Wednesday, May 3, 2023

The Lever: Thomas helped kill eviction ban threatening benefactor's business

 


Cori Bush


Last week, new reporting from The Lever continued to reveal more of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas' corruption.

In August 2021, the Court and its far-right majority voted to strike down a federal moratorium on evictions that was originally enacted by the CDC during the height of the pandemic.

Yes, this is the very same eviction moratorium that Cori fought to extend by protesting outside the Capitol for five days straight.

Cori fought for the people — despite the rain, the heat, the cold, and all the pessimism that nothing could be done — and won, preventing millions from being evicted.

...All while Thomas voted to end the eviction ban twice.

While Cori was putting her health and safety on the line to fight for the people, Clarence Thomas was voting to evict millions while accepting luxury gifts and trips from conservative billionaires.

He must be held accountable for this blatant corruption by impeaching and removing Clarence Thomas from the Court immediately. Add your name to our petition today to join Cori in demanding his impeachment.

Add My Name >>

At the time of voting on the eviction moratorium, Thomas failed to disclose his relationship with billionaire Harlan Crow a GOP mega donor whose company was fighting to end the moratorium in the name of increasing their profits. This is a clear conflict of interest, yet Thomas did not recuse himself from the case.

For nearly two decades, Justice Thomas was lavished with luxury gifts and trips and purchases of property, flagrantly violating longstanding federal ethics rules. And we can't forget his history of history of sexual harassment and abuse.

Justice Thomas shouldn't hold public office, let alone a permanent spot on the highest Court in the country. Every single day Justice Thomas remains on the bench, he disgraces the integrity of the Supreme Court with his complete disregard for ethical standards.

That's why Cori was the first member of the House Judiciary Committee to call for Clarence Thomas' impeachment.

No one is above the law, including Clarence Thomas. Will you sign our petition today calling for his immediate removal from the Court?

Add Your Name >>

Thank you for taking action today.

In solidarity,

— Team Cori






 

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Follow us on FacebookTwitterInstagram, and visit our website.  Mail us: Cori Bush for Congress, 75 North Oaks Plaza, St. Louis, MO 63121.

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FOCUS: New Documents Show Sandra Day O’Connor's Key Role in Bush v. Gore

 


 

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Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sandra Day O'Connor. (photo: Mike Theiler/Reuters)
FOCUS: New Documents Show Sandra Day O’Connor's Key Role in Bush v. Gore
Joan Biskupic, CNN
Biskupic writes: "Justice Sandra Day O’Connor provided the early framework that steered the outcome in the dispute over the 2000 presidential election and ensured George W. Bush would win the White House over Al Gore, Supreme Court documents released on Tuesday show." 

Justice Sandra Day O’Connor provided the early framework that steered the outcome in the dispute over the 2000 presidential election and ensured George W. Bush would win the White House over Al Gore, Supreme Court documents released on Tuesday show.

Memos found in the newly opened files of the late Justice John Paul Stevens offer a first-ever view of the behind-the-scenes negotiations on Bush v. Gore at the court. They also demonstrate the tension among the nine justices being asked to decide a presidential election on short deadlines.

The documents opened at the Library of Congress help reveal how the now-retired O’Connor, the first woman on the high court and a justice steeped in politics from her early days in the Arizona legislature, partnered with Justice Anthony Kennedy, effectively squeezing out an argument advanced by then-Chief Justice William Rehnquist.

The strong hand of O’Connor, who was at the ideological center of the court in this era, is not wholly surprising. O’Connor was also known for trying to get out ahead of deliberations, and her four-page memo was circulated to colleagues even before oral arguments. Her move may have guaranteed that she and Kennedy had the greatest influence on the final “per curiam” opinion that spoke for a five-justice majority.

That final 5-4 Bush v. Gore decision stopped county recounts for Florida’s decisive presidential electors and gave then-Texas Gov. Bush the victory over then-Vice President Gore.

The five conservative justices (O’Connor, Kennedy, Rehnquist, Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas) sided with Bush. The four liberal justices (Stevens, with David Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer) aligned with Gore and dissented angrily.

