Monday, June 15, 2020

RSN: FOCUS | Greg Palast: Here's How Trump Will Steal the 2020 Election





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President Donald Trump meets with Colorado gov. Jared Polis and North Dakota gov. Doug Burgum on May 13, 2020 in Washington, D.C. (photo: Doug Mills/Getty Images)
Chauncey DeVega, Salon
DeVega writes: "Greg Palast warns that Joe Biden's chances against Donald Trump are worse than the polls suggest because millions of Democrats will have their votes thrown out on Election Day. Moreover, many of those voters will have no idea that their votes were purged and therefore not counted."


Palast's new book, "How Trump Stole 2020," outlines a nightmare: Trump loses the electoral vote and wins anyway

s Election Day 2020 approaches, it would appear that presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden and his party have much to celebrate. 
Biden leads Donald Trump by an average of eight percentage points in national polling, with some surveys showing Biden ahead of Trump by as many as 14 percentage points.
Biden also enjoys huge leads among the Democratic Party's key constituents, including black voters, Latinos and other nonwhites, college-educated white women and younger voters. Polls also show Joe Biden making gains among older white voters, a group that consistently supports Republicans and has been especially loyal to Trump. Biden also leads Trump in key battleground states such as Michigan and Wisconsin.
On closer inspection, however, matters are more complicated.
Election Day is still more than four months away, almost an eternity in electoral politics. Previous Democratic nominees such as Hillary Clinton and Michael Dukakis are object lessons in the cruel and mercurial ways of the political fates: Both appeared to hold big leads over their Republican opponents at this approximate point in the cycle, only to lose on Election Day. 
There is also a not-insubstantial gap between what prospective voters tell pollsters and how they will actually decide to vote — if they vote at all.
Greg Palast is an investigative journalist whose work has been featured by the BBC, the Guardian, the Nation, Rolling Stone and here on Salon. He has become one of the nation's foremost experts on vote suppression, vote theft and vote fraud. He is the author of the bestselling books "Billionaires & Ballot Bandits" and "The Best Democracy Money Can Buy." His new book is "How Trump Stole 2020: The Hunt for America's Vanished Voters."
In our most recent conversation, Palast warns that Joe Biden's chances against Donald Trump are worse than the polls suggest because millions of Democrats will have their votes thrown out on Election Day. Moreover, many of those voters will have no idea that their votes were purged and therefore not counted. 
Palast explains how the Republican Party has refined its strategy of voter suppression, voter intimidation and vote theft in elections across the country. Palast also highlights how the planned chaos during the recent Georgia Democratic primaries is a preview of how the Republican Party intends to steal the 2020 presidential election for Donald Trump.  
Finally, Palast issues an ominous warning: Trump and the Republicans, he believes, are plotting to use the 12th Amendment to the Constitution to declare the popular vote and Electoral College results invalid, so that the 2020 presidential election will be decided in the House of Representatives — which, believe it or not, may well vote in Trump's favor. 


