Thursday, December 8, 2022

PRISONER SWAP

QUESTION: Did any of you criticize the Trump administration for trading a American Grad student held in Iran for a Nuclear Scientist?
In 2019, Iran freed Xiyue Wang, an American graduate student who had been imprisoned in Tehran for more than three years on suspicion of being a spy, in exchange for Masoud Soleimani, an Iranian scientist who was charged with violating American trade sanctions. Mr. Wang had been charged with espionage and locked in Evin Prison. U.S. officials denied that Mr. Wang was a spy.
DID ANY OF YOU COMPLAIN ABOUT THIS EXCHANGE IN APRIL
Trevor R. Reed — an ailing former U.S. Marine held for two years in Russia on what appear to be bogus charges of assault — was released in April in a prisoner swap involving a Russian pilot convicted of cocaine trafficking charges. The exchange came as President Vladimir V. Putin announced the beginning of his invasion of Ukraine.
Principles are a line in the sand you do not cross. This reminds me of the whole Harambe stupidity where everyone was pissed that the ape got shot instead of the child being dead. Ass fucking backward it is.

 





JARED KUSHNER





Jared Kushner’s family business dealings under congressional scrutiny
Two House committees are finally digging into the incredibly shady $1.4 billion bailout of Kushner's disastrous 666 Fifth Avenue apartment building — and whether or not Jared influenced government policy to help secure the loan from mysterious benefactors, suspected to be Qatar.

https://news.yahoo.com/jared-kushner-family-business-dealings-203600375.html



Kushner family's Jersey City project controversial even before China scrutiny
https://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/kushner-jersey-city-project-controversial-china-scrutiny-article-1.3151306

Jared Kushner’s family business dealings under congressional scrutiny
https://peer2peernews.com/feed/311104

Jared Kushner's shady business dealings evoke the nepotism and corruption of America's Gilded Age
https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opinion/jared-kushner-s-shady-business-dealings-evoke-nepotism-corruption-america-ncna852781

Kushner’s Business Dealings
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/01/opinion/kushner-business-dealings.html



Jared Kushner's Family Firm Accused Of Pushing Out Tenants
https://www.cbsnews.com/newyork/news/jared-kushners-family-firm-accused-of-pushing-out-tenants/


Drama Over The Kushner Family Business Once Landed Jared's Dad In Prison
https://www.bustle.com/p/who-is-jared-kushners-dad-charles-the-family-business-has-been-under-investigation-before-8663429

Jared Kushner
https://www.cbsnews.com/newyork/tag/jared-kushner/

Exploitable? | Jared Kushner’s Business Interests in Israel Revealed in Full
https://www.haaretz.com/us-news/2018-02-28/ty-article/.premium/jared-kushners-business-interests-in-israel-revealed-in-full/0000017f-f45a-d487-abff-f7fe3c500000


 





DECEMBER 6, 2022 HEATHER COX RICHARDSON

 December 6, 2022 (Tuesday)

