 | By Kelly Garrity | CHANGING THE RULES — Was the fallout from last year’s end-of-session struggle enough to push the House and Senate into alignment? Legislative leaders will soon face their first major test as they decide how to tweak their lawmaking process. The House is rolling out its full rules package for the two-year session Monday, but leaders previewed some of the changes they’re eyeing Thursday — all part of an effort to make the Legislature “more accessible and efficient,” according to a statement from House Speaker Ron Mariano. Whether or not lawmakers in each chamber can agree changes to their joint rules — they haven’t since 2019 — will set the stage for the rest of the session. Mariano struck an optimistic chord speaking with reporters Thursday. "I guess for the first time in a while, there's some agreement and understanding between us and the Senate that we want to make some changes," he said. But the changes each chamber wants to see aren’t identical. Where they’re in sync: The House, like the Senate, is calling for “plain language” summaries of bills, like the Senate did, but it wants them to be drafted by committee staff, rather than individual lawmakers. And the House is on board with a proposal long pushed in the Senate to make public lawmakers' committee votes, as well as a newer pitch to allow House and Sante co-chairs to poll members of their own chamber on their respective bills. Where they’re not: The two chambers diverged over the timeline for when bills should be reported out of committees. The Senate proposal called to move the bill reporting deadline (aka Joint Rule 10 day) up to the end of the first year of the two-year legislative session. The House is pitching a rule that would require bills to be reported out from committees 60 days after they have a hearing (with the possibility of a 30-day extension), with a “drop dead” date of March 30, after which There are “significant differences,” from the Senate’s joint rules package, according to House Speaker Ron Mariano. But “the spirit of it is very similar,” Rep. Mike Moran told reporters Thursday. “Toward the end of the last session and the session before that, we struggled with some backlog and logjam,” Moran said. “Certainly, if you look at the Senate rules that they sent us, there was an attempt there to kind of solve that problem. So in that sense, we definitely agree with them.” There's a lot riding on the House and Senate’s ability to come to an agreement on this first hurdle. Leaders in both chambers weren’t happy with the way things ended during their marathon final formal season last summer — nor with the media pointing out that they left a lot on the table before breaking for what would normally be a quiet few months of lawmaking. For now, Mariano is optimistic about their chances. “We're cautiously optimistic that some of the things we're doing, they've already done, and some of the things that we're proposing we hope they take a look at,” he said. GOOD FRIDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS . It was an OT win for Canada last night in a politically heated face-off against the U.S. in the final of the 4 Nations hockey series, and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau wasted no time in gloating. “You can’t take our country — and you can’t take our game,” he posted on X . TODAY — Secretary of State Bill Galvin is acting governor while Gov. Maura Healey is in D.C. and Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll is out of state. Rep. Stephen Lynch joins a rally supporting federal workers at 1 p.m. in Boston. THIS WEEKEND — Sen. Elizabeth Warren hosts a town hall in Framingham at noon Saturday. Rep. Jake Auchincloss speaks at a “Stand with Ukraine” rally in Boston at 1 p.m. Sunday. SUNDAY SHOWS — Rep. Jim McGovern is on WBZ’s “Keller @ Large” at 8:30 a.m. Sunday. Lynch is on WCVB’s “On the Record” at 11 a.m. Sunday. WEST WING PLAYBOOK 2.0: One month in, Donald Trump’s second term is reshaping Washington in ways unseen since the New Deal. To track this seismic shift, we’ve relaunched West Wing Playbook: Remaking Government. Washington, remade: This new daily briefing will deliver blow-by-blow updates on Trump’s far-reaching efforts to overhaul federal agencies. From the actions of the Elon Musk-led Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), to the strategy being carried out by the Office of Management and Budget under Russ Vought and the resulting conflicts playing out in the courts and Capitol Hill, our reporters will be your guide to the unprecedented disruption hitting Washington. Sign up now to get it delivered straight to your inbox. Have a tip, story, suggestion, birthday, anniversary, new job, or any other nugget for the Playbook? Drop me a line: kgarrity@politico.com .
