Showing posts with label CARPETBAGGER DEATON. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CARPETBAGGER DEATON. Show all posts

Thursday, July 18, 2024

MASS GOP: IT'S TIME TO STOP PROMOTING CANDIDATES WHO LIE! LOOK UP FACTS BEFORE VOTING FOR LIARS!

 

MAGA GOP PROMOTE LIES!  DON'T ELECT LIARS!

THESE MAGA DIM WITS stood with LIAR JOHN DEATON to promote LIES about the CAPE COD BRIDGE FUNDING:

CHRISTOPHER LAUZON,KARI MACRAE, MATTHEW MURATORE, SUSANNE CONLEY


MASSACHUSETTS has a CRYPTO candidate running against Senator Elizabeth Warren.

CRYPTO CARPETBAGGER JOHN DEATON voted 3 times in 20 years, never lived in MASSACHUSETTS.

The CARPET BAGGER blamed Senator Warren for the failures to get funding for the CAPE COD BRIDGES (owned by the ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS).....ignoring that Daffy Dude cut the funding... Gee, Republican Nit Wits did you notice that there was no FUNDING FOR INFRASTRUCTURE until President Biden & DEMOCRATS passed the INFRASTRUCTURE BILL? Former Daffy Dude called for its DEFEAT and 30 MAGA DIM WITS genuflected in the SENATE! Must I post the VOTES that are publicly available? It's time for REPUBLICAN CLOWNS to stop promoting LIES! These GOP DIM WITS whine, complain, criticize....did they attend any of the numerous hearings? They don't even comprehend the complexities involved. One of the bridges, the BOURNE is a RAILROAD bridge. Surely the Carpetbagger Deaton hasn't figured that out.

The SAGAMORE BRIDGE will be paid for thanks to President Biden and Democrats that approved the legislation.

  IT'S TIME FOR THE MASS GOP LIARS TO PUT PRESSURE ON THE MAGA GOP TO 

FUND THE ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS! BOTH BRIDGES BELONG  TO THEM!


Trump budget omits funds for Cape bridges


Trump budget omits funds for Cape bridges

It's time for REPUBLICAN CLOWNS to stop promoting LIES!  These GOP DIM WITS whine, complain, criticize....did they attend any of the numerous hearings? They don't even comprehend the complexities involved. 

excerpt: 

 CARPETBAGGER Deaton, of Swansea, and Republican state legislature candidates Christopher Lauzon, Kari MacRae and Susanne Conley took the occasion also to draw attention to the need to replace the bridges.  

CARPETBAGGER DEATON is uninformed and doesn't even comprehend the complexities of the issues...he voted 3 TIMES in 20 years, has no connection to MASSACHUSETTS...

They criticized their Democratic opponents and incumbents for not doing enough to lobby the federal government for money to cover the costs, estimated at $4.5 billion to replace both bridges, Deaton said.  

 If DEATON and the other GOP CLOWNS weren't so BRAIN DEAD, they might know the details - BAKER's application was INCOMPLETE!

“In 2021, the US Army Corps of Engineers said the bridges were obsolete,” Deaton said. “Gov. Baker tried to get federal money. Where was Sen. Warren? We need someone who doesn’t put party above country.”  

excerpt: 

Lauzon, who lives in Barnstable, will challenge state Sen. Julian Cyr, D-Provincetown, at the Nov. 5 general election for the Cape and Islands Senate seat. MacRae, of Bourne, is running against state Rep. Mathew Muratore, R-Plymouth, for the state Senate seat for Plymouth and Barnstable in the primary election on Sept. 3. Conley, of Barnstable, will run against state Rep. Kip Diggs, D-Barnstable, at the Nov. 5 general election for the 2nd Barnstable District seat.

Cyr, in a phone call, said Massachusetts lost out on earlier funding to other states in part because Baker’s application was considered incomplete. The state did not commit state dollars to the project, he said.

 CHRISTOPHER LAUZON is another GOP CLOWN ignoring FACTS! 

