Saturday, February 24, 2024

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Trahan gets personal on reproductive rights

 

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BY KELLY GARRITY AND LISA KASHINSKY

With help from Mia McCarthy

ALABAMA IMPACT — Rep. Lori Trahan describes the Alabama Supreme Court decision jeopardizing access to in vitro fertilization in the state as a “gut punch.”

“The idea that a family who has gone through every possible option before finally turning to IVF, having that option ripped away from them, is just a pain that I can't imagine,” Trahan told Playbook. Going through IVF treatments is already “harder than you can ever imagine,” she said, and “more grueling than women will ever admit.”

The Westford Democrat knows that first hand: IVF made it possible for her to give birth to both her daughters, Grace and Caroline. The process is punishing, physically and emotionally, she said — the daily injections lead to surgery and then to waiting. Oftentimes, it ends in heartbreak.

Now, just accessing IVF is getting more difficult. The Alabama ruling that frozen embryos are “children” has rocked the reproductive rights realm and has already led several sites in the state to suspend their IVF services.

It’s also setting the stage for a battle at the ballot box — one Trahan, who was recently elected co-chair of House Democrats’ messaging arm, thinks her party can capitalize on.

“There are going to be huge ramifications in not just this election, but in every election until women have the full portfolio of rights that they deserve,” she said. “The Republican Party is controlled by people who are not content with just overturning Roe. They want to ban abortion. They want to ban mifepristone and IVF in every state in the country, including here in Massachusetts. And we're not going to let that happen.”

Playbook spoke with Trahan about the ruling’s ripple effect in Massachusetts and the other big health care story rocking the state: Steward Health Care and its "disastrous" for-profit model. Here are more excerpts from our conversation:

Rep. Lori Trahan speaks during the 2019 Massachusetts Democratic Party Convention.

Lori Trahan personally underwent IVF treatments. | Jessica Hill/AP

What would you tell the justices who wrote the Alabama decision, as someone who had children through IVF? 

Shame on you. This is not going to make the lives of people from Alabama better. … What I want to tell women in Alabama: come to Massachusetts. We are happy to care for you here and to give you the opportunity to start a family and we will never give up fighting for you.

What does the Alabama ruling mean for Massachusetts? 

I have no doubt that if IVF continues to fall victim to Republican abortion bans, Massachusetts will continue to be a haven for women in need of care. But don't think that we're not watching this closely, because if more states follow suit — if this gets a hearing at the Supreme Court — that would impact access to IVF everywhere. That’s why this is a call to arms for all women across our country to make sure the stakes are understood for this election.

Do you think Steward has a future in Massachusetts? Three of their nine hospitals in the state are in your district — what happens to them?

Something would have to dramatically change in order for me to have faith or confidence in their long-term viability. ... I introduced a piece of legislation that would create a special designation for essential hospitals, because there is no Plan B when a community hospital in Lawrence or Haverhill or Lowell shuts down, or has to reduce their services. That's something that a federal designation would help with — it would just change the funding structure to reflect how important these hospitals are to communities.

GOOD FRIDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS Gov. Maura Healey will meet with federal officials in Washington today to lobby for more federal funding for energy programs and for disaster relief, after FEMA denied her request for aid following September's devastating floods.

TODAY — Rep. Ayanna Pressley is on WBUR’s “Radio Boston” at 11 a.m.

THE WEEKEND — Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey, Rep. Stephen Lynch, Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll, Auditor Diana DiZoglio, MassDems Chair Steve Kerrigan and other state officials attend the first John Walsh and Democratic Town Committee Chairs’ breakfast at 10 a.m. Saturday in Quincy. AG Andrea Campbell keynotes the 38th Annual Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Brunch at 11:30 a.m. Saturday in Cambridge.