The court’s views mirrored the deep divisions in the country after an election that for weeks remained too close to call and still haunts presidential contests. The decision has endured as one of the greatest threats to the court’s vaunted impartiality and institutional stature, perhaps eclipsed only recently by the court’s 5-4 decision last June reversing nearly a half century of abortion rights.

O’Connor’s views, expressed in a December 10, 2000, memo, were endorsed by fellow conservative-centrist Kennedy as he took the lead in writing the unsigned “per curiam” opinion issued late on the evening of December 12, the new documents show.

The shared views of O’Connor and Kennedy eventually forced Rehnquist to abandon his effort to author the main opinion with a boundary-pushing view of federal election principles – views that would come up during Donald Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 presidential election.

Even as the outcome of the case plainly pleased – and alternately upset – a divided nation, questions have remained over the crafting of the unsigned December 12 opinion. It was issued after 36 days of election uncertainty in Florida but just one day after the justices had held oral arguments in Washington.

The Florida results had been too close to call at the end of Election Day, November 7. And it became clear that, with other states nearly evenly divided between the candidates, the ultimate winner of Florida’s 25 electoral college votes would become president.

Amid ballot recounts in various challenged counties, the Florida secretary of state certified a 537-vote margin on November 26 for Bush, from 6 million votes cast. Bush strove to stop the recounts as Gore continued to challenge the state’s tallies. When the Supreme Court ruled on December 12, it ended the count, declaring that the Florida recount standards varied too widely to be fair and to meet the guarantee of equal protection of the law.

O’Connor laid the groundwork for that result in her December 10 memo to all her colleagues as she condemned a Florida state Supreme Court decision ordering selective recounts of “undervotes” in certain counties.

She opened by highlighting state legislative authority to set the rules for the appointment of state presidential electors but quickly focused on the flaws, as she perceived them, of the ongoing recounts ordered by the state court.

“The Florida Supreme Court provided no uniform, statewide method for identifying and separating the undervotes,” O’Connor wrote, referring to instances when machines had failed to detect a vote for president. “Accordingly, there was no guarantee that those ballots deemed undervotes had not been previously tabulated. More importantly, the court failed to provide any standard more specific than the ‘intent of the voter’ standard to govern this statewide undervote recount. Therefore, each individual county was left to devise its own standards.”

The system triggered by the Florida Supreme Court “in no way resembles the statutory scheme created by the Florida legislature” for the appointment of electors, said the justice who had once served as Arizona state Senate majority leader, the first woman nationwide to hold such the top post in a state senate.

The next day, Kennedy wrote to the chief justice, “Sandra’s memorandum sets forth a very sound approach” and said he wanted to build on it. He suggested he would point up how the varying recount practices breached the guarantee of equal protection.

Rehnquist on independent state legislature power

The correspondence in the Stevens files suggests that Rehnquist thought he might be able to work with Kennedy on the court’s main opinion and to press the chief’s own theory of complete and independent state legislative power.

Rehnquist wrote in a December 11 memo that he and Kennedy were “working on a composite opinion.” Rehnquist hoped to send around a copy that evening.

By the next day, however, Kennedy had fully separated himself from Rehnquist’s view of complete state legislative authority over presidential elections with no check by a state judges interpreting the state’s constitution.

As a result, Rehnquist wrote to the group, his own “present draft cannot accurately be labeled” the opinion for the court. Rehnquist said he would be re-circulating his views, going beyond the O’Connor-Kennedy position, as a separate concurring opinion.

The Rehnquist view, backed only by Scalia and Thomas, would have given new power to state legislatures to control presidential election battles. Under this “independent state legislature” theory – which was revived by Trump supporters in 2020 and is at the heart of a pending North Carolina dispute – state courts lack the authority to find that a state legislature’s electoral practices violate the state’s constitution.

Kennedy had foreshadowed his reluctance to accept that theory during the Bush v. Gore oral arguments. “It seems to me essential to the republican theory of government that the constitutions of the United States and the states are the basic charter, and to say that the legislature of the state is unmoored from its own constitution, and it can’t use its court … (is) it seems to me a holding which has grave implications for our republican theory of government.”

O’Connor, similarly breaking from the Rehnquist view, wrote Kennedy a note on December 12 that she would join his per curiam opinion.

