Wednesday, November 18, 2020

RSN: Robert Reich | Who Wins From Trump's Final Travesty?

 


 

Reader Supported News
18 November 20

It's Live on the HomePage Now:
Reader Supported News


WE NEED A FEW DONORS WHO BELIEVE THIS CAN BE BETTER - Reader Supported News has exceeded all expectations. The funding however is a long range nightmare. Using this formula we will never be rich. It’s just not a process designed for wealth accumulation. The object is “stability” and adequate funds to fight for what we fight for every day. We have to turn the fundraising around. It’s imperative. A few committed individuals is all it will take to make RSN great. Be a part of this. It is working. / Marc Ash, Founder Reader Supported News

Sure, I'll make a donation!


Robert Reich | Who Wins From Trump's Final Travesty?
Robert Reich. (photo: Getty)
Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Blog
Reich writes: "Leave it to Trump and his Republican allies to spend more energy fighting non-existent voter fraud than containing a virus that has killed 244,000 Americans and counting."

The cost of this misplaced attention is incalculable. While Covid-19 surges to record levels, there’s still no national strategy for equipment, stay at home orders, mask mandates or disaster relief.

The other cost is found in the millions of Trump voters who are being led to believe the election was stolen and who will be a hostile force for years to come – making it harder to do much of anything the nation needs, including actions to contain the virus.

Trump is continuing this charade because it pulls money into his newly formed political action committee and allows him to assume the mantle of presumed presidential candidate for 2024, whether he intends to run or merely keep himself the center of attention.

Leading Republicans like Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell are going along with it because donors are refilling GOP coffers.

The biggest beneficiaries are the party’s biggest patrons – the billionaire class, including the heads of the nation’s largest corporations and financial institutions, private-equity partnerships and hedge funds – whom a deeply divided nation serves by giving them unfettered access to the economy’s gains.

Their heist started four decades ago. According to a recent Rand study, if America’s distribution of income had remained the same as it was in the three decades following the second world war, the bottom 90% would now be $47 trillion richer.

A low-income American earning $35,000 this year would be earning $61,000. A college-educated worker now earning $72,000 would be earning $120,000. Overall, the grotesque surge in inequality that began 40 years ago is costing the median American worker $42,000 per year.

The upward redistribution of $47 trillion wasn’t due to natural forces. It was contrived. As wealth accumulated at the top, so did political power to siphon off even more wealth and shaft everyone else.

Monopolies expanded because antitrust laws were neutered. Labor unions shriveled because corporations were allowed to bust unions. Wall Street was permitted to gamble with other peoples’ money and was bailed out when its bets soured even as millions lost their homes and savings. Taxes on the top were cut, tax loopholes widened.

When Covid-19 hit, Big Tech cornered the market, the rich traded on inside information, and the Treasury and the Fed bailed out big corporations but let small businesses go under. Since March, billionaire wealth has soared while most Americans have become poorer.

How could the oligarchy get away with this in a democracy where the bottom 90% have the votes? Because the bottom 90% are bitterly divided.

Long before Trump, the GOP suggested to white working-class voters that their real enemies were Black people, Latinos, immigrants, “coastal elites,” bureaucrats and “socialists.” Trump rode their anger and frustration into the White House with more explicit and incendiary messages. He’s still at it with his bonkers claim of a stolen election.

The oligarchy surely appreciates the Trump-GOP tax cuts, regulatory rollbacks and the most business-friendly Supreme Court since the early 1930s. But the Trump-GOP’s biggest gift has been an electorate more fiercely split than ever.

Into this melee comes Joe Biden, who speaks of being “president of all Americans” and collaborating with the Republican party. But the GOP doesn’t want to collaborate. When Biden holds out an olive branch, McConnell and other Republican leaders will respond just as they did to Barack Obama – with more warfare, because that maintains their power and keeps the big money rolling in.

The president-elect aspires to find a moderate middle ground. This will be difficult because there’s no middle. The real divide is no longer left versus right but the bottom 90% versus the oligarchy.

Biden and the Democrats will better serve the nation by becoming the party of the bottom 90% – of the poor and the working middle class, of black and white and brown, and of all those who would be $47 trillion richer today had the oligarchy not taken over America.

This would require that Democrats abandon the fiction of political centrism and establish a countervailing force to the oligarchy – and, not incidentally, sever their own links to it.

They’d have to show white working-class voters how badly racism and xenophobia have hurt them as well as people of color. And change the Democratic narrative from kumbaya to economic and social justice.

Easy to say, hugely difficult to accomplish. But if today’s bizarre standoff in Washington is seen for what it really is, there’s no alternative.

