Wednesday, July 12, 2023

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Healey hits the road ... again

 



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BY LISA KASHINSKY

RACKING UP THOSE FREQUENT FLYER MILES — Maura Healey has been governor of Massachusetts for six months. She’s only been in the state for five of them.

Healey has spent 27 nights out of state since she was sworn in on Jan. 5, according to a review of the governor’s schedule. Counting travel days, her absences climb to upwards of 30. She’s trekked to Washington, D.C., four times, Florida twice (once for vacation, once for a Democratic governors’ conference) and Michigan for another DGA confab. She spent the past two weeks on a trade trip to Ireland followed by some R&R in Rhode Island.

Now, four days after returning to Massachusetts, Healey is leaving again. The governor is heading to Atlantic City this afternoon for a three-day National Governors Association meeting at the Hard Rock Hotel. By contrast, records show Charlie Baker spent less than two weeks out of the state during his first half year as governor.

Healey’s office defended her numerous trips in the name of “bolstering” the state’s competitiveness and said the governor "remains in constant communication with her team and continues to work" while traveling.

The governor “believes that engaging with other Governors and elected officials , and pitching Massachusetts to businesses, educational institutions, and residents in other states and countries are crucial to our success as a state,” Healey spokesperson Karissa Hand said in a statement.

Geoff Beckwith of the Massachusetts Municipal Association agrees, arguing that Healey’s physical absences are “immaterial” in the Zoom age. “Plus," he said, "who wouldn’t want the governor to be meeting with her Democratic and Republican colleagues across the country, building relationships and building best practices?”

But the conservative-leaning Massachusetts Fiscal Alliance doesn’t share the same view — particularly with the state budget growing later by the day. The group’s spokesperson, Paul Craney, told Playbook that the governor (and state lawmakers) “should not be abandoning their posts on Beacon Hill and traveling anywhere until they’ve done their job and passed an annual budget.”

“Massachusetts voters would be best served,” Craney continued, “if their governor took this more seriously before she booked her next junket.”

GOOD WEDNESDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. It's not yet clear how much Healey’s trips are costing taxpayers. Personal and political trips are not paid for by the state, her office said. The cost of the trade trip to Ireland, however, is still being calculated and will be divided between the state, the Massachusetts Technology Collaborative and the Massachusetts Competitive Partnership.

TODAY — Healey surveys western Massachusetts storm damage at 9 a.m. in North Adams and 10:30 a.m. in Williamsburg . Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll and Senate President Karen Spilka tour Framingham District Court at 10 a.m. Boston Mayor Michelle Wu attends a women in policing event at BPD headquarters at 11:15 a.m. AG Andrea Campbell tours Springfield’s Caring Health Center at noon and hosts an open house at the AG’s Springfield regional office at 2 p.m. Sen. Elizabeth Warren chairs a Senate subcommittee hearing on bank mergers at 2:30 p.m. in D.C.

Tips? Scoops? Traveling with the governor? Email me: lkashinsky@politico.com .

 

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THE NATIONAL TAKE

A photo illustration of several US governors with images of a newspaper, billboard, and bus behind them.

POLITICO illustration/Photos by Getty Images, AP, iStock

— FOES WITH BENEFITS: Gov. Maura Healey made a splash by taking out a dozen billboards across Texas and Florida promoting Massachusetts’ LGBTQ protections as part of a $750,000 tourism campaign. But she’s hardly the first governor to cross state lines to send a message. Governors deprived of foils at home in states with one-party rule are increasingly trolling their ideological foes in faraway places. Shia Kapos and I dig into the digs for POLITICO’s “The Fifty.”

MIGRANTS IN MASSACHUSETTS

— “A new BMC policy turns away migrant families seeking shelter — even if it means sending some to the airport in an Uber,” by Samantha J. Gross and Elizabeth Koh, Boston Globe: “Administrators at Boston Medical Center, which serves the neediest patients in the Boston area, have barred migrant families from sheltering in its emergency department, in some cases even sending them after-hours in Ubers to Logan Airport, according to five workers and a document reviewed by the Globe.”

