Tuesday, April 12, 2022

POLITICO NIGHTLY: Return of the mask

 


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BY MYAH WARD

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ACT|The App Association

With help from Tyler Weyant

The Philadelphia city skyline.

The Philadelphia city skyline. | Bruce Bennett/Getty Images

PHILLY SPECIAL — Masks are back.

Philadelphia became the first major U.S. city Monday to announce plans to reimpose an indoor mask mandate. Then came the debate: Some people claimed the city was acting too soon, as CDC guidance doesn’t yet recommend indoor masking for Philadelphia. Others said the announcement was an indicator of what’s to come across the U.S., if cases of BA.2, the Omicron subvariant, continue to creep up.

So Nightly called one of the people behind Philadelphia’s pandemic policy, health commissioner Cheryl Bettigole, to better understand the move and its potential relevance for the rest of the country. This conversation has been edited.

Philadelphia established a data-driven level system in February that determines when pandemic restrictions, like masks, come and go. Why do you feel this is the best policy at this stage in the pandemic? 

We had heard a lot, especially from the business community in Philadelphia, about wanting some kind of predictable, transparent metrics so we would tell them what we were doing. We talked to restaurant owners, hotel owners, the sports stadium community. We talked to a lot of public health experts.

We also took a deep dive into Philadelphia’s data. Each time we were hit with a wave, I remember standing in front of the news cameras, and trying to get people to understand that the rate of rise is something really important that we look at — that if cases are doubling, even if the numbers are small, that’s very concerning.

We took the span of the pandemic at each of the waves, the initial wave at Delta, at Omicron. The version that seemed to be the most predictive was a 50 percent rise in cases over a 10-day period. And again, not as a single metric, but as one of the signs.

So the metrics that we put together included overall case counts, this rate of rise metric, and of course hospitalizations.

We initially included positivity, but then the screening programs all started to come to an end, and we realized positivity was going to just change dramatically in a way that wouldn’t necessarily be related to what was happening with disease. So we dropped positivity.

We didn’t include death data for the same reason that everybody else hasn’t included it, which is that it’s a late metric.

Why bring back indoor masking before hospitalizations go up? 

What we’re trying to do is anticipate when we think hospitalizations, and ultimately deaths, are likely to rise. We had a massive wave with Omicron. Philly went on to have 750 deaths.

I’ve spent a lot of time looking at data from other places. In the U.K., which has similar vaccination rates to what we do, their Omicron surge in January looked a lot like ours. Their BA.2 wave is bad. They’ve stopped doing as much testing but their hospitalization wave peaked above their January hospitalization surge, and deaths are going up.

Then I was looking around the country at different places that seem to be ahead of us. New York State, New Jersey, Delaware have seen a rise in hospitalizations. They’re small, but they’re bigger today than they were yesterday. So it feels like something may be starting. If hospitalizations are going to go up in Philly, they should start to go up soon.

If it turns out that we’ve reached a point in the pandemic where hospitalizations are no longer associated with case rise, then great. That would be wonderful news, and then we will need to go back and revisit our metrics.

We’re at an all-time-high of pandemic fatigue. What do you expect mask compliance to look like in Philly? 

I’ve gotten a mixed reaction. I’ve gotten a certain amount of hate mail, like misogyny and all sorts of expletives.

The business community was quite perturbed, even though it’s the same people we talked to before, who were happy to see our metrics in February.

But I’ve also gotten some very positive messages from individuals, a lot of public health folks. Maybe the one that means the most to me — one of our local Black clergy members, who leads a large church, was very grateful for this. Philly’s Black community has suffered immensely in this pandemic. We’re the poorest big city in America. If you wanted an exercise in why health equity matters, this pandemic is it.

In general, our mask wearing has been much higher than in other places. People didn’t entirely stop wearing masks in Philadelphia, where we’ve been hovering around the 40 to 50 percent mark. I’m sure there will be people who absolutely refuse to wear masks. That’s always going to be true. At most parts of the pandemic, when we had a mask mandate, we’ve been around the 80 percent range.

I don’t know if we’ll get quite 80 percent on this, but if we want to drive down numbers, we don’t have to be perfect.

People criticized the move because it’s at odds with CDC guidance, which does not advise masking for Philadelphia and considers the city to have a “low Covid-19 community level.”

CDC has absolutely said that local health jurisdictions should be able to respond to local conditions, which is what we’re doing. We are, again, the poorest big city in America, with huge health disparities on an underlying basis. That’s part of what we’re responding to here in Philadelphia, and CDC has been supportive of that. They are trying to make a system that will work for the entire country, in an incredibly polarized environment. So what they put out has to be read in that way.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s author at mward@politico.com, or on Twitter at @MyahWard.

 

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WHAT'D I MISS?

— U.S. to send $750M in additional military aid to Ukraine: Using his presidential drawdown powers, President Joe Biden will give Kyiv’s forces drones, howitzers and protective equipment against possible chemical attacks along with other weapons, three people familiar with the new package told POLITICO.

— Team Biden scrambles to respond to claims of Russia chemical weapon use: Alleged and unconfirmed claims of chemical weapons use by Russia in Ukraine has forced a scramble inside the White House to match Biden’s promise of an “in kind” response while avoiding further escalation of the conflict . The White House is urging caution, noting that the use of chemical weapons remains unverified. U.S. officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive subject, said they have been running scenario-planning exercises on the possible use of chemical weapons, having publicly raised the alarm that Russian President Vladimir Putin may take such a step. The officials said that military options in Ukraine aren’t on the table — echoing Biden’s repeated position of not wanting to spark World War III.

— Biden labels Russian atrocities in Ukraine ‘genocide’: Speaking in Menlo, Iowa, about his Build a Better America agenda and efforts to lower energy prices, the president said a family’s financial situation in the U.S. should not be dependent on whether another leader “commits genocide.” The president doubled down later, telling reporters that his use of “genocide” was intentional. “It’s become clearer and clearer that Putin is just trying to wipe out the idea of being Ukrainian,” he said, adding that “we’ll let the lawyers decide internationally whether or not it qualifies, but it sure seems that way to me.”

— No terrorism connection in Brooklyn subway shooting: Police officials ruled out terrorism in their ongoing search for a man who opened fire in a subway car in Brooklyn this morning. “I want to begin by assuring the public that there are currently no known explosive devices on our subway trains and this is not being investigated as an act of terrorism at this time,” NYPD Commissioner Keechant Sewell said during a press briefing at the scene in Sunset Park this afternoon. None of the 16 people who were shot have life-threatening injuries, Sewell added.