Today, President Joe Biden traveled to Arizona to highlight how the CHIPS & Science Act is bringing innovation and jobs to the country. He visited a facility that Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) is building north of Phoenix, where he met with chief executive officers from several companies and with lawmakers. TSMC has recently committed to investing $40 billion in Arizona to produce advanced semiconductors, the very sort of investment the CHIPS & Science Act was designed to attract.
Biden noted that this investment will bring more than 10,000 construction jobs and 10,000 jobs in high tech, and he emphasized that the Democrats’ investment in the nation’s economy is paying off. The country has added jobs in every month of Biden’s administration—10.5 million of them—and exports are up, helping the economy to grow at 2.9% last quarter. And Walmart’s chief executive officer yesterday said that prices are coming down for toys, clothing, and sports equipment, while the chief executive officer of Kroger says prices for fresh food products are also easing.
But, Biden said, he is “most excited” about the fact that “people are starting to feel a sense of optimism as they see the impact of the achievements in their own lives. It’s going to accelerate in months ahead, and it’s part of the broad story about the economy we’re building that works for everyone: one…that positions Americans to win the economic competition of the 21st century.”
​​“Where is it written that America can’t lead the world once again in manufacturing?” Biden said. “We’re proving it can.”
Biden has apparently tried to undercut the radical right by ignoring its demands and demonstrating an America in which everyone works together to solve our biggest problems. His trip to Arizona was in keeping with that program, with White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre telling reporters that his trip was about “the American manufacturing boom we’re seeing all across the country thanks to, again, his economic policies… [and] in large part thanks to the CHIPS and Science Act the President signed into law—and a historic—let’s not forget—a bipartisan piece of legislation.”
But reporters immediately asked if President Biden would visit the border in Arizona, bowing to a right-wing talking point. Jean-Pierre responded that Biden would not engage in a political “stunt,” as the Republicans have been doing, and was instead going to Arizona “to talk about an important initiative that’s going to change Americans’ lives, specifically in Arizona.”
The follow-up? “If the President is not going to make time to visit the border during [this] trip…, will he do it…in the new year?”
The news from the right-wing faction in the nation often seems to steal the oxygen from the sober, stable politicians trying to address real issues and doing so with more than a little success.
Today, fewer eyes were on the $40 billion investment in Arizona than were on the verdict in the trial of the Trump Organization and the Trump Payroll Corporation. Late this afternoon, the jury found the two entities guilty on all counts for a range of crimes surrounding the company’s payments to its senior employees through apartments, school tuition, cars, and so on, to avoid taxes. The company was charged with scheming to defraud, criminal tax fraud, falsifying business records, and conspiracy. The key witness was Trump Organization chief financial officer Allen Weisselberg, who pleaded guilty to tax fraud, grand larceny, and conspiracy last August and received a reduced sentence in exchange for testifying against the company (but not against former president Trump or members of his family).
Trump promptly issued a statement. He blamed everything on Weisselberg and promised to appeal.
House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol chair Bennie Thompson (D-MS) told reporters today the committee will make criminal referrals to the Department of Justice. Those referrals, a source told Sara Murray, Annie Grayer, and Zachary Cohen of CNN, “will be focused on the main organizers and leaders of the attacks.” The Department of Justice is engaged in its own investigation, of course, but such a referral places a marker from a bipartisan group of lawmakers—many of whom are lawyers—indicating that they believe crimes have been committed.
Special counsel Jack Smith is now in charge of investigating the events surrounding January 6 as well as Trump’s theft of government documents, and news broke today that on November 22, just two days after he began work, he sent grand-jury subpoenas to officials in Arizona, Michigan, and Wisconsin, asking for all communications officials had with Trump, his campaign, or many individuals associated with the attempt to overturn the 2020 presidential election.
Meanwhile, the Biden-Harris administration continues to govern. Tomorrow, Second Gentleman Douglas Emhoff will convene a roundtable discussion with leaders from 13 Jewish groups from across the country to discuss the rise in antisemitism. Mr. Emhoff is the first Jewish individual married to a president or a vice president, and he has called out the escalating antisemitism as the former president elevates white supremacists.
“I do not see this just as a Jewish issue,” Emhoff said. “This is an issue for all of us. Because we’ve seen this before. This is how it started 70 years ago. So I don’t want it to feel normal. I don’t want people to think, ‘Well it’s just words, it’s just Kanye.’ No. This matters.”
And finally, tonight, as I finished up this letter, the news networks called the Georgia Senate runoff race for Democratic senator Raphael Warnock, giving the Democrats a 51–49 majority in the Senate. This means that the Democrats will have the power to issue subpoenas without getting Republicans to sign on to them. Greg Sargent of the Washington Post pointed out a few weeks ago that Democrats could use this power to demonstrate what actual congressional oversight should look like, compared to House Republicans’ threatened investigation of Hunter Biden, perhaps drowning out the Republicans’ tactic of endless “investigations” to tarnish their opponents.
After the results came out, Vox senior correspondent Ian Millhiser tweeted: “Huh, so Democrats managed to pick up a Senate seat in a cycle where they should have been crushed. Consider the possibility that Joe Biden is very good at his job.”