Racing to meet sliding deadlines

Other justices, meanwhile, were immersed in their separate writings.

Stevens’ files contain early drafts of his dissenting opinion that closed with the biting line: “Although we may never know with complete certainty the identity of the winner of this year’s Presidential election, the identity of the loser is perfectly clear,” he wrote. “It is the Nation’s confidence in the judge as an impartial guardian of the rule of law.”

Souter, Ginsburg and Breyer each began penning separate dissents, too. As the hours passed, they wanted to finish by the end of December 12, which was the deadline for establishing the presidential electors of each state.

The majority contended that no time remained to standardize recount rules to meet constitutional strictures for equal protection of the law. Its per curiam decision was concluding that Florida’s recount process was “inconsistent with the minimum procedures necessary to protect the fundamental right of each voter in the special instance of a statewide recount.” The majority also declared, “Our consideration is limited to the present circumstances, for the problem of equal protection in election processes generally presents many complexities.”

Rehnquist sent around a note at one point on the big decision day that acknowledged, “the previously agreed upon deadline of one o’clock this afternoon for release of the opinions is unrealistic. I suggest we strive mightily to have everything in shape for the Pubs unit by four o’clock this afternoon at the latest.”

Later that day, Rehnquist tried again: “David (Souter) advises that he is preparing a dissent, which he thinks he will be able to circulate by 5 o’clock p.m. I think that we should move the deadline back once more, but this time be absolutely certain that all opinions in this case be ready to go to the Publications Unit by 6 o’clock. The Pubs Unit will probably take at least an hour to prepare it, and this means that it can be released at 7 o’clock p.m. I urge all of you to keep up the efforts we have all been making, because I am unwilling to move the deadline further back unless there is some sort of a mechanical breakdown.”

The ruling became public around 10 p.m. ET. Gore conceded the next day.

Documents reveal the immediate bitterness between justices

“Going home after a long day,” Scalia wrote to fellow justices when it was all over on December 12, “I cannot help but observe that those of my colleagues who were protesting so vigorously that the Court’s judgment today will do it irreparable harm have spared no pains – in a veritable blizzard of separate dissents – to assist that result. Even to the point of footnote 4 in Ruth’s offering (I call it the Al Sharpton footnote), alleging on the basis of press reports ‘obstacles to voting disproportionately encountered by black voters.’”

Well-known for his take-no-prisoners dissenting views, Scalia added, “I am the last person to complain that dissents should not be thorough and hard-hitting (though it would be nice to have them somewhat consolidated). But before vigorously dissenting (or, come to think of it, at any other time) I have never urged the majority of my colleagues to alter their honest view of the case because of the potential ‘damage to the Court.’ I just thought I would observe the incongruity. Good night.” He signed it, “Sincerely, Nino.”

In their opinions, liberal dissenters had emphasized the cost to the court as an institution and, in Breyer’s words, “damage” to the country.

Similarly, Kennedy wrote to colleagues that same day, “I do not usually respond to dissenting opinions, and will not do so for the per curiam in this case. I take the occasion in this memo, however, to say that the tone of the dissents is disturbing both on an institutional and personal level. I have agonized over this and made my best judgment. Some of the dissenters in fact agree on the equal protection point, but take great pains to conceal that agreement. The dissents, permit me to say, in effect try to coerce the majority by trashing the Court themselves, thereby making their dire, and I think unjustified, predictions a self-fulfilling prophecy.”

The public fallout

Many of the justices were reluctant even with time to discuss the case, although Scalia regularly declared to critics, “Get over it!”

O’Connor seemed more chastened, expressing some regret over the years that the court had taken up the dispute. The 1981 appointee of President Ronald Reagan stepped down from the court in January 2006, when she retired to care for her husband, who was struggling with Alzheimer’s disease. In 2018 she revealed that she herself had been diagnosed with the disease. She turned 93 in March and lives in Arizona.

In 2013, she told members of the Chicago Tribune editorial board she was not sure the court should have intervened.

“It took the case and decided it at a time when it was still a big election issue,” O’Connor told the Tribune. “Maybe the court should have said, ‘We’re not going to take it, goodbye.’”