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| We’ve re-imagined and expanded our Inside Congress newsletter to give you unmatched reporting on Capitol Hill politics and policy -- and we'll get it to your inbox even earlier. Subscribe today . | | | |  | DATELINE BEACON HILL |
| DID YOU VISIT GAZA & SEE THE DESTRUCTION? DID YOU VISIT THE WEST BANK TO SEE THE ISRAELI DESTRUCTION OF THE INFRASTRUCTURE? DID YOU VISIT LEBANON? SO YOU'RE DEFENDING GENOCIDE & WAR CRIMES WITHOUT VISITING THE IMPACTED AREAS? DID YOU SEE MALNOURISHED GAZANS WHO LACK ADEQUATE HUMANITARIAN AID OR WATER? STATE SENATOR JOHN VELIS: UNINFORMED CLOWN! — “State lawmaker leading Mass. antisemitism panel took Israeli-funded trip, sparking pushback from critics,” by Matt Stout and Samantha J. Gross, The Boston Globe: “A state lawmaker leading a panel investigating antisemitism in Massachusetts traveled to Israel in January on a trip funded by the Israeli government, saying the experience would help ‘inform’ his work but which critics contend could cloud his objectivity. State Senator John Velis went to Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, and the site of the Oct. 7, 2023, attack at the Tribe of Nova music festival, among other locations, in late January. Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs covered more than $6,100 in Velis’s travel costs, according to disclosures he filed with state ethics regulators.” — “Lawmakers urged to keep remote meetings,” by Christian M. Wade, The Eagle-Tribune: “Good government advocates are urging lawmakers to make permanent pandemic-related rules authorizing remote or hybrid meetings for local governing boards, with a temporary law set to expire next month. In a letter to legislative leaders, a coalition of groups including the Massachusetts Municipal Association and Metropolitan Area Planning Council urged them to act on Gov. Maura Healey's proposal that would require cities and towns to provide the option for officials and members of the public to attend meetings in person or remotely.”
PAY WALL |  | WHAT'S ON CAMPBELL'S DOCKET |
| — “Massachusetts AG Andrea Campbell joins fight to stop Trump admin from ‘dismantling’ the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “Attorney General Andrea Campbell has joined an effort of more than 20 state AGs to stop the Trump administration from “dismantling” the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The Trump administration earlier this month ordered the CFPB to stop nearly all its work, effectively shutting down an agency that was created to protect consumers after the 2008 financial crisis. Billionaire Elon Musk, of the Department of Government Efficiency, has been taking aim at the CFPB.”
BOSTON HERALD PROPAGANDA RAG IS CONSISTENT IN THEIR WARP! BATTENFIELD: ALWAYS LIGHT ON FACTS WITH LOTS OF HYSTERIA: Battenfeld: MIAA rakes in $700K in pandemic aid amid trans controversy BLOVIATOR HOWIE CARR ALWAYS WITH INFLAMMATORY RANTS SHOULD BE FACT CHECKED! YA GOTTA BE PRETTY BRAIN DEAD TO BELIEVE HALF OF HIS RANTS! THE GANG MEMBERS WERE ARRESTED! Howie Carr: The gang’s all here to kill and terrorize
|  | FROM THE HUB |
| — “More than 1,200 citations issued to property owners who failed to clear sidewalks in Boston after storm,” by Travis Andersen and Claire Thornton, The Boston Globe: “Boston Mayor Michelle Wu said Thursday that officials issued more than 1,200 citations this week to property owners who failed to clear their sidewalks of snow and ice amid the bitter cold, as injuries from falls have spiked around the city. ‘I’m told that our teams have issued between Sunday and Wednesday, the last couple days, more than 1,200 citations for sidewalks that were not cleared by property owners,’ Wu said during a briefing on emergency preparedness in East Boston, which focused mainly on flood prevention efforts.” ***DOES THIS DEFINE THE FAILURE OF THE COMMERCIAL COMMUNITY TO LOOK FOR ALTERNATIVE USES?**** — “Boston office tower going on the auction block,” by Michael Jonas, CommonWealth Beacon: “In the biggest sign yet of persistent trouble in Boston’s commercial real estate market, a 36-story office tower that boasts more than 1 million square feet of prime class A office space is heading for auction. One Lincoln Street, the former longtime home of State Street Corp., will be put up for auction next month. It’s the first Boston building with class A office space to meet that fate since the pandemic upended the commercial real estate market, according to Jim Rooney, president of the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce.”