#TheyKnew who Trump Really Was All Along. Conservatives in their own words.



All These Conservatives Knew Who Trump Really Was All Along: Lindsey Graham Ted Cruz Rand Paul Marco Rubio Nikki Haley Kellyanne Conway Mike Pompeo Glenn Beck Rick Perry Susan Collins THEY CALLED HIM THESE THINGS... liar, narcissist, race baiting, xenophobic, religious bigot, mean spiritedness, con artist, orange faced windbag, kook, unfit for office, AND MORE... Sources: LINDSEY GRAHAM (1-2): 12/8/15, CNN, New Day TED CRUZ (1-2): 5/3/16, CNN RAND PAUL (1): 8/11/15, FOX NEWS, The O’Reilly Factor NIKKI HALEY: 2/29/16, MSNBC MARCO RUBIO (1): 2/26/16, FOX NEWS KELLYANNE CONWAY: 2/10/16, CNN MIKE POMPEO: 3/5/2016, The Kansas Presidential Caucuses GLENN BECK: 8/25/16, MSNBC, The Last Word RICK PERRY: 7/22/15, CBSN SUSAN COLLINS: 8/9/16, CNN RAND PAUL (2): 1/26/16, The Nightly Show, Comedy Central MARCO RUBIO (2): 2/26/16, CBS This Morning LINDSEY GRAHAM (3): 2/17/16, FOX NEWS


MORE stolen classified documents found at Trump's Florida property

 


In a development that is almost too much believe, even more stolen classified documents were just discovered at Trump's Florida property. But it's not the fact that Trump is still unlawfully possessing and concealing stolen materials that is so remarkable. Rather it is the revelation that the materials were found by Donald Trump's defense team - presumably the same defense team that previously certified, in writing, that all such documents had been returned to the the rightful owner - the federal government. It's difficult to understand how law enforcement authorities continue to decline to take overt law enforcement steps to recover ALL documents stolen by Trump and otherwise hold him accountable for the crimes he has not only committed but bragged about publicly. This video discusses why these latest developments are so troubling.




🚨 Trump now poised for WORSE news after guilty verdict

 

 


The Legal Breakdown episode 6: @GlennKirschner2 joins to discuss the Trump Organization's guilty verdict, why Trump wasn't named as a defendant in the case, and the impact this verdict will have on the upcoming New York Attorney General's case against the Trump Org.


Congress launches probe of Kushner's shadiest scheme

 

OD Action:

It's Our Democracy!

Demand the Justice Department investigate Jared Kushner for shady investments from the Saudis!

Today’s Action: Stand with striking journalists and don’t read the New York Times today!

President Biden secures release of Britney Griner in high-profile prisoner swap with Russia

Today's Top Stories:


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Jared Kushner’s family business dealings under congressional scrutiny

Two House committees are finally digging into the incredibly shady $1.4 billion bailout of Kushner's disastrous 666 Fifth Avenue apartment building — and whether or not Jared influenced government policy to help secure the loan from mysterious benefactors, suspected to be Qatar. 

AND THERE'S THIS:

Kushner family business submitted false paperwork with New York City over rent-regulated apartments


https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/kushner-family-business-submitted-false-paperwork-city-article-1.3882159

Take Action: Indict Ivanka Trump!


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Sean Hannity utterly humiliates himself on air trying to protect Trump

Trump's been an absolute disaster for the GOP's electoral prospects for three straight elections, but you can always count on his bootlickers at Fox News to keep carrying his foul water.

Take Action: Don't let Fox raise cable fees!


