Saturday, June 24, 2023

Republican Campaigns REEK OF DESPERATION and hit NEW Bottom

 



Whether it's Ron DeSantis saying he wish he could go back in time and be one of Jesus's disciples or Donald Trump pretending to have read the Bible, these Republicans are doing everything they can to court the Christian Nationalist vote. MeidasTouch contributor Gabe Sanchez breaks it down on a new episode of 'What Was That?'


RFK JR

SAD TO WATCH!

RFK JR initially gathered support about environmental issues, but has gone astray with NONSENSE!
It's embarrassing to watch mental illness capture such a well known voice.
RFK JR has been on the Whack-A-Ding sites like ROGAN.

https://www.thenation.com/.../rfk-jr-vaccine-disinformation/ 


Many of us lived through the devastation of the POLIO epidemic that still sickens parts of the World.
In itself, RFK JR has done a great disservice without getting mired in his other flawed facts.
Now he claims 5G is causing autism?
Each day produces more lunacy!

RFK Jr. cites Prozac, video games for rise in mass shootings, not guns


https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/rfk-jr-cites-prozac-video-games-for-rise-in-mass-shootings-not-guns/ar-AA1cYCsd?fbclid=IwAR2ex_ql2a4bq_0V_Gy2cBo4uqQYUI5R9bcP58KzgzZaAQb08wRhdkvHohA



'Beginning of the end of Russia's war': Ex-NATO ambassador suggests

 


Russian President Vladimir Putin has vowed to punish those behind an “armed uprising” after the head of the Wagner private military group launched an apparent insurrection, claimed control of military facilities in two Russian cities — Rostov-on-Don and Voronezh — and warned that his troops could head for Moscow. Former NATO ambassador Kurt Volker weighs in.


Ted Cruz HUMILIATED over pro-Putin post amid Russia news

 


NEW: Ted Cruz HUMILIATED over pro-Putin post amid Russia news



Ojeda Live: TGIF

 



FOCUS: Andrew Perez and Nick Byron Cambell | Millions of Americans Are Being Kicked Off Medicaid for No Reason

 

 

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President Joe Biden speaks at the White House in Washington D.C., June 22, 2023. (photo: Celal Gunes/Anadolu Agency)
FOCUS: Andrew Perez and Nick Byron Cambell | Millions of Americans Are Being Kicked Off Medicaid for No Reason
Andrew Perez and Nick Byron Cambell, Jacobin
Excerpt: "Now that Joe Biden and Congress have ended COVID-19 protections, millions of people are being kicked off Medicaid for procedural reasons like failing to respond to mail quickly. Many more are set to lose their health care coverage."


Now that Joe Biden and Congress have ended COVID-19 protections, millions of people are being kicked off Medicaid for procedural reasons like failing to respond to mail quickly. Many more are set to lose their health care coverage.


As states have begun clearing out their Medicaid rolls for the first time since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, nearly three quarters of the Americans who’ve lost coverage have been terminated not because they’re ineligible for the low-income health insurance program, but due to administrative reasons, such as failing to quickly respond to a piece of mail.

In February, President Joe Biden bragged in his State of the Union speech that “more Americans have health insurance now than ever in history.” Biden made that comment six weeks after he set the stage to massively increase the United States’ uninsured population, when he signed legislation from Congress ending the pandemic-era requirement that states maintain Medicaid beneficiaries’ coverage in exchange for extra federal funding.

The measure, passed as part of a year-end spending bill, allowed states to begin mass disenrollments starting in April — a policy decision that is naturally a boon for government contractors that states pay to identify beneficiaries they could potentially remove from the program.

Now that states have resumed annual Medicaid eligibility reviews, an estimated 17 million people, and potentially up to 24 million, could lose Medicaid coverage. According to early data from the Kaiser Family Foundation, more than 1.3 million Americans have already lost coverage, and nearly one million have lost their health insurance for arbitrary reasons, not because they aren’t eligible.

The Biden Health and Human Services Department (HHS) estimated last year that roughly 45 percent of people who would lose Medicaid coverage once states could begin disenrollments would have their insurance canceled for procedural reasons despite being eligible for the program. The actual proportion of Americans being terminated for such procedural reasons appears to be far higher — 71 percent — according to the latest Kaiser data.

At a health insurance industry conference last week, one lobbyist admitted that the country is witnessing “distressing levels of administrative procedural disenrollments.” A top official from an organization representing state Medicaid directors downplayed those numbers, arguing that it’s too soon to jump to any conclusions.