excerpt: One Lincoln Street, the former longtime home of State Street Corp., will be put up for auction next month. It’s the first Boston building with class A office space to meet that fate since the pandemic upended the commercial real estate market, according to Jim Rooney, president of the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce. It’s “a statement about the condition of the real estate market here in Boston,” Rooney said. It’s also potentially a statement about the city’s fiscal health. Property tax revenue accounts for three quarters of the city budget, and about 60 percent of that amount comes from commercial property. The question now is whether One Lincoln’s plight is an exceptional case, or a sign that the distress that has hit lower-priced class B office space could be making its way to the city’s higher-end class A office buildings. |  | MIGRANTS IN MASSACHUSETTS |
| ***HAITIAN IMMIGRANTS HAVE FILLED JOBS THAT HAVE GONE UNFILLED, CREATED BUSINESSES & CREATED COMMUNITIES! SHORT-SIGHTED TRUMP POLICY! WE SAW WHAT THEY CREATED IN OHIO UNTIL THEY WERE THREATENED WITH MAGA LIES!*** — “Boston’s Haitian community unsettled as Trump cancels TPS,” by Sean Cotter, Giulia McDonnell Nieto del Rio, Jason Laughlin and Niki Griswold, The Boston Globe: “The Trump administration on Thursday said it would end temporary immigration protections for roughly a half-million Haitians in August, raising the prospects that members of one of Boston’s largest immigrant communities may soon face deportation. The US Citizenship and Immigration Services said it would revoke an extension of Temporary Protection Status for Haitian immigrants to February 2026 that was put in place by the Biden administration. That protection will now end on Aug. 3.” — “Mass. immigrant detained in Texas will soon be free to return home,” by Sarah Betancourt, GBH News: “A 29-year-old Brazilian man is feeling relief after spending almost a month in a Texas detention center, despite having no criminal record. In an immigration court hearing on Thursday, Lucas Dos Santos Amaral was granted release on bond. His family is now eagerly awaiting his arrival home to Marlborough, Massachusetts.” excerpt: A 29-year-old Brazilian man is feeling relief after spending almost a month in a Texas detention center, despite having no criminal record. In an immigration court hearing on Thursday, Lucas Dos Santos Amaral was granted release on bond. His family is now eagerly awaiting his arrival home to Marlborough, Massachusetts. “I call it a miracle case,” said Eloa Celedon, his attorney. Celedon argued Dos Santos Amaral cannot be a flight risk due to his deep ties to Marlborough, including a pregnant wife, their 3-year-old daughter, a painting business, and an active career playing music at churches. Dos Santos Amaral had over 50 letters of support to present to the judge. “You kind of have to throw all the eggs at the basket at this point,” said Celedon. “And pray that the judge will change his mind, because throughout the hearing, up until the very last minute — my heart was, you know, very tight. It was a feeling of 'Oh God, I can’t believe this is happening. Is he going to deny bond?’” The remote hearing in El Paso was rescheduled several times before finally being held Thursday. Judge Stuart Alcorn granted release on an $8,000 bond, after Celedon argued for $1,500, a more standard amount. Next, the judge will grant an order, and the family will need to fill out bond materials and send payment. The family’s GoFundMe has $7,970 raised so far. Celedon anticipates Dos Santos Amaral will be released by Monday.