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Trump screws over GOP responding to Hunter Biden laptop saga

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: Not a smart move.


Supreme Court leans toward limiting judicial scrutiny of US elections
It appears American democracy as we know it is in its final days, as the right-wing Federalist Society puppets on the Supreme Court indicated that yes, they would be willing to endorse a legally unsound crackpot interpretation of legislature power that would prevent the judiciary from holding any authority over setting rules for elections. This would allow red states to disenfranchise wide swaths of voters and ensure our nation never has a legitimate presidential election again.

Take Action: Confirm progressive champion Gigi Sohn to the FCC!


The sponsor of Florida's "Don't Say Gay" bill indicted on federal charges of money laundering and wire fraud related to COVID relief loans
It's beyond parody how the most self-righteous culture warriors on the right are regularly exposed as the perpetrators of some kind of preposterous flagrant corruption. Florida State Rep Joseph Harding has been indicted for siphoning hundreds of thousands of dollars from the Small Business Administration and into dormant companies, which he hid through falsified bank statements. He also lied to the SBA, meaning he now faces 35 years in prison for his crimes. Couldn't have happened to a nicer guy.


Gay lawmaker receives chilling bomb threat accusing him of "grooming" kids
The right-wing terror campaign against the LGBTQ community is escalating at a frenzied pace, and so are the inevitable threats of violence that accompanies anything the right-wing does. Gay California lawmaker Scott Wiener has received not one but two death threats against his home and his office, accused of being a "pedophile" and a "groomer" — the same terminology used by most vocal proponents of the anti-LGBTQ attacks, leaving little questions as to who is responsible for inciting these threats. Tucker Carlson, Chaya Raichik, and the rest of their despicable ilk are a clear and present danger to countless innocent LGBTQ Americans.

Take Action: Tell corporations to suspend all their Twitter advertising!


Germany arrests 25 people over far-right coup plot
German law enforcement busted a deeply bizarre and unhinged terror cell of ex-military members that drew inspiration from the QAnon conspiracy and the far-right Reichsbürger movement and planned to overthrow the government and restore the German monarchy. Their usurper of choice is a 71-year-old self-styled aristocrat who aspired to become "Prince Heinrich XIII," but will soon be, uh, ruling from his prison cell.


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Trump suggests terminating U.S. Constitution amid GOP support in presidential bid

OD Action Partner: His baseless claims never succeeded in court, so now he throws his weight violently around in hopes of winning in the court of public opinion and destroying our country.


Defense bill heralds bonanza for US war industry
The latest military defense bill, which has ballooned to a staggering $857 billion — $45 billion more than the White House requested — is a bloated, morally repugnant handout to the blood profiteers in the military-industrial complex. The lion's share of this money goes not to our troops but to just six companies, which are regularly handed no-bid contracts on a silver platter. American weapons will continue to flow to every corner of the world, and the American people continue to be neglected by a government entirely submissive to the rapacious demands of the national security state.


Rep. Gosar deletes tweet backing Trump's call to "terminate" parts of Constitution
Arizona's Paul Gosar once again proved himself to be a seditious little worm by publicly supporting Trump's call to "terminate" the Constitution — and then proved himself a coward by deleting it after sparking an outcry.


100+ groups urge Congress to back Bernie Sanders' Yemen war powers resolution
Sen. Sanders is once again pressing to end the US involvement in Saudi Arabia's barbaric war in Yemen with a revived war powers resolution, which passed along bipartisan lines but was vetoed by Trump in 2019. A coalition of more than 100 advocacy, faith-based, and news organizations have joined Sanders, urging Congress to finally end US participation in a seven-year-conflict that has killed an estimated 377,000 people, mostly by deliberate mass starvation induced by a Saudi blockade.


New York Times union workers planning Dec. 8 walkout, rally over pay
More than 1,100 New York Times workers are planning a full-day walkout and afternoon rally today amid ongoing negotiations with newspaper management about pay and healthcare contributions. They're fighting for a $65,000 salary floor and more company contributions to the healthcare fund.