READ MORE



Vice President-elect Sen. Kamala Harris strides from the Senate chamber after voting against President Donald Trump's choice for the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, Judy Shelton, at the Capitol, Nov. 17, 2020. (photo: J. Scott Applewhite/AP)
Vice President-elect Sen. Kamala Harris strides from the Senate chamber after voting against President Donald Trump's choice for the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, Judy Shelton, at the Capitol, Nov. 17, 2020. (photo: J. Scott Applewhite/AP)


Kamala Harris Rushes Back to Washington to Block Trump From Putting a Crank on the Fed Board
Jim Newell, Slate
Newell writes: "The Senate on Tuesday failed to advance the nomination of Judy Shelton, one of President Donald Trump's most controversial appointees, to the Federal Reserve Board of Governors by a 47-50 vote. That was not the predicted outcome when senators went to bed on Monday night."
READ MORE



A pedestrian crossing from Mexico into the United States at the Otay Mesa Port of Entry has his facial features and eyes scanned at a biometric kiosk on Dec. 10, 2015, in San Diego, California. (photo: Denis Poroy/AP)
A pedestrian crossing from Mexico into the United States at the Otay Mesa Port of Entry has his facial features and eyes scanned at a biometric kiosk on Dec. 10, 2015, in San Diego, California. (photo: Denis Poroy/AP)


DHS Plans to Start Collecting Eye Scans and DNA - With the Help of Defense Contractors
Felipe De La Hoz, The Intercept
De La Hoz writes: "Through a little-discussed potential bureaucratic rule change, the Department of Homeland Security is planning to collect unprecedented levels of biometric information from immigration applicants and their sponsors - including U.S. citizens."
READ MORE



Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. (photo: Alyssa Pointer /AJC)
Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. (photo: Alyssa Pointer /AJC)


Georgia Elections Chief Says Trump 'Suppressed' GOP Vote, Cost Himself State
Zack Budryk, The Hill
Budryk writes: "Georgia's Republican secretary of state said Tuesday that President Trump's attacks on the integrity of mail-in voting contributed to his loss in the Peach State."
READ MORE



Christopher Krebs Department of Homeland Security's Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA). (photo: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)
Christopher Krebs Department of Homeland Security's Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA). (photo: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)


Trump Fires Top DHS Official Who Refuted His Claims That the Election Was Rigged
Ellen Nakashima and Nick Miroff, The Washington Post
Excerpt: "President Trump on Tuesday fired a top Department of Homeland Security official who led the agency's efforts to help secure the election and was vocal about tamping down unfounded claims of ballot fraud."
READ MORE



Children of Santa Anita La Unión attend school in 2006. The community includes former refugees who returned to Guatemala. (photo: J.H./Flickr)
Children of Santa Anita La Unión attend school in 2006. The community includes former refugees who returned to Guatemala. (photo: J.H./Flickr)


Guatemalan Child Refugees, Then and Now
Rachel Nolan, NACLA
Nolan writes: "The first wave of Guatemalan child refugees didn't flee to the United States. They fled to Mexico. The trickle began a decade earlier, but the first mass exodus occurred between 1981 and 1982."
READ MORE



Grounded passenger planes at Groningen airport in Eelde, the Netherlands. (photo: Siese Veenstra/EPA)
Grounded passenger planes at Groningen airport in Eelde, the Netherlands. (photo: Siese Veenstra/EPA)


1% of People Cause Half of Global Aviation Emissions - Study
Damian Carrington, Guardian UK
Carrington writes: "Frequent-flying 'super emitters' who represent just 1% of the world's population caused half of aviation's carbon emissions in 2018, according to a study."
READ MORE


Contribute to RSN

Update My Monthly Donation







RAPHAEL WAROCK: big problem

 










"Four Seasons Total Landscaping (Highway 95 Revisited)"

 







Pennsylvania Attorney General Says Rudy Giuliani Is 'Sad to Watch'

 


Pennsylvania Attorney General Says Rudy Giuliani Is 'Sad to Watch'


Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro suggested on Tuesday that former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani's performance in court was "sad to watch."

Shapiro, a Democrat, told CNN's Chris Cuomo that Giuliani had descended into "lunacy and conspiracy theory and fearmongering" during his testimony. The Republican, who is President Donald Trump's personal lawyer, had been granted permission to plead before the court on behalf of the Trump campaign.

Giuliani made his name as an attorney in New York before being elected mayor in 1993 but records suggest that he hadn't entered an appearance at a federal court in 28 years.

The Trump campaign is seeking to prevent certification of Pennsylvania's election results in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania as it continues to make unsubstantiated claims of voter fraud.

On Cuomo Prime Time, Shapiro said he doubted the case would succeed.

"It will not work to overturn the will of the people in Pennsylvania," he said.

Shapiro went on to discuss Giuliani's role in the case and expressed disappointment with the man who was once known as "America's Mayor" for his response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

"It's sad. It is sad to watch someone who America looked to in a time of need descend into this type of lunacy and conspiracy theory and fearmongering," Shapiro said.

"I see a man who clearly forgot what he learned in law school," Shapiro said. "And I see a man who's got absolutely no evidence to back up the ridiculous claims that his client makes on Twitter every day."

