Thursday, July 6, 2023

POLITICO Nightly: Chris Christie knows how to work with Democrats. It might be a liability.

 

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BY DUSTIN RACIOPPI

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie at a town hall-style event at the New Hampshire Institute of Politics on June 6.

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie speaks at a town hall-style event at the New Hampshire Institute of Politics on June 6. | Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

ACROSS THE AISLE — Chris Christie wants voters to know he’s more than just a guided missile. He’s also got a standout resume with a credential no one else in the field can match: an ability to work productively with the enemy.

In both of his presidential campaign launches — this year and in 2016 — Christie has emphasized his bipartisan bona fides as an asset compared to Donald Trump and a field of candidates crowded with governors accustomed to dealing with compliant GOP legislatures.

There’s just one problem: there’s little evidence GOP primary voters care that the former New Jersey governor can work across the aisle with Democrats.

“I governed in a blue state — one of the bluest states in this country — as a two-term Republican governor,” he said in a CNN town hall last month. “I got reelected in that blue state with 61 percent of the vote. What’s that tell you? I made things happen. I know how to make things happen.”

It’s a record of compromise that, in the pre-Trump era, might have garnered Christie support as a problem-solving conservative.

In his eight years as the Republican governor of New Jersey, Christie often worked closely with the Democratic-led Legislature to pass some of the most consequential policies of recent memory. He capped property tax increases; eliminated the estate tax; scaled back public employee health and pension benefits; realigned the higher education system; overhauled the troubled police department in one of the most dangerous cities in America; and renewed New Jersey’s Transportation Trust Fund to support long-term infrastructure projects.

And long before his popularity plummeted to a historic low in his home state, Christie was so popular that he earned prominent Democratic endorsements — supporters who were dubbed “Christiecrats.”

Christie’s entry into the 2024 race and his focus on Trump has so far generated media attention more akin to a face-versus-heel WWE wrestling showdown than a presidential primary. But what’s overlooked in Christie’s attempt to block the return of the 45th president to the White House is a distinctive record that neither Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis or any of the other governors in the race can claim.

DeSantis and the other Republican governors — Doug Burgum of North Dakota; Nikki Haley of South Carolina; Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas; and Mike Pence of Indiana — all led with Republican legislatures.

As president, Trump had Republican majorities in the House and Senate his first two years, but Democrats flipped the House in his midterm.

DeSantis’ work with a Republican-controlled legislature has enabled him to flex in the early-voting states of Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina: He can point to a six-week abortion ban, restrictions on sexual content in school books and targeting Disney World’s self-governance, as some examples.

Christie had no such advantage while leading New Jersey. At best, he can highlight how he used his veto pen liberally to defund Planned Parenthood, reject new gun restrictions and prohibit people from changing their gender on their birth certificate — culture war issues that resonate with the GOP base today.

But Christie can’t sidestep the fact his biggest policy achievements were done working with Democrats. Every budget had to be negotiated with the opposing party, and Christie famously resisted tax increases.

“Based upon the cast of characters that are in the Republican primary, he’s the only one that has that ability to go out on the stage and say, ‘I did eight budgets with Democrats,’” said state Sen. Paul Sarlo, the Democratic chair of the New Jersey Senate Budget Committee.

“It was always direct conversations,” he added. “Sometimes they were pleasant, sometimes we yelled at each other. But we would get right back at it a day later and negotiate.”

Christie’s voluble personality and his policy achievements worked in his favor early in his tenure, when he was courted to run for president as a presumed frontrunner against then-President Barack Obama in 2012. He declined and instead pursued reelection in New Jersey, reaching popularity upwards of 70 percent after Superstorm Sandy and winning 61 percent of the vote — the second-highest percentage in state history.

“He appealed to the independents. He appealed to the soft Democrats and he appealed to Republicans,” said New Jersey GOP state Sen. Holly Schepisi.

Public polling doesn’t reflect even a fraction of that support now. According to the FiveThirtyEight polling average , Christie is languishing at the bottom of the field with just three percent.

The former governor did see a bump in New Hampshire after he announced his candidacy, placing third behind Trump and DeSantis. However, Christie topped the list in a mid-June New Hampshire Journal/coefficient poll of candidates that residents “would never vote for under any circumstances.”