This conversation has been edited for clarity and length.
One of the dominant narratives in the news is that last week's Democratic primary in Georgia is a preview of the sabotage, chaos and interference that Donald Trump and the Republicans will be using against Joe Biden and the Democrats in the general election this November. Is that conclusion correct? 
Absolutely. And it's going to be worse.
The Republicans have been practicing this since 2018 in Georgia. What happened there was a test run for the entire nation. Brian Kemp won [the Georgia gubernatorial election] in November 2018 because of mass voter purges. The Republicans also tried other tricks.
Brian Kemp has been playing these games with voter rolls for seven years. He is governor of Georgia and he stole that election from Stacey Abrams, the first black woman to run for that office.
One of the primary things the Republicans tested in Georgia would be to see if the news media or others would try to find out just why the lines to vote were so very long. Forty precincts in Atlanta had no voting machines. That creates long lines especially when there are no paper ballots. If the machines break, they are supposed to have backup paper ballots. Of course, there were no paper ballots.
Why were all those people out there in the middle of the COVID-19 virus? Why were they waiting in line for a voting machine? The answer is that millions of Georgians asked for mail-in ballots and then hundreds of thousands of people did not get their ballots and were not told why. The answer is that these voters were purged. Hall a million of them! If you are purged, then you do not receive a mail-in ballot. If you do not get your ballot, you cannot mail it back in.
In Georgia and in Ohio, and who knows how many other states — those state officials will not tell me what their rules are — ballots are no longer being sent to people on the so-called inactive list. That is very strange. "Inactive" means that you missed the last two elections, in 2016 and 2018. According to federal law — it is actually in bold type in the National Voter Registration Act — a person cannot lose their right to vote by not voting.
If you fail to vote, these states are not going to send you a ballot and you will not know why. Then it's too late, and you are forced to physically go to the polls to vote. There you will join all the black and brown folks who also did not receive their ballots. All of you will be forced to wait in long lines.
In 2020 we are heading into a disaster, and it's a very well-designed and intentional one. The Republicans thought it all through and tested it in Georgia and Wisconsin and elsewhere. In 2020 when Trump is up for re-election, this chaos will be everywhere.
Donald Trump and the Republicans have been very public about the fact that if most Americans could vote, especially nonwhite Americans, they would be doomed as a political movement and a party. Naked white identity politics and white supremacy is now the mission statement of today's Republican Party. Republicans and Trump are cheating to win elections and have faced no consequences for it. Why should they stop?
Vote theft is the perfect crime. If you successfully steal the vote you have stolen the vote cops, the people who are supposed to monitor the voting to ensure that the rules are being followed. For example, the Department of Justice is supposed to arrest the vote thieves. Does any one thinking and reasonable person actually believe that Donald Trump's Justice Department, led by Bill Barr, is going to do that?
We are the only nation other than the recognized fake democracies such as Russia and China and Iran where the vote-counters are chosen by the political operatives.
Republican secretaries of state such as Brian Kemp (who is now governor of Georgia) and Kris Kobach [formerly of Kansas] are highly vicious partisan operatives who are given the power to determine who gets a vote, when you get to vote, where you get to vote and whose vote gets counted. Even the Wall Street Journal said that Brian Kemp holding that title [as Georgia secretary of state) while running for governor was unethical. Having politically appointed voting officials in the United States is something that must be put to end.
During an interview several years ago, Donald Trump literally said that he wanted riots and social unrest, presumably as a way for him to take power and "make America great again." With the United States in a state of economic calamity, a pandemic and social unrest, is this an opportunity for Trump and his movement to advance their goals?
These are politicians, along with the billionaires who back them, who thrive off chaos. That's how they make their money. It is also how they win their elections. It is the same process of chaos and mayhem. First of all they use the bogeyman of illegal voters, fraudulent voters, dead voters, foreign voters and double voters to create hysteria. It is a type of right-wing hysteria factory, the goal of which is to change voting requirements.
What I am very worried about is how Donald Trump and the Republicans could use the 12th Amendment to the Constitution to steal the 2020 election. We have had two presidential elections in the United States in which a candidate won both the popular vote and the Electoral College vote but did not become president.
The 12th Amendment states that if the Electoral College does not reach a majority, which is 270, the election then goes to the House of Representatives. How could that possibly happen with Trump and Biden in 2020? The answer is the rabidly right-wing legislatures in Wisconsin, Ohio and Florida say that there is so much voter fraud and that the mail-in ballots are not to be trusted. Trust me, those states are going to do things such as misprint ballots. Many "mistakes" are going to occur in those red states.
So the result could be that Wisconsin, Ohio and Florida do not certify their electors, and Biden has lost those three states' votes. There are still not enough votes for Trump, but Biden does not hit the 270 threshold in the Electoral College to be elected president.
The 2020 election now goes to the House of Representatives, where every state gets a single vote. New York, California and Illinois each get a vote. Wyoming, South Dakota and Oklahoma each get a vote. Who wins? Most state delegations are majority Republican, even though the Republicans don't control the House and have far fewer voters in America. But by the rules of the Constitution, Donald Trump could be re-elected even if he loses both the Electoral College and the popular vote.
In his campaign emails, Trump has been threatening to raise a "MAGA-Trump Army." He has encouraged violence by his paramilitaries and other street thugs. Trump and his operatives are also saying that they want 50,000 Republicans to serve as "voter observers" at the polls on Election Day 2020. The goal there is obvious — to intimidate, terrorize, and try to stop Democrats from voting. Given that Trump will be targeting black and brown people for such terrorism, it really is a form of Jim Crow in the 21st century.
America with Donald Trump is going back to the old White Citizens' Councils and other ways of intimidating black and brown voters during Jim Crow. Threats and intimidation are also being used in places like Arizona to keep Hispanics and Latinos from voting. Some of this voter intimidation by Republicans are just pure physical threats.