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C'mon, man, what are we doing here

DEEP DIVE: Right-wing terror campaign against LGBTQ Americans

Hope...

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Today’s Action: Stand with striking journalists and don’t read the New York Times today!

More than 1,100 union staffers are preparing to walk out of the New York Times and go on strike for a full 24 hours today, as ongoing negotiations with the newspaper’s management have failed to produce an acceptable contract more than 20 months after the previous agreement expired.

According to The NewsGuild of New York, certain desks could lose up to 90% of their workforce during the strike. The historic move comes after a year-and-a-half of failed negotiations, during which the union has accused the newspaper of misrepresenting their contract demands and rejecting to offer adequate wages.

The strike aims to illustrate just how necessary these journalists’ work is to one of the world’s most respected newspapers and gain support for their very reasonable demands of a $65,000 salary floor and greater company contributions to their healthcare fund.

Reporter Jenna Vrentas announced that the unionized workers are “are ready to take a stand together, for each other and for journalists everywhere.” NYT management predictably responded to the imminent walkout not with a reasonable offer, but with a company-wide memo announcing that any workers who take part in the strike will not be compensated.

We must stand in solidarity with the striking workers at the New York Times and against these anti-American, union-busting tactics. Don’t cross the picket line. Avoid any media from the New York Times today! Yes, that includes breaking your Wordle streak! Our democracy needs journalists, and they need our support!

PS — Please don't forget to sign the petition to demand the Justice Department investigate Jared Kushner for shady investments from the Saudis, and be sure to follow us on TwitterFacebook, and Instagram.

 @advocacy | 1002 Hull St., Louisville, KY 40204 




POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Remaking a Cabinet

 

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Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY

Presented by

NextEra Energy

UNDER CONSTRUCTION — Maura Healey remains mum on who’s filling her Cabinet, but the governor-elect has dropped hints along the way of how she plans to restructure it.

Healey pledged on the campaign trail to create a Cabinet-level climate chief who would coordinate efforts between myriad state and quasi-public agencies to meet her goals, which include achieving a 100-percent clean electricity supply by 2030 and fully electrifying public transportation by 2040.

She also intends to add a housing secretary to her Cabinet, a move that effectively splits the current secretary of Housing and Economic Development role into two.

Some of Healey’s proposed changes are sub-secretary-level. She’s called for a new transportation safety chief and the addition of a second deputy general manager for the MBTA focused on capital planning, who would join the existing deputy general manager of operations.

Now health care advocates are suggesting another new role: a secretary of equity. The Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts Foundation and Manatt Health are calling for the Cabinet-level secretary and accompanying executive office of equity to help reduce racial and ethnic inequities in health care access, coverage and quality. It’s part of a broader report on health care priorities for the next governor that also offers steps Healey can take to tackle workforce shortages and the youth mental health crisis, and to improve access and affordability.

Community leaders and electeds of color in Boston are also hoping Healey will add more diversity to the Cabinet that, under Gov. Charlie Baker, is largely white, the Bay State Banner’s Yawu Miller reports. Those advocates, Miller writes, see signs of hope in the diversity of the policy committee co-chairs on Healey’s transition team, half of whom are people of color.

GOOD THURSDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. The final playbooks of the year are rapidly approaching. Have any tips or scoops you’ve been sitting on? Now’s the time to email me: lkashinsky@politico.com .

TODAY — Baker and Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito join a housing roundtable at 10 a.m. at UMass Lowell’s Haverhill campus. Baker participates in his final “Ask the Governor” segment on GBH’s “Boston Public Radio” at noon. Baker, Polito, Healey and Treasurer Deb Goldberg participate in a Gold Star families tree dedication at 2 p.m. at the State House. Healey kicks off her AG office’s “Addressing Hate in School Sports” conference at 9 a.m. at the TD Garden. Boston Mayor Michelle Wu attends a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the BU Center for Computing & Data Sciences at 4 p.m.