“In terms of the data we’re starting to see, I think we need to proceed with caution,” Dianne Hasselman, deputy executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors, said at a health insurance industry conference last week. “It is very early. We can’t make huge assumptions about the data.”

“Administrative Churning”

Medicaid, the national health insurance program for low-income Americans, offers better, more comprehensive coverage for patients than most health insurance offerings in the United States, but the program is aggressively means tested with strict income limits.

States are required to perform annual “redeterminations,” in which they review Medicaid enrollees’ eligibility to make sure they are still earning little enough money to qualify for the program. Enrollees who miss or fail to respond to mail, sometimes within ten days, can quickly lose coverage.

Medicaid redeterminations and disenrollments were paused for three years during the pandemic, after Congress passed COVID relief legislation that required states to provide continuous coverage for Medicaid recipients in exchange for more funding. That change temporarily made Medicaid a much more generous program, one in which adult enrollees grew by 13.5 million beneficiaries, or 39 percent.

Late last year, Congress started phasing out the enhanced Medicaid funding and allowed states to begin the process of removing recipients from their rolls this April. The measure was part of the $1.7 trillion annual government funding bill that Democrats passed in the final days of their legislative trifecta, before they turned over control of the House of Representatives to Republicans.

Medicaid redeterminations often result in states cutting off coverage to adults and children who are still technically eligible for the program. The government calls this “administrative churning.”

As HHS explained in a brief last summer, “Administrative churning refers to the loss of Medicaid coverage despite ongoing eligibility, which can occur if enrollees have difficulty navigating the renewal process, states are unable to contact enrollees due to a change of address, or other administrative hurdles.”

The agency predicted at the time: “Approximately 9.5 percent of Medicaid enrollees (8.2 million) will leave Medicaid due to loss of eligibility and will need to transition to another source of coverage. Based on historical patterns, 7.9 percent (6.8 million) will lose Medicaid coverage despite still being eligible (‘administrative churning’), although HHS is taking steps to reduce this outcome.”

Kaiser’s Medicaid enrollment tracker, which is based on data from state websites and the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), reports a much higher administrative churn rate: “Overall, 71 percent of disenrollments are due to procedural reasons, among states reporting as of June 20, 2023.”

Some of these people may be able to reenroll or qualify for subsidized private insurance plans on the individual market, but those plans generally offer worse coverage and higher costs.

“Most of the people who are losing coverage for procedural reasons are going to be eligible for something else,” said Arielle Kane, director of Medicaid initiatives at the consumer advocacy group Families USA:

Whether they’re still eligible for Medicaid, or they’re eligible for subsidized coverage on the exchanges, or they now have employer-sponsored coverage, we want them to be either successfully reenrolled or transferred to another source of coverage. And we worry that when they just get procedurally disenrolled, they won’t know they don’t have coverage until something bad happens.

Kane added that “in an ideal world, the vast majority of these redeterminations would happen in a passive manner — the state would have the data to confirm their income, confirm their eligibility status, and just re-enroll them without the consumer having to do anything.” If that doesn’t work, states can “reach out and then the beneficiary could confirm their information and add any details that were missing,” she said. “We know this is possible.”

Last week, HHS secretary Xavier Becerra wrote to governors urging them to work to limit procedural disenrollments and ensure that cancellations are actually based on eligibility.

“I am deeply concerned with the number of people unnecessarily losing coverage, especially those who appear to have lost coverage for avoidable reasons that state Medicaid offices have the power to prevent or mitigate,” wrote Becerra:

Given the high number of people losing coverage due to administrative processes, I urge you to review your state’s currently elected flexibilities and consider going further to take up existing and new policy options that we have offered to protect eligible individuals and families from procedural termination.

Kane noted that under the year-end spending legislation, CMS secretary Chiquita Brooks-LaSure can put a state on a “corrective action plan” if it fails to comply with redetermination reporting requirements, and potentially halt the state’s Medicaid disenrollments due to procedural reasons.

“At least publicly, we don’t know of any corrective action plans,” she said.

A CMS spokesperson said the agency “is deeply concerned with the numbers of eligible individuals losing coverage due to red tape,” and added that “CMS will not hesitate to use the compliance authority provided by Congress, including requesting that states pause procedural terminations.”

