Friday, December 23, 2022

POLITICO NIGHTLY: The year’s best political movies and television shows

 

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BY CALDER MCHUGH AND KATHERINE LONG

Tom Cruise as Capt. Pete “Maverick” Mitchell in “Top Gun: Maverick.”

Tom Cruise as Capt. Pete “Maverick” Mitchell in “Top Gun: Maverick.” | Paramount Pictures

NIGHTLY FLIX — Political junkies had a lot to watch this year. Aside from wall-to-wall coverage of the midterm elections, there was the summer spectacle of the Jan. 6 Committee hearings (which one critic named as one of his top TV shows of 2022 ).

But wide-angle shots of congressional hearings and talking heads predicting doom for Dems weren’t the only political content — on the small screen and the big — this year. Satires of the rich, meditations on cancel culture, depictions of revolution and American exceptionalism were everywhere we looked.

In that spirit, here is Nightly’s list of movies and television shows that said something interesting about our politics and values — and, most importantly, kept us entertained.

TárA beautifully designed epic from director Todd Field, Tár tells the (fictional) story of famous conductor Lydia Tár (Cate Blanchett) as she spirals out of control while rehearsing Mahler’s 5th Symphony. It might sound like a tough sit, but it’s a dynamic, darkly funny look at how fame, and the power that comes with it, can lead to evil, destruction and madness. Tár imagines herself to be above the dominant discourse online or in classrooms, but as the political dance that comes with fame changes, she plows forward without regard for others or how she might be held to account. The film will surely spark discussions about cancel culture, but it’s also about power, abuse and the relationship between boss and worker or teacher and student. It’s such a realistic depiction that it had people on the internet asking whether Lydia Tár is a real person .

AndorDisney’s need to milk Star Wars content and ride the nostalgia train has made for a handful of lackluster shows, such as “The Book of Boba Fett” and “Obi-Wan Kenobi.” But “Andor” is a breath of fresh air. The basis of the Star Wars franchise has always been political, and “Andor” dares to explore the quotidian intricacies of both the Empire and the Rebellion in a way that previous films and series have avoided. In this prequel to the “Rogue One” film, the main character Cassian Andor (Diego Luna) practically stumbles upon the Rebel cause after initially spurning the fight against the Empire. We see the ways in which the Empire travels from planet to planet as unforgiving imperialists, and how their stifling, authoritarian reign impacts the financial stability and health of those it preys upon. The reason “Andor” succeeds is because it ties back to the original Star Wars message that people everywhere are surviving however they can, and that very little is black and white.

NOPEDirector Jordan Peele’s latest effort doesn’t deal as explicitly in the political as either of his first two films. Unlike, say, 2017’s “Get Out,” there are no characters proudly proclaiming they’d vote for Obama for a third time if they could. Without spoiling too much of the plot, “NOPE” asks questions about what it means to put “the other” on display. What seems like an alien life-form arrives around a farm; how each character deals with this — treating it as something to be feared, something to be conquered, something to be gawked at — speaks to their own motivations and how Americans deal with anything they deem unfamiliar or foreign.

The White LotusAccording to “White Lotus” creator Mike White, while the first season of the HBO dramedy focused on wealth, season two was all about sexual politics. There was plenty of time to watch rich people cavorting around Sicily, but a sharper focus on interpersonal dynamics took the show to new heights in its sophomore effort. In one episode, a couple horrifies their friends with their pronouncement that they no longer watch the news — and may not have voted. “It’s just too depressing,” Daphne (Meghann Fahy) says. What the characters don’t realize is that they’re distillations of the privileged, clueless rich themselves. White creates spot-on depictions of everything from the desires of “banker and tech bros” to the white male guilt of Albie (Adam DiMarco), a son of affluence who wants nothing but to prove that he’s different from his misogynistic father and grandfather. All of the guests at The White Lotus are in search of some kind of salvation, and willing to take a wrecking ball to the people and places around them to find it.

The MenuThere was no shortage of “eat the rich” satires on screen this year, including “Bodies, Bodies, Bodies,” “Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery” and, to an extent, “The White Lotus.” “The Menu,” though, takes things to new heights — guests at an immersive restaurant experience on an island are treated to a meal that quickly turns sinister. The restaurant industry critiques are a bit sharper than the political ones, and director Mark Mylod has a sense for how to move the camera to depict the wealthy guests at their most callous, thanks to his time working on “Succession.”