— “Cost of housing migrants in state-funded hotels, motels unclear as Massachusetts witnesses influx,” by Chris Van Buskirk, Boston Herald: “A Republican state lawmaker accused the Healey administration of providing a ‘woefully incomplete’ response to a request for the costs associated with housing migrant families in 38 hotels and motels on an emergency basis. A spokesperson for Gov. Maura Healey pushed back against Rep. Peter Durant, saying the Spencer Republican [who’s running for state Senate] agreed to a pared-down ‘narrative’ answer to a records request asking for the number of hotels and motels contracted with the state to house migrant families and the total cost to taxpayers.”

DATELINE BEACON HILL

— “AG seeks tougher penalties for 'ghost' guns,” by Christian M. Wade, Gloucester Daily Times: “Attorney General Andrea Campbell is urging lawmakers to set tough restrictions on ‘ghost guns’ as they consider tightening the state’s firearm laws. … But Second Amendment groups argue tougher gun controls are unnecessary and would punish law-abiding owners while ignoring the issue of illegal firearms. On Tuesday, the National Association for Gun Rights issued a ‘travel advisory’ warning legal firearm owners to avoid Massachusetts, citing the proposed gun control regulations.”

— “Rolling rally highlights push for Uber and Lyft drivers to unionize,” by Katie Lannan, GBH News: “Honking their horns and cheering as they circled the State House in a caravan, Uber and Lyft drivers rallied with labor groups and other advocates Tuesday to again press Massachusetts lawmakers to pass a bill that would let the drivers unionize and offer other worker protections.”

— “Nonprofits face a wave of help requests as new driver's license law takes effect,” by Andrea Perdomo-Hernandez, WBUR.

FROM THE HUB

— “Healey recommends head of Boston police watchdog office for Suffolk register of probate,” by Danny McDonald, Boston Globe: “Governor Maura Healey is recommending Stephanie Everett, the head of Boston’s police watchdog agency, to be appointed Suffolk Register of Probate and Family Court, replacing Felix D. Arroyo who announced his retirement in March. Everett, currently the executive director of Boston’s Office of Police Accountability and Transparency — commonly referred to as OPAT — would be the first Black person to serve as Suffolk register of probate. The appointment still needs approval from the Governor’s Council.”

— “‘We can have all of this’: Wu highlights promise of a climate-friendly transportation system,” by Sabrina Shankman, Boston Globe: “At a transportation summit Tuesday, Mayor Michelle Wu laid out her vision for how the city can transform, even in the face of a troubled T.”

— “Wu takes aim at state education commissioner’s claims about BPS,” by Hannah Loss, GBH News.

 

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THE RACE FOR CITY HALL

— CASH DASH: Big names are looking to deliver Boston City Council President Ed Flynn a big fundraising haul at a July 22 reception at PR guru George Regan ’s Mashpee residence. Former Legal Sea Foods CEO Roger Berkowitz , former Attorney General Frank Bellotti and former City Councilor Bill Linehan are among the hosts of the event that doubles as an 84th birthday celebration for Flynn’s father, former Boston Mayor Ray Flynn per an invite obtained by Playbook and first reported by the Dorchester Reporter’s Gintautas Dumcius .

— ‘NO REGRETS’: Outgoing Boston City Councilor Michael Flaherty “went back and forth” over whether to continue his reelection bid. But he ultimately has “no regrets” about ending it, he told Dumcius in a new interview , adding that he hopes “voters will hit the reset button” on a dysfunctional council nearly paralyzed by its infighting.

— BAD FOR BUSINESS: Boston Mayor Michelle Wu piled on in an interview on GBH’s “Boston Public Radio” yesterday, saying that the string of controversies surrounding members of the City Council “hurts [the body’s] credibility on every issue.”