— NY lieutenant governor resigns after arrest in federal bribery case: New York Lt. Gov. Brian Benjamin resigned this evening after he was arrested earlier in the day and charged in a federal bribery conspiracy case involving alleged fraudulent donations to a New York City comptroller run last year. Benjamin pleaded not guilty at a brief arraignment in front of U.S. Magistrate Judge Ona Wang and was released on a $250,000 bond. Shortly after 5 p.m., Gov. Kathy Hochul said he had resigned amid growing calls that he step down from Democrats and Republicans.

— U.S. inflation jumped 8.5 percent in past year, highest since 1981: Inflation soared over the past year at its fastest pace in more than 40 years, with costs for food, gasoline, housing and other necessities squeezing American consumers and wiping out the pay raises that many people have received. The Labor Department said today that its consumer price index jumped 8.5 percent in March from 12 months earlier — the biggest year-over-year increase since December 1981. Prices have been driven up by bottlenecked supply chains, robust consumer demand and disruptions to global food and energy markets worsened by Russia’s war against Ukraine.

— U.S. report acknowledges human rights backsliding in Afghanistan: An official report released by the State Department today acknowledged a steep drop in human rights progress in Afghanistan following the United States’ withdrawal last August . The 2021 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices, which outlines human rights progress in United Nations member states and countries receiving aid from the U.S., identified “significant human rights issues” in Afghanistan, both before and after the Taliban seized control of the capital, Kabul, on Aug. 15.

 

INTRODUCING DIGITAL FUTURE DAILY - OUR TECHNOLOGY NEWSLETTER, RE-IMAGINED:  Technology is always evolving, and our new tech-obsessed newsletter is too! Digital Future Daily unlocks the most important stories determining the future of technology, from Washington to Silicon Valley and innovation power centers around the world. Readers get an in-depth look at how the next wave of tech will reshape civic and political life, including activism, fundraising, lobbying and legislating. Go inside the minds of the biggest tech players, policymakers and regulators to learn how their decisions affect our lives. Don't miss out, subscribe today.

 
 
AROUND THE WORLD

A Ukrainian serviceman stands next to the destroyed Ukrainian Antonov An-225

A Ukrainian serviceman stands next to the destroyed Ukrainian Antonov An-225 "Mriya" cargo aircraft, which was the largest plane in the world, among the wreckage of Russian military vehicles, at the Hostomel airfield in Ukraine. | Alexey Furman/Getty Images

SHIFTING TACTICS — To better understand some of the moves the Russian military is making as it prepares for a new advance on the Donbas, we chatted with Alex Ward, the host of National Security Daily, over Slack. This conversation has been edited.

What does the change in military leadership over Russian forces in Ukraine tell us about the next phase of the war?

Russia was effectively fighting multiple smaller wars instead one, coordinated big one. The introduction of Gen. Alexander Dvorkinov aims to rectify that problem.

Experts frequently reference previous Russian military actions — Georgia, Syria, Chechnya — in comparison to the war in Ukraine. Are there patterns in these conflicts that provide insights into what might see over the coming weeks?

Even with a new general in charge of Russia’s Ukraine invasion, we should expect similar tactics by the Russians: artillery targeting civilian buildings, the butchering of innocents, and more. These methods are meant to break the will of the people and have them tell their government to stop fighting. The difference here, though, is that Ukrainian forces are far better at fighting than troops in Georgia, Syria or Chechnya were.

As the U.S. works to verify details on possible chemical weapons use, do the details we have right now comport with typical Russian strategy or weapons usage?

It would be very like Russia to use a chemical weapon to break the resistance of Ukrainian forces, including during the tense siege of Mariupol. But Moscow is aware that Ukraine doesn’t have blister or nerve agents, so they’ll likely use an industrial chemical like chlorine to then say, “It wasn’t us.”

We shouldn’t expect quick confirmation of the Ukrainian regiment’s claims, though. There isn’t really anyone to independently confirm the allegations, though perhaps investigators can make an early call based off of photos or videos.

 

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NIGHTLY NUMBER

15 percent

The increase in cases of congenital syphilis, which had all but disappeared in the U.S. at the beginning of the century, in 2020, contributing to at least 149 stillbirths and infant deaths that year. Gonorrhea and syphilis cases reached record levels during the first year of the Covid-19 pandemic, according to data released today from the CDC.

 

DON'T MISS ANYTHING FROM THE 2022 MILKEN INSTITUTE GLOBAL CONFERENCE: POLITICO is excited to partner with the Milken Institute to produce a special edition "Global Insider" newsletter featuring exclusive coverage and insights from the 25th annual Global Conference. This year's event, May 1-4, brings together more than 3,000 of the world’s most influential leaders, including 700+ speakers representing more than 80 countries. "Celebrating the Power of Connection" is this year's theme, setting the stage to connect influencers with the resources to change the world with leading experts and thinkers whose insight and creativity can implement that change. Whether you're attending in person or following along from somewhere else in the world, keep up with this year's conference with POLITICO’s special edition “Global Insider” so you don't miss a beat. Subscribe today.

 
 
PARTING WORDS

A police officer stands outside 10 Downing Street in London.

A police officer stands outside 10 Downing Street in London. | Rob Pinney/Getty Images

PARTY FOUL — U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson offered a “full apology” as he confirmed he has paid a police fine for attending rule-breaking parties while coronavirus restrictions were in place, Annabelle Dickson writes.

But Johnson batted away calls for his resignation after both he and his most senior minister, Rishi Sunak, were issued with fine notices by police investigating the so-called “Partygate” scandal that has rocked Westminster for months.

“I think the best thing I can do now is, having settled the fine, is focus on the job in hand,” he told broadcasters. “That’s what I’m going to do.”

A No. 10 spokesperson had earlier confirmed that both Johnson and his Chancellor, Rishi Sunak, had “received notification that the Metropolitan Police intend to issue them” with the fine notices. It follows a string of damaging stories about rule-breaching parties at the heart of government at a time the public were being asked to limit social contact or remain in lockdown.

 

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RSN: FOCUS: How Joe Manchin Knifed the Democrats - and Bailed on Saving Democracy

 


 

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According to Manchin's colleagues, he flip-flopped on voting to reform the filibuster and voting rights. (photo: Francis Chung/EE News/POLITICO/AP Images)
FOCUS: How Joe Manchin Knifed the Democrats - and Bailed on Saving Democracy
Andy Kroll, Rolling Stone
Kroll writes: "'Giddy' is not a word people use to describe Jon Tester. The towering senior U.S. senator from Montana is blunt and pragmatic. In the halls of Congress, he's one of the last surviving rural Democrats. When he's not in Washington, D.C., Tester runs a dirt farm in Montana that's been in his family for three generations."