Bad Incentives and Distressing Data

At a conference last week held by the health insurance lobbying group America’s Health Insurance Plans, or AHIP, the organization’s vice president of Medicaid advocacy, Rhys Jones, noted that Kaiser’s Medicaid tracker is showing “distressing levels of administrative procedural disenrollments where people lose coverage for process reasons, not because they actually lost eligibility.”

Hasselman, deputy executive director at the National Association of Medicaid Directors, which represents state Medicaid officials, encouraged the audience not to worry about these numbers — yet.

“The thing that is keeping Medicaid directors up at night is the thought that they will remove someone from Medicaid coverage who should not be removed,” she said, before explaining that there “are a lot of different reasons” why someone might not have their coverage renewed — including earlier eligibility reviews by states.

“We can’t just assume that it’s because [beneficiaries] didn’t get a mailing, or they . . . started to go through the application and didn’t complete all the information that was needed to verify eligibility,” Hasselman continued. “I would urge everyone to proceed with caution, and assure you that Medicaid directors and their teams are looking at the data and trying to understand and make sense of it.”

Since the enhanced federal funding for an expanded Medicaid population is winding down, states have a financial interest in quickly trimming their rolls as much as they can — as do the contractors helping states find beneficiaries to terminate.

The country’s largest Medicaid eligibility and enrollment service provider, Maximus, is usually paid by states based on “volume flow and beneficiary interaction.” Modern Healthcare, a major health care industry news publication, recently wrote that Maximus has “a financial incentive to find as many people ineligible for Medicaid as possible.”

Maximus regularly sponsors conferences held by the National Association of Medicaid Directors.

Asked by The Lever about outside contractors like Maximus having a potential financial incentive to speed up procedural disenrollments, Hasselman said:

I think that Medicaid directors are very independent in the decisions that they make. They are concerned about Medicaid beneficiaries, first and foremost, making sure that people who are eligible for Medicaid will stay on Medicaid. The last thing that they would do would ever be to be pressured into making a decision by a contractor.



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FOCUS: Kremlin Denies Putin Has Fled Moscow as Plane Mysteriously Disappears From Radar

 

 

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Russian president Vladimir Putin. (photo: Sputnik/AP)
FOCUS: Kremlin Denies Putin Has Fled Moscow as Plane Mysteriously Disappears From Radar
Namita Singh, William Mata and Maryam Zakir-Hussai, The Independent
Excerpt: "Vladimir Putin's whereabouts have been thrown into question after an aircraft belonging to the presidency was spotted flying from Moscow to St Petersburg, according to Flight Radar."


Putin warns the rebels will be ‘brought to justice’ as Russia grapples with a ‘mortal blow’


Vladimir Putin’s whereabouts have been thrown into question after an aircraft belonging to the presidency was spotted flying from Moscow to St Petersburg, according to Flight Radar.

However, his spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, denied Putin has fled the capital and told reporters the president “is working at the Kremlin”.

Wagner’s armed rebellion is racing towards Moscow after the mercenary group’s leader Yevgeny Prigozhin took control of the military headquarters in Russian cities Voronezh and Rostov-on-Don.

Prigozhin has said his forces have been attacked by artillery and helicopters since he launched his mutiny.

Putin said an “armed mutiny” by Yevgeny Prigozhin was treason and a “mortal blow” to Russia’s troops.

In an emergency televised address, the Russian president said anyone who had taken up arms against his military would be punished.

Prigozhin demanded Mr Shoigu and Russia’s top general Valery Gerasimov meet him in Rostov-on-Don, otherwise threatening to “blockade the city of Rostov and head for Moscow.”



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Wagner Inches Closer to Moscow as Putin Vows to Stop 'Rebellion'Wagner Group mercenaries. (photo: ABC)

Wagner Inches Closer to Moscow as Putin Vows to Stop 'Rebellion'
Robyn Dixon and Dalton Bennett, The Washington Post
Excerpt: "Forces led by Wagner mercenary boss Yevgeniy Prigozhin advanced in the direction of Moscow on Saturday, moving north from the Voronezh region to the Lipetsk region, which is roughly 250 miles from the Russian capital." 

Forces led by Wagner mercenary boss Yevgeniy Prigozhin advanced in the direction of Moscow on Saturday, moving north from the Voronezh region to the Lipetsk region, which is roughly 250 miles from the Russian capital. President Vladimir Putin, citing a threat to his nation, said he had ordered the military to quash the “rebellion” led by Prigozhin, who on Friday called for Russians to join a campaign against Russia’s military leadership.