Top Gun: MaverickThere’s little that’s more American than “Top Gun.” “Maverick,” the sequel to the 1986 classic, did big business in the box office by playing the hits, so to speak — a bunch of (good looking) fighter pilots who believe in service to their country while also having some fun. As Derek Robertson wrote about the movie in POLITICO Magazine this summer , “after years of Twitter, Trump, Covid, social upheaval, and an ever-more-bland, oppressive pop-cultural sameness, a large number of Americans are desperate for permission to collectively feel good about our life, country and culture, without any of the attendant political baggage.”

AtlantaIn its four-season run, “Atlanta” pushed the boundaries of classic storytelling. What began as a drama about an up-and-coming rapper in Atlanta ended with episodes in seasons three and four — both out this year — about cancel culture, how money and power corrupts, and death and remembrance. Throughout it all, showrunner and star Donald Glover imbued a nuanced understanding of race in America like nothing else on television. “Atlanta” was never simple.

KimiA fast-paced, frenetic thriller from Steven Soderbergh, “Kimi,” which stars Zoë Kravitz in the titular role, is a pandemic-era drama that actually works. Kimi, an agoraphobe whose anxiety has only gotten worse throughout Covid, hears a message during her work (from home) on a new smart speaker from a woman who claims she’s in trouble. As Kimi pushes her concern for what’s on the message up the chain of command, she realizes that the company she works for is trying to bury this information. She’s forced to go outside and confront the world. Kimi comes home with an understanding that big tech has invaded our lives, that the government has structures in place to allow it to do so and that resistance to powerful, faceless corporations can be deadly.

RRRA three-hour epic set in a British colonized India in the 1920s, “RRR” manages to surprise audiences again and again. The Telugu-language film follows two powerful revolutionaries (based on real Indian revolutionaries) who are practically unstoppable against the British regime, but their clashing motives become a wrench in their friendship and goals. Rama Raju (Ram Charan) is one of Britain’s top soldiers, with the ability to fight a crowd of 500 men and come out victorious. Komaram Bheem (N. T. Rama Rao Jr.) is a motorcycle-wielding member of the Adivasian God tribe who travels to Delhi to save a young girl who was “bought” by the British empire. “RRR” celebrates the reclaiming of one’s land from imperial overlords, shown through song and dance and action-packed, slow-motion-driven battles. It is a film that explores the lengths one is willing to go to take down an oppressive regime.

Dishonorable mention: Don’t Worry DarlingAll the drama at Cannes aside, Olivia Wilde’s biggest budget directorial effort yet tried to wade into questions of incel culture, the evolution of women’s rights and the postwar American experience. It fails spectacularly. All the high-minded concepts are over-wrought and under-considered, and the movie feels like it was made by a group of people who have been in Hollywood for so long that they’ve completely misunderstood the social and political ills actually plaguing the country. It’s the closest thing we got in 2022 to 2020’s Imagine video .

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Contact tonight’s authors at cmchugh@politico.com and klong@politico.com or on Twitter at @calder_mchugh and @katherinealong .

We’ll be off from Dec. 26 to Jan. 2 for the holidays. Nightly will resume its regular programming on Jan. 3.

THE NEW CONGRESS

THE SANTOS SAGA Republican Rep.-elect George Santos stands accused of fabricating major portions of his biography, from his Jewish ancestry to what companies he worked for. But disgust for Democrats is so strong among some voters in the district whose seat he flipped, they’d rather have a fabulist representing them in Congress, reports Janaki Chadha and Julia Marsh .

“Of course it bothers me,” Daniel Zimmerman, a 70-year-old registered Democrat, told POLITICO as he left a local pharmacy Thursday in Great Neck, a waterfront enclave in the heart of the district. But, he added, he’d vote for Santos again. “Right now I’m a Republican because Democrats, they’re destroying our country. I don’t like the president.”

John Catsimatidis, a Republican billionaire and political powerbroker who often hosts fundraisers at his Long Island home, said GOP leaders “should have done a lot more due diligence” on Santos before he was elected. But, Catsimatidis said, Santos “should be held to the same standard as” Connecticut Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D), who exaggerated his military service record when he ran for the Senate in 2010.