A message from NextEra Energy:

Seabrook Station has provided Massachusetts with low-cost, clean, reliable energy for over 30 years, reducing carbon emissions regionally by approximately 4 million tons per year. Nuclear energy is Massachusetts’ most cost-effective and essential tool to combat climate change.

 
DATELINE BEACON HILL

— “By appointing more than half the state’s judges, Baker has reshaped the judiciary from the top down,” by Matt Stout, Boston Globe: “As [Gov. Charlie] Baker prepares to leave office, perhaps nowhere will his reach be felt longer than in the judiciary. In nearly eight years, the Republican has appointed nearly 60 percent of the state’s 418 justices, installing judges who will oversee murder trials, reshape constitutional law, and unknot thorny civil litigation for years, if not decades, to come.”

— “Baker issues three more pardons,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine: “After failing to issue a single pardon or commutation in his first seven years in office, Gov. Charlie Baker continued to use his final months in office to wield his pardon power. Baker on Wednesday recommended three more pardons, building on the eight pardons he issued in October and seven in November. He also commuted the sentences of two men convicted of first-degree murder in January 2022. The three latest pardons were all for old offenses and were recommended by the state’s Advisory Board of Pardons. They still need approval by the Governor’s Council before they go into effect. The pardon recipients are John Austin, Phillip Hagar, and Edmund Mulvehill. ”

— “Mass. loan repayment program for health workers sees ‘huge demand,’ official says,” by Alison Kuznitz, MassLive: “A newly launched loan repayment program for behavioral health and primary care workers in Massachusetts generated ‘huge demand’ this week as an online application portal opened, according to one of the key officials administering the program. MA Repay, designed to retain exhausted and financially strained health professionals following the COVID-19 pandemic, will provide up to 2,000 awards ranging from $12,500 to $300,000. In return for the repayment awards, health care workers must stay at their current job or another eligible institution for four to five years.”

— “Frustrated regulators delay vote on sports betting at MGM Springfield,” by Chris Van Buskirk, MassLive: “Gaming regulators delayed a vote on approving a sports betting application from MGM Springfield Wednesday after they expressed frustration with how the document was intertwined with another submission from BetMGM, an online sportsbook that will provide many of the wagering services for the casino.”

— “State regulators cite developers over gas violations,” by Christian M. Wade, Eagle-Tribune: “State utility regulators have fined more than a dozen real estate developers for violating state and federal laws on natural gas pipeline safety. The state Department of Public Utilities last month issued $130,000 in fines to the developers, including Townhomes of Beverly, Haverhill-based Lesley Management Inc. and Roxbury-based Cruz Companies, after they failed to respond to alleged gas pipeline violations on properties they own.”

— “First Lady Lauren Baker comments on Charlie Baker’s political future,” by Alison Kuznitz, MassLive: “Gov. Baker has ruled out the possibility of running for president in 2024, but his wife said a future in public office could be on the horizon. ‘I think he really feels called to this work,’ Lauren Baker said. ‘It’s not like he’s driven to have another elected position, though it’s the work that he really enjoys.' ... For now, the first lady forecast the outgoing governor will ‘get another job, and he’s going to do something different, but he really doesn’t know what that is yet.’”

— Related: “More than 1,000 readers voted, they want Charlie Baker in the White House,” by Zipporah Osei, Boston.com.

 

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FROM THE HUB

— "Parent satisfaction with Boston Public Schools is falling, new poll finds," by Diane Adame, GBH News: "A new survey released by MassINC Polling Group on Thursday found only 32% of parents said they were 'very satisfied' overall with Boston Public Schools, down 10 percentage points from last year. Seven in 10 parents also said they were concerned about frequent substitute teachers, late buses and their children’s physical and emotional well-being while at school. This poll is the fifth in a series of surveys conducted by MassINC on parents’ overall satisfaction with BPS. This first poll, conducted in July and August 2021, found that 42% of parents were 'very satisfied' with BPS. Since then, that number has declined to 32%."