But even more important than intimidation of Democratic voters are demands for proof of residence and proof of citizenship. There are other ways to keep people from voting, such as checking to see if a person has paid their alimony or court fines. Voters could be arrested. In the upcoming 2020 election there Is going to be mayhem. There will be a large number of complaints about voting stations being closed two hours early, and claims that there are all these "illegal voters." Trump and the Republicans are going to say that the election outcome was illegitimate. This will throw it to the House and Trump gets re-elected.
How will these enforcers actually try to stop Democrats from voting? What does that look like on the ground?
There will be a massive official contesting of votes. In almost every state, the political parties are allowed to assign official poll workers who have the right to challenge a vote. According to my research, this person does not even have to live in the area. Some of these official poll workers are going to automatically challenge any voter they can.
Unfortunately, many of the poll workers will just go along with it and say, "OK, we'll give you a provisional ballot." One million provisional ballots were thrown in the garbage in 2016. It is very important for people to talk to other poll workers and summon the election judge and demand that you are allowed to vote. Do not accept a provisional ballot. They are effectively useless. It is a type of placebo that makes people think they voted when they really have not. The reality is that these provisional ballots are not counted, because whatever stopped a given voter from being allowed to vote normally in the first place is going to be the same reason the provisional ballot is rejected.
Recently in Wisconsin, the Democratic Party and its voters were able to win a seat on the state Supreme Court. This was very important in terms of stopping Republicans' efforts to purge Democratic voters and likely supporters from the voting rolls. The Republican Party of course is pushing back. What is going on in Wisconsin at present?
The Democrats are in real trouble. I just spoke with one of the election commissioners in Wisconsin. There is a right-wing group suing to force the state to remove a quarter of a million voters. This group was able to get a court to agree with them.
Now the case is going to the Wisconsin State Supreme Court — which is what that whole primary in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic was about. The Republicans insisted on having a vote during the virus because they thought that would block voters in Milwaukee who would be too afraid to come out and vote. It was partly true, but enough people in Milwaukee risked death to come out and vote. The number of polling stations in Milwaukee went from 180 to just five.
The Democrats were so happy because despite the Republican Party's impediments and interference, the Democratic-backed judge won. The Democrats thought that would be the end of it and that the voter rolls were safe. That would not be the case. The Republican candidate who lost then did something unheard of in my years of being involved with the courts: He un-recused himself.
The very man who lost that election is now going to hear the case in July and vote on it. Wisconsin may still remove 250,000 voters. This is extremely dangerous for democracy. If the Republicans succeed in removing those quarter million voters — concentrated in Madison, where the students are, and in Milwaukee, where African-Americans are concentrated — that is 10 times Trump's 2016 vote margin in the state. How do you overcome that thumb on the electoral scale? We have got to be very concerned about how the Republicans are using mass purges of voters in swing states to stay in power.
Given Donald Trump and his Republican Party's use of voter suppression, gerrymandering, vote theft and other efforts to "win" elections in Georgia and many other states, there have been demands by activists and others that the United Nations should send observers to monitor voting in this country. What would that look like in practice?
The UN would not be able to monitor American elections. The United Nations subcontracts to the Carter Center in Atlanta. The Carter Center's and the UN's rules require that there be a minimum standard of democratic-voting procedures. They report that the United States does not meet those standards.
The UN and the Carter Center cannot monitor an election that they have already certified as being broken. The biggest single problem with voting in the United States is the massive purging of voter rolls, and that has already been done before Election Day. All the UN and the Carter Center observers would be able to do in America would be to sit there and monitor the fact that millions of people who thought they could vote are being told that they cannot vote.
The second serious problem with voting in America is shown by how the news media relies on the State Department to certify foreign elections. The State Department uses exit polls to determine the veracity of an election. But in this country, we have seen a phenomenon in the past few presidential elections where exit polls report that the Democratic candidates won.
For example, in Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania, exit polls show that Hillary Clinton won a huge victory over Trump. But the official count shows Trump squeaking by in those states. If such a thing happened in Ukraine or Peru or Serbia — I cite those three countries because exit polls there conflicted with the official tally and the United States refused to recognize those governments. Our government actually declared those victories to be phony. Yet in 2016, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Iowa, and several other states showed Donald Trump losing in the exit polls. By the State Department's own rules regarding elections, Donald Trump lost.
Respected public opinion polls show Joe Biden with a double-digit lead over Trump in the 2020 election. Right now it looks like Trump will be routed in November. I will be transparent: I predicted that Trump would win in 2016 and I was correct. I believe he will win again in 2020. I hope I am wrong. Through skullduggery, trickery, foreign interference and other means, Trump is likely to win — assuming there even is an election and that he leaves the White House when he is defeated. Biden's lead feels to me like a repeat of Democratic defeats in the past. Michael Dukakis was way ahead of George H.W. Bush in early polls in 1988. Hillary Clinton was also way ahead of Donald Trump for most of the 2016 campaign.
Joe Biden's lead right now is not only completely meaningless but something far worse, because it is putting the Democrats to sleep. There were almost 7.9 million ballots that were either not counted or where voters were blocked from voting in 2016. If you were to call those voters up, like a pollster, many of them would tell you they were voting for Hillary Clinton. But those same people did not know that they would be blocked from voting on Election Day or that their votes were thrown out.
The non-count of voters, where people are either outright blocked from voting or their votes are thrown out by Republicans, undermines the predictive power of any poll that predicts a huge Biden victory. The Democrats must confront these structural impediments, many of which are driven by white supremacy, if there are going to be truly free and fair elections in the United States.
The Democrats are acting like they are still at Hillary Clinton's inaugural and they haven't left. They don't know why the balloons didn't drop through the glass ceiling.