The BRIDGE REPLACEMENT depended on FEDERAL FUNDING that was passed by President Biden & mostly DEMOCRATS! 


 excerpt: 

Lauzon said the bridges have been inadequate to handle the traffic for decades, adding there were backups in the 1970s. The estimate to replace the bridges in 2010 was $1 billion, he said. Today it’s $4.5 billion, he added.  

 NOTHING TO DO WITH THE MASSACHUSETTS LEGISLATURE....guess he doesn't comprehend how government works!

“There’s a one-party government in Massachusetts, a super majority legislature,” Lauzon said. “It’s been that way for long time. A Democratic governor, president and senate still can’t get it done. Waiting is costing taxpayers more.” 

 


Tuesday, May 28, 2024

SCRUTINIZE THE CARPET BAGGER JOHN DEATON! TOO MANY FALSE & MISLEADING STATEMENTS...JUST ANOTHER SHOOT FROM THE LIP CLOWN!

 

CARPET BAGGER JOHN DEATON VOTED 3 TIMES IN 20 YEARS - NO TIES TO MASSACHUSETTS, NEVER VOTE FOR ANYONE WHO HAS NOT PREVIOUSLY HELD ELECTED OFFICE! 

JOHN DEATON IS A "SHOOT FROM THE LIP" INCOMPETENT WHO IGNORES THAT HALF OF THOSE HOUSED IN MASSACHUSETTS ARE RESIDENTS OF THE COMMONWEALTH. SENATOR WARREN HAS COMMENTED EXTENSIVELY - HE IGNORES HER COMMENTS! 

SENATORS DO NOT DICTATE STATE LAWS!

PRESIDENT BIDEN HAS FUNDED THE VA TO PROVIDE FOR SERVICES & CARE - IGNORED BY THE CARPET BAGGER! 

MAGA GOP GENUFLECTED TO tRUMP AND OPPOSED THE BIPARTISAN BORDER BILL - TRY FACTS! SENATOR WARREN HAS PUBLICLY EXPLAINED HER OPPOSITION. 

tRUMP TAX CUTS FOR THE WEALTHY & CORPORATIONS CREATED THE DEFICIT - SENATOR WARREN HAS PROPOSED SOLUTIONS THAT THE CARPET BAGGER IGNORED! 

STEWARD & HEALTH CARE: JUST MORE UNINFORMED NONSENSE AS AN EXCUSE TO ATTACK SENATOR WARREN BECAUSE HE LACKS THE FACTS & COMPREHENSION! 


Among the issues 
Republicans are planning to hammer home: what they view as the state’s mismanagement of the emergency shelter system for migrant and homeless families and the general lack of affordability in Massachusetts. John Deaton , one of the Republicans running against Sen. Elizabeth Warren, seized on the former in his weekend interview on WCVB’s “On the Record,” criticizing the new limits on shelter stays and calling to “change the [right-to-shelter] law.” But he also said the state’s hands are somewhat tied without action from the federal government.




POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Campbell makes housing moves


Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY KELLY GARRITY AND LISA KASHINSKY

Presented by 

Choose Who You Use

NEW THIS MORNING — Attorney General Andrea Campbell is tapping a longtime housing lawyer and the director of Harvard Law School’s student-run legal aid organization to head up her new Housing Affordability Unit.

Esme Caramello, the faculty director of the Harvard Legal Aid Bureau, will start in July as director of the new unit, which will be tasked with making sure cities and towns are following the state’s housing laws — including the controversial MBTA Communities law.

Campbell is also embarking on her own housing campaign this morning, stumping across the state today and Wednesday to tout her office’s efforts to tackle the state’s housing crisis.

Andrea Campbell, Attorney General of Massachusetts, answers a question during an interview at the State Attorneys General Association meetings, Tuesday, Nov. 14, 2023, in Boston. In exclusive sit-down interviews with The Associated Press, several Black Democrat attorneys general discuss the role race and politics plays in their jobs. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Attorney General Andrea Campbell | Charles Krupa/AP

It may sound like a familiar play. Gov. Maura Healey and Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll recently hit the trail to promote their administration’s housing plans. Campbell’s two-day tour is the latest blitz in her battle to prod cities and towns into compliance with the MBTA Communities law without having to again turn to the nuclear option: a lawsuit.