Giuliani delivered a 30-minute opening statement before U.S. District Judge Matthew Brann on Tuesday. His submission and responses to the judge's questions garnered criticism on social media and, more importantly, from opposing counsel.

"The best description of this situation is it's a widespread, nationwide voter fraud," Giuliani said, according to Politico. "This is a part of the reason I'm here, Your Honor, because it is not an isolated case."

However, Giuliani admitted under questioning that he was not arguing a voter fraud case. The lawsuit in fact relates to election procedures that were not uniform across the state of Pennsylvania.

"I sat there dumbfounded because the story presented by Mr Giuliani bore no relationship to the actual complaint in the case," Mark Aronchick, a lawyer representing several counties that the Trump campaign is suing, told MSNBC.

Giuliani's surprising decision to argue in court may be related to the fact that the lawyers previously representing the Trump campaign withdrew from the case. They were replaced by Marc Scaringi, who was named as one of Giuliani's co-counsels in his court filing.

LINK



I worked for "The Journal News" (a Gannett Pulication) before, during, and after 9/11. Rudy's 'reputation' was quite well established before the 'planes'. I give him credit for doing his job, the job he was elected to do, on 9/11. BUT he was NO hero. Not before, NOT during, and certainly NOT after. Rudy was a 'slimeball'. He openly 'carried on with his main squeeze, Judy Nathan', publicly. He even informed his wife, Donna Hanover Giuliani, of the impending divorce at a press conference with Judy standing there for all to see. Rudy's drinking was always legendary. His 'cavorting' soon left Judy as just another of his 'conquests'. All in all, Rudy is simply behaving the way he always has.


Publicly announcing a divorce was tacky to say the least!
And people ignore that Rudy was term limited but wanted to remain as mayor.
Jimmy Breslin, RIP, wrote about Rudy, it was widely known....he also left stacks of lawsuits as a consequence of his 'broken windows' nonsense which caused police to arrest turn style jumpers and jay walkers. As a consequence of being arrested, those victims were cavity searched...just image jay walking and being arrested and subjected to a cavity search?
Jimmy Breslin wrote a column in which he explained that Rudy's security team had to call ahead to make sure they could deliver the next 'female guest.'
Maybe beauty is in the eye of the beholder, but this is difficult to understand.






FAIR: New York's Chait Boosts Charter Schools—but No Longer Mentions Spouse's Policy Role in Charter School Industry

 



FAIR
View article on FAIR's website

New York's Chait Boosts Charter Schools—but No Longer Mentions Spouse's Policy Role in Charter School Industry

 

Jonathan Chait

Jonathan Chait (image: HarperCollins)

New York magazine political writer Jonathan Chait penned a column last month (10/7/20) attacking teachers unions for their activism in keeping schools closed during the coronavirus pandemic, as remote learning continues for children across the country.

The unions, Chait wrote, "have been an influential force against reopening schools even in cities and states where elected officials felt it could be done with reasonable safety." This has led to a situation in Washington, he continued, wherein

restaurants and bars are open even as the schools are closed. This bizarre combination reflects the balance of political pressure, not any logical interpretation of public health.

It was a damning indictment of the decision to focus on remote learning, and placed much of the blame for closures at the feet of teachers unions, a familiar punching bag for Chait. The New York writer has gone after teachers unions repeatedly during his time at the magazine, while extolling the virtues of the charter school movement.

What Chait only mentions infrequently in these articles is that his spouse, Robin Chait, has spent her career in education, often working with groups affiliated with charters. Currently, Robin Chait works as a policy advisor to education nonprofit consulting firm WestEd on the group's National Charter School Resource Center. This role, which began in October 2018, came after five years as director of policy, development and communications for Center City Public Charter Schools, according to her LinkedIn profile.

Chait's lack of disclosure of these roles would appear to violate the code of ethics of New York's parent company, Vox Media, which states:

Any editorial team member or contributors will be recused from a story and/or publicly disclose conflicts of interest when editorially appropriate. This may include a personal or family relationship.

Vox communications vice president Lauren Starke told FAIR that those rules were not applicable in Chait's case. "Robin Chait is a consultant and policy expert, not an activist or lobbyist, and her compensation structure isn't tied to any political outcome," said Starke:

There is not generally an expectation that opinion journalists disclose ways in which their family members' jobs might be affected by changes in policy at the broadest national level—how, for instance, a doctor has an interest in health care policies or a professor in higher ed budgeting—and we don't think it's fair or appropriate to hold Jonathan to a different standard here.

Robin Chait

Robin Chait (image: LinkedIn)

But Robin Chait’s WestEd bio describes her “policy advisor” work as involving the development of “publications, tools and resources for charter authorizers, state education agencies and charter management organizations.” So the advice she’s offering on education policy is being offered to government bodies; this would seem to make influencing government policy part of her job, much like a lobbyist or activist does; she is not merely passively affected by policy, like a doctor or professor. And her previous job involved communications, likely meaning that part of her task was to get pro–charter school material into the media—like the sort of pieces her husband was writing.