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SENATOR DAVID PERDUE [R-GA]









SENATOR DAVID PERDUE [R-GA]

profited and you got sick?

Did he forewarn you? NO!

SENATORS KNEW!

That was before Americans DIED.







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Buffalo police veteran fired for stopping brutality may get a new investigation and restored pension





Buffalo police veteran fired for stopping brutality may get a new investigation and restored pension








Horne_Gregory.jpg

2006: Cariol Horne (l) and Gregory Kwiatkowski (r)

Former Buffalo police officer Cariol Horne tried to do the right thing back in 2006. In 2006, a white police officer Horne was working with began choking a handcuffed Black suspect. Horne pulled that officer off of the suspect and was summarily fired for her protection of a Buffalo citizen. At the time, Horne was called out for what higher ups called her “extreme lack of professionalism.” The white police officer said that Horne had jumped on him, and Horne was unable to get legal satisfaction as other police officers on the scene refused to back up her story. At the time, Horne was a 19-year veteran who was one year away from earning her pension. Horne lost her police pension. She has since tried and failed numerous times to get her pension reinstated.
The white officer, former Lt. Gregory Kwiatkowski, went on to abuse more Buffalo citizens. In 2018 after Kwiatkowski had retired, he was sentenced to four months prison time and four months home confinement for his brutality against four Black teens back in 2009. During that incident, Kwiatkowski called the four Black youths “savage dogs,” amongst other things. He slammed their faces into the hood of a car. The city of Buffalo subsequently paid out a settlement to two of the kids. Kwiatkowski was allowed to resume receiving his pension after serving his sentence.
Horne, the mother of three boys, took a few jobs, including as a long distance truck driver, and continued to run into various stresses from Buffalo city agencies. Last year, Horne was evicted from her apartment. She has pointed to her public outspokenness on the police department as the source and motivation of these problems. Horne’s petition to keep her pension was originally denied by disgraced former New York Comptroller Alan Havesi. Havesi resigned a couple of months after denying Horne’s pleas for pension. His resignation was due to his part in a pay-to-play scheme going on with the state’s pension fund. Just so many bad apples.
But even as the state’s apparatus of justice has continued to press its weight down on Horne, she has not stopped fighting. According to The Washington Post, Horne has been trying since 2016 to get Cariol’s Law passed at state and local levels. The statute that Horne worked with her attorneys to draw up would protect law enforcement officers who speak out against fellow officers’ abuses. Since the killings of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd Horne prompted widespread protests against police misconduct, Horne has protested every single day since Floyd was killed by Minneapolis Metro Police.  
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Cariol Horne in 2006 and 2017, fighting for justice
On Tuesday, The Buffalo News reported that Buffalo City Council members have asked the attorney general’s office to open an investigation into Horne’s original incident, as well as look into a dispute over the days Horne argued she had worked, in order to receive her pension. This comes after the council met to discuss how the city can ensure that “the duty to intervene” policy is not only followed, but effective.
The Buffalo Police Department has been brought into the national conversation about police because of their truly despicable brutalizing of protesters, specifically 75-year-old peaceful protester Martin Gugino, who was knocked to the floor and injured by a crew of cowards in riot gear. Trump and the right wing of the country can try to pretend that the fascist practices and tendencies of our country’s law enforcement agencies are the only things between us and anarchy, but the videos are in: The only chaos being created is the result of an overmilitarized police force that is lacking in accountability and racist to the core.









Trump falters his way down a ramp, and what do you know: There's always a tweet












Image is pretty much everything for Donald Trump, so he cannot be happy that the big image that came out of his big commencement speech at West Point was of him inching his way unsteadily down a gentle ramp. West Point was supposed to wrap Trump in presidential pomp and military glory and Trump wanted it badly enough to force the military academy to hold a commencement ceremony that might otherwise not have been held due to coronavirus, and for which cadets were called back to campus after having been sent home.
But images of helicopter flyovers and saluting cadets took a distant second place to that ramp walk, in which Trump pursed his lips as he took small, tentative steps, noticeably leading with his left leg, his eyes glued to the ramp directly in front of him. That has Trump predictably on the defensive, and lying about what we can all see in the video.


The ramp that I descended after my West Point Commencement speech was very long & steep, had no handrail and, most importantly, was very slippery,” Trump tweeted. “The last thing I was going to do is ‘fall’ for the Fake News to have fun with. Final ten feet I ran down to level ground. Momentum!”
We can all see in the video that the ramp was neither long nor steep, that it was a sunny day with no reason for things to be slippery, and that Trump walked a little faster—but did not run—the last two or three steps—but not 10 feet. It is, however, true that there was no handrail. 
Trump also drew attention during his West Point speech for trying to take a drink from a glass of water with the glass in his right hand, then using his left hand to steady and raise it.
From a politician who would admit that, hey, this was the day before his 74th birthday and his eyesight isn’t the best/he’s got a leg problem (or, for the water glass incident, a shoulder problem)/he has literally any minor human frailty common to septuagenarians, this might not be a big deal. But this is Donald Trump, a man who likes to attack his political opponents as physically weak or unwell, and who made an unexpected trip to Walter Reed National Medical Center last November, with the White House offering clearly false explanations for why he went, and then this year released less information about his annual physical than in previous years. 
Oh, and there’s always a tweet. In 2014, Trump attacked how President Barack Obama descended the stairs of Air Force One. How so? Obama apparently went down too fast: “The way President Obama runs down the stairs of Air Force 1, hopping & bobbing all the way, is so inelegant and unpresidential. Do not fall!”







THE PEOPLE'S WHITE HOUSE






This is NOT AMERICA where an occupant of the People's House is afraid of AMERICANS!













POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: BAKER’S emergency POWER — MARKEY lets it rip — The return of TRAFFIC