— "Former mayor Sam Sutter wants his job back. He promises to 'deliver results' with a plan," by Jo C. Goode, Herald News: "Former Fall River mayor and district attorney C. Sam Sutter told a crowd of supporters, in his official announcement for another run at the city's highest office, that if elected again he will be a 'results'-driven mayor. 'I can deliver results for the people of Fall River; results he has not been able to deliver,' said Sutter, referencing incumbent Mayor Paul Coogan."

FROM THE DELEGATION

— PRIME TARGET: Searching for deals this Amazon Prime Day? Sen. Elizabeth Warren is offering 20 percent off her campaign merch with the code “PRIME”. The proceeds, she said in a fundraising email, will help “power our movement to pass a wealth tax” and make billionaires like Amazon founder Jeff Bezos “pay their fair share” — or “cry.”

— TL;DR: Rep. Lori Trahan is renewing her push to make websites and mobile apps make their terms-of-service agreements more transparent. The bill that would force companies to distill those lengthy agreements that no one reads into easily digestible summaries: the aptly titled “Terms-of-service Labeling, Design and Readability (TLDR) Act.”

FROM THE 413

— CALL TO ACTION: Reproductive Equity Now is urging Easthampton city councilors to override Mayor Nicole LaChapelle ’s veto of an ordinance that would protect access to reproductive and gender-affirming care and raise public awareness about so-called crisis pregnancy centers.

LaChapelle expressed concerns about costly legal challenges and the city’s role in enforcing the state’s abortion laws in rejecting the measure. But Rebecca Hart Holder, president of Reproductive Equity Now, issued a statement Tuesday saying that “Massachusetts has an obligation to double down on its efforts to educate and protect the public from deceptive facilities that promote medical disinformation.”

THE LOCAL ANGLE

— “Furor over LGBTQ+ Pride flag, rainbow crosswalks roils Whitman,” by Chris Helms, Brockton Enterprise: “Whitman officials narrowly agreed to raise the LGBTQ+ Pride flag on public property, but the culture-war flashpoint over painting crosswalks in rainbow colors remains to be settled.”

— “Mass. Gaming Commission rejects LIV Golf betting as Senate probes deal with PGA Tour,” by Jon Keller, WBZ.

MEANWHILE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE

— OFF TO THE RACES: Outgoing Manchester Mayor Joyce Craig officially jumped into the New Hampshire governor's race on Tuesday, two months after forming an exploratory committee for the seat. She's facing Executive Councilor Cinde Warmington in a primary that's already dividing the state's Democratic establishment. Republican Gov. Chris Sununu has been hinting he might not seek a record fifth two-year term, but has yet to announce his intentions. More from WMUR .

MEANWHILE IN RHODE ISLAND

— “High-profile progressive lawmakers Khanna, Schakowsky back Regunberg for Congress,” by Ted Nesi, WPRI: “The endorsements by Congressman Ro Khanna of California and Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky of Illinois were announced by [former state Rep. Aaron] Regunberg’s campaign on Tuesday. … The twin endorsements are the latest effort by Regunberg’s campaign to position him as the top choice for progressive voters in a primary that could see as many as 21 Democrats on the ballot.”

— "GOP endorses Marine Corps veteran Gerry Leonard for Cicilline seat," by Ted Nesi, WPRI.

HEARD ‘ROUND THE BUBBLAH

SPOTTED — Former Rep. Joe Kennedy III , the U.S. special envoy to Northern Ireland, on Capitol Hill yesterday (h/t Mia McCarthy and Andrew Solender).

TRANSITIONS — Stephanie Swanson has been named EVP of government affairs at the Associated Industries of Massachusetts. She is an alum of Eric Lesser and Barry Finegold ’s state Senate offices.

— Former White House economic adviser Brian Deese has been named an MIT Innovation Fellow.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to Charlestown state Rep. Dan Ryan , Daily Hampshire Gazette reporter Scott Merzbach, Gregorio Gomez, Arlene Remz, Madeline Saunders and POLITICO’s Ryan Lizza .