Joe Biden promised to fix voting rights. The senator from West Virginia had other ideas

"Giddy” is not a word people use to describe Jon Tester. The towering senior U.S. senator from Montana is blunt and pragmatic. In the halls of Congress, he’s one of the last surviving rural Democrats. When he’s not in Washington, D.C., Tester runs a dirt farm in Montana that’s been in his family for three generations.

A dirt-farming rural Democrat knows better than to overhype. So it came as a surprise when, one day this winter, Tester showed up visibly excited at the office of his friend Michael Bennet, one of Colorado’s two Democratic senators, to share a tantalizing piece of information.

“I think we’re gonna get this voting-rights thing done,” he said to Bennet.

“You got to be kidding me,” Bennet said.

Tester said that Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, a critical swing vote on sweeping voting-rights reforms, had signaled his support for the bill and, more crucially, the parliamentary-rules change needed to bypass a Republican filibuster of that bill. “I think it’s gonna happen,” Tester said.

For the previous six months, Tester and two of his colleagues, Tim Kaine of Virginia and Angus King of Maine, had lobbied Manchin on voting rights and the fate of the filibuster. On weekends and holidays, on conference calls and huddled in one another’s hideaways in the bowels of the Capitol, Kaine, King, and Tester had urged Manchin to support his party’s proposal for overhauling the country’s voting laws.

They needed him, with Senate Democrats holding onto the barest majority possible — 50 votes, with Vice President Kamala Harris acting as tiebreaker. Not a single Republican had said they would support the voting bill, which left Democrats with only one path to passage: Change the filibuster, the procedural tactic that requires a 60-vote majority to advance most types of legislation. Manchin had remained steadfast in his opposition to this plan, arguing that the filibuster protected small states like his and forced lawmakers to seek bipartisan compromise. Yet during months of conversations with Kaine, King, and Tester, Manchin had increasingly lamented the dysfunction in the Senate. He wanted, as he put it, “some good rule changes to make the place work better.”

By early January, Manchin had given the impression — at least according to his colleagues — that he was ready to amend the filibuster in a way that would open a path to passing voting rights. At the end of one of their calls, Tester recalls saying that with everyone in agreement on a filibuster deal, all they had to do was put the finishing touches on the voting legislation itself and they were ready to proceed. “Yeah,” Manchin replied, according to Tester.

A “yes” vote from Manchin could not have been more critical for free and fair elections. The Republican Party responded to Joe Biden’s victory with a backlash on the right to vote. Last year, GOP-run legislatures passed 34 laws in at least 19 states that limit access to voting, put partisan operatives in charge of running elections, and make it harder to participate in American democracy. At the same time, a belief that the last election was somehow stolen or fraudulent — the so-called Big Lie — has become an article of faith for many Republicans.

In response to this onslaught, Democrats in Congress introduced multiple pieces of legislation and vowed to pass the bills in time for the 2022 midterms. In public, Democratic leaders spoke in existential terms about the need for reform. “Failure is not an option,” Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said. In private, lawmakers and activists predicted victory, arguing that the importance of the issue would overcome the challenge of unifying a 50-member caucus.

They were wrong.

Rolling Stone interviewed more than 30 key figures inside and outside of Congress to understand how the most ambitious voting-rights bill in generations and the Democratic Party’s main policy response to the Jan. 6 insurrection ended in failure. The blame for this defeat, sources say, lies with multiple parties: Manchin either strung along his party for months with no intention of actually supporting the reforms or gave indications to his colleagues that he was on board only to reverse his position on multiple occasions. Senate Democrats, meanwhile, miscalculated that if they could flip Manchin, another swing vote, Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, would follow his lead. As for the White House, these sources say, President Biden — despite saying as a candidate that “one of the first things I’ll do as president” is restore the Voting Rights Act — never seemed fully committed to passing voting-rights legislation. When Biden, who had vowed to run an “FDR-sized presidency,” did inject himself into the negotiations late in the fight, his contributions did more harm than good.

Manchin spokeswoman Sam Runyon says the senator “never said he was open to eliminating the filibuster.” If his colleagues believed that, she adds, they were mistaken. The White House responds by saying just because “we didn’t get the result we wanted, we can’t say the power of the presidency wasn’t behind it.” Nevertheless, a question lingers: Why did Democrats’ efforts fail?

“It was like riding a roller coaster,” Sen. Tester tells Rolling Stone. “There were many nights when I went to bed and I thought, ‘This thing is done. We just have to hammer out the details.’ But then something would always happen,” he added. “I don’t know what happened. I can guess. But I don’t know.”

One day last spring, Sen. Kaine got a call from Sen. Schumer, the Democratic leader. The House of Representatives had passed the For the People Act, a massive bill that sought to make it easier to vote, drag so-called dark money into the sunlight, combat gerrymandering, and modernize election equipment. Now, it was the Senate’s turn to take up the For the People Act. Every Senate Democrat had endorsed the bill except for one: Manchin. Schumer knew that Kaine had a good working relationship with Manchin dating back to their days as governors, and so according to Kaine, Schumer asked him, “Can you try to get Manchin on this bill?”

Kaine wasn’t on the judiciary or rules committees, but he made sense for other reasons. Before Kaine got into statewide politics in Virginia, he had worked as a civil-rights lawyer for 18 years, and voting rights had long been an obsession of his. The seat he now held in the Senate previously belonged to Harry Byrd Sr. and Harry Byrd Jr., two giants of 20th-century politics who were unapologetic racists and segregationists who opposed the landmark civil-rights laws of the 1960s and 1970s. The historical legacy of the Byrd family weighed on Kaine; so, too, did the more recent experience of witnessing firsthand an attack on the Capitol that was intended to disenfranchise 80 million people. “The seat that I hold and the moment in history in which I’m in the Senate, they have made this a cause unlike any other for me,” Kaine says.

Kaine began talking with Manchin about the For the People Act and what it would take for Manchin to support it. Manchin had concerns about giving the federal government more power to approve or reject voting-rule-changes at the local level. The broad use of consent decrees made Manchin fear that “savvy lawyers could go into cash-strapped localities” and bog those places down in lawsuits about voting practices. Mostly, though, Manchin couldn’t support Congress approving an 800-page bill about American elections along strict party lines. Doing so, he explained, “will destroy the already weakening binds of our democracy.” Republicans needed to be a part of the process.