Chait did not provide comment for this article, but wrote in an addendum to a piece in 2019 (1/15/19), after Ben Mathis-Lilley in Slate (1/4/19) criticized him for not disclosing that his spouse “works in charter school advocacy”:

My wife works for an education research organization and is not engaged in advocacy. My wife is a strong personal supporter of education reform, but that is not her job—neither my wife nor her employer attempt to persuade policymakers, voters or anybody else to expand their charter sector.

‘Disservice’ to Readers

Susan McGregor, a full-time researcher at Columbia's Data Science Institute and former professor at the School of Journalism who stressed she was only speaking for herself, told FAIR that she thought it was "a disservice not to disclose in this case," and that the anger of people in the comments of Chait's latest piece reinforced that point.

"This undisclosed bias and relationship is reducing people's interest in his work and his credibility," said McGregor, adding that Chait's lack of disclosure on the issue could "potentially be reducing the value of his work."

Whether or not the article is hard reporting or opinion, said McGregor, in her view the default should be to disclose.  "I think you should always disclose," said McGregor. "Less transparency looks like you are trying to hide something."

Jennifer Royer, communications director for the Society of Professional Journalists, told FAIR that her group's Code of Ethics encourages journalists to avoid any conflict of interest to best serve the public. If Chait must write about charters and teachers unions, she continued, there are workarounds. "There are a few ways it could be handled," said Royer:

His employer could assign any articles regarding charter schools to a different reporter. This would be the preferred option. Or they could allow him to write about the topic, as an opinion writer or columnist, and be upfront about the conflict.

Inconsistencies Raise Questions

FAIR reviewed Chait's recent New York columns, which are a mix of opinion journalism and reporting, from October 2018, looking for ones that focused on or mentioned charters and teachers unions sufficiently to require disclosure of his wife's role with WestEd. We found six that met that criteria.

Of those six articles, only one disclosed his wife's position, in “What Happens When Elizabeth Warren Sells Out to Powerful Interests?” (1/13/19), and then only in an addendum after criticism from Slate (1/14/19).

New York: Bernie Sanders Wants to Destroy the Best Schools Poor Urban Kids Have

Jonathan Chait (New York5/18/19) describes charter schools as "one of the most successful social policy innovations in decades, and...a lifeline of opportunity for hundreds of thousands of poor urban children"—without mentioning that his spouse works as a policy advisor to the charter school industry.

In the remaining five stories—“Bernie Sanders Wants to Destroy the Best Schools Poor Urban Kids Have” (5/18/19), “Elizabeth Warren Tells Poor Parents to Fix Their Own Schools” (12/6/19), “Trump and DeVos Propose to Eliminate Federal Charter School Funds” (2/10/20), “Parents Are Flocking to Virtual Schools and Homeschooling. They’ll Find a Minefield” (8/4/20) and “Remote Learning Is a Catastrophe. Teachers Unions Share the Blame” (10/7/20)—Chait's wife is only mentioned once, in last month's article, and only in the context of working from home, not as a charter school consultant:

My two children, both enrolled in public schools that have gone remote since the pandemic began, have lost a fair amount of learning, but benefitted from an array of privileges. My wife and I both have white-collar jobs we can do at home, and can provide the (fortunately occasional) assistance high-schoolers require.

Prior to Robin Chait's work with WestEd, her husband was more forthcoming about her role. In "Why Do Teacher Unions Hate Eva Moskowitz?” (9/5/14), “Teacher Unions Still Haven’t Forgiven Michelle Rhee, Don’t Care How Well Her Policies Work" (5/27/16), ”Why Was Betsy DeVos the One Trump Nominee Who Provoked Opposition?” (2/10/17), “Charters Didn’t Cause Segregation. They’re a Solution for Its Victims” (12/8/17) and “Obama’s Education Legacy Has Been Forgotten. Now He Has to Save It” (2/27/18), Chait mentioned his wife's role in education policy and the charter school movement in the first writing. When her role was frequently disclosed by her husband, Robin Chait was working for a particular group of charters, whereas her role today involves advising on policy for the charter movement as a whole.

Chait's lack of disclosure around his wife's position struck SPJ Ethics Committee member Andy Schotz as peculiar. Schotz, who said he was only speaking for himself and not in any capacity for the SPJ, told FAIR that a reader without knowledge of Chait's background could end up thinking less of the credibility of the writer and the magazine after discovering the semblance of conflict.

And, Schotz added, the opinion nature of the column doesn't let the writer off the hook. "If he's writing advocacy that's his personal opinion, that's not covering it in a neutral way and doesn't absolve him of the responsibility," said Schotz. "Disclosure is the easy way to avoid that."