 
Massachusetts Playbook logo
GOOD MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Happy Monday!
MOULTON SILENT ON SENATE RACE — Rep. Seth Moulton says he has no regrets when it comes to his attempt to oust House Speaker Nancy Pelosi from leadership in 2018. But on the topic of new leadership closer to home, the congressman is staying quiet.
Moulton said Pelosi is doing a "great job" standing up to President Donald Trump during an interview on WCVB's "On the Record" which aired Sunday morning. So does he regret trying to replace her after Democrats flipped the House?
"No, absolutely not, because I was elected on a promise to bring a new generation of leadership to Washington. There are a lot of people who talk about generational change but there aren't many of us who actually fight for it," Moulton said. "I'm going to keep upholding that promise. That's why I'm working so hard to endorse and support a new generation of servant leaders running in seats across the country."
But given the chance to support a new generation of leadership at home in Massachusetts, Moulton is staying quiet. The Salem Democrat declined to say whether he'll back Sen. Ed Markey, 73, or Rep. Joe Kennedy III, 39, in the Democratic Senate primary. Moulton won his congressional seat in a primary against former Rep. John Tierney in 2014.
"I am focused on the Senate races that we need to win across the country to take back control of the Senate. That's what we need to be focused on," Moulton said.
NEAL ON THE AIRWAVES — Rep. Richard Neal's reelection campaign is airing a new TV ad highlighting how he helped a local business navigate the coronavirus crisis.
The ad features the owner of Nick's Nest, the Holyoke restaurant best known for its hot dogs, talking about how Neal helped the business qualify for the Paycheck Protection Program. The ad also takes place on the home turf of Neal's primary opponent — Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse.
"We applied for the PPP loan when it first came out. We didn't make the cut. Congressman Neal and his staff got in contact with me and they were just wonderful. We were able to get a little of the weight lifted off of us," restaurant owner Jenn Chateauneuf says in the 30-second spot. "Congressman Neal's help has been tremendous." The ad.
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: CAVELL'S NEW OPIOID PLAN — Dave Cavell, a Brookline Democrat running in the crowded race to replace Rep. Joe Kennedy III, is rolling out a new plan today aimed at addressing the opioid crisis. Cavell is pitching an Opioid National Emergency bill that would allow for safe consumption sites, increase accountability for pharmaceutical companies and provide more prevention education. Cavell is a former White House aide and most recently worked for Attorney General Maura Healey. The plan.
Have a tip, story, suggestion, birthday, anniversary, new job, or any other nugget for the Playbook? Get in touch: smurray@politico.com.
TODAY — Rep. Seth Moulton, Dr. Alexandra Piñeros-Shields and Rev. Dr. Andre Bennett host a virtual town hall. Rep. Joe Kennedy III speaks to the New England Council. Former Gov. Deval Patrick is a guest on WGBH’s “Greater Boston.” Rep. Ayanna Pressley talks about housing with Colorado Rep. Joe Neguse on Instagram Live, and joins a racial justice town hall hosted by All In Together and She The People.
 
HAPPENING TODAY 9 a.m. EDT - "INSIDE THE RECOVERY" PART III: PLAYBOOK INTERVIEW WITH MIKE SOMMERS, CEO OF AMERICAN PETROLEUM INSTITUTE: Global oil markets took a plunge, and worldwide demand for fuel remains weak — making the expectation the industry’s recovery will be lengthy. Join POLITICO Playbook co-authors Anna Palmer and Jake Sherman for a conversation with Mike Sommers focused on how Covid-19 has slammed the energy industry, the role API could play in the upcoming 2020 election, and what the industry needs from the federal government moving forward. REGISTER HERE.
 