But not everyone in Santos’ soon-to-be district was willing to easily forgive.

Joanne, a 66-year-old Manhasset resident who wasn’t comfortable sharing her last name, said she wouldn’t cast a ballot for Santos again. But she also said she doesn’t think much of politicians from either party. “All of them, they’re getting away with it. And he’s going to get away like the Democrats are getting away [with it]. Everyone in politics, it’s all lies now,” the registered Republican said.

Bruce Blakeman, the Nassau County executive and a Republican, said in an interview with POLITICO that he’d withhold judgment until he heard Santos’ remarks.

WHAT'D I MISS?

Staff members of the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6 Attack on the U.S. Capitol pose for a group photo following the committee's last public hearing.

Staff members of the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6 Attack on the U.S. Capitol pose for a group photo following the committee's last public hearing. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

— Seven takeaways from the Jan. 6 committee’s final report: The Jan. 6 select committee’s long-awaited final report recounted almost every step of Donald Trump’s last-ditch plan to stay in power and slammed home its conclusion: The former president should never hold elected office again. But the end product of the committee’s year and a half of investigative work painted a more comprehensive picture of Trump’s attempt to stop the certification of electoral votes that would seal his loss of the White House to President Joe Biden. Cobbling together nearly 1,200 witness interview transcripts and hard-won documents, the 845-page report uncovers themes and patterns that select panel members clearly hope are of use to the Department of Justice.

— House sends $1.7T government funding bill to Biden: The House today approved a mammoth $1.7 trillion funding package , capping a chaotic week as party leaders dashed to avoid a shutdown and an intensifying winter storm just days before Christmas. The spending bill, which includes a pile of high-profile year-end priorities from Ukraine aid to an election law overhaul, will be Democrats’ final legislative act before surrendering their House majority to Republicans in January. And with their post-midterm leverage boost, GOP leaders successfully negotiated huge hikes to the bill’s military spending, adding billions of dollars beyond what Biden sought, to the consternation of many progressives.

 Biden signs defense bill repealing military vaccine mandate: Biden signed an $847 billion defense policy bill today, killing his own administration’s mandate that troops receive the Covid vaccine. The National Defense Authorization Act, which prescribes military policy and budget priorities each year, cleared Congress this month with overwhelming bipartisan support. The compromise bill also prescribes a whopping $45 billion increase to the defense budget proposed by the Biden administration and would mark a roughly 10 percent increase in military spending over last year.

— Tax forms reveal steep legal fees for voting rights group founded by Stacey Abrams: The voting rights organization founded by Stacey Abrams, Fair Fight Action, spent an additional $12 million in legal fees in 2021, bringing its running total to $37.7 million from 2019 through 2021 alone , according to new filings by the group. A significant portion of the fees went to a single voting rights case that ended this September when a judge rejected the group’s final claims in a bench trial. The recently filed federal 990 form for 2021 also shows that the group paid an additional $4.4 million to the self-described boutique law firm of Abrams’ former campaign chairperson and longtime friend, Allegra Lawrence-Hardy.

— Black voters are moving to the suburbs — and transforming American politics: The latest story in POLITICO Magazine’s “Next Great Migration” series shows how the percentage of Black Americans living in suburbs has increased steadily since 2000 , while the percentage of Black Americans in cities has decreased at the same time. Today, more than one-third of Black Americans live in suburban areas — the fastest-growing areas in the country for Black people. This realignment is already leading to suburbs that are more friendly to Democrats, though challenges in sustaining and growing that political power remain.

AROUND THE WORLD

THEY’RE WATCHING — TikTok’s parent company ByteDance accessed the data of two journalists and other users in an attempt to track down company leaks in revelations that will likely intensify security concerns in the West about the popular video app’s Chinese ownership, writes Clothilde Goujard .

ByteDance employees in China and the U.S. inappropriately pulled the data including the IP addresses —which reveal a person’s general location — of journalists from BuzzFeed News and the Financial Times and people they had connected with via TikTok, according to an internal investigation. ByteDance had tried unsuccessfully to identify staff who had shared internal company documents with the reporters.

The news comes as Congress is set to vote this week to ban TikTok from U.S. federal government phones over fears about privacy and national security. There is also growing European concern over the case.