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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COVID! DEER TRANSMISSION!

COVID!
As I was leaving a grocery store yesterday, a woman in the parking lot jokingly yelled 'PUT YOUR FACE MASK BACK ON!'
She explained that TOBEY HOSPITAL was overwhelmed with COVID patients.
In addition, DEER are transmitting COVID back to people.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-023-39782-x 



POLITICO Nightly: The left goes to war with itself



 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY CATHERINE KIM

Massachusetts state Rep. Mike Connolly in 2017 in Cambridge, Mass.

Massachusetts state Rep. Mike Connolly in 2017 in Cambridge, Mass. | Ryan McBride/AFP via Getty Images

PURITY TESTS — The Democratic Socialists of America has seen a meteoric rise since 2015, when Sen. Bernie Sanders, a self-proclaimed Democratic socialist, began his first campaign for president. The movement has elected a slew of lawmakers to state legislatures and city councils across the country, and grown from 5,000 to 92,000 members in the span of less than a decade.

But that growth has come at a cost. Infighting within local DSA chapters is making headlines across the country — a sign that the far-left faction of the progressive wing may be fracturing as a result of its success.

The latest DSA meltdown came this week in Massachusetts, where the Boston chapter clashed with state Rep. Mike Connolly — who was elected as a DSA member — for working with establishment Democrats.

Connolly’s offenses, according to DSA, include supporting a stabilized rent program that doesn’t align with the group’s platform and endorsing a non-DSA candidate in 2020. Before the group had a chance to expel him though, Connelly announced he was dropping his DSA affiliation, criticizing the group for failing to see the benefits of building broader coalitions.

“Why continue with an organization whose new leadership has made it clear they oppose seeking common ground with state leaders or building broader coalitions to benefit working people?” Connolly wrote in a statement first shared with POLITICO .

These ideological tests are also bad for constituents, as the energy spent on infighting ultimately “takes the service out of public service,” said Joe Caiazzo, a Massachusetts-based political consultant and top aide for the Bernie Sanders 2020 campaign.

“The whole point of the progressive movement is to fight for a set of policy values that are going to make the lives of working people throughout this country better,” he said. “How on earth is inflicting a purity test going to help working people throughout the country?”

The Connolly clash isn’t an isolated occurrence. Across the country, DSA chapters are roiling with conflicts between members who win elections and the hardliners who object to their legislative compromises. The ripple effects of the struggle between power and purity aren’t hard to find: In the Boston-area, where DSA had seen major wins on local city councils, the group is down to a single representative in the state legislature now that Connolly is out of the picture. In Nevada, the DSA takeover of the state Democratic Party in 2021 came to an end in this year’s state party election — a bitter conclusion to a brief reign marked by intense controversy (It didn’t help that Nevada was the only state where an incumbent Democratic governor lost last year ).

The far left’s fractures come at a pivotal time for the movement. Dozens of progressives, many backed by DSA, won elections in the 2022 midterms — from city councils to Congress — and the hope is that these wins will provide a playbook for running on policies such as affordable housing and minimum wage.

But just as progressive issues are becoming part of the mainstream debate in many places and the left is increasing its voice in the halls of power, the internal fights are damaging the brand.

DSA has historically played a pivotal role in building the progressive coalition through grassroots organizing, says Caiazzo, but the focus on ideological purity will ultimately be their demise if they continue to make headlines for kicking out members who don’t reach their stringent standards.

“At the end of the day, politics is about compromise,” he said. “If you’re not willing to compromise, then you don’t get to play on the team. And if you can’t play on the team, then there’s no way to ever win.”

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight’s author at ckim@politico.com or on Twitter at @ck_525 .

 

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WHAT'D I MISS?