Here’s what to know

  • Late Friday, Prigozhin called for Russians to join Wagner’s campaign after claiming that a Wagner camp in Ukraine had been attacked “from the rear” by Russia’s military. He also said he would march on Moscow unless he could confront his enemies in Russia’s Ministry of Defense. The Defense Ministry denied the accusations in a Telegram post, and state media suggested video of the strike had been staged.

  • Putin promised heavy consequences for the organizers of Wagner’s Saturday operation: “Everyone who deliberately embarked on the path of betrayal, who prepared an armed rebellion, chose the path of blackmail and terrorist methods — they will suffer inevitable punishment,” Putin said in a five-minute speech.

  • Signs of anxiety were clear across Russia on Saturday. The mayor of Moscow told the public not to go to work Monday, declaring it a day off for all nonessential workers and asking them to stay home. Security was reinforced on main highways leading into Moscow, and residents in other areas were asked not to leave their homes. Meanwhile, flights out of Russia were selling out.

  • Russian forces launched one of their biggest overnight missile barrages in weeks against Ukrainian cities early Saturday morning, firing about 51 cruise missiles and two self-destructing drones, Ukraine’s air force said in a Telegram post.


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POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: DeSantis world makes Mass. moves

 


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BY LISA KASHINSKY

MAKE MASSACHUSETTS FLORIDA — Ron DeSantis once used Massachusetts as the backdrop for one of his biggest political stunts . Now the Republican Florida governor and his allies are quietly laying the groundwork for his presidential campaign in this traditional Super Tuesday state as they prepare to play deep into the primary calendar.

DeSantis’ campaign has activated volunteers, including MassGOP Vice Chair Jay Fleitman and state committeewoman Mary Lou Stuart, to build a supporter network in Massachusetts.

And Ken Cuccinelli, founder of the DeSantis-aligned super PAC Never Back Down, is expected in Massachusetts later this week to connect with potential donors as the operation works to staff up and canvass in states that vote through Super Tuesday , a spokesperson for the group confirmed.

Fleitman said he connected with the DeSantis camp through the Florida GOP . The governor’s team then reached out a few weeks ago asking Fleitman to start lining up supporters in Massachusetts.

“We need somebody who has the right politics but also is the type of candidate who can appeal to independent voters. We need a candidate who can actually win,” Fleitman, who said he helped campaign for Donald Trump in New Hampshire in 2020, told Playbook. “DeSantis is the type of person who could win nationwide.”

The DeSantis campaign confirmed it has started recruiting volunteers in Massachusetts, but declined to get more specific about its operations here.

Republican presidential candidate Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks at an annual Basque Fry at the Corley Ranch in Gardnerville, Nev.

Republican presidential candidate Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. | Andy Barron/AP Photo

DeSantis and his allies’ early maneuvers in Massachusetts signal that the Florida governor is preparing for a prolonged fight for the Republican presidential nomination, presumably against polling frontrunner Trump. Massachusetts will likely again be in the lineup for Super Tuesday, traditionally the biggest batch of nominating contests after the four early states. And DeSantis’ early attention here shows the pivotal role this deep-blue state and its 40 delegates could play in a close Republican primary fight.

Trump won Massachusetts’ 2016 Republican presidential primary with 49 percent of the vote. Four years later, he won roughly 87 percent of the vote against the state’s former governor, Bill Weld. Support for the former president still runs deep among party activists and the Republican grassroots.

But DeSantis has already been making inroads here. Prominent conservative donor and auto-parts magnate Rick Green has pledged to support DeSantis this cycle, though he didn’t respond to Playbook’s questions about his relationship with the campaign. And while support for Trump was clearly visible on signs at this month’s GOP state committee meeting, at least one member was spotted wearing a DeSantis for president T-shirt.

GOOD TUESDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Tips? Scoops? Working for DeSantis (or any other presidential campaign) in Massachusetts? Email me: lkashinsky@politico.com .

TODAY — House Democratic Whip Katherine Clark , Reps. Ayanna Pressley and Stephen Lynch , Gov. Maura Healey , Boston Mayor Michelle Wu and Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo hold an event on the CHIPS Act at 11 a.m. at the JATC Electrical Training Center in Dorchester. Healey visits Jewish Vocational Service Boston at 10 a.m. and joins Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll for a meeting with the Black and Latino Legislative Caucus at 1:30 p.m. at the State House. Wu is on GBH’s “Boston Public Radio” at 12:30 p.m

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING : What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president’s ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today .