Christie is banking his primary hopes on New Hampshire, just as in 2016 when he placed sixth behind Trump. One of Christie’s closest allies in the New Jersey legislature, Republican state Sen. Jon Bramnick, said he fears that voters will once again prioritize politics over policy.

“People who don’t believe in compromise at all I guess have never had a family, have never run a business. It’s only in politics where you’re not supposed to compromise ever,” Bramnick said. “Not compromising ever is a great thing for a primary. It’s not a great way to govern.”

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

 

JOIN 7/11 FOR A TALK ON THE FAA’S FUTURE: Congress is making moves to pass the FAA Reauthorization Act, laying the groundwork for the FAA’s long-term agenda to modernize the aviation sector to meet the challenges of today and innovate for tomorrow. Join POLITICO on July 11 to discuss what will make it into the final reauthorization bill and examine how reauthorization will reshape FAA’s priorities and authorities. REGISTER HERE .

 
 
WHAT'D I MISS?

— Biden to crack down on ‘junk’ health insurance: The Biden administration on Friday is expected to propose a new regulation cracking down on short-term health insurance plans , five Democrats with knowledge of the matter, who were granted anonymity to discuss the specifics of White House plans, told POLITICO. The long-awaited rule will curtail a Trump-era expansion of the skimpy health coverage, which Democrats and patient advocacy groups have criticized for undermining Obamacare and its broad protections for patients with pre-existing conditions.

— Marjorie Taylor Greene booted out of Freedom Caucus, member says: A member of the House Freedom Caucus today confirmed that the conservative group has voted to boot Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) . “A vote was taken to remove Marjorie Taylor Greene from the House Freedom Caucus for some of the things she’s done,” said Rep. Andy Harris (R-Md.). The Maryland Republican declined to say how he voted, but called the decision to remove her “an appropriate action.” Pressed if that meant Greene is formally out, Harris, who noted he is on the group’s board, added: “As far as I know, that is the way it is.”

— Trump valet Walt Nauta pleads not guilty in classified documents case: Donald Trump’s valet pleaded not guilty today to charges that he helped the former president hide classified documents from federal authorities , appearing with a new Florida-based lawyer to represent him as the case moves forward. Walt Nauta was charged alongside Trump in June in a 38-count indictment alleging the mishandling of classified documents. His arraignment was to have happened twice before, but he had struggled to retain a lawyer licensed in Florida and one appearance was postponed because of his travel troubles.

NIGHTLY ROAD TO 2024

WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN — At the very moment last month that images of President Joe Biden falling on stage at the Air Force Academy’s commencement rocketed around the internet, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer was reminding her state’s business executives and political leaders about what could have been.

Speaking at the Detroit Regional Chamber’s annual conference on this resort island, Whitmer won repeated applause from the centrist crowd by reciting the fruits of her party’s so-called trifecta in Lansing, POLITICO writes.

She ruled out running for president next year even if Biden forgoes reelection, but allowed a resounding “maybe” to pursuing the White House down the road .

Democrats in Michigan’s congressional delegation have pleaded with Whitmer to run, I’m told by officials familiar with the conversations, and the lawmakers have themselves been nudged by colleagues from other states to push her. Notably, that roster of congressional Democrats from other states eager for a Whitmer bid included members of the Congressional Black Caucus.

These backstage conversations have taken place as Biden’s approval ratings show little sign of improvement and increasingly appear impervious to external events, for good or ill. Of course, Democrats are betting that the most significant external event of all — Republicans renominating a candidate with more baggage than O’Hare at Thanksgiving — will tip the election again to Biden.

LOYALTY TEST — Gov. Ron DeSantis and former President Donald Trump are finding that the price to make the 2024 Florida primary ballot is going up, reports POLITICO.

All GOP candidates will have to pledge their loyalty to the eventual Republican nominee to make the March 19 primary , a contest that could tip the balance of the crowded race since Florida’s contest is a winner-take-all primary. The new oath, which includes a promise to “endorse” the GOP nominee and requires a candidate to pledge not to run as an independent or third-party candidate, mirrors language adopted by the Republican National Committee for its first debate.