On this point, Kaine knew he had a problem. It would take 10 Senate Republicans to join all 50 Democrats to pass any voting changes. Only six Republicans had voted in favor of a bipartisan panel modeled after the 9/11 Commission to investigate the Jan. 6 attack. “I said, ‘That is the North Star,’ ” Kaine recalls. “ ‘We will never get more votes than that from them for anything in the voting space.’ ” What’s more, a Republican senator (whom Kaine declined to name) told him that Minority Leader Mitch McConnell had two red lines: voting rights and campaign-finance reform. “Those are his only two thou-shalt-nots,” the unnamed GOP senator told Kaine. (McConnell’s office didn’t respond to a request for comment.)

The path to passage for any voting law would instead require reforming the filibuster. Kaine and his colleagues needed to find a way to persuade Manchin to support such a move. Democrats also needed to do the same with Sen. Sinema from Arizona. Unlike Manchin, Sinema had co-sponsored the For the People Act and considered herself a vocal supporter of stronger voting protections. Yet from the moment she joined the Senate, Sinema opposed any changes to the filibuster. Despite her clear position, some Senate Democrats as well as leading activists believed that Sinema would not want to be the lone “no” vote on reform if Manchin signed on. “All along our theory was: Get Manchin, and if we get Manchin, we get Sinema,” a source involved in the negotiations tells Rolling Stone.


President Joe Biden talks to reporters after meeting with Senate Democrats in the Russell Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill on Jan. 13, 2022.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

One Friday in July, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Majority Leader Schumer met with President Biden at the White House. Eventually, the discussion turned to voting rights and the filibuster. When the time came to change the Senate rules for voting rights, Biden told them, he would take an active role lobbying any wavering Senate Democrats. According to a source briefed on the White House’s position, Biden told Schumer: “Chuck, you tell me when you need me to start making phone calls.”

Up to that point, senators and activists saw the White House as MIA in the voting-rights push. Anonymous quotes given by people close to the White House voiced skepticism about the prospect of passing any voting legislation in Congress. The Associated Press reported that “frustrated” White House aides “seeing the reality in the Senate, believe too much of a focus has been placed on federal legislative measures” to protect the vote. To activists, each negative blind quote felt like a stab in the back.

Civil-rights leaders pressed Biden to “take to the bully pulpit and fight” against the GOP’s voter-suppression laws, says Rev. Al Sharpton. Biden responded by traveling to Philadelphia and giving a rousing speech, but back in Washington, his priorities appeared to be elsewhere.

Throughout the fall of 2021, the president focused his negotiating energies on two other bills: a bipartisan deal to fund infrastructure repairs and the sweeping, $1.75 trillion Build Back Better (BBB) Act. Biden seemed to believe his transformative, FDR-esque moment had come, and he spent the next several months in talks with Manchin and Sinema to persuade them to support Build Back Better. Voting rights, by all indications, was a secondary concern.

In the background, though, Kaine kept up the pressure on Manchin. Even after Manchin declared his opposition to the original For the People Act in a widely read op-ed, saying he couldn’t envision passing such a bill with only Democratic votes, Kaine and several other Senate allies, a group that would come to include Tester and independent King, continued their talks with Manchin, asking him what it would take to get his support. They saw it as an encouraging sign that Manchin had said that “inaction is not an option” on protecting the right to vote. Eventually, Manchin took out a piece of paper and jotted down a list of priorities. He wanted automatic voter registration any time someone went to the DMV or interacted with state government. He wanted to make Election Day a federal holiday. He wanted a mandatory 15 days of early in-person voting in every state and a ban on partisan gerrymandering. His demand for some version of a voter ID requirement rankled liberal activists, but Democrats believed that to be a minor concession in exchange for passing the larger bill. The new measure would also include policies to stop future attempts at election subversion. The new bill, per Manchin’s request, would be named the Freedom to Vote Act.

But before Manchin would commit to the new bill and tweaking the filibuster, he wanted to try the Republicans again, with Kaine’s help. The two senators met with their GOP colleagues and offered them deals that Schumer hadn’t authorized. “We were trying every skeleton key on the key ring to see if we could unlock the door to get Republican support,” Kaine says.

One outcome of this exercise, Kaine says, was to show Manchin that no amount of good-faith bargaining would win over Republicans. Instead, McConnell and his caucus used the filibuster to block debate on every piece of democracy-related legislation introduced by Democrats. The same GOP senators who had sung the praises of the late John Lewis would not allow the Senate to even debate the John Lewis Voting Rights Act or the Freedom to Vote Act despite Manchin’s across-the-aisle outreach.

While Manchin remained opposed to filibuster reform in public, he began making comments in private meetings that seemed to suggest he was moving closer to yes. In a late-August meeting with a small group of West Virginia faith leaders, Manchin said that he valued the filibuster but did not believe preserving the filibuster outweighed protecting voting rights, according to a person who was briefed on the meeting. (Manchin’s spokeswoman disputes this characterization.) This was seen as an encouraging sign — short of a hard commitment, but evidence that Manchin could be moved. Democrats and outside activists agreed that any talk of “abolishing” or “weakening” the filibuster would scare off Manchin, so they framed their lobbying blitz as an effort to “restore the Senate” and make it work better.

A filibuster-reform proposal crafted by Sen. Jeff Merkley of Oregon and several others was a far cry from eliminating the filibuster. The proposal had three parts: It lowered the 60-vote threshold needed to begin debating a bill to a simple majority; guaranteed that each party could offer at least five amendments to a bill; and replaced the secret filibuster with the talking filibuster, allowing the minority party to block a vote for weeks and possibly months so long as it had a member speaking on the Senate floor. But when that extended debate period was up, the Senate would vote and a simple majority was good enough to pass the bill. “It eliminated the potential of one person having veto power over the other 99,” Kaine says. “It restored the filibuster back to what I thought the filibuster was supposed to be.”

With Manchin deeply involved in the negotiations over filibuster reform, Senate Democrats and their outside partners looked to Biden to follow through on his pledge to pressure Manchin and Sinema. “The key for Biden never was what he was going to say publicly,” says Fred Wertheimer, founder and president of the clean-government group Democracy 21. “The key was what he was going to do in the endgame.” But the White House kept its focus on Build Back Better even as the talks there showed no sign of a breakthrough. Manchin refused to support the expanded child-tax credit in the bill, claiming it would incentivize parents not to work, and he opposed several key climate provisions as a senator who represented a coal-producing state and earned a small fortune from holdings in his family’s coal-processing business. He wanted to shelve the deal until a later time and, according to Kaine and Tester, turn his attention fully to voting rights and the filibuster.