 
THE LATEST NUMBERS
– “Massachusetts health officials announce 48 new coronavirus deaths on Sunday and 208 new COVID-19 cases,” by Benjamin Kail, MassLive.com: “Massachusetts health officials on Sunday announced another 48 people have died from coronavirus. The commonwealth’s death toll from the pandemic now stands at 7,624. Officials also reported another 208 new cases of the virus, for a total of at least 105,603 confirmed and probable cases across the state.”
DATELINE BEACON HILL
– “Pandemic highlights Baker’s sweeping — and indefinite — emergency authority,” by Matt Stout, Boston Globe: “For seven decades, Massachusetts law has granted governors sweeping emergency authority during crises: record-setting snowstorms, hurricanes, floods. Normally these are brief calamities, and the orders stop soon after the threat recedes. But now, amid a global pandemic, the vast and indefinite nature of the governor’s emergency power has rushed into focus.”
– “Beacon Hill leaders plan to overhaul law enforcement policies,” by Christian M. Wade, Eagle-Tribune: “Beacon Hill leaders are planning to overhaul law enforcement policies, from banning the use of chokeholds to creating a state office that will oversee police standards.The move comes amid nationwide protests over the deaths of black Americans in police custody — including George Floyd, who was killed last month while being arrested by Minneapolis police.”
– “Chair Of Black And Latino Caucus Calls For More Police Reform, 'Reprogramming' Police Funds,” by Derek J. Anderson and Sharon Brody, WBUR: “Springfield State Rep. Carlos González, chair of the Black and Latino Legislative Caucus, is calling for police reform — including independent investigations of police — but says calls to defund the police go too far.”
– “‘More federal support is absolutely essential’; Massachusetts officials expect more help for the state’s unemployed,” by Tanner Stening, MassLive.com: “Massachusetts officials said on Friday that more federal help is needed to bolster the state’s unemployment needs as the end of Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation (FPUC) program draws near. The program, which has provided certain unemployed residents with an additional $600 a week in coronavirus-related help, is set to expire on July 27.”
– “Many businesses closed by COVID are not coming back,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine: “Many businesses are beginning to reopen with new safety standards and reduced capacity, but there are many others that may not be able to reopen at all. And those closures could have a ripple effect on Main Streets across the state.”
FROM THE HUB
– “Coronavirus takes $65M bite out of Boston revenues,” by Erin Tiernan, Boston Herald: “Coronavirus is taking a $65 million bite out of Boston’s revenue — more than double initial projections — prompting cost-cutting and hiring freezes across nearly every city department except schools and affordable housing, which will both see funding expansions next year. Boston Mayor Martin Walsh’s administration on Monday is submitting a revised budget for the fiscal year starting in July with coronavirus-induced losses now in clearer view.”
– “Mayor Walsh declares racism a public health crisis in Boston, will seek to transfer 20% of police overtime budget to social services,” by Dasia Moore and Milton J. Valencia, Boston Globe: “Racism is a public health crisis in Boston, Mayor Martin J. Walsh declared Friday, responding to glaring racial inequities exposed by the COVID-19 pandemic and massive protests against police abuse that he said served as a call to action.”
– “Black People Made Up 70 Percent Of Boston Police Stops, Department Data Show,” by Isaiah Thompson, WGBH News: “Seventy percent of people stopped by Boston Police officers through the department’s ‘Field Interrogation and Observation’ program throughout most of last year were black — even though black residents comprise less than one quarter of the city’s population. That’s according to data collected by the Boston Police Department itself and reviewed by WGBH News that represents the first public glimpse in years into thousands of routine stops made by the BPD as part of its field interrogation program — which includes, but is not limited to, police actions known elsewhere as ‘stop-and-frisk .’”
– “Tear down statue of Lincoln towering over kneeling slave, petition says,” by Meghan E. Irons, Boston Globe: “For more than 100 years, the statue of Abraham Lincoln has stood in Park Square in tribute to the president known as the ‘Great Emancipator.’ Lincoln towers over a half-clothed Black slave who is down on one knee, one of the president’s hands extended over the man who has broken shackles on his wrists.”
– “Thousands March In Boston For Black Transgender Lives,” by Quincy Walters, WBUR: “A day after the Trump administration rolled back healthcare protections for transgender people, a day after the U.S. queer community paused to recognize the 49 people killed in the Pulse night club shooting four years ago, and just days after two transgender women were murdered in the U.S., thousands gathered in Franklin Park for the ‘Trans Resistance Vigil and March’ Saturday.”
– “Some members push back as Mass. Asian American Commission head stands firm on Black Lives Matter statement,” by Jeremy C. Fox, Boston Globe: “Several members of the state’s Asian American Commission publicly dissented Saturday with controversial language used in a statement the panel issued in support of Black Lives Matter, while the commission’s president stood firm against the critics.”
– “Hospitals are trying to coax you back — and convince you that it’s safe — as the COVID-19 outbreak eases,” by Naomi Martin, Boston Globe: “For the first few months of the pandemic, reports from hospitals around Massachusetts were grim: medical workers in spacesuit-like protective gear scrambling to care for infected patients, many on ventilators. Now, with the number of coronavirus cases falling and health care providers resuming routine and elective care, hospitals are trying to coax back regular patients — and reassure them that it’s safe.”
– “Mayor Marty Walsh Plans To Repair, Return Christopher Columbus Statue,” by Elie Levine and Fausto Menard, WBUR: “Dr. Francis Mazzaglia, chairman of the board of the Italian American Alliance, says Boston Mayor Marty Walsh plans to repair the Christopher Columbus statue and return it to its former location — the Christopher Columbus Park in the North End — with added security cameras. The statue was found beheaded Wednesday morning.”
PRIMARY SOURCES
– “Markey lets it rip in ‘Massachusetts family fight,’” by Stephanie Murray, POLITICO: “The Massachusetts Democratic Senate primary faded into the background here in recent months as the coronavirus pandemic overshadowed everything else. But if the most recent Senate debate between Sen. Ed Markey and Rep. Joe Kennedy III is any indication, that’s about to change .”
PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES
– “Commuter rail service expands as state reopens,” by Christian M. Wade, The Salem News: “Commuter rail platforms will soon look more like they did before the state shut down businesses under the threat of COVID-19, as the MBTA brings back trains to accommodate passengers returning to work. The T's commuter rail is restoring service to 85% of pre-pandemic schedules beginning June 22, adding more regular trains to morning and evening peak periods, as well as midday service.”
– “As the economy recovers, that same old problem is resurfacing — Boston traffic,” by Adam Vaccaro, Boston Globe: “Perhaps there is no greater sign that things are slowly but surely returning to some semblance of normal than the traffic backups on the Southeast Expressway. Eduarda Berry found herself in her first traffic jam in months this past week, her short commute home from the overnight shift at Boston Medical Center suddenly jumping to 20 minutes, from under 15.”
IT'S NOT EASY BEING GREEN
– "Effort to keep state’s largest power plant open fuels concern about climate, public health,” by David Abel, Boston Globe: “The towering smokestacks of the state’s largest power plant have loomed for decades over the Boston area, spewing pollutants that produce smog, warm the planet, and exacerbate asthma and other respiratory illnesses, such as the coronavirus.”
VERETT — The towering smokestacks of the state’s largest power plant have loomed for decades over the Boston area, spewing pollutants that produce smog, warm the planet, and exacerbate asthma and other respiratory illnesses, such as the coronavirus.