She added, according to the paper’s account, “Obviously the court did reach a decision and thought it had to reach a decision. It turned out the election authorities in Florida hadn’t done a real good job there and kind of messed it up. And probably the Supreme Court added to the problem at the end of the day.”



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POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook:

 

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BY LISA KASHINSKY

PLAYING THE LONG GAME — The MBTA is far from the only major public transit agency struggling to recover from the ridership slump triggered by the pandemic. Nor is it the only one staring down a potentially massive budget shortfall.

Changing travel patterns and dwindling federal aid are stressing transit agencies and prompting talk of service cuts across the country, my colleagues report in a new look at the troubles facing the nation’s major public transit systems .

While San Francisco’s BART is considering an expansion of night and weekend service to boost its off-peak ridership, officials at other agencies are trying to cut their losses by appealing to state lawmakers to set aside more money in their budgets or even raise certain taxes to help keep their systems running.

It’s a bleak backdrop upon which to launch another push for free fares, even before taking into account the safety and service failures specific to the MBTA.

Yet Boston Mayor Michelle Wu argues that transit reliability and accessibility are linked. And she points to data from the first year of her pilot program making three key bus routes free to ride, which shows ridership was up and dwell times were down , to back it up.

“We can’t be in a society that says we’re going to try to fix the T and make it reliable, but only for those who can afford it,” she said at a press conference last week.

From right: Ed Markey, Ayanna Pressley and Michelle Wu

Boston Mayor Michelle Wu speaks at a press conference on fare-free transit with Sen. Ed Markey and Rep. Ayanna Pressley on April 24, 2023, in Boston. | Lisa Kashinsky/POLITICO

Wu stood with Sen. Ed Markey and Rep. Ayanna Pressley outside Ruggles Station as they reintroduced federal legislation that would put $25 billion over five years toward supporting state and local fare-free transit efforts. But in a divided Congress, with little support from their colleagues, and without a surface transportation bill due anytime soon, that won’t go anywhere fast. For now, such initiatives will likely continue falling to cities and states.

Gov. Maura Healey pledged as a candidate to create a pathway to fare-free buses . But her first budget — and the spending plan approved by the House — only sets aside $5 million to study means-tested fares.

Still, Wu says Healey’s public commitments are a “tremendous change” over her Republican predecessor, who vetoed a low-income fare program passed by the Legislature.

Those looking to “free the T” are playing the long game , locally and federally. Pressley likened the push for free fares to the effort to cancel student loan debt. Three years ago, it was a progressive pipe dream. Now, after a public and private pressure campaign, it has the president’s approval (though remains tied up in court).

Transit systems across the state are already moving to eliminate fares. In Worcester, the WRTA advisory board voted unanimously last month to keep buses free through June 2024. The Merrimack Valley Regional Transit Authority eliminated fares on local buses. And Wu is working with Cambridge officials to expand her pilot program to include the Route 1 bus that connects the two cities, though that would require MBTA approval.

Public opinion is also on their side. A clear majority of residents backed free buses and fare discounts for lower-income riders in a MassINC Polling Group survey last year. In another MassINC poll last month on regional transit authorities, 77 percent of residents said they would be at least somewhat more willing to ride the bus if it were free.

“I think [means-tested fares] are going to happen. There is a real push and some really great work happening behind the scenes at the T … and the governor’s put it in the budget,” TransitMatters’ Jarred Johnson said on the most recent episode of The Horse Race podcast .

But political and financial roadblocks remain on the path to free fares, particularly if the feds and the state don't put up more money to prop up existing programs . "Can we both expand the bus network, invest in it and do free fares? I think that’s still a question that is up in the air,” Johnson said.

The state could get some more data on reduced fares if transportation officials follow through on offering discounts and free monthly passes for some residents affected by the upcoming Sumner Tunnel closure. Of course, that’s if the Blue Line functions appropriately.

GOOD WEDNESDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Today is my two-year Playbook anniversary! It’s been such a joy to land in your inboxes each morning. Here’s to more #mapoli adventures ahead. And a big thank you to the team that helps make this newsletter happen! Playbook truly benefits from your expertise and passion. Now, back to the news.