The controversial zoning law — and Campbell’s attempt to enforce it by suing Milton — has put her high on the list of public enemies for those who don't want the state to force their hand on multifamily zoning.

But Campbell is taking her pitch to friendly territory. After a stop in Leominster this morning to visit a formerly abandoned property that’s been rehabilitated with help from her office, Campbell is heading to Salem for a walking tour with Mayor Dominick Pangallo. The city, Campbell’s office pointed out in a press release, was “one of the first communities to come into compliance with the MBTA Communities Law.” And Pangallo, who served as Driscoll’s chief of staff when she was mayor of Salem, is an ally of an administration that very much wants to enforce the MBTA Communities law and is supportive of Campbell’s lawsuit. Tomorrow Campbell will head to Taunton to talk about manufactured housing communities.

Campbell’s campaign comes amid a flurry of town meeting votes in recent weeks where cities and towns have weighed new zoning plans. So far, only two — Milton and Holden — are considered noncompliant, per a handy tracker from WBUR . Other communities where voters have shot down zoning plans still have time to come into compliance.

GOOD TUESDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS What a satisfying Celtics sweep.

TODAY — Healey and Driscoll have no public events. Campbell is in Leominster at 10 a.m. and Salem at 3 p.m. Rep. Lori Trahan announces federal funding at 5 p.m. at the Boys & Girls Club of Greater Lowell. Mayor Michelle Wu speaks at the Age Strong Spring Fling at 11 a.m. at the Irish Social Club of Boston and the BPS valedictorians luncheon at 12:30 p.m. at Fenway Park.

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

 

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A new study published earlier this year revealed that if customers chose a retail electric provider over a utility in 2022 and 2023 the combined savings would have been $1.7 billion. Join the Choose Who You Use coalition to protect electricity choice and preserve Massachusetts ratepayers’ ability to choose the most affordable, renewable options for them. Learn more.

 
MIGRANTS IN MASSACHUSETTS

— “Massachusetts shelled out nearly $400K for vaccine record checks in state-run shelters,” by Chris Van Buskirk, Boston Herald: “State officials have pumped nearly $400,000 into a program to review the vaccine records of families entering the emergency shelter system, including migrants from other countries who may have foreign documentation, according to the Healey administration. … Vaccine record checks have occurred since September 2023 but the cost surfaced in a bi-weekly report on the shelter system released Monday, which said $381,000 has been shuttled to the program.”

FROM THE HUB

— “Felix D. Arroyo, patriarch of Boston political family, files for bankruptcy amid unpaid legal bill lawsuit,” by Gayla Cawley, Boston Herald: “Records show Felix D. Arroyo has filed for bankruptcy amid a lawsuit over an $86,379 unpaid legal bill tied to his past suspension as Suffolk register of probate, a process that could allow him to wipe out the debt after years of making six figures. … The same court documents show that Arroyo gave more than $16,000 to his adult children in the two years leading up to his bankruptcy filing, including $2,000 for ‘legal advice’ to his son and former City Councilor Ricardo Arroyo in 2023.”

— “Healey names former city councilor O’Malley to BPDA board,” by Tim Logan, The Boston Globe.

 

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PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

— "South Coast Rail coming to New Bedford, but not with MBTA assessments," by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Beacon: "Under state law, communities that are members of both the MBTA and a regional transportation authority can deduct their assessment by the regional transit authority from the assessment of the T. In New Bedford’s case, the city’s $1.4 million assessment by the Southeastern Regional Transit Authority surpasses the MBTA assessment of $750,000, so New Bedford won’t have to pay the T anything. ... But allowing New Bedford, Fall River, and other communities to deduct their RTA assessments from their MBTA assessments will create a shortfall in T funding of nearly $20 million that 65 municipalities in the MBTA’s core service area will have to make up."

YAHD SIGNS AND BUMPAH STICKAHS

GOP PRIORITIES — Massachusetts Republicans are aiming low this election cycle. Lower down the ballot, that is, according to MassGOP Chair Amy Carnevale . Republicans are challenging less than half of the 10 members of the state’s all-Democratic federal delegation who are up for reelection this year. Instead, the state party is “laser focused” on (re)gaining ground on Beacon Hill after a pair of special legislative election wins, Carnevale said on WBZ’s “Keller @ Large” over the weekend.