— Microsoft, Activision defeat FTC’s bid to block $69B deal: A federal judge has sided with Microsoft and Activision Blizzard as they fought off the Federal Trade Commission’s attempt to block a deal between the two companies that would create a video gaming giant. Today’s ruling is a stinging rebuke for the FTC in the biggest test yet of its ability to police competition in fast-moving technology markets, a key priority for agency Chair Lina Khan, an antitrust hawk appointed by President Joe Biden in 2021. The FTC initially challenged the deal in its in-house court in December.

— United Airlines CEO warns of more weather delays as climate warms: Air travelers should brace for even more of the delayed and canceled flights that have made flying so miserable recently, United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby said today — all because of climate change. “More heat in the atmosphere, thermodynamics 101 — we’re going to have more thunderstorms,” he said. As an example, Kirby said that almost a week of thunderstorms west of Newark Liberty International Airport crippled his airline’s operations ahead of the July 4th holiday. Kirby argued that no airline can withstand six straight days of storms that prevent flights from departing, especially at a hub airport like Newark.

— Flores launches comeback bid for Texas House seat: Former GOP Rep. Mayra Flores launched a comeback bid today, months after she lost her South Texas district to Democratic Rep. Vicente Gonzalez by 9 points. Flores made her announcement on “Fox & Friends” while criticizing Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas’ work on the border. The National Republican Congressional Committee had been working to recruit Flores to make another run, commissioning a poll that showed she could win the district that President Joe Biden carried by nearly 16 points in 2020.

NIGHTLY ROAD TO 2024

THE GEORGIA CASE — A grand jury that was sworn in today in Atlanta will likely consider whether criminal charges are appropriate for former President Donald Trump or his Republican allies for their efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss in Georgia, the AP reports.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has been investigating since shortly after Trump called Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger in early 2021 and suggested the state’s top elections official could help him “find 11,780 votes,” just enough needed to beat Democrat Joe Biden.

The 2 1/2-year investigation expanded to include an examination of a slate of Republican fake electors, phone calls by Trump and others to Georgia officials in the weeks after the 2020 election and unfounded allegations of widespread election fraud made to state lawmakers. Willis, a Democrat, is expected to present her case before one of two new grand juries being seated today. She has previously suggested that any indictments would likely come in August.

DEBATE DODGER — Republicans are divided over whether former President Trump should show up at the first Republican presidential debate scheduled for Aug. 23 in Milwaukee, with some warning it would be a bad look for their party if Trump skips it.

Some Republicans think Trump is holding off on committing to the debate to exert leverage over the rules and tickets to the event, reports The Hill. The Republican National Committee has announced that candidates will have to pledge to support the eventual GOP presidential nominee in order to qualify for the debate stage, a promise that Trump has so far refused to make.

Trump’s absence from the debate would make Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who is running in a distant second place, the focal point of the evening. GOP candidates would concentrate their fire on DeSantis in hopes of displacing him as the leading alternative to Trump. A debate without Trump would deal a setback to former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R), who has built much of his campaign on a promise to go toe-to-toe with the former president, something other candidates have shied away from.

TRUTH IN FUNDRAISING — In the months before the 2020 presidential election, Roy W. Bailey, a Dallas businessman, received a stream of text messages from Donald J. Trump’s re-election campaign, asking for money in persistent, almost desperate terms.

“Have you forgotten me?” the messages read, Mr. Bailey recalled. “Have you deserted us?”

He is now raising money for Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, whose campaign has pledged to avoid the kinds of online fund-raising tactics that irritated Mr. Bailey and that have spread in both parties, particularly the Republican Party, in recent years as candidates have tried to amass small donors.

No phony deadlines, Mr. DeSantis has promised donors. No wildly implausible pledges that sizable contributions will be matched by committees affiliated with the campaign. And no tricking donors into recurring donations. This strategy is one of the subtle ways Mr. DeSantis’s team is trying to contrast him with Mr. Trump , who has often cajoled, guilt-tripped and occasionally misled small donors, writes the New York Times.

