Showing posts with label VA CLOSURE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label VA CLOSURE. Show all posts

Monday, April 18, 2022

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: A marathon, not a sprint

 


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BY LISA KASHINSKY

SLOW AND STEADY WINS THE MONEY RACE — Members of the Massachusetts congressional delegation aren’t dashing for campaign cash — at least not yet.

Facing few challengers and competing for donors against candidates in contested statewide races and federal primaries in other states far more consequential to the balance of power in Washington, our House members’ reelection campaigns largely flew under the radar in the first three months of the year, and their Q1 fundraising numbers reflect it. Let’s dive into their latest FEC reports:

HIGHS AND LOWS — Rep. Richard Neal again raised the most money of the delegation. The majority of the $390,394 the powerful House Ways and Means chair received in Q1 came from PACs and other political committees, according to his FEC filing. He also ended the quarter with the most cash on hand, with nearly $2.9 million in his coffers. Rep. Jake Auchincloss was a close second with $312,886 raised in Q1 and $2.4 million in cash on hand.

Rep. Bill Keating again raised the least, just $61,067. And Rep. Jim McGovern ended another quarter with the lowest cash on hand of the bunch, with $470,979.

THE ELEPHANTS IN THE ROOM — Republican challengers aren’t giving members of the all-Democratic delegation a run for their money, and several are paying for their campaigns out of their own pockets. Dean Tran, the former state senator challenging Rep. Lori Trahan, raised the most of the bunch with $47,140. McGovern challenger Jeffrey Sossa-Paquette loaned himself the most of any GOP candidate last quarter — $25,000 — and has now poured $90,000 of his own cash into his campaign. All $9,000 that Mark Littles, one of Keating’s challengers, raised last quarter was through candidate loans.

WHAT MONEY CAN BUY — Rep. Ayanna Pressley spent $6,520 on digital ads focused on her legislative work and key issues she supports, like canceling student loan debt, her team said, plus another $1,286 on print advertising. Trahan spent just under $400 sponsoring holiday music in her district, her team said. Keating spent $1,000 on advertising, including to promote campaign events on Facebook, while Rep. Stephen Lynch spent just over $100. It’s chump change compared to what some of their out-of-state colleagues facing intense reelection fights are spending right now, but Bay State representatives don’t need to be in full campaign mode just yet.

GOOD MARATHON MONDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Happy Patriots’ Day, and best of luck to everyone running the Boston Marathon today, including several Playbookers: Dan Koh and his wife Amy Sennett, Benchmark Strategies’ Joe Rull, the Boston Herald’s Rick Sobey, Boston City Councilor and state Sen. Lydia EdwardsBarry O’BrienKelsey Rode, Maddy Thursby and Laura Huggard.

TODAY — Boston Mayor Michelle Wu speaks at the 247th annual Patriots’ Day Parade at 9 a.m. at City Hall Plaza. Wu and Gov. Charlie Baker participate in the Boston Marathon awards ceremony at 11:30 a.m. Former senator and ambassador Scott Brown is the special guest at state Rep. Steve Xiarhos’ campaign fundraiser at 6 p.m. in Hyannis.

Tips? Scoops? Pictures of you running the marathon today? Email me at lkashinsky@politico.com for a chance to be featured in tomorrow's Playbook!

 

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CAMPAIGN MODE

— AS SEEN ON TV: Labor attorney Shannon Liss-Riordan has already loaned $500,000 to her campaign for state attorney general. She signaled more could come when asked on WCVB’s “On the Record” whether she’d be willing to put $3 million into her AG bid like she did for her short-lived 2020 challenge to Sen. Ed Markey.

“I’m privileged to be able to invest in my campaign. We know that my message is resonating and there’s a path to victory,” Liss-Riordan said. “If I need to contribute to make sure we get our message out there, I’m going to do whatever it takes.”

Liss-Riordan also took some shots at her competitors, saying that she’s the only candidate who is an “actual practicing lawyer” and that Massachusetts needs a “top, acclaimed litigator” as attorney general, “not a politician.”

