UNDER CONSTRUCTION - MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW AND SO ON
https://middlebororeviewandsoon.blogspot.com/
Monday, December 1, 2025
The Legislature breaks for the holidays and ballot season heats up
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New from CommonWealth Beacon
BALLOT BATTLES: With the first major signature deadline behind them and another looming, proponents and opponents of a possible record dozen ballot initiatives brace for the next series of hurdles. Jennifer Smith looks ahead at possible legal fights and legislative maneuvering as courts, lawmakers, and the public prepare to sort through a California-level number of ballot referendums.
COURT IN SESSION: An alliance of unions, school districts, and now a major disability rights advocacy group is suing to block President Trump’s efforts to dismantle the US Department of Education. The group expanded its lawsuit last week to include objections to recent interagency agreements to shift the department’s responsibilities to other Cabinet-level agencies. Shauneen Miranda of the Rhode Island Current has more.
OPINION: The way Cambridge elects its leaders paved the way for zoning changes that often stall in other communities, write housing policy analysts Andrew Justus and Alex Armlovich. They dive into how the coalition-based structure of the city council under its proportional representation voting system made the city’s recent ambitious zoning reforms possible.
As lawmakers made a final push last month at the end of formal sessions for the year, the state’s real political energy wasn’t centered under the Golden Dome. It was in supermarket parking lots and coffee shops where signature gatherers made a final dash to gather the required support to place ballot questions before voters next year. A potential record number of 2026 ballot measures have cleared that significant hurdle, setting the stage for a second half of the two-year legislative session consumed by outside pressure for policy change.
CommonWealth Beacon reporters Jennifer Smith and Chris Lisinski dug into the dawning ballot season and reviewed the end-of-session scramble on The Codcast.
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Voters could see as many as a dozen ballot questions at the polls next November. Ballot referendums – inherently blunt instruments – are tools to prod lawmakers to take action as much as efforts to create law themselves. And several take aim at the state’s notoriously opaque and uncompetitive political system.
Ballot efforts to subject the governor’s office, the House, and the Senate to public records laws and rein in legislative stipends are successor referendums of a sort, after last cycle’s successful initiative authorizing the state auditor to audit the Legislature, which has stalled. “Thematically, all of this falls under the exact same umbrella that has long been hoisted," Lisinski noted, “criticizing Massachusetts as one of the least transparent state legislatures in the country.”
Both legislative chambers okayed bills to retool the embattled Cannabis Control Commission.
“Legislative leaders have tried to downplay the degree to which the controversies at the commission, specifically between chair Shannon O'Brien and Treasurer Deb Goldberg, prompted this legislation,” Lisinski said. “They've really pitched the bill as just a necessary update, so many years into this industry, to buff out some rough areas that practice has shown don't work as well as needed. That being said, we're all free and independent thinkers, and we can connect the dots that this significant industry overhaul has only started to move now after a very long series of controversies.”
Meanwhile, a ballot measure that could come before voters next November seeks to recriminalize recreational cannabis just a decade after voters took to the ballot box to legalize it.
The ballot question would roll back the clock to before the 2016 ballot measure that legalized recreational use of marijuana. While proponents say they have submitted enough signatures to clear the first hurdle – not without controversy – Bay State voters have not signaled a broad appetite to undo the earlier measure. A 2024 poll on cannabis policy from the MassINC Polling Group, which is partially owned by CommonWealth Beacon’s publisher MassINC, found 65 percent of respondents said legalizing marijuana in the state was “the right decision.”
November 19 marked the end of this year’s formal sessions under internal legislative rules. Major bills that didn't reach the governor are likely on hold until 2026. But Massachusetts lawmaking is famously backloaded—most major action happens in the final weeks of the second year, not the first.
As lawmakers downshift into informal sessions for the remainder of 2025, the Legislature cleared a $2 billion closeout budget last month for fiscal 2025. Beyond MassHealth funding and money for sheriffs and World Cup tourism, the bill imposed new oversight on sheriff spending and decoupled state vaccine schedules from federal recommendations – a preemptive move against potential changes under vaccine-wary Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
The House punted on its energy bill after attempting to rewrite Gov. Maura Healey’s affordability proposal to weaken the state's 2030 decarbonization targets. Budget chief Aaron Michlewitz pulled it after strong blowback.
On the episode, Smith and Lisinski discuss what made it through the final 2025 formal session (2:50), what didn’t (9:00), and the potential record ballot season (12:30).
HEALTH CARE AUDIT: A state audit of UMass Memorial Health released last month by Auditor Diana DiZoglio’s office asserts that the health system should have used more than $6 million in COVID relief grants from the state to prevent its maternity unit in Leominster from closing in 2023. Hallie Claflin has more.
OPINION: David Stein, a Boston entrepreneur and activist, does some reworking of President Abraham Lincoln’s famous – and famously spare – 272-word Gettysburg Address, delivered 162 years ago last month, to offer a template for how the nation can face its current trials.
What We're Reading
EDUCATION:In light of a recent MassINC report on the quality of Gateway Cities schools, GBH looks at attempts to improve school facilities with limited resources in New Bedford, Chelsea, and Everett. CommonWealth Beacon Gateway Cities reporter Hallie Claflin dove into the discrepancies in Holyoke schools last week.
MASS GOP SEN. PETER DURANT & several others immediately embraced DESANTIS presidential campaign after DESANTIS appointed DR. JOE LAPADO to protect the health of FLORIDA. JOE LAPADO embraced the LUNACY of Dr. STELLA IMMANUEL who promoted her lunacy about ALIEN SPERM DONORS in your sleep, as well as numerous BOGUS & UNPROVEN CURES. TRUMP also promoted her lunacy. If MASS GOP SEN. PETER DURANT is incapable of scrutinizing LUNACY, how credible is he? MBTA COMMUNITIES ACT was enacted under MA. GOV. CHARLIE BAKER. Where was PETER DURANT? This issue has survive COURT CHALLENGES. The HEALEY ADMINISTRATION is enforcing the STATUTE...now you're whining?
HOUSING: Sen. Peter Durant has called on the Healey administration to stop “weaponizing” the MBTA Communities housing law after Wachusett Regional High School was denied money from a state grant program that teaches students budget and money-management skills. (MassLive – paywall)
SAFETY: Some 83 years after the deadliest fire in Boston history, and the deadliest nightclub fire in US history, survivors of the Cocoanut Grove fire reflect on their losses. (WBUR)
BUSINESS: Boston has lagged most of the metro areas in the US in return-to-office rates, according to a new study, particularly on Fridays. (Boston Business Journal – paywall)
POLITICS: Just ahead of a December deadline, members of a state panel tasked with identifying replacements for Massachusetts’s state seal and flag say they’ll seek another extension, warning that there remains a fundamental “public misunderstanding” about why the flag’s controversial imagery needs to go. (The Boston Globe – paywall)
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