“We do have limited resources. So we'll be focusing on a lot of the legislative seats, where we have openings and we have strong candidates running,” Carnevale said. “We need to make small gains and walk before we can run."

CARPET BAGGER JOHN DEATON VOTED 3 TIMES IN 20 YEARS - NO TIES TO MASSACHUSETTS, NEVER VOTE FOR ANYONE WHO HAS NOT PREVIOUSLY HELD ELECTED OFFICE! 

JOHN DEATON IS A "SHOOT FROM THE LIP" INCOMPETENT WHO IGNORES THAT HALF OF THOSE HOUSED IN MASSACHUSETTS ARE RESIDENTS OF THE COMMONWEALTH. SENATOR WARREN HAS COMMENTED EXTENSIVELY - HE IGNORES HER COMMENTS! 

SENATORS DO NOT DICTATE STATE LAWS!

PRESIDENT BIDEN HAS FUNDED THE VA TO PROVIDE FOR SERVICES & CARE - IGNORED BY THE CARPET BAGGER! 

MAGA GOP GENUFLECTED TO tRUMP AND OPPOSED THE BIPARTISAN BORDER BILL - TRY FACTS! SENATOR WARREN HAS PUBLICLY EXPLAINED HER OPPOSITION. 

tRUMP TAX CUTS FOR THE WEALTHY & CORPORATIONS CREATED THE DEFICIT - SENATOR WARREN HAS PROPOSED SOLUTIONS THAT THE CARPET BAGGER IGNORED! 

STEWARD & HEALTH CARE: JUST MORE UNINFORMED NONSENSE AS AN EXCUSE TO ATTACK SENATOR WARREN BECAUSE HE LACKS THE FACTS & COMPREHENSION! 


Among the issues 
Republicans are planning to hammer home: what they view as the state’s mismanagement of the emergency shelter system for migrant and homeless families and the general lack of affordability in Massachusetts. John Deaton , one of the Republicans running against Sen. Elizabeth Warren, seized on the former in his weekend interview on WCVB’s “On the Record,” criticizing the new limits on shelter stays and calling to “change the [right-to-shelter] law.” But he also said the state’s hands are somewhat tied without action from the federal government.

 

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DAY IN COURT

— “Retired Boston cop gets prison time for assaulting police during Jan. 6 Capitol riot,” by Chris Van Buskirk, Boston Herald: “A federal judge sentenced [Joseph Robert Fisher,] a retired Boston cop to 20 months in prison for using a chair to ram into a police officer chasing another rioter during the breach of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, prosecutors said in a Friday statement.”

— “At Harvard, a confrontation during a protest erupts in political controversy — and lands in court,” by Mike Damiano, The Boston Globe. 

DATELINE D.C.

— "Biden has stayed silent on Trump’s trial. The verdict will change that," by Jonathan Lemire, POLITICO: "Joe Biden plans to break his vow of silence and publicly address the criminal trials Donald Trump is facing when a verdict is reached, four people familiar with internal deliberations told POLITICO. ... 'At some point, people have to get real and say, "You really want this man in the Oval Office? Do you really want him representing the people of this country?'" said Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.)."

 

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FROM THE 413

— “Northampton superintendent outlines school layoffs on eve of budget hearings this week,” by Alexander MacDougall, Daily Hampshire Gazette: “The city’s schools are poised to layoff 17 full-time teachers next school year, the most significant of expected cuts should the City Council approve Mayor Gina-Louise Sciarra’s proposed fiscal 2025 budget next month.”

WHAT ELSE YOU SHOULD BE READING

— “Massachusetts to overhaul key educator licensing exam, in an effort to better serve students of color and their families,” by James Vaznis, The Boston Globe: “Since the communications and literacy skills test began in the 1990s, it has narrowly focused on measuring reading and writing skills. But now state education officials want to expand it to include whether applicants possess the ability to communicate in ways that are culturally and linguistically in tune with the students and families they serve.”