SUNDAY SHOWS — MBTA Advisory Board Executive Director Brian Kane is on WBZ’s “Keller @ Large” at 8:30 a.m. Sunday. Boston City Councilor Brian Worrell is on WCVB’s “On the Record” at 11 a.m. Sunday. Boston planning chief Arthur Jemison and state Sen. John Keenan are on NBC10 Boston’s “At Issue” at 11:30 a.m. Sunday.

Tips? Scoops? Birthdays? Email us: kgarrity@politico.com and lkashinsky@politico.com.

 

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DATELINE D.C.

CHRIS SUNUNU is destroying his credibility - recently got approval to send NH NATIONAL GUARD to the southern border by promoting the REPUBLICAN MYTHOLOGY that immigrants are bringing in DRUGS - that's not where FENTANYL is coming from CHRIS! TRY FACTS!


‘ASSHOLES COME AND GO’ — 
New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu still believes the Republican Party can and will move on from Donald Trump even after the former president won the Granite State GOP primary by 11 percentage points and appears on a glidepath to his third party nomination.

“It won’t be his party forever. Right? It just won’t,” Sununu told our colleague Eugene Daniels at POLITICO’s Governors Summit . “Let me put it a different way: Assholes come and go. But America is here to stay.”

Sununu has to hope that’s true. Trump returning to the top of the ticket is trouble for down-ballot Republicans in both New Hampshire and Massachusetts.

“That’s my biggest concern. And if there’s any reason why I [didn’t] support Trump in the primary,” Sununu, who backed former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, said, “is because I’m not going to be governor, but I want to win the governorship. I keep losing a congressional seat that we should be winning, school board seats that Republicans should be winning, because we’re always answering [for Trump].”

Meanwhile, Sununu cast the failed federal border deal — which Democratic Gov. Maura Healey lobbied hard for — as a “red herring” and blamed President Joe Biden for taking executive action that worsened the border crisis. An “immigration bill is not needed to secure the border,” Sununu said. “It was the president that created [the problem] and he’s gotta take ownership.” We think Healey would largely disagree.

DATELINE BEACON HILL

— “Legislation updating sex education in Massachusetts moving toward vote on Beacon Hill,” by Chris Van Buskirk, Boston Herald: “Legislation requiring sex education in Massachusetts schools to be inclusive of all identities and use ‘medically accurate, age-appropriate, and comprehensive’ information started advancing Thursday toward a vote in the Senate, which could come next week. Supporters of the proposal, dubbed the ‘Healthy Youth Act,’ said the law will make clear that sex and relationship education in Massachusetts must cover LGBTQ+ identities and experiences while emphasizing consent in relationships.”

— “Russia divestment promises largely unfulfilled,” by Christian M. Wade, The Eagle-Tribune: “Nearly two years after Massachusetts moved to strip the state’s retirement fund of Russian-tied stocks and other holdings in response to its war in Ukraine, that pledge remains largely unfulfilled. Following Russia's invasion of Ukraine in early 2022 state lawmakers approved a $1.6 billion bipartisan supplemental spending bill that called for divesting the state's pension fund of an estimated $140 million in investments tied to the country. But nearly two years after the much publicized move, little has changed. … The state's pension fund still has an estimated $140 million in investments tied to Russia, according to Treasurer Deb Goldberg, whose office oversees the retirement system.”

FROM THE HUB

— “New coalition wants Boston to give ranked choice voting another shot,” by Hannah Loss, GBH News: “After Massachusetts voters rejected a 2020 ballot initiative for ranked choice voting in most state and federal elections, a new coalition is zeroing in on changing elections at the municipal level. ‘In Boston ... we saw a significant amount of support for ranked choice voting in 2020 and see it as a great opportunity — this go-round — to bring about ranked choice voting for the residents here in the city,’ NAACP President Tanisha Sullivan told Boston Public Radio on Thursday.”

DAY IN COURT

— “Sixth retired Mass. State Trooper arraigned in federal court in commercial driver’s license scheme,” by Tonya Alanez, The Boston Globe: “Retired state Trooper Perry Mendes on Thursday became the sixth person to plead not guilty in a scheme involving the approval of commercial driver’s licenses by members of the Massachusetts State Police in exchange for gifts.”