— THAT’S AMORE: The Boston Globe hit the campaign trail with Gov. Charlie Baker and Anthony Amore for a new piece on the latter’s run for state auditor. “Amore, 55, said he was first recruited to run statewide when he was giving a speech introducing Baker at a 2017 Christmas party hosted by Swampscott and Marblehead Republican Town Committees. Within a week, he got a call from the state party asking that he forgo the state House race he had originally entered and consider running for secretary of state. The Winchester Republican did, and lost to William Galvin, who won more than 70 percent of the vote. But Baker supported him then as he does now, which Amore says ‘makes a big difference with credibility’ when he talks to voters,” the Globe’s Samantha J. Gross writes.

Baker was “attracting double-takes” from shoppers as he collected signatures for Amore, who tweeted out pictures of his special helper last week. Baker also plans to introduce Amore to some of his donors at a campaign finance committee meeting next week.

— “State cites Wrentham company led by GOP gubernatorial candidate Chris Doughty,” by Tom Reilly, The Sun Chronicle: “A local company whose president is a candidate for the Republican gubernatorial nomination has been cited by state officials for more than a dozen environmental violations. Chris Doughty, a town resident, is president of Capstan Atlantic, a local division of Capstan, an industrial gear manufacturer with other locations in California and Mexico. Capstan Atlantic and the state’s Department of Environmental Protection entered into an administrative consent order in February, with the company agreeing to correct issues and paying a penalty of $1,380. A company official says it’s in talks with the state to resolve other issues. The company says the infractions were ‘minor’ in nature.”

DATELINE BEACON HILL

— “State's unemployment rate drops to 4.3%,” by Christian M. Wade, Eagle-Tribune: “The state’s unemployment rate dropped to 4.3% in March as employers added 21,000 more jobs, according to newly released figures.”

— “Encore Record Haul Headlines Strong March for Gaming Revenue,” by Colin A. Young, State House News Service (paywall): “In terms of revenue, March was the best month on record for Encore Boston Harbor, the third-best month ever for MGM Springfield and the second-best month for Plainridge Park Casino since Encore opened, the Gaming Commission announced Friday. Encore brought in $64.87 million last month, MGM reported a haul of $24.28 million and Plainridge took in about $12.94 million in March.”

— UNDER THE DOME: There’s no shortage of secrets inside the State House, but the Boston Herald’s Amy Sokolow is taking a look at the “secrets of the golden dome” itself. Did you know the dome was purely wooden when it was first built? That it was eventually gilded, and then regilded, with 23-karat gold leaf? And that it will eventually need to regilded again, because that gold-leaf layer can’t be cleaned? “New Hampshire recently regilded its golden dome with 4.5 pounds of gold leaf at a total project cost of $2.4 million,” Sokolow writes, so it could cost Massachusetts a pretty shiny penny.

VAX-ACHUSETTS

— “Three Mass. counties have ‘medium’ level of COVID-19, CDC says,” by Travis Andersen and Jeremy C. Fox, Boston Globe: “The CDC says three Massachusetts counties now have ‘medium’ community levels of COVID-19, an elevated designation shared by just 5 percent of all counties nationwide. The new designation for Berkshire, Middlesex, and Suffolk counties was posted on the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s website Friday. The state’s other counties remain in the ‘low’ category for community level of the virus.”

— “Survey finds widespread grief among children from COVID-19 losses,” by Felice J. Freyer, Boston Globe: “Nearly 60 percent of Massachusetts parents and caregivers who responded to a recent online survey said their family had lost at least one person to COVID-19, another sign that the pandemic’s effects promise to be far-reaching and long-lasting.”

FROM THE HUB

— “On a day of fanfare at the Boston Marathon, reminders of the war in Ukraine,” by Andrew Brinker, Boston Globe: “[Igor] Krytsak, 33, said he was granted an exemption by Ukraine’s government to leave the country for three days so he can run in Boston’s Marathon for the first time. ... People around the world cannot look away from the war, he said, and he’ll spend his run passing out fliers and wearing his country’s colors to ensure that Marathon spectators don’t.”