A Pattern That Leads to Mistrust

Chait's inconsistency does not make him the only—or even the worst—offender on transparency with readers. Journalist Salena Zito, who writes for publications like the New York Post and Atlantic, has repeatedly come under fire for her improbable approach to reporting wherein she somehow repeatedly finds man-on-the-street interviewees whose views align with her right-wing bent. In 2018, HuffPost's Ashley Feinberg (8/30/18) discovered multiple instances of questionable quotes and a consistent refusal to properly disclose the conflicts of interest of Zito's subjects.

The problems have continued across corporate media. New York Times reporter Elaina Plott in late October initially failed to disclose the Republican Party affiliations of two sources for “Around Atlanta, Many White Suburbanites Are Sticking With Trump” (10/21/20)—referring to a GOP political consultant merely as “an interior decorator, married with two children and a University of Georgia alumna” (Press Watch10/23/20). And Fox News—which has myriad credibility problems—was dinged by Media Matters for America's Bobby Lewis (Twitter10/28/20) for not disclosing the professional political background of Lauren Debellis Appell, a writer for the network and other far-right news outlets.

fox news presented this person as just "one suburban mom" and "freelance journalist" voting for trump. the fuller story is that she's also a former senate republican comms staffer, a former lobbyist, and has many (opinion) bylines at the daily caller and fox news pic.twitter.com/YgEVPER0Ym

— Bobby Lewis (@revrrlewis) October 28, 2020

As FAIR has reported on numerous occasions going back decades, nondisclosure of conflicts can easily lead to a lack of trust in media—earned or not. McGregor, the data researcher, said that in her view the erosion of trust in media over the last four years means that writers and outlets should take easy wins when they're presented.

"With regard to journalistic credibility and trust, there are easy wins you can get, and one is disclosing, even over-disclosing," said McGregor.

‘What's the Harm?’

Because Chait has disclosed his wife's role in the past, Schotz said, that's all the more reason for him to be consistent with doing so now and in the future. A piece in Washington Monthly (3/17/16) four years ago by Alexander Russo, addressing the same issue, featured a quote by Chait expressing pride in his wife's work, but no explanation for the unpredictable disclosures. Schotz said he found the inconsistency puzzling.

"He doesn't do it every time, and I don't understand why not," said Schotz. "For me, I would do it every time—what's the harm?"

Nina Berman, a professor at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, agreed. "It appears he has disclosed before," said Berman, "and so I think it's fair to ask New York magazine why they didn't require it for his last piece, which is so clearly an attack on the NYC union, while praising DC charter schools."

But Vox's Starke said that Chait's prior disclosures did not mean there was any requirement to do so again. "Any decision by Jonathan to mention this in the past—or future—in no way conflicts with our policy as stated," said Starke.

McGregor told FAIR she was perplexed that he would not disclose, given the existence of Google and other search engines. "It's not really a smart move," she said, "because there is an internet, and people will figure it out. And that can create a negative impact of perception for the writer, if not the organization."


Featured image: Photo of a teacher from a Jonathan Chait column (New York10/7/20) critical of teachers unions.





POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: CLARK vies for HOUSE LEADERSHIP ROLE — BAKER nominates GEORGES to SJC — WALSH threatens THANKSGIVING CRACKDOWN



 Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY STEPHANIE MURRAY

Presented by Uber

GOOD MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS.

CLARK BIDS FOR TOP HOUSE POST — The Massachusetts congressional delegation could gain some more clout in Washington this week.

The House is holding leadership elections today and Thursday, and Rep. Katherine Clark is running for assistant speaker. The Melrose lawmaker currently serves as vice chair of the House Democratic Caucus.

Lawmakers will vote today from 9 a.m. to noon, and will select caucus chair, speaker, majority leader, whip and assistant speaker. All the top races are uncontested — Speaker Nancy Pelosi, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer and House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn are expected to win their elections. But if the vote takes a while, Clark's race could be pushed to Thursday morning.

Clark faces Rhode Island Rep. David Cicilline in her bid for the assistant speaker position, which would make either of them the fourth most powerful Democrat in the House. The role is held now by Rep. Ben Ray Luján of New Mexico, who is headed to the Senate. Clark and Cicilline are both members of Pelosi's leadership team, though Clark outranks him due to her post as vice chair of the caucus.

Clark is among the more low-key members in Massachusetts' star-studded delegation — some colleagues call her the "silent assassin." Clark was co-chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee's "Red to Blue" program during the 2018 midterm, when Democrats took back the House, which earned her plenty of goodwill among her colleagues.

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 hosts his annual "Women's Event" fundraiser. Emerge Massachusetts honors state Rep. Rep. Claire Cronin and attorney Beth Boland at a “Women of the Year” event. Worcester Mayor Joseph Petty is a guest on WBUR.

A message from Uber:

CA voters & app workers voted overwhelmingly to protect workers’ flexibility and provide new benefits. Time for Massachusetts to follow, see how here.