— “With school out, campus Israel-Hamas protests may move to public areas,” by Juliet Schulman-Hall, MassLive: “As the college graduation season comes to a close, few believe the encampment and protest movements that have spread across college and university campuses related to the Israel-Hamas war will end — and some speculate they may spill into public spaces over the summer.”

— “Massachusetts mifepristone stockpile sits dormant after Maura Healey spent nearly $700K,” by Chris Van Buskirk, Boston Herald: “A stockpile in Massachusetts of widely-used abortion pills has sat dormant over the year-plus since Gov. Maura Healey directed her administration to spend nearly $700,000 on 15,000 doses in the face of a legal challenge to the medication, according to health officials. … Healey turned to the University of Massachusetts Amherst to purchase the pills — which have a five-year shelf life — because the institution had the necessary certifications in place to order mifepristone and already provides the drug through its health services.”

— “The now-controversial flag flown at Justice Alito’s beach house? It’s rooted in Massachusetts,” by James Pindell, The Boston Globe.

— “Is Boston’s Economy Doomed?,” by Jon Keller, Boston Magazine.

 

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Choose Who You Use is committed to protecting real electricity choice in Massachusetts. We believe the power to choose energy should be in the hands of the people. In Massachusetts, individuals should be able to choose the type of energy they want and how to pay for it. Learn more.

 
HEARD ‘ROUND THE BUBBLAH

SPOTTED — at Boston Calling: Shannon Liss-Riordan , Megan Johnson .

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to Alan Khazei , Rich Thuma , Jeff Santos and Ellen Weinstein Pildis . Happy belated to Sabrina Correa , who celebrated Sunday; and to state Rep. Steven Owens , who celebrated Monday.

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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Wednesday, April 24, 2024

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: 'Flash in the Pan' Ian Cain launches Senate bid against Warren

 


Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY AND KELLY GARRITY

WARREN BUFFETT called CRYPTO 'rat poison squared'
CRYPTO caused an FDIC INSURED bank collapse.

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: 
A NEW CAIN-DIDATE — Quincy City Council President FLASH IN THE PAN Ian Cain is formally launching his campaign against Sen. Elizabeth Warren today, growing the field of Republicans — and crypto-friendly candidates — waging an improbable battle to unseat the two-term Democrat.

The 41-year-old founder of a technology incubator and the council’s first Black and openly gay president is entering the race with a call to “usher in the next generation of leadership." He's also aiming to address workforce and pocketbook issues, in part by supporting “new pathways to prosperity” through short-term training programs for jobs in the trades and tech.

While Cain chairs blockchain-focused QUBIC Labs, the newly minted Senate candidate insisted to Playbook that he’s not centering his campaign around cryptocurrency — even as he vies against Congress’ biggest crypto skeptic and against CARPETBAGGER Republican John Deaton, whose digital-asset advocacy has attracted financial backing from major industry players .

“I’ve seen Elizabeth Warren come out as anti-crypto. … And I’ve seen John Deaton come out as pro-crypto. What that really says to me is that they’re both grossly out of touch and out of step with Massachusetts voters,” Cain said, adding that crypto "will not be the No. 1 issue" for residents.

Still, Cain is kicking off his campaign with a launch video in which he explicitly calls for “embracing the innovation economy and the new digital world." And cryptocurrency is already shaping the contours of this race. Industry leaders and boosters have padded Deaton’s campaign coffers with tens of thousands of dollars and a network of crypto super PACs that started the year with more than $80 million is already spending in other Senate races.

Ian Cain

Quincy City Council President Ian Cain is Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren's latest Republican challenger. | Ian Cain/Courtesy photo

MORE GOP CLOWNS RUNNING FOR ELECTION! 

CARPETBAGGER DEATON VOTED 3 TIMES IN 20 YEARS...IAN CAIN IS A FLASH IN THE PAN!

Cain is also coming out of the gate attacking Warren as an absentee senator who’s “working for herself” instead of the residents of Massachusetts. “Quincy is the seventh-largest city in the Commonwealth, and I’ve never seen our current senator here. I’ve never heard from her office,” Cain said. Did you look?