A decisive moment came on Dec. 14, when Manchin went to the White House to meet with Biden. According to two sources briefed on the meeting, Manchin had expected a productive conversation about pausing BBB and shifting focus to voting rights and the filibuster. Instead, Biden was upset. He criticized Manchin for what he felt was the senator’s duplicity during the BBB talks, accusing Manchin of backtracking on a pledge to support BBB he’d made weeks earlier during a visit to Biden’s house in Wilmington. (Manchin’s spokeswoman says this was “not a correct accounting of this meeting” but declined to say why. The White House wouldn’t comment on it.) Later that week Manchin appeared on Fox News and declared BBB dead. “I cannot vote to continue with this piece of legislation,” he said. “This is a no.”

The next morning, Manchin met again with his filibuster working group. The progress Kaine, King, and Tester felt they had made over the preceding months was slipping away. “[Biden] chose to sequence the debate by insisting he deal first with Build Back Better and only then would he consider voting rights, and that sequencing was costly,” says Wade Henderson, the interim president of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights. But King, Kaine, and Tester believed that they could still win over Manchin despite the breakdown between Manchin and the White House. The four senators stayed in constant contact over the holiday break and into the new year. Even when Kaine was stranded overnight on I-95 on his way from Richmond, Virginia, to attend a voting-rights meeting in Washington, with nothing but an orange and Dr. Pepper to fuel him, he called into the meeting from his car.

His colleagues’ commitment was not lost on Manchin. It was soon afterward that Manchin gave one of his most encouraging signs related to the filibuster, according to Tester, which prompted the senator from Montana to relay that promising news to Bennet. Kaine, too, believed they had gotten Manchin to yes. “I thought we were there a couple of times,” Kaine says. “But maybe that was just me.”


Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) leave the Senate chamber after Republicans successfully filibustered the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act.
Kent Nishimura/"Los Angeles Times"/Getty Images)

Finally, after months of waiting, the moment had arrived. Democrats and voting-rights activists sprang into action for a final frantic push to persuade Manchin and Sinema to support filibuster changes and the John Lewis Voting Rights Act and Freedom to Vote Act. Schumer told allies on one call that he had mobilized every high-profile surrogate possible, including Oprah Winfrey, to sway the two senators. Biden traveled to Atlanta and delivered a fiery speech calling on the Senate to deliver new voting protections. “I ask every elected official in America: How do you want to be remembered?” he said. “At consequential moments in history, they present a choice: Do you want to be on the side of Dr. King or George Wallace? Do you want to be on the side of John Lewis or Bull Connor? Do you want to be on the side of Abraham Lincoln or Jefferson Davis?”

Two days later, Biden said he would make an appearance at a private meeting of the Senate Democratic caucus to rally the group before a scheduled vote on the John Lewis and Freedom to Vote bills. Just as Biden was about to head to the Capitol that day, Sen. Sinema appeared on the Senate floor to give a speech. There had been warning signs: Sinema’s recent interactions with civil-rights leaders and other influential progressive groups had left the groups frustrated. On a Zoom call with the heads of the Leadership Conference, NAACP, Urban League, and other African American organizations, Sinema seemed to be tuned out. She refused to turn her camera on, and her disembodied voice suggested she was dismissive of the arguments put before her on why she should vote to amend the filibuster. “As my grandmother would say, she blew by that argument like a freight train blowing past trash,” says Henderson of the Leadership Conference.

The attempts to win over Sinema had come in the final stages of the filibuster battle. John LaBombard, who was Sinema’s top spokesman at the time, says there was much less of an effort to persuade the Arizona senator to change her mind than there had been with Joe Manchin, even though Sinema’s vote was just as crucial as Manchin’s in the final count. LaBombard says he couldn’t escape the impression that Democratic leadership either took Sinema’s vote for granted or considered her long-standing opposition to changing the filibuster somehow less sincere or authentic than Manchin’s. “It would be a mistake on anyone’s part to engage in any wishful thinking that Sen. Sinema’s policy or tactical positions are somehow contingent on the positions of other colleagues and are not sincerely held,” LaBombard says.

On the morning of Biden’s planned visit to the Democratic caucus in mid-January, Sinema gave one of the longest floor speeches of her career. She restated that she would not under any circumstances get rid of the 60-vote filibuster. “When one party need only negotiate with itself, policy will inextricably be pushed from the middle towards the extremes,” she said.

Soon after Sinema finished speaking, Biden arrived at the closed-door Senate Democratic caucus meeting. Anyone hoping for a rousing call to action or LBJ-style browbeating was disappointed. Biden drifted from one side of the room to the other, at times speaking so softly that senators struggled to hear him, according to one source in the room. “His style was very much ‘I’m here among friends,’ ” the source says. “He decided not to give the stump speech of someone who stands up and says, ‘This is the moment that history changes in America and you all decide which way it goes.’ ” When Manchin asked Biden a question about the history of the filibuster, Biden’s answer was so unconvincing that Schumer motioned to Sen. Jeff Merkley to intervene and give a more substantive response, according to multiple witnesses.

Once the meeting was over, Biden walked to the crowd of reporters gathered outside the room and did something inexplicable: With the final vote still days away, he declared defeat. “I hope we can get this done, but I’m not sure,” he told the press. “Like every other major civil-rights bill that came along, if we miss the first time, we can come back and try it a second time. We missed this time.”

It was mystifying to the senators and the activist groups that had spent the past year and tens of millions of dollars trying to get this far. Yet it also felt representative of the Biden White House’s half-assed and confusing role in the entire voting-rights campaign. “We have seen what an all-out effort from the White House looks like when they are trying to pass a bill, and we never saw that same level of effort from the White House to pass the Freedom to Vote Act,” says Tiffany Muller, president of End Citizens United and End Citizens United Action Fund, one of the leading outside groups pushing for voting-rights and filibuster reform. There were brief moments of help from the White House, she adds, “but we never got a White House that was fully bought into winning this fight.”

The White House declined to comment on the record for this story. A senior administration official, who refused to be named, says these criticisms of the administration are “people playing Monday-morning quarterback.” Within months of taking office, the official adds, Biden said he supported restoring the talking filibuster. He gave speeches and made private entreaties to senators. As for Manchin and Sinema, the official says, “I don’t think there was anything the president could do to change those two votes on the filibuster.”