POLITICAL BOSS — Hours after Marianne Williamson announced the hiring of her third campaign manager in five months, six staffers left her team through a round of firings and resignations .

The departures came primarily over a fight about Williamson’s ballot access operations, or lack thereof, POLITICO reports. The campaign’s entire three-person South Carolina operation, which had been led by Marcurius Byrd, resigned, according to four people with knowledge of the campaign’s operations and team discussions, granted anonymity to discuss internal dynamics. In addition, Carlos Cardona, who was recently promoted to head the campaign after serving as New Hampshire state director, fired two national field directors and a member of Williamson’s New Hampshire team, according to those same people.

AROUND THE WORLD

Smoke billows from the Donnie Creek wildfire burning north of Fort St. John in British Columbia, Canada on July 2.

Smoke billows from the Donnie Creek wildfire burning north of Fort St. John in British Columbia, Canada on July 2. | Noah Berger/AP Photo

SO HOT YOU’RE HURTING MY FEELINGS — Canada’s 2023 wildfire season is unprecedented by many measures — but this is just the start , write Sue Allan and Nick Taylor-Vaisey .

“It’s no understatement to say that the 2023 fire season is — and will continue to be — record-breaking,” Michael Norton, director of the Northern Forestry Centre with the Canadian Forest Service at NRCan, said Thursday during a technical briefing on the unfolding crisis.

There are 639 active fires across Canada, 351 of which are out of control, Norton said. “The total area burned now exceeds any year on record.”

An unparalleled number of people have also been displaced, with Indigenous communities particularly hit, in a national crisis that has spurred major international outreach and concern, in part due to smoke wafting across borders and the Atlantic.

Natural Resources Canada said it expects drought and above-normal temperatures to contribute to higher-than-normal fire activity through the summer. El NiƱo may exacerbate conditions, especially in northern Canada, Norton added.

Asked if wildfire smoke will continue to trigger air quality warnings in the U.S. and beyond, meteorologist Armel Castellan told reporters that modeling is tricky in a chaotic environment.

“The smoke goes both in the lower part of the atmosphere and higher up into the highway of the atmosphere where it can transport across oceans and right all the way down to, of course, the eastern seaboard, New England, parts of the United States,” he said. “We saw our same smoke make its way to England, Portugal, Spain.”

DOING A 180 — From national hero to drug-addled, bewigged zero: the Kremlin’s propaganda machine has turned against Wagner Group founder Yevgeny Prigozhin , writes Zoya Sheftalovich .

In a sensational report on state-run Rossiya-1’s “60 Minutes” program on Wednesday evening, the Kremlin’s propaganda attack dogs played footage of what they claimed was a raid of Prigozhin’s mansion and offices, showing cash, guns, drugs, a helicopter, multiple (Russian) passports — and a closet full of terrible wigs.

“The investigation is continuing,” said pundit Eduard Petrov at the top of the program, referring to the probe into the mutiny led by Prigozhin last month, during which the leader of the Wagner Group of mercenaries marched his men to within 200 kilometers of Moscow in a bid to oust the country’s military leadership. “In reality, no one planned to close this case,” he added.

It was an open declaration of war on Prigozhin, and came after Russian President Vladimir Putin and his aides issued improbable assurances that the criminal case into those who had organized the mutiny would be dropped if the warlord and his Wagnerites agreed to either disarm, sign contracts with the Russian defense ministry, or leave for Belarus. This morning, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, who ostensibly negotiated the exile agreement with Prigozhin and Putin, told state media the warlord was not in the country.

 

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 .

 
 
NIGHTLY NUMBER

5,000

The number of unique donors Republican presidential candidate Asa Hutchinson currently says he has , well short of the 40,000 needed to qualify for Republican debates. The former Arkansas governor has positioned himself as a moderate in a crowded, qualified GOP candidate pool, vocally opposing former President Donald Trump amid his slew of investigations and legal woes.