  

JOIN TODAY - CONFRONTING INEQUALITY TOWN HALL “BRIDGING THE ECONOMIC DIVIDE": Although pandemic job losses have been widespread, the economic blow has been especially devastating to Black workers and Black-owned businesses. POLITICO's third “Confronting Inequality in America” town hall will convene economists, scholars, private sector and city leaders to explore policies and strategies to deal with the disproportionate economic impact of the pandemic and the broader factors contributing to the persistent racial wealth and income gaps. REGISTER HERE.

  

THE LATEST NUMBERS

– “Massachusetts broke single-day record for most COVID cases last week; reports 2,263 new COVID cases, 20 deaths today,” by Tanner Stening, MassLive.com: “Massachusetts last week broke its record for the most new COVID-19 cases in a day with 3,175 cases on Nov. 9. The previous one-day high was 2,990 on April 17, according to data of cases by date released by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health. State health officials confirmed another 2,263 coronavirus cases on Tuesday, bringing the number of active cases to 32,309.”

DATELINE BEACON HILL

– “Governor nominates Serge Georges Jr. to Supreme Judicial Court,” by Matt Stout and Shirley Leung, Boston Globe: “Governor Charlie Baker on Tuesday nominated Boston Municipal Court Judge Serge Georges Jr. to the Supreme Judicial Court, the latest in a series of historic picks that aim to bring unprecedented diversity to the high court. By selecting Georges, a Black jurist raised in Dorchester, Baker has now offered seven new nominees to the SJC, putting the Republican governor in line to appoint the entire bench and make the state’s top appellate court better reflect the 7 million residents it serves.”

– “Massachusetts senator’s proposal would limit the Baker administration’s executive powers during the pandemic,” by Steph Solis, MassLive.com: “A Massachusetts lawmaker has filed a proposal to limit the longevity of a Baker administration executive order, requiring that they expire after 30 days if they don’t get legislative approval. Sen. Ryan Fattman, a Sutton Republican, proposed the limitation as one of nearly 500 amendments to the fiscal 2021 budget plan the Senate will debate this week.”

– “Charlie Baker re-evaluating TCI in Massachusetts amid pandemic as advocates urge support,” by Erin Tiernan, Boston Herald: “Gov. Charlie Baker said governors are re-evaluating support of a controversial carbon tax designed to limit greenhouse gas emissions as advocates renew calls for its passage. ‘We’re living at a point in time right now that’s dramatically different than the point in time we were living in when people’s expectations about miles traveled and all the rest were a lot different,’ Baker said Tuesday during a press conference at the State House.”

FROM THE HUB

– “U.S. Attorney Finds Constitutional Violations At Massachusetts Prisons,” by Deborah Becker, WBUR: “Massachusetts U.S. Attorney Andrew Lelling says the state Department of Correction has not provided adequate mental health care or supervision to prisoners in mental health crisis. He also says the DOC has violated the constitutional rights of prisoners in crisis by using prolonged mental health watch under restrictive housing conditions, resulting in some prisoners harming or killing themselves while on watch.”

– “Walsh Threatens Thanksgiving COVID Crackdown,” by Craig LeMoult, GBH News: “A Thanksgiving meal that would be routine any other year could result in a 911 call and a fine, warns Boston Mayor Marty Walsh. As Boston hit an average of 224 new cases of COVID-19 a day, Walsh announced a range of new metrics the city will use for measuring the pandemic's growth. He also threatened to enforce the city's ban on more than 10 people gathering indoors for the upcoming holiday.”

– “Text messages fly on Boston School Committee after chairman’s racist remarks,” by James Vaznis, Boston Globe: “As a contentious Boston School Committee meeting on Zoom last month approached midnight, Chair Michael Loconto clicked off his camera, but accidentally left his microphone on. Within seconds, he could be heard mocking the Asian names of some upcoming speakers, remarks that set Twitter aflutter and reverberated around City Hall the next day. His fellow School Committee members, stunned and confused by what they heard, sat nearly frozen in front of their cameras.”

– “Ashkenazy says it has paid $2.1M owed to Boston for Faneuil Hall,” by Catherine Carlock, Boston Business Journal: “Ashkenazy Acquisition Corp. said in a statement Tuesday evening that it has paid the $2.1 million the city of Boston says it’s owed as part of payment in lieu of taxes for Faneuil Hall. Boston Planning and Development Agency Director Brian Golden last week served New York-based Ashkenazy with a notice of default, alleging it owed two payments of $1.05 million to hold the lease on the historic property.”

– “Prison visits halted, testing underway for COVID-19,” by Jill Harmacinski, Eagle-Tribune: “No visitors are allowed and testing is underway at state prisons as COVID-19 positive cases climb again statewide, officials said. The Department of Corrections announced this weekend it was going into ‘modified operations’ for a period of 14 days so a second round of COVID-19 testing for inmates and staff could be conducted, according to a statement.”