Going into the final vote on filibuster reform on Jan. 19, it was clear that the votes weren’t there. Sinema had given her forceful floor speech, and Manchin announced he would not in the end vote to alter the filibuster. In a statement sent to Rolling Stone, Manchin said: “Since coming to the Senate in 2010, I have come to understand that the filibuster is our last check on power no matter who is in the majority. And it has protected our great nation from volatile political swings for more than 233 years.”

When Schumer called the final vote on the combined John Lewis Voting Rights and Freedom to Vote acts, Republicans filibustered the legislation yet again. And when Democrats at last forced a vote on changing the filibuster, Manchin and Sinema voted with the Republicans against it. Some Democrats and activists couldn’t help but notice that Vice President Harris, who had come to the Senate to preside over the vote, left before it officially finished.

In a recent interview, Kaine, the Democratic senator, said that while he and many of his colleagues are “discouraged” by how the voting-rights battle finished, he hasn’t given up.

“The guys that held my seat, Harry Byrd Sr. and then Harry Byrd Jr., were masters at using the filibuster to try to block passage of civil-rights legislation, including voting-rights legislation,” Kaine says. “But it didn’t stop. The temporary setbacks were not accepted as permanent setbacks, and we’re not going to accept them either.”

When I last spoke with Sen. Tester, he had just come from a classified briefing on China. He drew a connection between what he’d heard in that briefing and the voting-rights push. “The gridlock and the division here in the United States, they [the Chinese] love it,” Tester says. “It plays into their hands; it plays into what they want to do. And so consequently, we are where we are, and we may not even realize that oftentimes we’re our own worst enemy.”


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POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: SCOTUS fight isn’t over for Markey

 

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BY LISA KASHINSKY

Presented by

PhRMA

FULLER COURT PRESS — Democrats’ jubilation over Ketanji Brown Jackson’s historic U.S. Supreme Court confirmation is starting to give way to renewed calls to expand the bench as crucial decisions on abortion access and other key issues loom.

Ed Markey is asking his supporters to sign a petition calling on his Senate colleagues to abolish the filibuster and pass his Judiciary Act to add four seats to the nation’s highest court. Behind the scenes, he’s working with advocates and Senate colleagues including Elizabeth Warren and Tina Smith (D-Minn.) to elevate the issue in the national debate, a spokesperson said.

“The U.S. Supreme Court will soon decide bedrock abortion and climate change cases that will impact the health and safety of millions of Americans,” Markey said in statement to Playbook. “It is critical we begin to repair the damage done to our judiciary by the Republican theft of two court seats.”

The popular progressive cause isn’t going anywhere fast. President Joe Biden’s SCOTUS commission punted on court packing in its December report, and Republicans attacked Jackson over the concept during her confirmation process. In the year since Markey and House lawmakers filed their Judiciary Act to expand the court, it’s gained just two Senate cosponsors — Warren and Smith — and 50 in the House, including Rep. Ayanna Pressley.

But some advocates say SCOTUS’ pending decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization — a case about Mississippi’s ban on abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy through which justices could roll back or overturn Roe v. Wade — could galvanize supporters old and new. And they point to other once-fringe calls, like a wealth tax, that have now made it to the political fore as a sign of hope.

“We’ve seen a growing number of members of Congress and leading progressive institutions recognize that expansion is the only way to restore balance to the court,” Christopher Kang, chief counsel of Demand Justice, said in a statement. He added that SCOTUS’ upcoming decisions “will be a clear reminder that the only way to realize the promise of Judge Jackson’s nomination is to send her four new colleagues.”

GOOD TUESDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. While Gov. Charlie Baker sees the state’s surplus revenues as a means for providing tax cuts, House Ways and Means Chair Aaron Michlewitz sees the plentiful coffers as an opportunity to invest in the middle class for long-term stability and equity.

The House will not propose tax cuts in the fiscal year 2023 budget that legislative leaders will unveil Wednesday, budget-writer Michlewitz told Playbook. But he said that doesn’t rule out discussions about tax cuts in future budget cycles.

“We’re very clear that we feel that the revenue growth that we’ve seen here is an opportunity to reinvest for FY ‘23,” Michlewitz told reporters after he, House Speaker Ron Mariano and their colleagues outlined their proposed investments in early education at a child care center yesterday.

“There’s going to be other pieces in the budget that come out on Wednesday that you’re going to see reinvesting in other sectors of our economy,” Michlewitz continued. Mariano also said “no” when asked whether there would be tax breaks in the budget.

TODAY — Baker and Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito participate in a ceremonial bill signing for Nero’s Law at noon at the Yarmouth Police Department. Baker testifies on his $9.7 billion infrastructure bill at 2:30 p.m. Polito speaks at a North Shore Realtors’ legislative breakfast at 8:30 a.m. in Haverhill.

Mayor Michelle Wu hosts a Boston Marathon press conference at noon at City Hall. Sen. Ed Markey and Rep. Lori Trahan discuss federal school aid at UMass Lowell at 11 a.m. and Haverhill High School at 1 p.m. Markey highlights fare-free transit with a bus ride from Methuen to Lawrence at 3:15 p.m. State AG Maura Healey attends a Chamber of Central Mass South meeting at 12:30 p.m. in Southbridge, participates in WooSox opening day ceremonies at 2:30 p.m. at Polar Park and tours Worcester’s canal district at 3:45 p.m.

Tips? Scoops? Email me: lkashinsky@politico.com.

 

A message from PhRMA:

Thousands of scientists in Massachusetts are creating ground-breaking treatments to fight everything from the common cold to cancer. Gov. Charlie Baker’s bill would let the government set prices on medications, limiting the amount of research scientists can do to create cures. More importantly, it might make some medications harder to get. Gov. Baker: let the scientists do their jobs, don’t discriminate against patients, and stop threatening access to medications. Go to SupportMassCures.com to learn more.

 
CAMPAIGN MODE

— FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Suffolk County Sheriff Steve Tompkins is formally launching his reelection bid with a two-minute video titled “Unfinished Business,” an endorsement from the National Association of Government Employees and a kickoff event featuring Sen. Elizabeth Warren at 5:30 p.m. on April 21 at the Stockyard restaurant in Brighton. 

“From officer wellness to inmate rehabilitation to impactful community reintegration, I’ve stood side-by-side with clients in the community to help drive the conversation, provided long-term solutions and spurred definitive action on these issues,” Tompkins says in the video. “Together, over the past eight years, we’ve accomplished so much successfully making public safety work. But we still have more to do.”