RADAR SWEEP

THE NEWEST BIRD APP — For years, a significant chunk of Twitter’s user base has been looking for an alternative that serves a similar function — first largely due to complaints about censorship of free speech and then because of Elon Musk’s acquisition of the platform in October of last year. That brought with it some increased technical difficulties, as well as continued frustration about the politics and functionality of the site. Now, after a lot of different sorts of tries, the platform seems to have its first real rival . Threads, produced by Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta, has already been downloaded by tens of millions of people since it launched Wednesday — a well-timed market correction given some of Twitter’s technical difficulties this week. Can Threads finally be the thing to displace Twitter? Amanda Hoover explains how it could be possible for Wired.

PARTING VIDEO

A video of former Vice President Mike Pence speaking to a Trump voter.

WATCH — A Trump supporter in Iowa confronts former Vice President Mike Pence over his rejection of Donald Trump’s call to overturn Joe Biden’s election.

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The Squabbling Conways "Attacking" KELLYANNE CONWAY

 

Wasn't it MERCER who recommended her for the job?
Sold her company to LEONARD LEO, never mind ethics.




Lucas Kunce for Missouri: Hawley’s latest embarrassment

 


Lucas Kunce for U.S. Senate

Did you catch the latest headline about Josh Hawley?

Headline from the Kansas City Star that reads: ' Josh Hawley rings in July 4 with fake quote with antisemitic, white nationalist roots'


Missourians deserve a U.S. Senator who won’t routinely embarrass them. That’s why Lucas Kunce is running to replace Josh Hawley and flip this Senate seat.


Thank you,

— Team Lucas Kunce



POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Chaos could cost Boston councilors on the ballot



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BY LISA KASHINSKY

With help from Kelly Garrity

COUNCIL CONTROVERSIES — The Boston City Council is a mess. Soon councilors could face consequences for it.

The past few weeks have been … eventful: Ricardo Arroyo paid a $3,000 penalty for violating the conflict of interest law by representing his brother in a sexual harassment lawsuit after becoming a city councilor. Kendra Lara crashed a car into a house and now faces a host of alleged motor vehicle violations , including driving with a revoked license.

Councilors warred with each other and with the mayor over a city budget that almost cut spending for police and veterans. The process was complete with walked-back votes override attempts and hurt feelings that showed the council’s dysfunction didn’t end with its court-prompted redistricting redo. Allegations of racism have swirled within a body that has often divided this term along racial lines. And the sparring is spilling online as members mount their reelection bids — and begin to position for the next mayoral race.

Council President Ed Flynn — who’s alternated between acting like a dad trying to quell warring siblings and stoking the division by bankrolling the lawsuit that nixed the city’s first redistricting map — slammed Arroyo and Lara in a statement Wednesday for continuing to “draw negative attention” to the body through their “troubling ethical and legal lapses.” But he stopped short of calling for their resignations, telling the Herald that discipline “is not something I have considered yet.”

Hours later, Councilor Michael Flaherty called it quits. The 20-year council veteran and top vote-getter in several at-large contests stunned the Boston political class by withdrawing his name for reelection “after much deliberation and self-reflection.” Flaherty didn’t mention the ongoing drama, but he didn’t need to.

“The body is so dysfunctional that it’s driving good people from running or serving,” one City Hall insider lamented to Playbook after Flaherty’s surprise announcement, calling the council a “complete clown show.”

Flaherty's departure is “a big loss for the city," former city Councilor John Tobin said. But he told Playbook it’s understandable given the “soap opera” that is the current council: “You just get to a point in your life that’s like, why am I doing this?”

The Boston City Council convenes, Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2022, in the Council Chamber, at Boston City Hall, in Boston. The Boston City Council voted Wednesday to form a task force to study how it can provide reparations and other forms of atonement to Black Bostonians for the city's role in slavery and its legacy of inequality. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

The Boston City Council convenes, Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2022, in the council chamber at City Hall. | AP

The chaotic council won’t barrel ahead unchecked for much longer. Voters will soon head to the polls for the city’s September and November municipal contests. Flaherty’s exit from the at-large race guarantees at least one new face on the council next year, with now just three incumbents and five challengers running for the four citywide seats. District 3 Councilor Frank Baker’s departure guarantees another new member.

And five of the nine district councilors have drawn challengers , according to the city’s elections department (Flynn, Gabriela Coletta and Brian Worrell are so far unopposed).

