge In Giving, As Need Increases,” by Jack Lepiarz and Lynn Jolicoeur, WBUR: “The coronavirus pandemic has had a profound impact on nonprofit organizations that serve people in need. Many have had to change the way they operate or the services they offer. Some are struggling to manage increased need with a drop in fundraising.” – “With sale of Legal Sea Foods, another Boston institution changes hands,” by Larry Edelman, Boston Globe: “If it’s not Roger, is it Legal? That’s the question as Roger Berkowitz, the chief executive and public face of Legal Sea Foods, is poised to sign off as soon as Monday on the the sale of the restaurant business his family started in 1968 to PPX Hospitality Group, owner of Smith & Wollensky steakhouses and three Boston-area Strega restaurants.” | ||
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