– “ICE arrests man in East Boston park,” by Sarah Betancourt, CommonWealth Magazine: “Four agents with Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested a man in an East Boston park on Tuesday morning. A video from a passerby shows ICE agents searching the man’s wallet, frisking him, and then taking him into custody. According to the passerby, one of the agents said ‘ICE had a warrant for his [the arrested man’s] apartment.’”

– “College students’ Thanksgiving plans have public health officials worried,” by Deirdre Fernandes, Boston Globe: “Adri Lanza is yearning to spend a traditional Thanksgiving at home in Pennsylvania with her mom making empanadas and pernil, a Puerto Rican pork dish reserved for celebrations. Instead, she’ll be in her Northeastern University dorm room, microwaving baked potatoes and spaghetti with her roommate.”

– “Sean Ellis’s quest for justice remains maddeningly unfinished,” by Adrian Walker, Boston Globe: “Sean Ellis was freed after serving 22 years in prison for murder, but never exonerated. Released, yet somehow still a captive. Ellis was released from prison in 2015 after judges found significant evidence of police misconduct, though a related conviction on a gun charge was left untouched. That Ellis remains a convicted felon is a miscarriage of justice, and it has to change.”

HEALTH CHECK

– “New Pfizer Results: Coronavirus Vaccine Is Safe and 95% Effective,” by Katie Thomas, The New York Times: “The drug maker Pfizer said on Wednesday that its coronavirus vaccine was 95 percent effective and had no serious side effects — the first set of complete results from a late-stage vaccine trial as Covid-19 cases skyrocket around the globe. The data showed that the vaccine prevented mild and severe forms of Covid-19, the company said. And it was 94 percent effective in older adults, who are more vulnerable to developing severe Covid-19 and who do not respond strongly to some types of vaccines.”

CABINET WATCH

– “Why Charlie Baker is more likely to be offered a Biden cabinet post than Elizabeth Warren,” by James Pindell, Boston Globe: “President-elect Joe Biden’s victory has set up the ultimate political guessing game in Massachusetts. Senator Elizabeth Warren for Treasury Secretary? Boston Mayor Martin J. Walsh for Labor Secretary? Representative Stephen Lynch for Postmaster General? Those moves, should Biden ever decide to make them, are logical enough given the backgrounds and passions of each person.”

PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

– “The MBTA says its planned service cuts will be temporary. Transit advocates worry the effects will be permanent.” by Nik DeCosta-Klipa, Boston.com: “MBTA officials have tried to take some of the edge off their recently proposed — and seemingly inevitable — service cuts, needed to offset unprecedented revenue losses due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with the assurance that they aren’t forever. ‘The service reductions are not intended to be a permanent shrinkage,’ MBTA General Manager Steve Poftak said during a meeting last week. While the sweeping cuts will be painful in the near term, the idea is to ‘build back’ service when ridership eventually rebounds, he said.”

– “AG Investigation Forces Company To Pay Mass. For False Claims About Sanitizer Sold To MBTA,” by Christine Willmsen and Beth Healy, WBUR: “A Maryland-based company will pay $550,000 to resolve claims it illegally misled the MBTA to purchase tens of thousands of dollars worth of hand sanitizer that was fake, according to Attorney General Maura Healy's office. In March, Federal Resources Supply Company sent the MBTA a marketing email claiming the product ‘Theraworx Protect’ sanitizes in a ‘30-second flash and provides a 6 hour prolonged effect’ to fight off the coronavirus, Healey's office said.”

DAY IN COURT

– “Massachusetts drug lab scandal: Suffolk DA vacates 100-plus convictions tied to former state chemist Annie Dookhan,” by Jackson Cote, MassLive.com: “Suffolk District Attorney Rachael Rollins announced Tuesday her office has moved to vacate more than 100 convictions tied to former state chemist Annie Dookhan, who faked test results in hundreds of criminal drug cases in a scandal that rocked the commonwealth roughly a decade ago.”

– “New Bedford family joins lawsuit over school flu vaccine mandate,” by Wheeler Cowperthwaite, The Patriot Ledger: “A New Bedford family is among six families suing Gov. Charlie Baker and the state Department of Public Health over the requirement that schoolchildren be vaccinated against the flu. The lawsuit is part of an effort by Vincent Delaney, of Peabody, to fight the vaccine mandates. On the GoFundMe website, Delaney has raised $80,414 to fund the lawsuit fighting the mandatory flu vaccinations. The private ‘Flu You Baker’ Facebook group has more than 13,000 members.”

– “Female Watertown detective calls out ‘toxic’ and ‘sexually charged’ department,” by Joe Dwinell, Boston Herald: “Watertown’s first female detective is suing the town and police union over what she alleges was a ‘toxic’ and ‘sexually charged’ workplace that left her feeling vulnerable — including when the bullets began to fly after Marathon Bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was found cowering in a boat.”