FROM THE DELEGATION

TREK TO TAIWAN — Rep. Seth Moulton traveled to Taiwan on Wednesday and Thursday with the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party. The bipartisan group met with Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen and the new President-elect Lai Ching-te .

“Just like Putin is watching, so is Xi Jinping,” Moulton said in a statement urging the House to pass a foreign aid package. “If we abandon Ukraine now, if we fail to provide aid to Taiwan — that could prove disastrous for our national security in the future.”

POD PREVIEW — Rep. Ayanna Pressley is the featured guest on this week’s episode of Sen. Ed Markey ’s podcast. Markey and his “partner in progressive politics” celebrate the Green New Deal’s 5th birthday (sans cake) and talk fare-free transit.

— “In Watertown visit, Senator Warren and FTC head Lina Khan look to jumpstart right-to-repair,” by Hiawatha Bray, The Boston Globe: “Massachusetts US Senator Elizabeth Warren has no idea why it’s taking so long for a federal court to approve the 2020 state law that gives consumers a right to access the digital information that controls their cars. But in a Thursday visit to a Boston-area auto repair shop, Warren hoped to generate fresh momentum for the right-to-repair movement in a state where it’s overwhelmingly popular with voters.”

— “Warren warns of nationwide abortion ban if Republicans win big in November,” by John L. Micek, MassLive.

 

Don’t sleep on it. Get breaking New York policy from POLITICO Pro—the platform that never sleeps—and use our Legislative Tracker to see what’s on the Albany agenda. Learn more.

 
 
IT'S NOT EASY BEING GREEN

— “Mixed messages on Vineyard Wind,” by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Beacon: “Massachusetts officials on Thursday gushed about the progress on Vineyard Wind, but one of the developers of the wind farm cautioned financial analysts that the project may not be fully completed this year as forecasted.”

FROM THE 413

SPRINGFIELD’S REQUEST — The Springfield City Council approved a plan to petition the state to allow Deputy Police Chief Lawrence Akers to work past the mandatory retirement age of 65 so he can head up the police department, the Springfield Republican’s Jeanette DeForge reports Matt Szafranski of Western Mass. Politics & Insight has a deep dive on the request and other changes the city is considering to the Police Commission.

WHAT ELSE YOU SHOULD BE READING

— “Major barriers persist for former prisoners who need IDs,” by Maeve Lawler, GBH News.

— “Five months later, Worcester still evaluating options for police chief search,” by Marco Cartolano, Telegram & Gazette.

— “Biden loan forgiveness to save Mass. borrowers $19.5M,” by Christian M. Wade, The Salem News.

MEANWHILE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE

STAFFING UP — President Joe Biden ’s campaign has hired five more general-election staffers in New Hampshire after skipping the state’s Democratic primary, the Union Leader’s Kevin Landrigan reports.

HEARD ‘ROUND THE BUBBLAH

TRANSITIONS — The Massachusetts AFL-CIO promoted senior organizer Brian Dunn and organizer Lindsay Kenney to the posts of political director and legislative director, respectively.

— Frank Mendoza is Boston’s new deputy director of the Office of Neighborhood Services. Ben Tayag is new neighborhood liaison for West Roxbury.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to former state Rep. Lenny Mirra, Bob McGovern and Neil Levesque.

HAPPY BIRTHWEEKEND — to former acting Gov. Jane Swift; Sarah Groh, chief of staff to Rep. Ayanna Pressley; Benjamin Kail, Vicki DiLorenzo and Boston City Councilor Sharon Durkan, who celebrate Saturday; and to Sunday birthday-er Jack Dew.

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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POLITICO Nightly: Biden’s ‘Uncommitted’ issue

 


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BY CALDER MCHUGH

Samra'a Luqman hands out fliers outside of the American Moslem Society Mosque in Dearborn Heights, Mich. to ask voters not to vote for President Joe Biden.