Arroyo has three opponents: Roslindale’s Enrique Pepen, executive director of the mayor's neighborhood services team; Hyde Park police officer Jose Ruiz and Mattapan activist Jean-Claude Sanon. Arroyo has more money banked than any of his challengers, though Pepen and Ruiz outraised him in June, per OCPF. Oddly, Arroyo’s campaign website still says he’s running for district attorney.

Lara has two challengers: William King, a past at-large candidate from West Roxbury who could draw votes from the part of the district that Lara is weakest in, and Benjamin Weber, a workers’ rights attorney from Jamaica Plain. Neither Lara nor Arroyo responded to calls for comment.

Politicians have rebounded from bad press and personal troubles before. But, as former city councilor Larry DiCara told Playbook, “anything can happen in an off-year election when the turnout is lower and a small number of votes can have a dramatic impact.”

GOOD THURSDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Tips? Scoops? Running for city council? Email me: lkashinsky@politico.com .

TODAY — Gov. Maura Healey remains in Rhode Island through Saturday. Acting Gov. Kim Driscoll boards the Blue Line at 8:30 a.m. at the Orient Heights station to highlight transportation alternatives during the Sumner Tunnel closure. Wu launches the city’s Swim Safe Boston initiative at 10:30 a.m. at the BCYF Paris Street.

 

JOIN 7/11 FOR A TALK ON THE FAA’S FUTURE: Congress is making moves to pass the FAA Reauthorization Act, laying the groundwork for the FAA’s long-term agenda to modernize the aviation sector to meet the challenges of today and innovate for tomorrow. Join POLITICO on July 11 to discuss what will make it into the final reauthorization bill and examine how reauthorization will reshape FAA’s priorities and authorities. REGISTER HERE .

 
 
DATELINE BEACON HILL

— OUT OF SIGHT, NOT OUT OF MIND: The Massachusetts Taxpayers Foundation is calling for the “timely resolution” of tax talks between legislative chambers in a new analysis that says the state can afford to do everything the House and Senate put on the table. That includes cutting the short-term capital gains tax rate and expanding housing tax credits.

The one measure the group doesn’t want to see in the final deal: the Senate’s plan to require married couples who file joint federal income tax returns to do the same at the state level. Supporters say the change would close a “loophole” couples could use to avoid paying the new millionaires surtax. But MTF argues it would “run directly counter to the broader goals of addressing high costs and competitiveness.”

Oh, and there’s still no budget. Massachusetts is one of just five states that hasn’t passed a fiscal year 2024 spending plan , per the National Association of State Budget Officers.

— PUNTING ON RENT CONTROL: Boston Mayor Michelle Wu ’s rent-control plan likely won’t get a hearing on Beacon Hill until the fall, the State House News Service reports after lawmakers left the city's home-rule petition off the dockets for the housing committee’s June and July meetings.

— “Harvard Legacy Admissions Targeted by Massachusetts Lawmakers,” by Janet Lorin, Bloomberg: “A bill in Massachusetts seeks to tax rich colleges that favor families of alumni and donors in admissions policies — namely Harvard University — and give the money to poorer community colleges. The legislation targets Harvard, Williams College and a half-dozen other schools that use preferences for students whose parents attended the college, called legacies, and meet a threshold of current endowment value per student.”

— IN MEMORIAM: “State House Mourns Passing Of DCR Ranger [Joanne] Croken,” by Sam Doran, State House News Service (paywall).

FROM THE HUB

— “Wu wants to deliver police reform via union contracts. With potential arbitration on the horizon, will it happen?” by Danny McDonald, Boston Globe: “It’s shaping up to be a defining question of Michelle Wu’s mayoral tenure: Can she deliver meaningful reform to the nation’s oldest police force? Wu has repeatedly cited collective bargaining as a tool to implement reform within the Police Department, which has been buffeted by scandal in recent years. But as the state takes over protracted contract talks with the Boston Police Patrolmen’s Association, the city’s largest police union, any changes to the next labor pact could be decided by independent arbitrators.”

— "Just What Is Marty Walsh up to, Anyway?" by David Bernstein, Boston Magazine: "By all appearances, Walsh seems to be in the Boston public eye more and more these days after consciously stepping back to avoid detracting from the current mayor, Michelle Wu."