 
 
DATELINE BEACON HILL

— REWIND: Gov. Maura Healey told GBH on Friday that the Supreme Court would be “terribly misguided” if it decides to end affirmative action in college admissions. She repeated that at a Juneteenth flag-raising ceremony at the State House, where she also vowed to “keep fighting every single day to dismantle systemic racism in all its forms.”

— PARDON THE UPDATE: The Governor’s Council will start holding hearings on Healey’s seven pardon recommendations this week. Meanwhile, Healey's team has received another three recommendations for pardons from the Parole Board, a spokesperson said, bringing the total cases under review by her office to four.

— “Nurses rally for change to hospital closure rules, say DPH is ‘toothless’ to prevent,” by Matthew Medsger, Boston Herald: “Following dozens of hospital closures and while the state’s medical facilities continue to face challenges in keeping nurses at bedsides, advocates and medical practitioners will tell lawmakers [in a hearing today] that public health is placed at risk when corporations put profit over patients.”

FROM THE HUB

— “Wu rejects Council’s cuts to city departments, including Boston Police,” by Gintautas Dumcius, Dorchester Reporter: “Mayor Michelle Wu on Friday rejected the City Council’s proposed cuts to Boston Police and a host of other city departments, including veterans affairs and the Boston Public Library. … In a letter to the City Council on Friday, Wu said the cut to police was ‘illusory,’ because the city is ‘obligated to cover salary and overtime expenses incurred by the department.’”

— "In Boston City Council redistricting mess, Ruthzee Louijeune emerges as a leader," by Emma Platoff, Boston Globe.

— "Suffolk district attorney places official on leave after report about antisemitic remarks," by Laura Crimaldi, Boston Globe.

THE RACE FOR CITY HALL

— FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Sen. Ed Markey is endorsing his 2020 campaign finance director, Sharon Durkan , in the special election for District 8 Boston city councilor, her campaign said.

— HAVERHILL UPHEAVAL: Some of the state's top politicians are voicing concern over allegations of misconduct by Haverhill School Committee member and mayoral candidate Scott Wood that were detailed in two background checks for police jobs that WHAV surfaced last week .

Rep. Lori Trahan and state Rep. Andy Vargas said in a joint statement that they're "deeply disturbed" by Wood's alleged behavior and that he "owes Haverhill residents an explanation." Markey also weighed in, tweeting , “From our police forces to our school committees and city halls — there is no room for racism, misogyny, harassment, or bigotry in Massachusetts,” along with a link to a WHAV story on the situation.

Wood is suing the city over the distribution of one of the background checks, which he claims cost him police jobs in Haverhill and Wenham. He has dismissed an attempt to censure him over the allegations as part of a “political smear campaign” tied to the mayor’s race. Vargas is backing City Councilor Melinda Barrett for mayor; Trahan, who co-signed the statement with Vargas, is not backing anyone.

PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

— “As other parts of Green Line saw upgrades, tracks where MBTA train derailed Monday hadn’t seen a major overhaul since 2002,” by Laura Crimaldi and Taylor Dolven, Boston Globe: “Now, the T’s top leader says the agency is planning to begin construction ahead of schedule to replace tracks at and near the sharp curve on Commonwealth Avenue in both directions.”

— WATCH: MBTA general manager Phillip Eng hinted at “some” staffing changes and the need to “reinvent” the system to adapt to pandemic ridership changes on WBZ’s “Keller @ Large.”

MAHTY MONITOR

— “Why Marty Walsh left the Biden administration to run the NHL players’ union,” by Stephen Whyno, The Associated Press: “‘This job is more like being the mayor,’ Walsh said in a wide-ranging interview with The Associated Press during the Stanley Cup Final in Las Vegas.”

 

SUBSCRIBE TO POWER SWITCH: The energy landscape is profoundly transforming. Power Switch is a daily newsletter that unlocks the most important stories driving the energy sector and the political forces shaping critical decisions about your energy future, from production to storage, distribution to consumption. Don’t miss out on Power Switch, your guide to the politics of energy transformation in America and around the world. SUBSCRIBE TODAY .

 
 
IT'S NOT EASY BEING GREEN

— “Big decisions looming on offshore wind,” by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Magazine: “The developers say they need more money to build their wind farms, which is putting regulators in a very awkward situation. States need the wind farms to have a chance of meeting their climate change goals, but giving in to the demands of the developers could set a dangerous precedent and translate into much higher prices for electricity ratepayers.”