Tompkins faces a Democratic primary challenge from Sandy Zamor Calixte, a former senior aide in the sheriff’s office. Calixte ended March with $26,042 in cash on hand, compared to Tompkins’ $79,160.

— NEW: Hampden County Sheriff Nick Cocchi has been endorsed for a second term by two dozen elected officials including Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno, Agawam Mayor William Sapelli, West Springfield Mayor Will Reichelt, Chicopee Mayor John Vieau , Westfield Mayor Michael McCabe, Holyoke Mayor Joshua Garcia, Hampden District Attorney Anthony Gulluni; state Sens. John Velis, Eric Lesser, Adam Gomez, Adam Hinds and Anne Gobi; and state Reps. Joseph Wagner, Bud Williams, Orlando Ramos, Angelo Puppolo, Carlos Gonzalez, Brian Ashe, Mike Finn, Jake Oliveira and Patricia Duffy.

— GETTING IN: Republican businessman and Townsend firefighter Andrew Shepherd is running for First Middlesex state representative, per a MassGOP press release.

— OPENING THE DOOR: Republican governor hopeful Geoff Diehl is opening regional campaign offices in Plymouth and Waltham.

THE LATEST NUMBERS

— “Boston-area COVID wastewater keeps climbing, Massachusetts reports 38% jump in new virus cases,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “The south of Boston’s COVID wastewater average has increased from the very low level of 92 copies per milliliter to now 414. The north of Boston’s average has gone up from 101 copies to now 397. The wastewater levels are still far below the omicron peak. Meanwhile, the state Department of Public Health reported a daily average of 1,333 COVID cases over the weekend, which was up 38% from the daily rate of 963 infections over the previous weekend.”

 

DON'T MISS ANYTHING FROM THE 2022 MILKEN INSTITUTE GLOBAL CONFERENCE: POLITICO is excited to partner with the Milken Institute to produce a special edition "Global Insider" newsletter featuring exclusive coverage and insights from the 25th annual Global Conference. This year's event, May 1-4, brings together more than 3,000 of the world’s most influential leaders, including 700+ speakers representing more than 80 countries. "Celebrating the Power of Connection" is this year's theme, setting the stage to connect influencers with the resources to change the world with leading experts and thinkers whose insight and creativity can implement that change. Whether you're attending in person or following along from somewhere else in the world, keep up with this year's conference with POLITICO’s special edition “Global Insider” so you don't miss a beat. Subscribe today.

 
 
DATELINE BEACON HILL

— “‘We have to begin somewhere.’ Facing system in crisis, Mass. House leaders propose boost for child care provider pay,” by Matt Stout, Boston Globe: “Massachusetts House leaders on Monday released a plan to dedicate an extra $40 million toward bolstering the salaries of child-care providers in Massachusetts, a three-fold increase lawmakers say will help stabilize an industry where thousands of workers still toil in poverty. … The House proposal does not include measures that would substantially cut the prices with which many families grapple. Instead, it focuses largely on the industry’s workforce, by injecting new money into worker pay and shifting how some providers are reimbursed by the state by basing the subsidies on enrollment, not attendance — a change, lawmakers say, that would stabilize their revenue.”

— “Key lawmakers like Baker health care priorities,” by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Magazine: “Key Beacon Hill lawmakers said on Monday they were supportive of Gov. Charlie Baker’s bid to tilt health care more toward behavioral and primary care, but they worried that the $1.4 billion spending mandate over three years would result in higher health care spending. At a hearing of the Legislature’s Health Care Financing Committee, Baker and Marylou Sudders, his secretary of health and human services, pushed for passage of legislation that would require health care providers to boost spending by 30 percent over three years on primary care, behavioral health, substance abuse treatment, and geriatric care.”

— “Senate hires one-time Rosenberg adviser to counsel position,” by Samantha J. Gross, Boston Globe: “Massachusetts Senate President Karen E. Spilka announced Monday that she has hired former Senate policy adviser James DiTullio to permanently fill the open role of Senate counsel. … It’s a wide-ranging role that has gained new importance in recent weeks, as Senate staff have announced their intent to form a union.”

— “Mass. lawmakers consider expanding definition of domestic abuse to include financial and mental abuse,” by Ally Jarmanning, WBUR: “Now there's a growing movement in state legislatures across the country, including in Massachusetts, to expand domestic abuse laws to help victims get help for controlling behavior and verbal abuse.”

— “Telehealth reimbursement rules pit insurers against doctors,” by Jessica Bartlett, Boston Globe: “When Governor Charlie Baker signed legislation in January 2021 mandating insurance coverage for telehealth appointments, the move seemed to resolve years of debate about how to pay for and adopt 21st-century health care technology. But delays in releasing regulations for that law have thrown insurers and doctors back into debate about which visits should be fully covered, and some say the resulting uncertainty could undo gains the industry has made in adopting telehealth over the course of the pandemic.”

— "Is a Cat Cafe Coming to Beacon Hill?" writes Marc Hurwitz. There better be, writes your Playbook scribe, who will henceforth conduct all meetings at said cat cafe should it exist.

VAX-ACHUSETTS

— “Massachusetts businesses not following COVID-19 sick time program, workers and advocates say,” by Mike Beaudet, WCVB: “Ariel Antonio Velazquez tried to call in sick to his job as a cook at a Boston restaurant in December, using the emergency paid sick leave program. ‘I wasn't able to get paid, even though I had written proof of COVID and a test,’ he said, speaking through an interpreter. He stayed home anyway and ended up losing his job. … Workers rights groups and attorneys say that and similar incidents should not have happened after the state passed the COVID-19 Temporary Emergency Paid Sick Leave Program.”

 

A message from PhRMA:

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FROM THE HUB

— “Boston community members voice concern over possible state takeover of schools,” by Jenna Russell, Boston Globe: “The roster of Bostonians opposed to a state takeover of city schools grew longer Monday, as City Council members, academic researchers, parents and teachers, the head of the Boston Teachers Union and a former member of the state Board of Education testified against the prospect of state receivership [at a council committee hearing].”

— “Music, food, Dunkin’: Here’s how Wu wants to bring people back downtown,” by Catherine Carlock, Boston Globe: “Mayor Michelle Wu of Boston is hoping the draw of live music and street art, food trucks and free Dunkin’ coffee, lawn games, and an evening beer garden will bring workers out of rectangular Zoom boxes and downtown in real life this Wednesday, and gradually back for good.”