FLASH IN THE PAN CAIN MAKING FALSE ACCUSATIONS? YUP! A REPUBLICAN!
Hasn't 'heard from her' ? How come I have?

Warren was last in Quincy in February for a Democratic breakfast and toured a housing resource center in the city last August , her campaign confirmed. A spokesperson also cited a report showing the senator has secured $50 billion in federal funding for the state since taking office in 2013.

Broadsides aside, Cain’s entrance presents the best-case scenario for Warren (besides, of course, having no opponent). The fundraising juggernaut who already has $4.4 million in the bank will have months to tap into her national network to keep filling her war chest while her Republican foes drain their accounts battling each other. And with the state’s comparatively late September primary, the winner of what could be a bruising GOP fight will have little time to recalibrate for the general election against a seasoned statewide candidate.

And the two most prominent Republican candidates, Cain and Deaton, may struggle to differentiate from each other.

Like Deaton, Cain only recently joined the GOP after previously being unenrolled and, before that, a Democrat. Though he endorsed Warren protégé Michelle Wu for Boston mayor and has donated to several other prominent Democrats, Cain insists he’s long been aligned with “the basics of the Republican Party."

“That just shows that I can work with both sides, no matter the party politics,” Cain said. “To me, this is about getting shit done.”

Unlike Deaton, Cain is no stranger to elective office — or to living in Massachusetts — and he starts with some name recognition because of it. But Cain, who has previously positioned himself as a Charlie Baker-esque Republican , may struggle to claim that mantle in this race. Several of Baker’s former top political aides are now assisting Deaton’s campaign and former Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito is informally advising the political novice.

Cain and Deaton also share overlapping — and non-traditionally Republican — views on key issues. Cain, like Deaton, describes himself as “pro-choice” on abortion. He also said he doesn’t plan to vote for either former President Donald Trump or President Joe Biden in November. (Deaton has similarly said he won't support either candidate.)

“I’m here to be an independent voice for Massachusetts,” Cain said. “ By the time that people come to know me, personally, you’re going to be referring to an ‘Ian Cain Republican.”

GOOD WEDNESDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS . In case the campaign launch didn't make it clear, Cain said he's confident he has enough signatures to get on the ballot. We've got more from our interview with Cain here.

TODAY — Healey speaks at MassBIO’s State of Possible conference at 11 a.m. at the Royal Sonesta in Cambridge, at the Denim Day Event in recognition of Sexual Assault Awareness Month at 2 p.m. at the State House and at a New England Chapter of the National Association of Corporate Directors reception at 7 p.m. in the Seaport. Wu hosts a coffee hour in Charlestown at 9:30 a.m.

Tips? Scoops? Running for office? Email us lkashinsky@politico.com and kgarrity@politico.com .

 

THE GOLD STANDARD OF POLICY REPORTING & INTELLIGENCEPOLITICO has more than 500 journalists delivering unrivaled reporting and illuminating the policy and regulatory landscape for those who need to know what’s next. Throughout the election and the legislative and regulatory pushes that will follow, POLITICO Pro is indispensable to those who need to make informed decisions fast. The Pro platform dives deeper into critical and quickly evolving sectors and industries—finance, defense, technology, healthcare, energy—equipping policymakers and those who shape legislation and regulation with essential news and intelligence from the world’s best politics and policy journalists.


Our newsroom is deeper, more experienced, and better sourced than any other—with teams embedded in the world’s most active legislative and regulatory power centers. From Brussels to Washington, New York to London, Sacramento to Paris, we bring subscribers inside the conversations that determine policy outcomes and the future of industries, providing insight that cannot be found anywhere else. Get the premier news and policy intelligence service, SUBSCRIBE TO POLITICO PRO TODAY .

 
 
DATELINE BEACON HILL

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — The Greater Boston Real Estate Board is launching a multi-pronged campaign to try and stop Beacon Hill lawmakers from approving Gov. Maura Healey’ s proposal to let municipalities levy a 0.5 to 2 percent fee on property-sale proceeds over $1 million.