— "50 years later, Val Rogosheske is back to run the Boston Marathon once again," by Marta Hill, Boston.com: “Rogosheske, who is 75 years old, is running this year’s Boston Marathon as a part of the honorary women’s team. She will be running along with seven other women who have made powerful impacts in everything from athletics to human rights, according to the B.A.A.”

— “State power limits Boston’s vision,” by Emma Platoff, Boston Globe: “Here is a partial list of actions Boston can’t take without permission from the Massachusetts Legislature: Levy a new tax. Add liquor licenses. Tweak local election schedules. Thanks to a striking concentration of power in the seat of Massachusetts government on Beacon Hill, the capital city and other Massachusetts municipalities must seek state sign-off for both substantive policy changes, such as restricting how much rents may increase each year, and more routine proposals, such as changing speed limits on some roads.”

— “Properties near ‘Mass and Cass’ are going for record prices. Here’s why,” by Greg Ryan, Boston Business Journal: “Despite the tribulations endured by its business owners, the area’s commercial real estate market has never been stronger. … The hot market is driven in part by the lack of industrial space elsewhere in or just outside of Boston proper.”

— “Boston Police: Recovery of ghost guns up nearly 300% since tracking began,” by Matthew Medsger, Boston Herald: “Since tracking began in 2019, Boston has seen a 280% increase in the number of so-called ‘ghost guns’ recovered during the course of criminal investigations, reflecting a national trend highlighted by President Biden last week.”

 

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PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

— “Passenger killed [earlier this month] on the Red Line was exiting the train at the time, NTSB says,” by Taylor Dolven, Boston Globe: “Robinson Lalin was exiting the Red Line train Sunday at the time of the tragedy that claimed his life, the National Transportation Safety Board said Friday. Little else is known about the death.”

DAY IN COURT

— "Prosecutors tell appeals court: Jasiel Correia deserves no more prison reporting delays," by Jo C. Goode, Herald News: "It’s time for former Fall River mayor Jasiel Correia II to do the time, U.S. prosecutors argued — again."

— “Judge faults Berkshire DA's handling of case involving foster child's death and dismisses charges against Adams couple,” by Amanda Burke, Berkshire Eagle: “A judge has dismissed the manslaughter case brought against two local foster parents in connection with the death of an infant in their care. In a 17-page ruling Monday, Superior Court Judge John Agostini called the evidence against Matthew Tucker and Cassandra Barlow-Tucker ‘circumstantial and not particularly strong,’ and found the office of Berkshire District Attorney Andrea Harrington failed to present to the grand jury sufficient evidence to support the indictments.”

— “Mass. Judge Delays 'Right To Repair' Decision For 5th Time,” by Brian Dowling, Law360: “The Massachusetts federal judge deciding the fate of the state’s expanded automotive ‘right to repair’ law is delaying his long-awaited opinion in the matter for a fifth time, telling counsel Friday his judgment should be delivered before the Fourth of July holiday weekend.”

THE CLARK CAUCUS

— “Mass. addiction treatment faces a staffing 'crisis.' Rep. Clark says this program will help,” by Deborah Becker and Hafsa Quraishi, WBUR: “Workplace shortages are affecting several industries, including addiction treatment. … A federal government initiative called the Substance Use Disorder Treatment and Recovery Loan Repayment Program (STAR LRP) seeks to address the shortage by offering loan repayment to workers in addiction treatment.”

THE LOWELL CONNECTOR

— “White House official visits Lowell to discuss issues facing Asian community,” by Jacob Vitali, Lowell Sun: “Krystal Ka’ai, executive director of President Biden’s White House Initiative on Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders, spoke to about 20 people at the Lowell TeleMedia Center on Market Street. At the core of the visit was understanding the issues facing the community. In her remarks, Ka’ai addressed education, health care and language access barriers. She also spoke about the rise in hate crimes against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.”