'It was 100% racial profiling’Lucas Dos Santos Amaral was pulled over by three Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in January when they mistook him for someone else, GBH News first reported in January. After the agents ran a background check, they discovered he had an expired visa — a civil offense, not a criminal one. Still, ICE took him into custody. “Lucas was definitely a victim of a collateral arrest and also a warrantless search and all the above,” said Celedon. “It was 100% racial profiling. That’s the trick right? They’re like, 'He looks brown. He must be an immigrant. So let’s stop him.’” The arrest launched what his family has called “a nightmare.” His wife, Suyanne Boechat Amaral, recalled one shocking moment when Dos Santos Amaral was taken in the middle of the night from Plymouth County to a detention center in Karnes City, Texas. He was unable to contact his lawyer or family before the sudden flight. Dos Santos Amaral was subsequently sent to the detention center in Pearsall, Texas. The two crowded Texas detention centers are run by GEO Group, a company that has multiple lawsuits and complaints lodged against it for the treatment of detainees in its care. His wife, Suyanne Boechat Amaral, has described nausea and anxiety in calls leading up to the hearing. Several months pregnant, she has been the sole breadwinner for her daughter. President Donald Trump has sent mixed messages of who he intends to deport, with ICE last month stating plans to focus on the “worst first,” or people with significant violent criminal offenses. But during Trump’s campaign, he promised to deport people who are here legally under parole programs or various statuses — and those that don’t have papers. Dos Santos Amaral will still have to go to immigration court hearings about his case, and has filed a separate lawsuit against the Plymouth County sheriff’s office. Massachusetts state Sen. Jamie Eldridge, who represents Marlborough and wrote a letter on Dos Santos Amaral’s behalf, said he was “so relieved” to learn about his release. Eldridge had spent time with Boechat Amaral and her daughter earlier in the day at Celedon’s office. “I was hearing how nervous she was, how her 3-year-old daughter kept on asking, you know, 'Where’s daddy? When am I going to see daddy next?’” Eldridge said that while this is a happy moment, he anticipates more immigrants being pulled over in similar circumstances. ***FIRING IMMIGRATION JUDGES! *** — “Mass. immigration court case backlog likely to get worse, fired judge says,” by Hadley Barndollar, MassLive: “At the state’s new immigration court in Chelmsford, opened last April to break up a logjam in Boston, judges have been scheduling cases out to 2027. Some fear the pileup will only get worse with fewer judges now on the bench nationally as a result of Trump-administration firings. The country already sports a backlog of 3.7 million immigration cases, according to Syracuse University’s Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse.” | |
| A new era in Washington calls for sharper insights. Get faster policy scoops, more congressional coverage, and a re-imagined newsletter under the leadership of Jack Blanchard. Subscribe to our Playbook Newsletter today . | | | |  | FROM THE DELEGATION |
| — “Why Rep. Ayanna Pressley is pushing for reparations now,” by Emily Judem and Lisa Wardle, GBH News.
excerpt: As President Donald Trump and his administration focus on dismantling DEI programs, U.S. Rep. Ayanna Pressley says now is the time to push for reparations. “I think at a time of, quite frankly, anti-Black racism on steroids coming out of this hostile Trump-Musk White House ... this is the right time,” the Massachusetts congresswoman said in a conversation with GBH News’ Paris Alston. “I think it’s appropriate at a moment of anti-Blackness that we are pro-Black,” Pressley added, “and we continue to build upon the momentum throughout this country and municipalities throughout the country who have been successful in redress the work of truth, reconciliation, and healing.” Last month, Pressley introduced H.R. 40 , or the Commission to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African Americans Act. The bill would establish a 15-member federal commission to study the impact of slavery in the United States, and then recommend appropriate remedies to Congress. |  | TRUMPACHUSETTS |
| — “Mass. advances health equity work, despite Trump’s opposition to DEI,” by Priyanka Dayal McCluskey and Martha Bebinger, WBUR: “Massachusetts health officials are rolling out new programs aimed at improving health and life expectancy in 30 communities across the state where residents are more likely to suffer preventable, early deaths. The Healey administration’s initiative, Advancing Health Equity in Massachusetts, is focused on reducing complications that happen during and after pregnancy, and addressing the social and economic drivers of heart disease and other related health conditions.” excerpt: The Healey administration’s initiative, Advancing Health Equity in Massachusetts, is focused on reducing complications that happen during and after pregnancy, and addressing the social and economic drivers of heart disease and other related health conditions. “We are really laser-focused on those two areas because we know they are driving early deaths in individuals in Massachusetts,” said Dr. Robbie Goldstein, the state commissioner of public health. “And when we look at the data, those are the areas where we see the most striking disparities when it comes to race, ethnicity, geography.” Goldstein said he’s directing Department of Public Health dollars toward the cities and towns where residents suffer the worst health outcomes. These communities stretch from western Massachusetts to Boston and Cape Cod. State officials are also working with two private groups, the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts Foundation and the Atrius Health Equity Foundation, which have agreed to fund programs in two of the communities: Chicopee and New Bedford. State data shows residents in Chicopee and New Bedford are more likely to suffer early deaths related to heart disease and diabetes, and have a greater percentage of people living in poverty, compared to the state average. This work is getting underway as the Trump administration tries to dismantle equity programs across the federal government and threatens to pull funding from organizations with diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives. President Trump has also signed executive actions taking aim at people who identify as transgender.