FROM THE DELEGATION

– “Elizabeth Warren, Ed Markey slam Trump for nominating 1st Circuit appeals court judge after election,” by Lisa Kashinsky, Boston Herald: “U.S. Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Edward Markey are calling on President Trump to withdraw his nomination for a new federal appeals court judge in Massachusetts, saying it was made during a ‘lame-duck session’ after the presidential race was called in favor of his rival.”

ABOVE THE FOLD

— Herald“DANNY'S DAY!" "SHOTS FIRED,”  Globe“Gains in virus fight tempered by obstruction," "Baker picks Boston judge Serge Georges for high court," "BIDEN GIVES THANKS FOR NANTUCKET.”

FROM THE 413

– “Jacob’s Pillow Theater, Site of Dance Festival, Is Destroyed in Fire,” by Julia Jacobs, The New York Times: “A theater at Jacob’s Pillow, a destination for dance performance in Becket, Mass., was destroyed on Tuesday in an early morning fire. The fire was reported around 7 a.m. at the Doris Duke Theater, according to a statement from Jacob’s Pillow. Videos from the scene showed a collapsed building engulfed in smoke, with firefighters blasting water onto heaps of charred wood. The theater was lost, the statement said, but the fire was contained to the one building at the performing arts campus.”

– “Area COVID testing sites stretched thin,” by Jacquelyn Voghel, Daily Hampshire Gazette: “The Holyoke Community College COVID-19 testing site — one of the few state-sponsored ‘Stop the Spread’ testing locations in western Massachusetts — is being stretched to its limits as hundreds of people flock to the site each day, sometimes resulting in hourslong waits and people being turned away.”

THE LOCAL ANGLE

– “Varian cleanup has faded from view, but chemical levels remain high,” by Paul Leighton, The Salem News: “An industrial site on Sohier Road continues to show high levels of contamination despite a cleanup that has been going on for nearly three decades, raising concerns about the impact on nearby residents, according to two experts on environmental cleanups. Recent tests at the site of the former Varian Associates revealed elevated levels of potentially toxic chemicals in the groundwater at several locations on the property.”

– “Civic Center Commission OK's use of DCU Center as a field hospital, rent-free, but wants help to offset revenue loss,” by Nick Kotsopoulos, Telegram & Gazette: “The Civic Center Commission unanimously agreed Tuesday to again allow UMass Memorial Health Care to use the DCU Center's exhibition hall for a COVID-19 field hospital. At the request of UMass Memorial Health Care, the commission also agreed to waive all rental fees for the space for at least two months.”

– “Rockland restores $890,000 to town budget,” by Johanna Seltz, Boston Globe: “A Special Town Meeting in Rockland quickly approved restoring $890,000 to the fiscal 2021 town budget in a session that lasted barely 20 minutes. The money had been cut in the spring in anticipation that the state would reduce aid to towns because of the pandemic, but Rockland did not have its state aid cut, Town Administrator Douglas Lapp said.”

– “Polar plunges, cozy dinners, security details: For Joe Biden, Nantucket means a perfect Thanksgiving,” by Hanna Krueger, Boston Globe: “Everyone on Nantucket has a Joe Biden story. Just ask the taxi driver who watched him plunge into the icy waters of Children’s Beach on Thanksgiving morning. Or the gaggle of saleswomen at Murray’s Toggery Shop who have sold countless pairs of authentic Nantucket Reds to the Biden bunch.”

MEDIA MATTERS

– “Boston Herald newsstand sales crater during pandemic,” by Don Seiffert, Boston Business Journal: “The Boston Herald's newsstand sales, which make up roughly half of the tabloid's print circulation, are down 41% year-over-year in the past few months as much of the city remains empty due to the Covid-10 pandemic, according to the newspaper's own filing this week. The Herald, owned by Denver-based MediaNews Group since March 2018, said in a filing with the Alliance for Audited Media that its total weekday print circulation over the six months from April to September this year averaged 24,540 per day.”

HAPPY BIRTHDAY – to Vermont's #1 Mass. Playbook fan Melanie Nigro, Eric D. Roiter and Monica Rosales.

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.

A message from Uber:

In order to raise the standard for independent work for all, government and business need to work together. That’s why Uber created our Working Together Priorities, which can help people who earn through app-based work receive more security, protection, and transparency. This work is already underway in California, where voters overwhelmingly approved Prop 22.

  

TRACK THE TRANSITION, SUBSCRIBE TO TRANSITION PLAYBOOK: As states certify their election results, President-elect Biden is building an administration. The staffing decisions made in the coming days, weeks, and months will send clear-cut signals about his administration’s agenda and priorities. Transition Playbook is the definitive guide to what could be one of the most consequential transfers of power in American history. Written for political insiders, it tracks the appointments, people, and the emerging power centers of the new administration. Stay in the know, subscribe today.

   

Follow us on Twitter

Stephanie Murray @StephMurr_Jour

 

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

 













The GOP just tried to kick hundreds of students off the voter rolls

    This year, MAGA GOP activists in Georgia attempted to disenfranchise hundreds of students by trying to kick them off the voter rolls. De...