— “Research finds stark racial disparities in how Boston responds to unhealthy conditions that trigger asthma,” by Danny McDonald, Boston Globe: “Unhealthy housing conditions that can trigger asthma are more commonplace in Boston’s poorer and more diverse neighborhoods, and the city is slower to address such problems, if at all, in those enclaves than in whiter areas, according to a striking new research paper.”

PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

— “A Boston man died after he got trapped in the door of a Red Line subway car. The T isn’t answering basic questions about what happened,” by Taylor Dolven and Travis Andersen, Boston Globe: “Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority spokesman Joe Pesaturo declined to say if Robinson Lalin was getting on or off the train. He declined to say if the T suspects the car, which was put into service more than 50 years ago, malfunctioned. He declined to say if officials think the operator — who is no longer driving trains as the investigation continues — might be at fault. The lack of information left Lalin’s family to describe a nightmarish turn of events. … Lalin’s death is the latest in a recent series of safety incidents on the MBTA system causing transit advocates to issue urgent warnings about the need for more funding and oversight of the sprawling system.”

 

INTRODUCING DIGITAL FUTURE DAILY - OUR TECHNOLOGY NEWSLETTER, RE-IMAGINED:  Technology is always evolving, and our new tech-obsessed newsletter is too! Digital Future Daily unlocks the most important stories determining the future of technology, from Washington to Silicon Valley and innovation power centers around the world. Readers get an in-depth look at how the next wave of tech will reshape civic and political life, including activism, fundraising, lobbying and legislating. Go inside the minds of the biggest tech players, policymakers and regulators to learn how their decisions affect our lives. Don't miss out, subscribe today.

 
 
THE CLARK CAUCUS

 — “How Congresswoman Katherine Clark Gets It Done,” by Andrea González-Ramírez, The Cut: “Assistant Speaker Katherine Clark doesn’t hesitate to outline the challenges members of Congress face: an unrelenting schedule, frustrating deadlocks in the legislative process, long periods of time away from family, threats on a regular basis, extreme political polarization, a steady diet of bad airport food — the list goes on. And yet, if she could travel back nine years ago, to when she first ran for Massachusetts’s Fifth Congressional District, she’d do it all over again.”

DATELINE D.C.

— “Kamala Harris, Marty Walsh and the unlikely bonds of politics,” by Matt Viser, Washington Post: “In what has become one of the more unusual pairings in the Biden administration, Vice President Harris and Marty Walsh, the secretary of Labor, have struck up a tight bond that started with policy and has evolved into a personal connection that has surprised those close to them. They talk on a weekly basis and Harris has spent more time one-on-one with Walsh than any other Cabinet member, according to aides in the vice president’s office. Walsh now has drop-in privileges at the VP’s office, allowed to swing by unannounced anytime he chooses. When Walsh recently told Harris that he was going to be a grandfather this summer, she expressed delight — and is now planning a baby shower at the U.S. Naval Observatory, her official residence, for Walsh’s stepdaughter.”

— SPOTTED: Middlesex Sheriff Peter Koutoujian at the White House on Monday as President Joe Biden unveiled new reforms aimed at curbing increasing gun violence.

 

A message from PhRMA:

Massachusetts is a booming biotech ecosystem. Its scientists and researchers are developing ground-breaking treatments to fight everything from the common cold to cancer.

Gov. Charlie Baker’s bill imposes government prices on medications, which would then limit the amount of research scientists can do to create lifesaving treatments. By setting medication prices, it also means politicians decide which patients and diseases are more important than others.

State bureaucrats should not be playing doctor. When the government imposes artificial prices from the top-down, some patients can lose access to their medications. Seniors, the disabled, and the chronically ill are most vulnerable to these policies.

Gov. Baker: let the scientists and doctors do their jobs, don’t discriminate against patients, and stop threatening access to medications. Go to SupportMassCures.com to learn more.

 
THE LOCAL ANGLE

— ABORTION ACCESS: As advocates prepare for the possibility that SCOTUS could disrupt abortion access, Reproductive Equity Now is rolling out its “New England Abortion Care Guide,” an online portal through which pregnant people can find information about abortion care across the six New England states. It’s the Massachusetts-based group’s first regional project since relaunching with a broader reach last year.

— “Fired Massachusetts State Police eye court to win jobs back,” by Joe Dwinell, Boston Herald: “Some of the dozen State Police officers fired for violating the governor’s vaccine mandate say they are lawyering up. … The list of staties let go includes the son of an officer tied up in the overtime scandal and others who have said in the past they dreamed of becoming troopers to follow in the footsteps of their kin.”

— “Two Starbucks stores in Boston area unanimously secure union wins, the first in Massachusetts,” by Tori Bedford, GBH News: “Joined by union organizers and supporters from around the state, baristas from Starbucks locations in Coolidge Corner and Allston erupted in cheers and embraced one another as election results were announced by an official from the National Labor Relations Board: 14-0 in Brookline and 16-0 in Allston.”

— “Grafton resident files federal lawsuit over alleged civil rights violations during talk at police HQ,” by Maureen Sullivan, Grafton News: “A complaint about flashing police cruiser lights has led to an accusation of civil rights violations and a lawsuit. … According to a report within the lawsuit, [Robert] Holmes said he found it ‘highly troubling’ that he was told by the dispatcher he could not speak to the on-duty police sergeant without providing identification, ‘...since I was not in custody and I was just a civilian [filing] a complaint against the department.’"

— “South Coast area colleges changing courses, shifting strategies to boost declining enrollment,” by Sawyer Smook-Pollitt, New Bedford Light: “Specific majors and departments at South Coast universities are seeing a decline in liberal arts enrollment while interest shifts to fields that have a more reliable track to the workforce.”

SPOTTED — Gov. Charlie Baker collecting signatures for fellow Republican Anthony Amore’s state auditor bid over the weekend.

TRANSITIONS — Allie Polaski is now press secretary and digital director for the House Rules Committee under Rep. Jim McGovern.

— Stephanie Bensadoun is now communications director for MassDems. Allison Mitchell, the previous comms director, has joined the attorney general’s office as digital director.

WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Kathryn Alexander, comms director/senior adviser for Assistant House Speaker Katherine Clark, and Mike Brown, a dentist, welcomed Nolan Alexander Brown on April 2. Pic … Another pic

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to Romneycare, Dan Manning and Ilya Rasner. Happy belated to the Boston Herald’s Meghan Ottolini, who celebrated Monday.

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.

 

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Lisa Kashinsky @lisakashinsky

 

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