FROM THE 413

— “Northampton VA hospital closure of ‘serious concern’ to Massachusetts delegation; Rep. Jim McGovern prepared to go to President Joe Biden ‘if necessary’,” by Erin Tiernan, MassLive: “Nearly every member of Massachusetts’ federal delegation has signed onto a letter asking the secretary of Veterans Affairs to reconsider recommending the closure of the Northampton VA hospital, saying they are prepared to take their concerns all the way up to President Joe Biden ‘if necessary.’"

— “Chicopee welcomes new Police Chief Patrick Major after turmoil over search process ebbs,” by Stephanie Barry, Springfield Republican: “Major was initially competing for the top job along with three other captains, but ended up going head to head with interim Chief Jeffrey Gawron. Previously, two other captains were in the mix, but one, Capt. Donald Strange, dropped out early in the process and another, Capt. Richard Henry, bailed out after allegedly being extorted by the superintendent of schools.”

— “Powerful maps: Groundbreaking report exposes ‘redlining’ in Pittsfield’s past that kept Black citizens in poverty cycle,” by Heather Bellow, Berkshire Eagle: “The authors of a groundbreaking report, ‘Redlining in Pittsfield: A case study,’ lay all of this out, focusing on the West Side neighborhood, and revealing that the Berkshires, like the rest of the Northeast, had its own way of keeping people of color down. ‘We didn’t have Jim Crow laws but we had Jim Crow in everything but name,’ said Kamaar Taliaferro, an NAACP Berkshire County Branch officer and community leader specializing in housing, and one of the report’s leading authors.”

THE LOCAL ANGLE

— ‘POD SAVE AMERICA’ TAKES BOSTON: Sen. Ed Markey says Bostonians (and people from Malden, etc) are actually raised bilingual: “We have the accent out on the street and then the accent your mother wants you to use,” Markey said on Pod Save America’s live show in Boston . He also knows “many guys” who know people who know people who knew Whitey Bulger, which, to be honest, I’d be more surprised if he didn’t since he served in the state House while Billy Bulger was in the state Senate.

On a more serious note, Markey said former President Donald Trump “belongs in jail” for “what [he] did on Jan. 6."

And Boston Mayor Michelle Wu addressed the hate she gets on Twitter. “I’m probably more extremely online than I should be,” Wu said, adding that she used to be able to check Twitter and "see constituents and respond to issues in real time and feel like I was being available and accessible. ... But when it becomes flooded with such hate, when you’re kind of targeted by right-wing news sources and that whole stuff descends on a city or on an individual, it just crowds out a lot of the direct human-to-human interaction."

— “Study shows positive impact of ‘procedural justice’ police training,” by Michael Jonas, CommonWealth Magazine: “In one of the first rigorous analyses of training in ‘procedural justice,’ which aims to have police officers treat residents more fairly, the study [of three U.S. cities including Cambridge] found that the training led to better interactions with residents, fewer arrests, and a reduction in crime.”

— "Mansfield police chief on paid administrative leave," by David Linton, The Sun Chronicle: "Police Chief Ron Sellon has been on paid administrative leave since Oct. 29, the town’s lawyer said in a response to a records request filed by The Sun Chronicle. ... The town’s response to The Sun Chronicle did not explain the reason why Sellon is on administrative leave, how long he will be on leave, or his absence from work for some time before he was officially placed on leave."

SPOTTED — at a Valerie Biden Owens book party hosted by Linda Pizzuti Henry at private social club The ‘Quin House on Thursday: Doris Kearns Goodwin, Anne Finucane, Micho Spring, Jill Abramson, Cathy McLaughlin, Salem Mayor Kim Driscoll, state Auditor Suzanne Bump, Lauren Kennedy, Meredith DeWitt, Kelly Wallace, the Boston Globe’s Marjorie Pritchard, Heather Campion, Cathleen Douglas Stone, Farah Stockman and Dot Joyce, per an attendee.