One of the region’s few remaining fossil fuel plants to continue operating in such a densely populated place, the Mystic Generating Station was slated to be closed two years ago, when Exelon Corp., its Chicago-based owner, said it was no longer profitable.
But then the operator of the regional power grid threw the Mystic plant a lifeline. Executives of ISO New England worried they needed the plant in order to keep the area’s lights on. So they awarded the company a contract worth hundreds of millions of dollars — subsidized by New England ratepayers — to continue operating Mystic through 2024.
Now, with the plant’s oil and gas turbines belching millions of tons of noxious pollutants every year, Exelon is seeking to continue operating the 2,000-megawatt plant beyond the next four years. The move has sparked outrage throughout the surrounding communities, where a disproportionate number of residents have long suffered elevated levels of respiratory and cardiovascular diseases.
Among them is Sean Collie, who has lived a few blocks from the Mystic plant for 23 years. The 45-year-old construction worker suffers from asthma, as does his 12-year-old daughter.
Collie, whose wife gave birth last year to another daughter, worries for his growing family. The air in the neighborhood can be so difficult to breathe that they sometimes have to shut all their windows. The foul-smelling fumes often leave him wheezing, and prone to long spells of coughing, he said.
“We want to see the plant gone — the sooner, the better,” he said, noting there are many other sources of unhealthy air nearby, including Logan International Airport, major highways, and tankers transiting the Mystic River. “The air here can be gross. You can taste it. It’s not healthy.”
Mystic is among the last of what were known as the “Sooty Six” — the state’s most polluting power plants. While state and federal requirements have required Exelon to reduce the amount of soot emitted, the plant still remains one of the state’s largest sources of pollution.
Company officials insist their plant remains vital to the metropolitan area, and that there are good reasons to keep it running.
The plant’s turbines “meet Massachusetts’ environmental and emissions standards, which are among the strictest in the country,” said Mark Rodgers, a spokesman for Exelon, which received a $400 million contract to continue operating the plant from 2022 to 2024.
“Mystic generates reliable, low-carbon power for more than a million homes and businesses in Boston and beyond, and until a transmission solution is in place, keeping Mystic online is the safest and cleanest way to meet regional energy demand and prevent the risk of rolling blackouts,” he said.
Last week, in an effort to extend its operating contract, the company filed a 53-page complaint with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, accusing ISO New England of violating its policies by insufficiently reviewing the region’s energy and transmission needs. Exelon also accused the grid operator of curtailing a competitive bidding process to replace Mystic’s power.
The company filed the complaint two days after ISO New England announced it would reject all but one of 36 proposals to replace Mystic, and that it planned to select a $49 million project by National Grid and Eversource to upgrade substations and build new transmission lines.
Exelon alleged that the grid operator was risking power failures in Boston “by prematurely substituting the uncertain outcome” of the proposed replacements “for the certainty provided by Mystic.”
But officials at ISO New England have defended their decisions and call Exelon’s initial commitment to close in 2024 “irrevocable.”
“Exelon has requested to retire the Mystic plant, and that request cannot be withdrawn,” said Matt Kakley, a spokesman for the grid operator. “The ISO is working to ensure that the regional power system remains reliable following this retirement.”
The company’s effort to keep Mystic running has raised concerns among environmental advocates, who fear the additional emissions would exacerbate public health issues, especially in an area already hit hard by the coronavirus.
In just the past two years, Mystic released more than 3.1 million tons of carbon dioxide into the air over Everett — 21 percent of the primary emissions responsible for global warming from all the state’s power plants, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.
In the same time, Mystic emitted more than half of all the sulfur dioxide and nearly one-fifth of all the nitrogen oxide released by the state’s power plants, EPA records show. Both gases have small particles that can be inhaled, leading to breathing problems and respiratory illnesses.
The surrounding cities, including Boston, Chelsea, and Revere, already had among the state’s highest asthma rates, while a recent study by researchers at Harvard University found that long-term exposure to air pollution increases the risk of dying from the coronavirus. The study found that a person who has lived for decades in a neighborhood with elevated levels of soot is 8 percent more likely to die of the virus than someone who has lived in a neighborhood with just one unit less of the pollution.
Indeed, the surrounding counties of Middlesex, Suffolk, and Essex lead the state in the number of coronavirus deaths, while infections around the plant have been among the highest in the state, with Chelsea leading Massachusetts with more than 7,500 infections per 100,000 people — five times the state average. Everett and Revere also have among the state’s highest infection rates.
“It’s true that the Mystic plant is cleaner than it used to be, but burning fossil fuels there compounds so many other problems,” said John Walkey, waterfront coordinator of GreenRoots, an environmental group in Chelsea. “The continued operation of that plant will continue the ongoing legacy of environmental insults to our community, and to people’s health. It should have already been shut down.”
Others worry that prolonged operation of the plant could delay or kill proposals to replace its power with renewable energy.
Exelon’s recent complaint and other efforts, they worry, could also delay the selection of a replacement, leaving ISO New England with no choice but to keep Mystic going.
“The Exelon filing is concerning to the extent that it seeks to further delay the retirement of a climate killer,” said Phelps Turner, a senior attorney at the Boston-based Conservation Law Foundation.
He also scoffed at the company’s assertions that its gas turbines are among the state’s safest and cleanest.
Those claims “disguise the plain and undeniable fact that these are old, inefficient, and polluting fossil-fuel-fired units that harm the health of nearby residents and damage the climate,” Turner said.
Exelon’s recent tactics have also raised the concerns of Attorney General Maura Healey, who filed a petition this month with state energy officials, urging them to reduce the state’s dependence on fossil fuels and arguing the state has sufficient power to keep the lights on.
Healey noted that Mystic has a history of violating limits on emissions of particulate matter, requiring the company to pay millions of dollars in penalties, she noted.
“We need to focus on moving away from highly polluting fossil-fuel power plants like Mystic that have a disparate impact on vulnerable communities," she said, noting that keeping it open would saddle Massachusetts ratepayers with hundreds of millions of dollars in extra costs.
Among those hoping that Exelon closes the plant on schedule is Sandra Padilla, who also lives a few blocks from the plant. On a recent afternoon, with her daughters, ages 2 and 5, playing on her porch, the 35-year-old pregnant mother said she worries about the air.
With the smokestacks looming in the distance on a muggy afternoon, Padilla said the air was typically the most fetid in the summer, when the plant often runs at full capacity on the hottest days.
“I hope they know young children live here," she said.
Correction: The story initially cited an incorrect amount of carbon dioxide the Mystic Generating Station released over the past two years. The plant released 3.1 million tons of the greenhouse gas into the atmosphere in 2018 and 2019, or 21 percent of all carbon dioxide released by power plants in Massachusetts.