— “Hillary Clinton headlines list of speakers for NAACP National Convention in Boston,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald.

— ICYMI: “Former Globe president sues over the way he charges he was fired,” by Adam Gaffin, Universal Hub.

 

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PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

— “WRTA appoints Connecticut transit official as new administrator,” by TrĆ©a Lavery, MassLive: “The Worcester Regional Transit Authority has chosen Joshua Rickman, an official with Connecticut’s state transit system, as its new administrator.”

— “Repairs that will shut down part of Green Line extension postponed until September,” by Mike Pescaro and Abbey Niezgoda, NBC10 Boston.

ROLLINS REPORT

— “Rollins could face suspension of law license, disbarment at hands of state disciplinary board,” by Mike Damiano and Shelley Murphy, Boston Globe: “The misconduct that Rachael Rollins is alleged to have committed as US attorney is so unusual and varied that there is little precedent for what discipline she might receive, if any, from the state agency that regulates lawyers, according to legal ethics experts. … It is unclear if the board has begun investigating Rollins. Its general counsel, Joseph Berman, said, ‘We don’t comment on pending cases.’”

DATELINE D.C.

— "Spending bill targets Kerry’s office, global climate spending," by David Jordan, Roll Call: "House Republican appropriators want to eliminate funding for John Kerry’s position as President Joe Biden’s special envoy and for other international climate efforts."

FROM THE 413

— “Here’s what happened when West Springfield police added a mental health clinician,” by Aprell May Munford, Springfield Republican: “On the second floor of the J. Edward Christian Municipal Office Building in West Springfield, Ariana Ploran sits monitoring a police radio — ready to jump into action. She did that the other day, holding an impromptu therapy session with someone on the side of a road. That same week, Ploran, a licensed mental health clinician, gave substance abuse resources to a person in a jail cell. … Since [she started joining police officers on calls in] November, repeat 911 crisis calls in the town have dropped by 20%, Ploran said.”

— “Westfield director of public health is charged with allegedly stealing more than $7,000 in union funds,” by Stephanie Barry, Springfield Republican: “According to a police report obtained by The Republican, Joseph Rouse, the city’s director of public health, cashed checks and did not deposit that money in the union’s account.”

— "Controversial Easthampton city council ordinance on crisis pregnancy centers passes," by Juliet Schulman-Hall, MassLive: "At a heated public hearing attended by more than 50 people across the Commonwealth on Wednesday evening, an ordinance — which provides protections for those seeking reproductive and gender-affirming health care services — passed with six councilors supporting the measure despite mayoral apprehension."

MEANWHILE IN RHODE ISLAND

— “State engineer accuses SouthCoast Wind of lying to RI agencies. What the email says,” by Alex Kuffner, Providence Journal: “A member of the team that reviews offshore wind projects for Rhode Island’s coastal regulatory agency has accused SouthCoast Wind of lying to a separate state board about the company’s $5-billion proposal to install nearly 150 wind turbines south of Martha’s Vineyard.”

MEANWHILE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE

— “After extended health-related absence, Nashua state lawmaker who sued for remote participation resigns,” by Todd Bookman, New Hampshire Public Radio: “Longtime Nashua state Rep. David Cote, who is part of an ongoing lawsuit seeking remote participation in the New Hampshire Legislature, has resigned. … Cote, who was first elected to the New Hampshire House of Representatives in the 1980s and has served in Democratic leadership, was never sworn in after winning election in 2022.”

HEARD ‘ROUND THE BUBBLAH

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to former state Sen. Richard Ross, state Sen. Jake Oliveira, Dave Eisenstadter and WBUR’s Cloe Axelson.

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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BREAKING: Elon Musk’s gamble BLOWS UP in his face PAY ATTENTION! ELECT CLOWNS EXPECT A CIRCUS!

  ELON MUSK TOLD MAGA DIM WITS TO CUT CHILD CANCER REEARCH FUNDING! WHAT HAS ELON MUSK EVER DONE FOR ANYONE?  THIS IS ABOUT CUTTING SOCIAL S...