TRANSITIONS — President Joe Biden has appointed Massachusetts’ Rebecca Haffajee as principal deputy assistant secretary for planning and evaluation at the Department of Health and Human Services; Haffajee has been serving as the acting assistant secretary for planning and evaluation since March 2021.

— Cam Cote, a Markey campaign alum, is now volunteer network manager for Carter Institute for Caregivers.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to Dewey Square Group’s Charlie Baker, Theresa Verbic, Kelsey Donohue, Trey Grayson, Tracy Spicer, James D. Lee and Muzammil Nazir. Happy belated to Alex Kellner, Atul Shembekar and Clovis Young, who celebrated over the weekend.

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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Monday, April 4, 2022

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Doughty’s not so moderate after all

 


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BY LISA KASHINSKY

WHAT’S IN A WORD — Chris Doughty entered the governor’s race as a “self-described moderate.” Now he’s pushing back against that label.

“If I chose my own labels, it would be: pragmatic, common sense, businessman, fiscally conservative,” Doughty told WBUR last week. He cast himself similarly in a WCVB “On the Record” interview that aired Sunday, saying that the “Legislature is starting to lean further left. If there is ever the need and a time for a strong conversative Republican to hold back tax increases, it’s now.”

Doughty is often described as the more moderate rival of Geoff Diehl, a conservative former state representative who’s been endorsed by former President Donald Trump.

But Doughty has repeatedly lauded Trump’s trade policies with China. He left the door open to voting for Trump for president again. And Doughty stopped short of rejecting both conversion therapy and Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” law in his WCVB interview, saying that he “would always lean towards the parents being the ones that make the decisions regarding age-appropriate teachings.”

He’s also eschewed comparisons to former Massachusetts governor and now Utah Sen. Mitt Romney — the two Republicans attended the same universities and are members of the same faith. And he doesn’t appear to be lusting after GOP Gov. Charlie Baker’s endorsement, either. Doughty said he didn’t ask for Baker’s support when he met with the outgoing governor prior to launching his bid. Pressed on how important Baker’s endorsement could be in the governor’s race, Doughty said he “would like to have everyone’s endorsement, including Charlie Baker’s” but that it’s “still early in the cycle.”

GOOD MONDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Remember when Playbook reported last week that state Attorney General Maura Healey was building a dominant campaign finance operation?

Sure enough, Healey will report raking in $602,420 in March, the largest monthly haul of her gubernatorial bid to date. She's now sitting on a staggering $4.7 million in cash on hand after raising nearly $1.5 million in the first three months of the year, her campaign said.

State Sen. Sonia Chang-Díaz will report raising $106,635, the fourth month in a row she’s raised more than $100,000. She has $370,516 in cash on hand, her campaign said. The Republicans’ totals aren't yet available.

TODAY — Healey tours the Brockton Adult Learning Center at 10 a.m. and Brockton Neighborhood Health Center at 10:45 a.m. in her official capacity; she then pivots to campaign mode with a meet-and-greet at the Cape Verdean Association at 12:30 p.m. and a business walk at 2:15 p.m. Boston Mayor Michelle Wu launches Phase II of the All-Inclusive Boston campaign at 11 a.m. at City Hall. Rep. Lori Trahan highlights ARPA funding in Chelmsford at 11 a.m. Doughty speaks at the Brookline Republican Town Committee meeting at 7 p.m. State Sen. Cindy Creem chairs a legislative hearing on the future of gas in Massachusetts at 10:30 a.m.

Tips? Scoops? Birthdays? Email me: lkashinsky@politico.com.

 

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CAMPAIGN MODE

— CASH DASH: Former Boston City Councilor Andrea Campbell has reported raising $237,329 in March for her bid for state attorney general. She now has $502,482 in cash on hand. Campbell’s campaign says more than 90 percent of the money she’s raised has come from Massachusetts donors.