CHINA IS PROMOTING CHEAP CLEAN ENERGY & THEIR ECONOMY IS PROSPERING! CHINA IS MAKING FRIENDS, BUILDING ROADS WHILE TRUMP/MAGA & THE FOSSIL FUEL SHILLS CIRCULATE LIES & PROPAGANDA! — “Offshore wind foes ask Trump’s Interior secretary to halt all projects,” by Anastasia E. Lennon, The New Bedford Light: “Dozens of offshore wind opponents are lobbying the new Interior secretary to revoke authorizations for the energy projects and order an immediate stop to construction, including at Vineyard Wind, citing concerns over whales and other marine species.” DISINFORMATION FROM DIRTY ENERGY GROUPS! LOOK AT WHO'S FUNDING THESE GROUPS! President Donald Trump’s Jan. 20 order on offshore wind has already had a chilling effect on the industry. It halted leasing and permitting, and ordered Interior Secretary Doug Burgum to not only review all projects and permits, but also consider terminating leases and rescinding approvals. SUGGEST LOOKING UP DOUG BUGUM! I KNOW! I KNOW! IT'S ASKING A LOT TO INFORM YOURSELF.... WIKIPEDIA DOUG BURGUM
This Feb. 11 request from the groups, submitted in a letter, is seeking to fast-track possible actions by the Interior Department before it completes its project-wide review. The status of that review is unclear. The Interior Department did not provide a comment on the letter, or answer questions from The Light about the secretary’s review of permitted offshore wind projects, what it entails, and when it might be completed. “We recommend the Interior Department work with [National Marine Fisheries Service] to immediately revoke the Letters of Authorization and order an immediate cession of construction until a review is complete,” wrote representatives of the Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow (CFACT) and the Caesar Rodney Institute. The conservative think tanks and some of the letter’s co-signers have been involved in litigation against the federal government over its approval of several offshore wind projects — and some of the opponents have been tied to fossil fuel interests. The letters of authorization they refer to are granted by NOAA Fisheries (another name for the National Marine Fisheries Service), which falls under the Commerce Department (not the Interior Department). Paul Craney, executive director of the Massachusetts Fiscal Alliance and one of the letter’s co-signers, said he believes all the offshore wind projects should be shut down, citing environmental and economic concerns over what this new form of energy would cost ratepayers. Massachusetts Fiscal Alliance IS KNOWN FOR ITS LIES & DISTORTIONS! “If I had one wish, it would be that all offshore wind should be prohibited completely,” Craney told The Light in an interview this week. He added the organization is looking at participating in a pending lawsuit against Vineyard Wind, which alleges the project — and the federal permitting agencies — violated laws that are meant to protect marine life. Vineyard Wind declined to comment on the letter. Turbine components have continued to move in and out of the Port of New Bedford as the project erects towers and removes faulty blades. An organization that represents the offshore wind industry criticized the letter. “The groups involved in this effort have a well-documented history of spreading false claims about renewable energy, particularly offshore wind,” said a spokesperson with the American Clean Power Association. “NOAA Fisheries has conducted a comprehensive review of all offshore wind-related activities and found no evidence that they pose a risk of serious injury or mortality to marine mammals.” The ACP spokesperson also said the groups’ proposals threaten to drive up energy costs for consumers. “But to achieve energy dominance, we need to invest in an all-of-the-above energy strategy,” the spokesperson said. IT HAS BEEN DOCUMENTED THAT RIGHT WHALES ARE KILLED BY VESSEL STRIKES & ENTANGLEMENT WITH FISHING GEAR - WHAT ARE THE OPPONENTS DOING TO PROTECT RIGHT WHALES FROM THOSE KNOWN KILLERS? Wind opponents claim projects harm whales