The industry group is up with a new website called “Stop New Taxes MA” and is planning to run digital advertisements educating voters about what GBREB CEO Greg Vasil called a “deeply flawed” policy. The group also plans to use text messages and patch-through calls to connect constituents directly with their legislators to advocate against the policy Healey tucked into her housing bond bill that lawmakers have yet to take up. It was not immediately clear how much money the group intends to spend on the campaign.

“Increasing housing costs during an affordability crisis makes zero sense and we need to broadcast that message loud and clear, so legislators are keenly aware,” Vasil said in a statement.

Transfer taxes, he said, “do not provide reliable funding to produce housing units as they are not stable and guaranteed revenue streams.” Instead, he argued, the state should be focused on reducing red tape around accessory dwelling units, developing housing on unused state-owned land (both of which Healey pitched), making sure municipalities implement the MBTA Communities law (which the administration also wants) and strengthening the Community Preservation Act.

BUDGET DEBATE BEGINS — The House kicks off its traditionally multi-day budget debate later today. Lawmakers will have to wade through nearly 1,500 amendments under the cloud of the “fiscal winter” that’s gripped the state for the past several months. Republicans are again looking to tweak the rules around the state’s emergency shelter system (more on that from GBH News’ Katie Lannan ) as lawmakers jockey to add earmarks that’ll fund programs and policies in their districts.

— “Students may have new graduation requirement: Completing financial aid application,” by Christian M. Wade, The Eagle-Tribune: “High school students would be required to fill out the application for federal student aid under a proposal being pitched by lawmakers as part of the state budget."

— “Shelter dollars ‘close to running out’ as funding bill sits on Beacon Hill, Gov. Healey says,” by Chris Van Buskirk, Boston Herald. 

FROM THE HUB

— “Felix Arroyo sexual harassment trial to feature former mayor Walsh and other Boston political and legal figures,” by Niki Griswold and Sean Cotter, The Boston Globe: “Major fixtures in the Boston political and legal scenes, including former mayor Martin J. Walsh and sitting federal Judge Mark L. Wolf, will take the stand in the coming weeks in a sexual harassment lawsuit against former city health chief Felix G. Arroyo and the city of Boston. Tuesday morning’s final pretrial hearing in the court case provided a preview of some of the Boston flavor that will lace the trial, which will run for about two weeks. Two former Boston city councilors sat in the Suffolk Superior courtroom for the hearing: Arroyo and his brother and lawyer Ricardo Arroyo, who joined other attorneys in sparring over a range of motions.”

— "Neighbors vow to keep fighting Boston, pro soccer team’s plans for White Stadium redevelopment," by Gayla Cawley, Boston Herald.

WHAT'S ON CAMPBELL'S DOCKET

— “Marshfield voters reject MBTA zoning plan. Might the state sue the town?,” by Hannah Morse, The Patriot Ledger: “Marshfield voters at town meeting have rejected a proposal intended to make it easier to build multifamily housing near public transportation as required by a state law. The effort to get the town in compliance with the MBTA Communities Act by proposing an 84-acre zoning change on Route 139 failed by a vote of 169 in favor and 289 against.”

But don't look for a lawsuit from Attorney General Andrea Campbell just yet. Marshfield has until the end of the year to come into compliance with the law. And Campbell said in a statement to the State House News Service that her "office stands ready to help" the town meet that deadline.

YAHD SIGNS AND BUMPAH STICKAHS

DID ANYONE SCRUTINIZE THE RECORD OF TOM COTTON BEFORE MAKING THIS COMMITMENT?

CASH DASH
—  
Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) is coming to Boston on Friday for a fundraising luncheon for his Cotton Victory fund hosted by former Ambassador Chris Egan  and Brian Shortsleeve , according to an invite obtained by Playbook .

 

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PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

PANTIES still in a wad over a comment! 
Interesting....New Hampsire residents clog highways traveling to Massachusetts for better jobs due to New Hampshire's failures....


TRANSPO TALK
— 
The governor is again defending her transportation secretary as backlash continues to controversial comments Monica Tibbits-Nutt made about imposing tolls on drivers entering Massachusetts and more while addressing activists earlier this month. Even as Healey described the secretary’s remarks as “a very poor choice of words” during an interview Tuesday on WBUR , she said "we've moved on from that." And she’s still not planning on removing her transportation secretary, she told the Boston Herald .