“We expect clear explanations and irrevocable commitments from TikTok,” tweeted French digital minister Jean-Noël Barrot today. “France and Europe will never compromise on the freedom of the press.”

The investigation conducted by an outside law firm was revealed in emails that ByteDance’s general counsel Erich Andersen sent to employees on Thursday and were shared on Thursday with media outlets including The New York Times. It followed previous reports alleging the company had gathered U.S. users’ data, including their location, phone numbers and birthdays.

NIGHTLY NUMBER

5.5 percent

The amount that prices rose in November from a year earlier , down from 6.1 percent in October and the smallest increase since October 2021. It marks another sign that the long surge in consumer prices appears to be easing.

RADAR SWEEP

CASH RULES EVERYTHING AROUND ME — Eight months ago, the Central African Republic — one of the poorest countries in Africa — celebrated its status as the only country in Africa to adopt Bitcoin as a legal currency . The decision was rooted in decades of colonial rule from the French, which included a “colonial currency.” Bitcoin was something different, but it comes with its own risks; a downturn in the crypto space has imperiled the project. Ben Hunte reports for VICE.

PARTING WORDS

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and Vice President Kamala Harris hold a Ukrainian flag signed by members of Ukraine's military given to them by President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and Vice President Kamala Harris hold a Ukrainian flag signed by members of Ukraine's military given to them by President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

ASK THE AUDIENCE — Over the past week, we’ve asked you to write to us about the year’s most important news stories. We’re grateful for all the responses — including from our readers around the world. Here are your rankings of the top stories from 2022, along with excerpts from some of the most interesting answers:

1. The Russian invasion of Ukraine: “Russia’s invasion of Ukraine effectively created the perfect storm,” wrote Constantinos St. Loizides of Nicosia, Cyprus. “First, large scale war in Europe with loss of life among civilians, with the risk at any time of escalating into a nuclear confrontation by strategic dint or even by accident; Energy price hikes of tremendous proportions; Huge disruption of food supply lines; After COVID, further deterioration of commerce through logistics and transportation challenges. The invasion also highlighted, to weary citizens of democratic nations, the growing numbers of autocracies around the world, especially China.”

Karlis Streips of Riga, Latvia adds about the invasion: “I give most of the credit to President Zelensky, who no one expected to be a true war leader, but that is exactly what he has become.”

2. The January 6th Committee: “The careful and systematic investigation conducted by the Committee, and the Committee’s rational conclusions and referrals to the Justice Department, refuted the image of a spontaneous event and revealed a long-planned and organized attempt to overthrow the rule of law and the peaceful transition of power in our democracy,” wrote Dennis Hopwood of Milton-Freewater, Ore.

Patricia Palmer of Boston added that she was most impressed during the hearings by “the gutsy, principled Liz Cheney” and Alitha Young of Round Pond, Maine, said that “[the committee is] helping to secure our precious democracy. What could be more essential or important than that?”

3. America’s southern border: “My nomination would be the de facto open southern border of the United States, with the Biden Administration showing no real interest in controlling it.” wrote Thomas Farrelly of Seattle, Wash. “The story is barely covered by progressive media, including Politico.”

4. The Santos scandal: “The extraordinary level of fabrication by Rep-elect George Santos in his distributed resume, public statements, falsified government filings and outright disrespect for his constituents and the Constitution [is a huge story],” wrote in Sal Samperi of Naples, Fla. “The Santos case is the epitome of destructive disinformation that leads to a completely unwarranted outcome.”

As a bonus, we also got two interesting notes about media and entertainment. “The continuing biggest story is the media’s addiction to profit over truth,” said William Donelson of Memphis, Tenn.

Longtime film critic Daniel M. Kimmel of Somerville, Mass. told us about the state of his side of the industry: “...even as people are returning to movie theaters after the worst of the pandemic, there seems to be a real shift. Many movies are released on streaming services either simultaneously with their theatrical releases or shortly thereafter. While I’ve attended some press screenings this year, I’m reviewing mostly from at home screeners that I can watch from secure apps on my TV. It’s not the end of movie theaters, but it’s a significant change in how we consume movies and I’ve been hearing predictions of this for forty years. It seems to be finally happening.”