In their letter to Burgum, first reported by Heatmap, the organizations argue that the federal government has failed to adequately consider cumulative impacts to species, including the right whale, which numbers fewer than 350. In recent years, scientists have cautioned that the government has not sufficiently considered cumulative impacts, including impacts to fisheries. (The Biden administration tried to address this by adopting a regional environmental review of newer wind projects.) Offshore wind companies require review and approvals from several federal agencies, and each agency has a responsibility to enforce different statutes. The Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) is under NOAA Fisheries’ purview. The MMPA, enacted in 1972, prohibits killing or injuring marine mammals “except under certain circumstances.” The act allows exemptions by request for the accidental killing or injuring of mammals, called “incidental take,” provided the government finds the take will be a “small number,” have no greater than a “negligible impact,” and have no “unmitigable adverse impact.” NOTICE THERE ARE NEVER FACTS FROM FOSSIL FUEL SHILLS! Offshore construction has environmental impacts ranging from negligible to adverse, so wind developers must request authorization from NOAA Fisheries to undertake certain activities, like pile driving foundations into the seafloor. They must also propose and enact mitigation measures. PERSONAL POLITICAL STATEMENTS DON'T BELONG IN BUILDINGS FUNDED BY TAXPAYER DOLLARS! POLITICAL ZEALOTS HAVE EVERY RIGHT TO PROCLAIM THEIR BELIEF ON THEIR PRIVATE PROPERTY! — “'Does it really bother anyone?' W. Boylston residents have say on removal of Trump flag at PD,” by Craig S. Semon, Telegram & Gazette.
excerpt: Residents weigh inJohn L. Sullivan, a resident for more than 47 years, said a “political flag” is not right for town buildings. “I think everyone would agree that it is wrong to portray or to put a political flag in a town building,” Sullivan said. “It is not wrong to display the president of the United States, which is that flag right there,” he said pointing to the American flag behind the Select Board. John M. DeCarlo, a town resident for more than 10 years, said the real issue is not the flag but how the matter was handled.
Melissa Ashwell, who introduced herself as a “relatively new resident in town,” expressed her support for the town administrator, adding that the police chief should be removed. “I am incredibly disappointed and embarrassed by the behavior of the police chief,” Ashwell said. “Not only is he unwilling to follow the rules to take down a campaign flag, he is also given an ultimatum that the town must pick him over the town administrator, putting himself on leave, saying threateningly that he will not go quietly and the town will pay for it.” |  | FROM THE 413 |
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— “Easthampton reaffirms welcoming status initially passed in 2019,” by Alexa Lewis, Daily Hampshire Gazette: “The city strengthened its commitment to being a welcoming community for all at Wednesday’s City Council meeting by reaffirming its Welcoming City Trust Ordinance — a move that drew mixed reactions from residents in the audience. The ordinance, first approved in the summer of 2019 during President Donald Trump’s first term, puts in place citywide codes of conduct that ensure no part of city government can be ‘federalized,’ according to a memorandum from Easthampton Mayor Nicole LaChapelle.” PAY WALL
— “North Adams Mayor Macksey to make all appointments to boards and commissions without city council approval,” by Sten Spinella, The Berkshire Eagle.
PAY WALL |  | HEARD ‘ROUND THE BUBBLAH |
| TRANSITIONS — Zachary Hafer and Yoni Levy have joined Simpson Thacher & Bartlett’s Boston office. Hafer is joining the firm’s government and internal investigations practice, and Levy is with its private funds practice. — Heather Egan is joining Morgan Lewis’ cybersecurity, incident response and privacy practice in the firm’s Boston office. HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to Jay S. Schaefer. HAPPY BIRTHWEEKEND — to Sunday birthday-ers former state Rep. Lenny Mirra, Bob McGovern and Neil Levesque. 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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