Nearly a quarter of parents say their kids have fallen behind academically since the pandemic began, and more than a third of say the schools could do more to help students catch up. The poll of 850 BPS parents was conducted Nov. 16-28.

— “Appeals panel hears Boston parents' fight against exam school admissions policy,” by Max Larkin, WBUR: “Wednesday's hearing was the latest indication of ongoing bitterness between the city and some parents in the struggle over the policy changes designed to foster diversity at the prestigious public schools.”

TRANSITION TIME

— A DIFFERENT KIND OF INAUGURAL BALL: Where do a former professional basketball player and a former college basketball player hold their inaugural celebration as governor and lieutenant governor? The TD Garden, of course. Gov.-elect Maura Healey and Lt. Gov.-elect Kim Driscoll ’s fete will follow their swearing-in ceremony on Jan. 5. The theme: “Moving the ball forward,” a nod to both their baller pasts and their historic election.

— EYES EMOJI: Within days of Healey’s election as attorney general in 2014, people were pitching her for governor. A little over a month since she was elected to that job, Healey is already being viewed as a potential “longer-term leader” for her party nationally, my POLITICO colleague Zach Montellaro writes in his dispatch from the Democratic Governors Association meeting in New Orleans . Healey wasn’t there, but she was talked about as a face for the future along with several other newcomers and newly reelected governors.

 

PROPAGANDA: A message from NextEra Energy:

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PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

— “Buried rail car turned up in GLX excavation,” by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Magazine: “The team that constructed the Green Line extension to Medford and Somerville encountered all sorts of obstacles over the last four years, including unexpected bedrock, contaminated soil, ground water, and, perhaps the most challenging of all, COVID. But the most unusual surprise was buried under tons of dirt near what is now the new East Somerville Station on the line from Lechmere to Tufts University in Medford. ‘We encountered a buried rail car — like an old freight train flatbed,’ said John Dalton, the MBTA’s Green Line extension program manager.”

— “Biotech workers driving more, using the T less,” by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Magazine: “Surveys of life science employees by MassBio in July 2019 and November 2022 indicate workers are now driving more and using public transportation less. The survey results mirror what the MBTA itself is finding, that many riders who stopped taking the T during the pandemic are not returning.”

DAY IN COURT

— “SJC judges pose dismissal of 27,000 tainted drunk driving convictions,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine: “The Supreme Judicial Court on Wednesday heard arguments in a case that will decide how the courts should deal with approximately 27,000 drunk driving cases. Justices quizzed attorneys on whether they should dismiss every case or give every defendant an opportunity to seek a retrial. They questioned what should happen with the most serious cases, like motor vehicle homicide. They also analyzed the comparison with the notorious drug lab scandals, in which two chemists admitted to misconduct affecting drug evidence. … The case arises from years of litigation over the use of a particular breathalyzer test, the Alcotest 9510.”

— “Former firefighter sues Boston, alleging racist handling of COVID exemption,” by Chris Van Buskirk, MassLive: “A Muslim former firefighter in Boston has sued the city Tuesday for $8.3 million after officials rejected a religious exemption request for COVID-19 testing and vaccination policies in 2021 and placed him on unpaid administrative leave for non-compliance, according to a lawsuit filed in Suffolk County Superior Court.”

— "Judge unable to drop felony charges in City Councilor's love-triangle case," by Jo C. Goode, Herald News: "City Councilor Pam Laliberte’s attempt to get two felony obstruction and harassment charges dropped from her criminal case were dashed, for now, after a District Court judge denied her request."