TODAY — Healey returns from D.C. and speaks at the Mass. Taxpayers Foundation’s annual meeting at 4:30 p.m. in Boston. Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll attends the Brockton Housing Resource Center groundbreaking at 10 a.m. and the Salem Chamber of Commerce awards dinner at 6:30 p.m. Wu is on “Java with Jimmy” at 9 a.m., attends a Roslindale coffee hour at 9:30 a.m. and participates in a GBH event on diversity at 6:15 p.m. Rep. Richard Neal visits Barnes Air National Guard Base at 10 a.m. Rep. Jim McGovern is in Amherst in the afternoon.

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

 

DON’T MISS THE POLITICO ENERGY SUMMIT: A new world energy order is emerging and America’s place in it is at a critical juncture. Join POLITICO on Thursday, May 18 for our first-ever energy summit to explore how the U.S. is positioning itself in a complicated energy future. We’ll explore progress on infrastructure and climate funding dedicated to building a renewable energy economy, Biden’s environmental justice proposals, and so much more. REGISTER HERE .

 
 
DATELINE BEACON HILL

— SUFFOLK SPECIALS: Democrats John Moran and Bill MacGregor are poised to join the Legislature after winning yesterday's state representative primaries in the 9th and 10th Suffolk districts, respectively. There were no Republicans on the ballot, setting up the May 30 general election to be little more than a formality.

West Roxbury's MacGregor emerged victorious over Robert Orthman of Roslindale and Celia Segel of Jamaica Plain in the 10th with nearly 46 percent of the vote, based on unofficial tallies . He's now on track to take over the seat previously held by Ed Coppinger , who left the Legislature for MassBio and endorsed MacGregor as his successor. MacGregor was considered the more moderate pick in a district where progressives are working to make inroads.

Moran, a South End consultant, was unopposed in his primary after his last remaining rival dropped out last month and endorsed him. He is set to succeed now-Veterans Secretary Jon Santiago in the 9th.

— “Hospitals and aid groups press state for improved ‘front door’ to emergency shelter,” by Jessica Bartlett and Samantha J. Gross, Boston Globe: “[H]ospitals and groups that work with migrants are pressing the state to expand access to emergency housing to help the city’s homeless families without drawing on critical hospital resources. … On Tuesday the Healey administration said it plans to spend $1.75 million on a new program called Immigrant Assistance Services. The money is enough for 800 individuals and families currently living in state-run homeless shelter placements and will include an intake and triage process to help immigrants with advice, legal services, and other supports.”

— “Panel urged to curb 'toxic' youth sports culture,” by Christian M. Wade, Eagle-Tribune: “The proposal, if approved, would amend the state’s Anti-Bullying Law by adding a section that requires the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education to publish new guidelines for the implementation of a ‘social emotional learning curriculum’ for middle- and high-school athletic programs.”

— “Open enrollment for state workers' health insurance looms despite Harvard Pilgrim hack,” by Cassie McGrath, Boston Business Journal.

FROM THE HUB

— “City councilors and staff admonished that ‘comments are not to be posted’ on Globe stories using shared account,” by Emma Platoff, Boston Globe: “‘Comments are not to be posted’ on Boston Globe stories using a shared subscription for the Boston City Council, councilors and their staff were told Tuesday, in the wake of revelations that a shared council account had been used to lob a barrage of Internet attacks on public officials.”

THE RACE FOR CITY HALL

— “District 3 field taking shape as signature-gathering begins,” by Gintautas Dumcius, Dorchester Reporter: “Since City Councillor Frank Baker’s announcement two weeks ago that he won’t be running for a seventh term inside City Hall, the field of District 3 candidates has begun to fill in."

— ENDORSEMENT ALERT: The Professional Fire Fighters of Massachusetts has endorsed Neil Harrington for Salem mayor. Harrington, who’s held the job before, faces Dominick Pangallo in the May 16 special election.

PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

— “New Bedford has ‘unwavering’ support for South Coast Rail, but wants better deal for land, attorney says,” by Matt Stout, Boston Globe: “The city of New Bedford’s attorney said it has ‘unwavering’ support for South Coast Rail despite threatening to sue the MBTA on a claim it wrongly seized city property for the project, and suggested the city is primarily concerned with getting the best deal for the land.”