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FOCUS: Charles Pierce | On the Fifth Day of Christmas, Everyone Invoked the Right Not to Self-Incriminate

 


 

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The House's Jan. 6 committee held its third public hearing focusing on the pressure campaign on then-Vice President Mike Pence. (photo: Getty)
FOCUS: Charles Pierce | On the Fifth Day of Christmas, Everyone Invoked the Right Not to Self-Incriminate
Charles Pierce, Esquire
Pierce writes: "The villains of January 6 stuck to the refrain of 'We WO-ON'T SA-AAY a Thing!'" 


The villains of January 6 stuck to the refrain of "We WO—ON'T SA—AAY a Thing!"


Garrett Ziegler was an aide to White House trade advisor and natural B-movie villain Peter Navarro during the previous administration*. But Ziegler was a mighty piece of work himself. From the Daily Beast:

Garrett Ziegler, who recently went on a sexist tear against former White House colleagues, took to Telegram to post the personal information of men he identified as agents. “This is one of the two feds who signed the ‘Receipt for Property’ form, which detailed—at a very high level—the fishing expedition that the FBI performed at Mar-a-Lago,” Ziegler said on both Truth Social and Telegram. The former Trump administration staffer that worked under White House trade adviser Peter Navarro further listed out the FBI agents’ date of birth, work emails and linked to alleged family members’ social media accounts. “Hope he doesn’t get a good night’s sleep for the rest of 2022,” Ziegler wrote on Truth Social, responding to another Truth Social user’s photos of one of the alleged FBI officials who signed off on the inventory receipts on the warrant.

Went on a sexist tear, you say? From CNN:

In the 27-minute livestream, Ziegler used vulgar and misogynistic language to attack Cassidy Hutchinson and Alyssa Farah Griffin, two women who worked for the Trump White House but have since publicly broken from the former President and cooperated with the January 6 panel. He also accused the January 6 House select committee of being “anti-White,” without any evidence. (The nine-member panel is led by Rep. Bennie Thompson, a Mississippi Democrat, who is Black.) “They’re Bolsheviks,” Ziegler said in the stream, referring to the far-left communists who led the Soviet Union, “so, they probably do hate the American founders and most White people in general. This is a Bolshevistic anti-White campaign. If you can’t see that, your eyes are freaking closed. And so, they see me as a young Christian who they can try to basically scare, right?”

As it happens, his sexist tear came not long after Ziegler had been deposed before the House select committee investigating the events of January 6. Ziegler was nowhere near as eloquent under oath as he was on the internet later. The transcript of his session was among 34 released by the committee Wednesday as it prepares its entire 800-some-page report. And in most of those transcripts—including Ziegler's, especially—the magic word is "Fifth."

You see, in an attempt to save time and effort, the various inmates of Camp Runamuck were allowed to simply say, "Fifth," to assert their constitutional right against self-incrimination. And judging by the number of times that right was invoked, it appears that almost anything said inside that crab bucket of a White House was self-incriminating—a possibility that, given that White House, I'm willing to entertain. (My favorite is the apparatchik who replied, "Fifth" when asked where they'd gone to college. The answer was Duke, and I completely understand.)

Garrett Ziegler, sexist ranter, was particularly cautious that he avoid the clever web of words in which committee counsel was attempting to enmesh his ass. His first invocation of the Fifth came when he was asked how he'd obtained his job in the White House. But there were other, more intriguing ones. For example,

Q: Were you expecting violence in the Capitol...on January 6, prior to that date?

A: I'm invoking my right to silence under the Fifth Amendment.

Q: Did you instruct your wife or suggest your wife leave town prior to January 6 because of concerns about violence?

A: I'm invoking my right to silence under the Fifth Amendment.

Now, I am perpetually impatient with the argument that asserting one's Fifth Amendment right is tantamount to an admission of guilt. I was impatient when the former president* used that argument against Hillary Clinton's staffers who'd taken the Fifth to defend themselves against the congressional snipe-hunters when Clinton was secretary of State. For example, at a rally in Colorado in 2016, El Caudillo del Mar-A-Lago—a man who'd invoked the Fifth 97 times during his first divorce proceeding—said, "Her staffers took the Fifth. So many people took the Fifth Amendment there was nobody left!" The 34 transcripts released Wednesday are the living embodiment of what the former president* was talking about.