Samra'a Luqman (right) hands out fliers outside of the American Moslem Society Mosque in Dearborn Heights, Mich. to ask voters not to vote for President Joe Biden on Feb. 16, 2024. | Jeff Kowalsky/AFP via Getty Images

PROTEST AT THE POLLS — When President Joe Biden urged the Democratic National Committee in late 2022 to upend the primary calendar and elevate Michigan to early primary status, he was likely imagining the multi-racial coalition that had helped deliver him the presidency in 2020 coming together to launch him towards the general election.

Now, some of those same voters are causing his campaign grief — and could, depending on the results of Tuesday’s primary, do even more damage.

A group of progressives — many of whom are Arab American or have ties to Palestine — are vowing to vote “Uncommitted” on the Democratic primary line for president due to Biden’s continued support for Israel, a protest vote that would lay bare the depth of ill will towards the president on his left flank that’s been engendered by his response to the Israel/Hamas war.

A protest vote might not normally make much of a dent in an incumbent president’s reelection campaign. But what makes this situation potentially problematic for Biden is that there are 200,000 registered voters who are Muslim and 300,000 who claim Middle East or North African descent in Michigan, largely concentrated around Detroit and in the suburb of Dearborn. These communities are numerous and politically active enough that the state even provides voter registration and absentee vote applications in Arabic .

A dedicated number of these voters — the good majority of whom have previously voted for Democrats — are at the leading edge of a campaign to vote “Uncommitted.” Depending on how many of them vote that way, Biden — already riding low in the polls — could suffer a significant embarrassment, generating another round of hand-wringing about his prospects in November.

Listen to Michigan, the group organizing the effort, is setting a modest goal of 11,000 extra voters to go Uncommitted — the margin of Donald Trump’s victory in the state in 2016. But around 20,000 Michiganders have voted on the “Uncommitted” line in recent Democratic presidential primaries without any organized effort at all. So any number above that would give a sense of how deep the unrest runs.

The activists leading the “Uncommitted” effort are not the first group to attempt to send a message to Biden through the primary process this year. In New Hampshire, a late campaign to write in “ceasefire” on the ballot largely failed to get off the ground and only resulted in around 1,500 “ceasefire” votes among well over 100,000 total ballots cast. Biden ended up easing any doubts about his by piling up 64 percent of the vote as a write-in candidate.

But the Michigan effort is more organized and has garnered the backing of elected officials and other prominent names in the state.

The campaign has in part been spearheaded by Abraham Aiyash, the Michigan House majority leader, and it has the support of Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.), who represents Dearborn in Congress. It also has the backing of filmmaker Michael Moore, a Michigan native who endorsed the “Uncommitted” ballot line on MSNBC Thursday evening , arguing that Biden’s “hugging [Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu]” and funding of the war has “turned young people against Biden.”

Notably, Moore has been a staunch backer of Biden’s domestic policy and has advocated strongly against former President Donald Trump. He still thinks Democratic voters in Michigan need to send Biden a message.

The problem for Biden is that signs of support for a protest vote are growing, not diminishing. The Uncommitted campaign has also grabbed the attention of other groups that are deeply frustrated with Biden policies. Dzovinar Hatsakordzian — a national board member of the Armenian National Committee of America — is urging Armenian Democrats in Michigan to vote “Uncommitted” because he “armed Azerbaijan’s genocide of Artsakh’s indigenous Armenians.” The ANCA has circulated graphics that read “Michigan’s Armenian voters will remember this November that Biden armed Azerbaijan and abandoned Armenians to genocidal killers.”

There are just under 20,000 Armenians in Michigan, only a fraction of whom will vote in the Democratic primary. In competitive primaries in 2020 and 2016 respectively, over 1.4 million people and around 1.2 million people voted in the primary. In the most recent Democratic presidential contest featuring an incumbent president, a 2012 caucus, 174,000 people voted in Michigan. This year, over 800,000 people have voted early so far across both the Democratic and Republican primaries in the state.