— “Box that hit woman at Red Line Harvard Station part of defunct biological agent detection system, MBTA says,” by WCVB.

 

GET READY FOR GLOBAL TECH DAY: Join POLITICO Live as we launch our first Global Tech Day alongside London Tech Week on Thursday, June 15. Register now for continuing updates and to be a part of this momentous and program-packed day! From the blockchain, to AI, and autonomous vehicles, technology is changing how power is exercised around the world, so who will write the rules? REGSITER HERE .

 
 
IT'S NOT EASY BEING GREEN

— “Healey playing catchup with latest offshore wind procurement,” by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Magazine: “The Healey administration made the best of a bad situation on Tuesday, issuing a draft of the state’s fourth request for offshore wind proposals that reworks the failed third procurement, pushes forward with a modest wind farm expansion, and provides some increased flexibility to future bidders.”

DAY IN COURT

— “Parents file lawsuit alleging civil rights violations after children were taken from Waltham home without warrant,” by Ivy Scott, Boston Globe: “A couple whose children were taken from their Massachusetts home by police in the middle of the night last year filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday against four Waltham officers, four employees of the state’s Department of Children and Families, and the city of Waltham for violating the family’s civil rights.”

FROM THE DELEGATION

— “House Democrats take steps to force vote on clean debt ceiling increase,” by Rebecca Kaplan, CBS News: “Democratic Rep. Jim McGovern of Massachusetts, the top Democrat on the House Rules Committee, introduced a special rule Tuesday that would allow Democrats to attach a clean debt ceiling increase to an unrelated bill.”

2024 WATCH

— DESANTIS HAS A FRIEND IN MASS.: Deep-pocketed auto-parts magnate Rick Green says he’s supporting Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in the GOP presidential primary, the Boston Herald’s Joe Battenfeld reports , giving the potential contender some financial backing in New England.

FROM THE 413

— “Former Easthampton schools chair believes Open Meeting Law violated in ‘ladies’ dispute,” by Will Katcher, MassLive: “A former leader of the Easthampton School Committee has accused the board of violating the state’s Open Meeting Law when it rescinded an offer to superintendent candidate Vito Perrone — which Perrone said was over his use of the word ‘ladies’ in an email to the board’s chairperson and clerk.”

— “Veterans Affairs inks agreement with Holyoke Veterans’ Home for funding,” by Aprell May Munford, Springfield Republican: "Veterans Affairs has awarded $164 million of a promised $263.5 million to the Massachusetts Executive Office of Veterans Services for the construction of the new facility."

— “Sheffield voters ban 5G cell towers, approve $11.9 million operating budgets for town and schools and $40k to hire a smell expert,” by Scott Stafford, Berkshire Eagle.

WHAT ELSE YOU SHOULD BE READING

— CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION: Frank Bellotti turns 100 today, and top pols and newspaper columnists are marking the milestone by looking back on the former lieutenant governor and attorney general's life and career.

“Bellotti transformed the attorney general’s office from a backwater political Democratic Party hangout to a non-partisan first-class law office,” the Boston Herald’s Joe Dwinell writes . Boston Globe columnist Kevin Cullen calls Bellotti “the best governor Massachusetts never had.”

Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll, Attorney General Andrea Campbell, Secretary of State Bill Galvin , House Speaker Ron Mariano and former Govs. Mike Dukakis and Bill Weld are among the big names expected to celebrate Bellotti when he’s honored at Quincy District Court’s annual Law Day at 11 a.m., per the Patriot Ledger.

— “2 Massachusetts hospitals report no COVID-19 inpatients for 1st time since pandemic,” by WCVB.

— “Vermont allows out-of-staters to use assisted suicide law,” by Lisa Rathke, The Associated Press.

HEARD ‘ROUND THE BUBBLAH

TRANSITIONS — WPRI’s Steph Machado is joining the Boston Globe’s Rhode Island team next month.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to former national climate adviser Gina McCarthy, Ben Ginsberg, Andrew Miga, Josh Irwin and Peter Brown of Peter Brown Communications.

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

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