There was some speechifying against the committee itself; Jeffrey Clark, the guy whom the plotters allegedly had lined up to be attorney general to give his blessing to the 'fake electors' scam, spent a long time haranguing the committee for what he said were its "pretenses" of fairness. Then he availed himself of the Fifth Amendment...120 times, beginning with whether or not he'd worked at the Department of Justice.

If god's in his heaven and all's right with the world, they'll all find gaily wrapped grants of immunity in their Christmas stockings. At which point, the only fifths in which they find comfort will be whatever they pour out when the day's testifying is done.

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MASSterList: Turning to trees for help | Today's sponsor - Delta Dental of Massachusetts



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Today's News

 

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The Massachusetts Package Stores Association (MassPack) congratulates Governor Elect Maura Healey and all the newly elected Massachusetts officials. MassPack is comprised of over 800 locally owned package stores, independent markets, and convenience stores. As work begins on the new legislative session it is asked that the Massachusetts regulatory system for alcohol beverages not be further deregulated. Learn more at www.masspack.org


Happening Today

9:30 a.m. | Massachusetts Gaming Commission meets to discuss and potentially vote on a series of sports betting regulations and research studies, and to have a preliminary discussion on sports betting marketing affiliations.


11 a.m. | House and Senate meet in informal sessions.


2 p.m. | Sen. Marc Pacheco moderates a Council of State Governments Eastern Regional Conference seminar titled "Improving Mental Health Services in Response to Severe Weather: A Proposal for States."


6 p.m. | Gov. Charlie Baker attends a Menorah lighting ceremony in Boston's Seaport neighborhood.

-- Getting from point A to point B


You mean Boston doesn't run on Dunkin'? The Boston Globe's Janelle Nanos wrote a new piece based on interviews with riders passing through Roxbury's Ruggles Station to offer a glimpse of what it means when the MBTA is running on time, or perhaps more importantly not running on time. The article makes the case for why a high-functioning public transit system is essential for the region and its economy as people depend on the service to get to work on time, and suffer the consequences when it lets them down. The MBTA's own dashboard puts the subway system's reliability at 87 percent, though that can vary depending on the line you use, while the bus network is 72 percent reliable and the commuter rail pulls into the station at 94 percent reliability. There's obviously room for improvement and this will be something Gov.-elect Maura Healey will have to focus on early and often.


The Boston Globe


-- Incidentally, Healey and Lt. Gov.-elect Kim Driscoll toured the MBTA's Everett repair facility where the incoming governor said she was "struck" by the workforce shortages plaguing the agency. She also said she hopes to identify a new general manager for the T within weeks, not months, if possible.

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-- Baker: Hands off Proposition 2 1/2


Don't touch Proposition 2 1/2. That's what Gov. Charlie Baker had to say in an exit 

interview yesterday with WBZ's Jon Keller. In excerpts that aired on CBS last night, 

Baker talked taxes and his concern for the message sent in November by the passage 

of the so-called "millionaire's tax." "There's going to be a lot of consequences, I think, 

that won't be all that great to some of the issues associated with the millionaires tax," 

Baker said. Keller pushed further, asking about a return to "Taxachusetts" and whether 

Proposition 2 1/2 - the ballot law that caps annual growth in property taxes - could be at 

risk. Baker said that during his eight years Prop 2 1/2 was "sacrosanct," but he 

acknowledged that the idea of tinkering with or scrapping the law is always lurking 

just beneath the surface. "I think doing anything to Prop 2 1/2 would be a huge mistake," 

Baker said. The full interview airs Saturday morning.


WBZ TV

-- First-of-its-kind survey details campus sexual assault problem


More than 900 incidents of sexual assault and violence were reported on college campuses 

in 2020, according to a new report published by the Department of Higher Education. 

The survey establishes a baseline as the Eagle-Tribune's Christian Wade reports its the 

first of its kind required under a 2021 law intended to push universities to identify, prevent 

and respond to campus sexual violence. Wade reports of the 900 incidents only 136 were 

investigated by law enforcement, with the vast majority of the allegations - about 600 - 

made by students against other students. “Those numbers barely scratch the surface,” 

Lily Bohen James, co-executive director of The Every Voice Coalition, told the Eagle-Tribune. 