 

POLITICO AT CES 2023 : We are bringing a special edition of our Digital Future Daily newsletter to Las Vegas to cover CES 2023. The newsletter will take you inside the largest and most influential technology event on the planet, featuring every major and emerging industry in the technology ecosystem gathered in one place. The newsletter runs from Jan. 5-7 and will focus on the public policy related aspects of the event. Sign up today to receive exclusive coverage of CES 2023.

 
 
FROM THE DELEGATION

— “Senate Democrats just won subpoena power. That includes Elizabeth Warren,” by Tal Kopan and Jess Bidgood, Boston Globe: “Senator Raphael Warnock’s victory in the Georgia runoff cemented the Democrats’ 51st seat in the Senate but delivers a lot more than just a one-vote cushion. The shift from a 50-seat majority to 51, while seemingly insignificant, opens up a whole range of possibilities to exercise oversight authority — especially for watchdog-minded senators such as the two Democrats from Massachusetts.”

FROM THE 413

— “Monterey town clerk resigns alleging retaliation from officials after filing a whistleblower lawsuit,” by Heather Bellow, Berkshire Eagle: “In her Nov. 30 resignation letter to the Select Board, [Town Clerk Terry] Walker said the day after a story appeared in The Eagle about her federal lawsuit, Select Board member Susan Cooper identified six 'perceived' work violations by Walker. Cooper submitted them for action against Walker by the board that could include firing.”

THE LOCAL ANGLE

— “DOJ hammers handling of Whitey Bulger leading up to killing,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “A Department of Justice probe into notorious mobster James ‘Whitey’ Bulger’s 2018 jailhouse slaying identified ‘serious deficiencies’ in the prison-transfer process, with evidence that various inmates knew the ailing crime boss was en route to a West Virginia lock-up before someone whacked him within 24 hours.”

— “Some Chelsea residents got $400 a month, no strings attached. Here’s what happened next,” by Janelle Nanos, Boston Globe: “Chelsea Eats was crafted out of chaos. But the lessons from the city’s COVID-era effort to give needy families $400 a month, no strings attached, are proving to be a boon for Harvard University researchers seeking to explore guaranteed income as a solution to poverty. … The data, [Jeffrey] Liebman said, suggest helping needy people with direct cash can have multiple benefits, from helping them eat better to having them feel more connected to the community.”

— “Melrose city councilor allegedly targeted in anti-Muslim incident,” by Craig LeMoult, GBH News: “Police in Melrose are investigating an incident last weekend in which a Muslim Melrose city councilor was allegedly the victim of racist harassment at a gas station in the city. The Massachusetts branch of the Council on American Islamic Relations is calling for a hate crime probe into the incident.”

MEANWHILE IN RHODE ISLAND

— “3rd RI man arrested for role in Jan. 6 Capitol riot,” by Tim White, WPRI: “William Cotton, 53, of Hopkinton, was arrested Wednesday by the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force and charged with four federal counts including: entering a restricted building or ground, disorderly and disruptive conduct in a restricted building, disorderly conduct in a Capitol building or grounds and parading, and demonstrating or picketing in a Capitol building.”

A message from NextEra Energy:

A Beacon Research poll of Massachusetts’ voters conducted in July 2022 showed that a majority support the use of clean, low-cost, carbon-emissions free nuclear energy to fight climate change. Over 70% of informed voters support including nuclear energy to fight rising energy costs and climate change.

 
HEARD ‘ROUND THE BUBBLAH

NEW HORSE RACE ALERT: BLOCKCHAIN MELODY — Massachusetts Playbook and The Horse Race alum Stephanie Murray, now a reporter for The Block, rejoins the pod to talk hosts Jennifer Smith and Lisa Kashinsky through the wild world of crypto. Steve Koczela shares the findings from the latest MassINC poll of BPS parents. Subscribe and listen on iTunes and SoundCloud .

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to Scott Ferson, founder of Liberty Square Group, Jeremy D’Aloisio of Sen. Ed Markey’s office, Margaret Geller, Sophia Narrett and Honey Sharp (h/t son Daniel Lippman).

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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