WHAT ELSE YOU SHOULD BE READING

— "Life after prison: Mass. leaves thousands of prisoners awaiting education that would help their re-entry," by Chris Burrell and Paul Singer, GBH News: "Some 3,100 state prisoners — more than half of all those incarcerated in Massachusetts prisons — were waiting to get into academic, vocational or technology classes last fall, records show. About 850, or just 15% of prisoners, were actually enrolled in a class. And instead of boosting programs, the state Department of Correction is moving away from in-person classes and relying more on online learning."

— “Teachers in New Bedford and across Mass. could lose jobs due to expiring COVID emergency teaching licenses,” by Colin Hogan, New Bedford Light: “Thousands of teachers across Massachusetts are facing non-renewal of their contracts due to the expiration of emergency teaching licenses. In New Bedford, the primary driver of roughly 180 teacher non-renewals — a spike from the normal amount of non-renewals — is the expiration of these licenses, which are no longer automatically reissued since the official end of the COVID-19 emergency.”

— “Trump and Teixeira stand accused of breaking the same law,” by Mike Damiano, Boston Globe: “Donald Trump, indicted in Florida on June 8, and Jack D. Teixeira, indicted in Worcester last week, both now face federal prosecutions under the same provision of the Espionage Act of 1917, a law the government has used for decades to lock up spies and leakers of government secrets. And both men are accused of additional conduct — obstructing investigations and disclosing classified material — that could make their sentences more severe if they are convicted.”

— “Hard feelings after North Brookfield official removes pride flags from town property,” by Jeff A. Chamer, Telegram & Gazette: “Three petitions aimed at recalling two North Brookfield elected officials and canceling an upcoming pride event were not submitted to the town’s Board of Selectmen, said Chairman Jason Petraitis in an interview with the T&G on Saturday. Organizers are excited the event will face no issues next weekend, but are feeling frustrated with Petraitis after he removed small pride flags they planted for a story about Small Town Pride that will air on NBC’s Nightly News with Lester Holt. “

— “Taunton mayor’s daughter found safe in Ohio after she went missing last week,” by Nick Stoico, Boston Globe.

— “Former head of Legal Sea Foods supporting Massachusetts lobstermen in battle against California aquarium that told people to stop eating lobster,” by Lance Reynolds, Boston Herald.

— “Case of stolen body parts from Harvard Medical School morgue began with a tip from an ex-lover,” by Dugan Arnett and Sean Cotter, Boston Globe.

— “Nation split on whether to allow book bans, UMass Amherst/WCVB poll finds,” by WCVB.

MEANWHILE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE

— “Democrats buy time in fight over New Hampshire primary,” by Lisa Kashinsky, POLITICO“The Democratic National Committee’s Rules and Bylaws Committee voted as expected on Friday to give New Hampshire until Sept. 1 to comply with the national party’s requirements to move its primary behind South Carolina’s in early February — or get kicked out of the official early state window for 2024."

— NEARLY SUNU-NO: New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu told WEEI Friday that he’s “not leaning towards” seeking a record fifth term — partly because he could “make a real paycheck” by going back to the private sector.

— “N.H. state senator accused of assaulting employee of restaurant he owns,” by Steven Porter, Boston Globe.

— “NH officials say they're looking into neo-Nazi incident outside drag story hour in Concord,” by NHPR.

HEARD ‘ROUND THE BUBBLAH

TRANSITIONS — MKS Instruments’ John T.C. Lee is now chair of the Massachusetts High Technology Council board; Corey Thomas of Rapid7 is vice chair.

— Quint Forgey is now communications director for the congressional campaign of Michael B. Moore, a Democrat running in South Carolina. He continues as an MPP candidate at the Harvard Kennedy School and is a POLITICO alum.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to state Sen. Sal DiDomenico, Mark Gardner , the Boston Globe’s Samantha J. Gross , Eagle-Tribune alum Breanna Edelstein, Tom Tripicco, Sydney Asbury , principal of DNM Solutions and Anastasia Nicolaou .

Want to make an impact? POLITICO Massachusetts has a variety of solutions available for partners looking to reach and activate the most influential people in the Bay State. Have a petition you want signed? A cause you’re promoting? Seeking to increase brand awareness among this key audience? Share your message with our influential readers to foster engagement and drive action. Contact Jesse Shapiro to find out how: jshapiro@politico.com .

 

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Lisa Kashinsky @lisakashinsky

 

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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...