“We know the actual number and scope is much higher than what the data shows.”


The Eagle-Tribune

-- Trooper vax case to spill over into new year


Seven state troopers fighting for their jobs after being dismissed for refusing to get the 

COVID-19 vaccine will have to wait until after the holidays to find out if they successfully 

made their case. State House News Service's Sam Drysdale reports that the hearing 

before the American Arbitration Association is expected to resume in mid-January after 

the troopers this week began laying out their defense. The law enforcement officers 

have claimed the state ignored their request for religious exemptions, instead choosing 

to suspend them without pay based on Gov. Baker's COVID-19 vaccine mandate for 

state employees.



State House News Service

-- Chang-Diaz looks back on 14 years at the State House


Last week, Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz said goodbye to the State House from the Senate floor, reflecting on a political career full of ups and downs. The Jamaica Plain Democrat's campaign for governor this year never quite caught on, closing the door on a chapter of her professional career that she had hoped might just be opening wider. Instead, Chang-Diaz tells the Dorchester Reporter that she doesn't know what's next except more time with her family and holiday leftovers to eat. She also reflected further on her Beacon Hill accomplishments and her hopes for success for her successor Liz Miranda. On running for public office again, Chang-Diaz said probably not. But one never knows.


Dorchester Reporter

-- Electric rates zap holiday displays as homeowners look to conserve


Bah, humbug! It seems soaring high electricity rates this winter are not only taking a bite out of our wallet, but our holiday cheer as well. The Globe's Shannon Larson writes that some homeowners known for lighting up their neighborhoods with festive displays this time of year are pulling the plug after seeing the cost of all those little glowing bulbs skyrocket.


The Boston Globe

-- Markey, Moulton lead push to compensate fishing industry


U.S. Sen. Ed Markey and U.S. Rep. Seth Moulton have unveiled a plan to create a federal fund that would be used to compensate the fishing industry for any losses related to the development of offshore wind farms. Anastasia Lennon and Will Sennott of The New Bedford Light report the duo’s legislation would require all at-sea wind farm developers to set aside compensation funds and provide federal oversight over their distribution.


New Bedford Light

-- Holyoke council to ask Healey to end receivership of public schools


Enough, already. The Holyoke City Council is poised to formally ask incoming Gov. Maura Healey to end the receivership of the city’s public schools, with councilors saying the takeover has produced few positive results over the last seven years. MassLive’s Dennis Hohenberger reports the council wants local control restored to the district, which has seen an exodus of teachers in recent years.


MassLive

-- Worcester’s Petty says he plans to run for mayor again in 2023


Worcester Mayor Joseph Petty says he’ll seek what would be a record seventh two-year term in November 2023, Marco Cartolano of the Telegram reports. Petty, who has been mayor since 2011, left his future in the city up in the air after his bid to become a state senator ended with a loss in the Democratic primary.


Telegram & Gazette

-- Most inmates who ask are denied medical parole


Just one-fourth of state prison inmates who applied for medical parole during the last fiscal year were granted early release, Christian Wade of the Eagle-Tribune reports. Citing newly available Department of Corrections data, Wade reports the agency approved 17 requests for early release last year due to dire medical issues out of the 67 requests it received.


The Eagle-Tribune

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-- Inauguration taking shape


Gov.-elect Maura Healey inauguration in just 14 days is beginning to take shape. MassLive's Alison Kuznitz has details on some of the regional service projects the new administration will be supporting that week, as well as how to get your seat for the TD Garden festivities on Jan. 5


More Headlines

Metro


Here's a list of Boston-area companies that shut down in 2022 - Boston Business Journal


Ex-Harvard Fencing Coach and HarvarParenAcquitted of Bribery Charges - The Harvard Crimson


Massachusetts


In record numbers, families without shelter are turning to Massachusetts emergency departments - WBUR


Wayland police investigate racist graffiti found near high school - MassLive


Haverhill to bring in experts to address hazing issues - The Eagle-Tribune


Greenfield, police chief appeal racial bias verdict - Greenfield Recorder


App-based drivers revive push for union rights - State House News Service


National


House Dems plan another swing at Trump over his taxes - Politico


Romney on possible reelection bid: ‘I’m convinced that if I run, I win’ - The Hill


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