There’s little chance that “Uncommitted” bests the president. But the higher that number is, the higher the likelihood the result leaves a bruise. In part that’s because Biden himself sought to elevate Michigan’s stature on the primary calendar. But it’s also due to the state’s recent history of playing a high-profile role in the Democratic nomination process. In 2016, Michigan gave Bernie Sanders’ campaign some much needed life; four years later, the state all but wrapped up the nomination for Biden. This year, it’s set to prove that Biden either has enduring strength among both progressive and ethnic communities in Michigan or that he has a real problem on his hands.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight’s author at cmchugh@politico.com or on X (formerly known as Twitter) at @calder_mchugh .

 

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WHAT'D I MISS?

— Trump moves to dismiss classified documents case: Donald Trump is asking a federal judge in Florida to throw out his criminal case for hoarding classified secrets at his Mar-a-Lago estate , offering a grab bag of arguments that the charges are legally faulty, that prosecutors have targeted him for political reasons and that the special counsel spearheading the case had no legal authority to bring it. Trump’s lawyers filed seven motions late Thursday aimed at derailing the case, in which he is charged with willfully retaining classified information after he left office and obstructing a federal investigation into his possession of those secrets.

— Progressive groups preemptively rip Biden over immigration executive actions: A major coalition of progressive groups today warned President Joe Biden not to go forward with a slew of executive actions designed to stem migration along the southern border. Those groups, totaling more than 150 international, national, state, local and faith-based entities, said in a letter to the White House that the policies under consideration — including an asylum ban between U.S. ports of entry — “emulate” the approach of the Trump administration and “extremist legislators.”

— Senate GOP urges its candidates to support IVF after Alabama ruling: The Senate GOP’s campaign arm today urged its candidates to publicly express their support for IVF treatment and condemn efforts to limit its accessibility. In a memo sent by National Republican Senatorial Committee Executive Director Jason Thielman, the party’s campaign apparatus instructs candidates to “Clearly state your support for IVF and fertility-related services as blessings for those seeking to have children” and to “Publicly oppose any efforts to restrict access to IVF and other fertility treatments, framing such opposition as a defense of family values and individual freedom.”

NIGHTLY ROAD TO 2024

TRUMP SPEAKS ON IVF — Former President Donald Trump declared his support for in vitro fertilization treatment and called on Alabama lawmakers to preserve access to it after a ruling by the state’s high court forced hospitals there to stop offering the procedure. Trump addressed the issue in a post on Truth Social today, days after the Alabama court’s ruling declaring embryos are children. Democrats have sought to tie that decision to broader GOP efforts to restrict access to abortion since the reversal of Roe v. Wade. And President Joe Biden’s campaign has laid blame for the ruling squarely at the feet of Trump, noting that he has taken pride in the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn abortion protections.

TEAMSTERS GIVE TO RNC — The Teamsters’ political action committee broke decades of precedent last month when the union leadership voted to approve a $45,000 donation to the Republican National Committee ’s convention fund, NBC News reports. In recent years, Teamsters donations have been given primarily to Democrats. This year’s donation to the RNC convention fund marked the labor union’s pivot to large donations to both parties, though the vast majority of donations still flow to liberals.

The January vote to approve the donation is igniting frustration among some members, who in interviews with NBC News were blunt in expressing their disapproval of the move: "Disgusting." "Disheartening." "Playing footsie."

RETURN TO NORMALCY — Nikki Haley called for a return to normalcy in American politics as she portrayed Donald Trump as a major drag on the Republican Party while seeking to avoid a landslide drubbing in her home state’s presidential primary on Saturday, reports the Wall Street Journal.

“Donald Trump cannot win a general election,” the former South Carolina governor and United Nations ambassador told several hundred supporters here this afternoon, after saying the GOP needs to select someone with “moral clarity” who knows “the difference between right and wrong.”