ABOVE THE FOLD
— Herald“PRAY FOR PEACE," "CORONA COST,”  Globe“Baker wields sweeping, indefinite powers," "Scrutiny over police use of force intensifies.”
FROM THE 413
– “Holyoke Soldiers’ Home retired superintendent rallying support for expansion, renovation,” by Cynthia G. Simison, Springfield Republican: “Forty-eight days. It’s a short time in which to make a big impact, but Paul Barabani is a man on a mission. A mission to change the narrative about the Soldiers’ Home in Holyoke where he once served as superintendent .”
– “Pittsfield teachers union to rally Monday,” by Jenn Smith, The Berkshire Eagle: “Will public school districts be able to safely and successfully reopen and best serve all students in the fall? Hundreds of educators are saying, ‘no way,’ particularly as schools across the commonwealth are bracing for staff and budget cuts and severe reductions in Chapter 70 state aid due unfunded legislation and economic strains caused by the COVID-19 crisis.”
THE LOCAL ANGLE
– “City officials resist calls to defund police,” by Brad Petrishen, Telegram & Gazette: “The city manager and several councilors last week said they aren’t inclined to heed demands for a reduction in the police budget, opining that the majority of city residents want more services and pointing to reforms they say have already been made. ‘We have been trying to do a lot of what these folks are advocating for,’ City Manager Edward M. Augustus Jr. said Friday, as he ticked off an array of reforms he does not believe have received enough attention.”
– “Sluggish census response may harm Cape Cod region,” by Geoff Spillane, Cape Cod Times: “The Cape and Islands are on a path to diminished political representation and slashed federal and state funding if residents don’t pick up the pace responding to the 2020 U.S. census. ‘The census is of real significance to how we get federal funding,’ said U.S. Rep. William Keating, D-Mass., who represents the region. ‘A low participation rate will translate into dollars and cents lost. This is an urgent matter.’”
– “Pride flags, BLM sign stolen from homes in Chelmsford,” by Aaron Curtis, The Lowell Sun: “Dan Tang said it was at least a year ago when a pride flag that was hanging from his family’s mailbox was stolen from their Elm Street property. Tang said he and his wife quickly replaced the flag — a symbol of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer pride — this time fastening it tighter to the mailbox to make sure if anyone stole it, they would have to ‘work for it .’”
MEDIA MATTERS
– “WBZ-TV places Phantom Gourmet on hiatus after posts targeting Black Lives Matter protests,” by Ainslie Cromar, Boston.com: “Co-owner of Mendon Twin Drive-In and CEO of Phantom Gourmet Dave Andelman apologized Saturday for a series of Facebook posts on his personal account that mocked the protests against racial injustice and police brutality spurred by the killing of George Floyd.”
SPOTTED: Rep. Joe Kennedy III dining at Quattro in Boston’s North End on Sunday, per a Playbook tipster. Pic.
TRANSITIONS – Ricardo Sánchez joins Rep. Ayanna Pressley’s office as communications director. Sánchez previously worked in Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s office as a press aide.
REMEMBERING AUBRI ESTERS … via WBUR: “Veteran Boston activist Aubri Esters, who led efforts to expand treatment for substance use and rights for people who use drugs, was found dead by police in her apartment on Thursday.” Link.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY – to Marie Harf and Hunter Woodall.
NEW EPISODE: RENT – On this week’s Horse Race podcast, hosts Jennifer Smith, Steve Koczela and Stephanie Murray speak with MassINC COO Juana Matias, former state lawmaker and candidate for Congress, about racial inequity in the Legislature. 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.
 
TODAY - A VIRTUAL CONVERSATION ON WATER SECURITY: How can we secure long-term solutions at a time when the Covid-19 pandemic consumes the attention and resources of local and state leaders? Join POLITICO today at 10:20 a.m. EDT for a virtual panel discussion on the policies and legislation needed at the state, regional and federal levels to meet the water needs of Western states. REGISTER HERE.
 
 
 
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