Meanwhile, more supporters came to Tibbits-Nutt’s aid Tuesday. Reps. Jake Auchincloss and Seth Moulton both defended her against a jab from New Hampshire gubernatorial hopeful and former Sen. Kelly Ayotte . And Jim Aloisi, who served as transportation secretary under Gov. Deval Patrick told CommonWealth Beacon he liked how Tibbits-Nutt spoke her mind.

But the remarks are still reverberating through the panel tasked with coming up with new revenue resources for the state’s transportation system. Jim Rooney , the president and CEO of the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce and a key member of the task force, told CommonWealth Beacon the comments had created a “divisiveness and alienation” on the body — which, he pointed out, is already struggling to move quickly.

FROM THE DELEGATION

THE VOTES ARE IN — Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey joined 77 of their colleagues in sending a $95 billion foreign aid package for Israel, Ukraine and Taiwan on to President Joe Biden ’s desk. Warren in a statement said she continues to oppose “providing more aid for Israel without additional conditions” but that she voted in favor of the legislation because it “delivers long overdue support for Ukraine” and “life-saving humanitarian aid for Palestinians in Gaza and for millions of people facing starvation around the world.”

— “Northfield appeals to Warren, Markey for Schell Bridge aid,” by Liesel Nygard, Greenfield Recorder.

excerpt:

NORTHFIELD — In the town’s latest effort to secure funding to replace the Schell Bridge, the Selectboard has sent a letter to U.S. Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Edward Markey seeking their support.

The letter, which was recently sent to the senators’ offices in Springfield, laid out reasons to financially support the project through the congressionally directed spending process that identifies high-impact projects within the state that can be completed with federal assistance, according to Warren’s website. The town hopes to secure federal funding to match the $25 million that the Massachusetts Department of Transportation has already pledged toward the project.

The proposed project consists of the complete replacement of the Schell Bridge, named after Francis R. Schell, a New York merchant who gave $42,000 for the bridge’s design and construction. The bridge, carrying East Northfield Road over the river, opened in 1903 and has been closed since 1985 because it deteriorated beyond being safe to use. It links two sections of Northfield, as the town is the only one in the state that is divided by the Connecticut River.

Listed within the Selectboard’s letter are potential benefits the bridge could provide to Northfield residents and surrounding rural neighbors, should it be replaced. While a new bridge, which could take up to three years to build, would be primarily intended for pedestrians and bicyclists, it would also allow for increased efficiency for first responders in the event of emergencies that require getting to the other side of the river. Replacement also would eliminate the threat that the existing, deteriorating bridge could collapse into the Connecticut River.

The Selectboard called the bridge a centerpiece in Northfield and the region that may help to expand business opportunities and employment. Multi-use paths also could be created through this project, enhancing access to parks, forests and regional trails.

“The board strongly feels that this bridge project will enhance the quality of life, safety and connection for the town and region,” the letter reads. “The bridge was central to the town’s growth in the early 20th century, and remains a pivotal icon of Northfield as we just celebrated the town’s 350th anniversary in 2023. ”

The Selectboard signed the letter to Warren and Markey during its April 2 meeting after Town Administrator Andrea Llamas announced that Northfield did not receive the $25 million it had hoped for through the United States Department of Transportation’s Reconnecting Communities and Neighborhoods Grant Program. The Selectboard had sent a letter to U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg last September while seeking funding through that grant program, following earlier unsuccessful efforts to secure funding through the 2022 Rural Surface Transportation Grant Program.

“We’re just keeping our fingers crossed,” Llamas said. “We’re just trying to move this in hopes that the project will eventually advance. [The] best we can do is just keep going after funding.”

The closed Schell Bridge linking East and West Northfield over the Connecticut River.The closed Schell Bridge linking East and West Northfield over the Connecticut River. STAFF FILE PHOTO/PAUL FRANZ


HEARD ‘ROUND THE BUBBLAH

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to Italo Fini, Matt Vautour , former Melrose Mayor Paul Brodeur,  Romney alum Charlie Pearce, Chris Wayland and Jacob Stern.

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