She also suggested that Trump has shattered norms in American democracy.

AROUND THE WORLD

Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin are pictured in Switzerland.

President Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin are pictured during the U.S.-Russia summit at Villa La Grange in Geneva, Switzerland. | Peter Klaunzer/Keystone via Getty Images

CRIME AND PUNISHMENT — President Joe Biden today announced more than 500 new sanctions on Russia and its war machine in the largest tranche of penalties since Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine nearly two years ago, POLITICO reports.

Biden followed through on a promise to further punish Russian President Vladimir Putin one week after opposition leader Alexei Navalny died in a Siberian prison. The sanctions — as well as those added today by the European Union — come one day before the second anniversary of Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

“The American people and people around the world understand that the stakes of this fight extend far beyond Ukraine,” Biden said in a statement announcing the sanctions. “If Putin does not pay the price for his death and destruction, he will keep going. And the costs to the United States — along with our NATO Allies and partners in Europe and around the world — will rise.”

The bulk of the sanctions were already in the works for the invasion anniversary, though a few were added this week to target those involved in Navalny’s death at an Arctic penal colony. Biden met Thursday with Navalny’s widow and daughter in San Francisco and praised her late husband’s bravery.

“Russia’s financial sector, defense industrial base, procurement networks and sanctions evaders across multiple continents,” Biden said. “They will ensure Putin pays an even steeper price for his aggression abroad and repression at home.”

The Treasury Department will impose additional price cap sanctions that will make it more costly for Russia to get around sanctions, Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo told reporters in a Thursday night call previewing the sanctions. He touted the Biden administration’s price cap on Russian oil, saying that the Kremlin has invested money on trying to adapt to the sanctions and evade them.

GERMANY GREENLIGHTS POT — The German parliament passed a marijuana decriminalization bill today, setting up the country to eventually authorize legal sales to adults, reports POLITICO EUROPE. The legislation, part of an agreement by the country’s three-party coalition government, would legalize cannabis possession and home cultivation for adults and allow non-profit cannabis clubs to supply consumers.

"That’s the way that works. Away from punishment. Away from taboo. We have to face up to the problems," German Health Minister Karl Lauterbach said before the law was adopted this afternoon.

The vote has also been closely followed across the Atlantic. “It’s a historic moment,” said Omar Khan, a spokesperson for Canadian cannabis company High Tide. “Germany [will] become the first EU country and the second G7 country after Canada to legalize adult use.”

 

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NIGHTLY NUMBER

WARREN BUFFETT CALLED CRYPTO RAT POISON SQUARED FOR GOOD REASON 
It's unregulated, contributed to the collapse of at least one bank, was allowed to enter FDIC insured banks

BE CAREFUL WHAT YOU BELIEVE!


$80 million

The amount of money that three crypto-affiliated Super PACs are planning to spend in the 2024 election cycle , campaign finance filings released this week confirm. That puts them among the top-spending outside groups this year.

RADAR SWEEP

LOOKING FRESH — In the midst of missile fire and worries about advancing Russian ground troops, daily life goes on in Ukraine. Nowhere is this more obvious than among Ukraine’s beauty salons , which continue to operate despite all kinds of difficult conditions. LuChe salon in Kyiv had its front windows destroyed by a bomb in January — it was open again the next day, operating temporarily from behind boarded up windows onto which the salon’s owner spray painted “we are open”. Author Sophia Panych asks for Allure whether beauty has a place in a society at war — and answers largely in the affirmative.

PARTING IMAGE

On this date in 1945: U.S. Marines of the 28th Regiment, 5th Division, raise a U.S. flag atop Mt. Suribachi in Iwo Jima, Japan.

On this date in 1945: U.S. Marines of the 28th Regiment, 5th Division, raise a U.S. flag atop Mt. Suribachi in Iwo Jima, Japan. | Joe Rosenthal/AP

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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...