AROUND THE WORLD

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson shake hands next to NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg in Vilnius this week.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson shake hands next to NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg in Vilnius this week. | Henrik Montgomery/TT News Agency via AP

IN THE CLUB — Biden administration officials today celebrated Sweden’s ascension into NATO and promised that Ukraine will one day be on the same path, writes Matt Berg .

Fourteen months after applying to the military alliance, Stockholm’s bid got the green light from Turkey on Monday after months of being blocked by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. Sweden is now on track to become NATO’s 32nd member.

“It sends two messages. First of all, our alliance is stronger, it’s bigger with two new members — Finland and now Sweden, and it’s more united than ever,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on CBS. “In terms of Russia’s aggression against Ukraine, it’s sending a very strong message to Putin that he’s not going to outlast us, he’s not going to outlast Ukraine, and the sooner he ends this war of aggression the better.”

As part of the agreement, Turkish, Swedish and NATO officials explained that Stockholm had changed laws, expanded counterterrorism cooperation against the Kurdistan Workers’ Party and restarted arms exports to Turkey.

Ankara and Stockholm also agreed to create a “new bilateral Security Compact” and that Sweden will present a “roadmap as the basis of its continued fight against terrorism in all its forms,” according to a joint statement from the officials. As part of the deal, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg also agreed to create a new post of “Special Coordinator for Counter-Terrorism” at NATO.

UNWELCOME GIFT — Finland’s new prime minister has had his honeymoon period cut short by two racism scandals that have thrown his government into turmoil, writes Charlie Duxbury .

Center-right leader Petteri Orpo, widely regarded as a dependable political operator, is already watching the uproar undercut one of his key strategic moves: The decision to team up with the far-right Finns Party in government.

The Finns Party has long been seen as something of a wild card in Finnish politics, pushing a “Finland first” line, which has seen it advocate strong anti-EU and anti-immigration positions. Its leaders, from Timo Soini to Jussi Halla-aho to current chief Riikka Purra, have long kept headline writers busy with flamethrowing speeches and populist blog posts.

After elections in April, Purra secured serious influence in Orpo’s new government, not least by taking the role of finance minister and deputy prime minister for herself during lengthy government formation talks.

But shortly after the new coalition was announced on June 16, historical public statements by senior party players — including Purra herself — started coming back to haunt both the Finns Party and Orpo.

Economy Minister Vilhelm Junnila was forced to quit after allegations that he had made a joke about Nazism. Now, Purra has found herself under pressure amid allegations that she used racist slurs in online blog posts in 2008 and encouraged violence against beggars in the form of spitting.

 

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NIGHTLY NUMBER

$250 million

The amount of money that Bank of America is paying — between fines of $150 million and reimbursements of customers of $100 million — for “double-dipping” on overdraft fees, withholding reward bonuses on credit cards and opening accounts without customer consent . It is one of the largest financial penalties in years against Bank of America and comes on the heels of the Biden administration’s mandate to Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director Rohit Chopra to go after “junk fees.”

RADAR SWEEP

THE WORLD OF ANTONOFF — If you’ve listened to any pop music within the last five years, you’ve probably heard the stamp of super-producer — and frontman of Bleachers — Jack Antonoff. He’s worked with artists from Taylor Swift to Lorde to Sara Bareilles. But at a certain point, all of that music started to converge, according to Mitch Therieau ’s critical essay in The Drift. Therieau traces Antonoff’s influence through the 2010s and early 2020s and arrives at conclusions not just about the producer and his musical sensibilities but also about our broader cultural moment.

PARTING IMAGE

On this date in 1944: Labeled with large tags and carrying their possessions in hand bags, these London children, part of 15,000 moved from the range of German bombs, stand on a railroad platform ready for evacuation.

On this date in 1944: Labeled with large tags and carrying their possessions in hand bags, these London children, part of 15,000 moved from the range of German bombs, stand on a railroad platform ready for evacuation. | AP Photo

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