— “AG candidate Shannon Liss-Riordan earns endorsement from labor union representing workers at contaminated Springfield courthouse,” by Alison Kuznitz, MassLive: “[Shannon] Liss-Riordan’s new endorsement from OPEIU Local 6 — which represents about 4,500 workers from the Trial Court of Massachusetts, MBTA, and the Boston Water and Sewer Commission, among other entities — comes about two weeks after she visited the Springfield courthouse with the labor union.”

— “'America first' Republican will take on state Rep. Tricia Farley-Bouvier for Statehouse seat,” by Danny Jin, Berkshire Eagle: “Gina Divola, 32, of Pittsfield, says she is a constitutional conservative who is running because she is concerned with the direction of the state and the country.”

— “3rd candidate in running for Governor’s Council post that covers WMass,” by Bera Dunau, Daily Hampshire Gazette: “City elected official Tara Jacobs has thrown her hat into the ring for the race for the 8th District on the Governor’s Council, and she said that she’s running to be a strong voice for western Massachusetts and as a change agent for dismantling systemic injustice and promoting equity and transparency. … Other candidates for the position are Michael Fenton of Springfield and Jeffrey Morneau of East Longmeadow.”

DATELINE BEACON HILL

— CHEERS TO THAT: Gov. Charlie Baker signed a $1.6 billion supplemental budget bill on Friday that extends expanded outdoor dining and to-go alcohol sales through April 1, 2023. It also authorizes the state to divest pension funds from companies sanctioned by the Biden administration or incorporated in Russia, and approves $10 million to help resettle refugees, including from Ukraine. The Boston Herald’s Amy Sokolow has more on the bill’s other provisions, including aid for the state’s Covid-19 response.

VAX-ACHUSETTS

— “Boston-area coronavirus wastewater jump shows ‘a new wave has begun’,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “The Boston-area COVID wastewater tracker data keeps on rising, sending out alerts to the public that ‘a new wave has begun,’ according to a leading local epidemiologist. The latest update from the coronavirus wastewater tracker reveals that COVID levels are back up to the measurements from early February.”

— “‘I felt like I was drowning’: Exhausted and burned out, nurses are leaving their jobs in droves,” by Priyanka Dayal McCluskey, Boston Globe: “In interviews, a dozen nurses described staffing crises at hospitals across New England that have left them feeling stretched too thin and unable to think critically or tend to all their patients’ needs. They fear they will make mistakes. And when they go home at the end of a shift, the stress and trauma of their work often stays with them.”

— “Boston digital health company offers long COVID treatment alternative,” by Amy Sokolow, Boston Herald: “Recognizing the variety of symptoms afflicting long COVID patients, the Cambridge-based corporate benefit wellness company Goodpath has designed what its founders say is the only long COVID solution on the market that’s not offered in a hospital setting.”

FROM THE HUB

— “Demonstrators fined near Wu’s home after new protest restrictions take effect,” by Danny McDonald, Boston Globe: “One day after Mayor Michelle Wu signed a controversial proposal that curtailed the hours protesters could target a private home, five demonstrators were fined near Wu’s Roslindale home for violating the new rules. … The new rule bars demonstrations at any private home between 9 p.m. and 9 a.m. Previously, Boston’s restrictions on noise effectively restricted demonstrators from loud protests before 7 a.m. or after 11 p.m.”

— “Gravestone stolen in Boston as advocates fear escalation in gang dispute,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “A stolen gravestone has reinvigorated a rivalry between two Mission Hill-area gangs, according to police and community sources, worrying advocates about potentially escalating violence in a city that’s otherwise largely been able to avoid recent surges.”

DAY IN COURT

— “Mass. high court places limits on police access to cellphone data,” by John R. Ellement, Boston Globe: “The state’s highest court on Friday for the first time extended privacy protections to ‘tower dumps’ of cellphone data, requiring police to get a search warrant for the novel technique, which was used by Boston police to pinpoint two men out of 50,000 people as suspects in a 2018 Boston murder and several robberies.”

— “For a seventh time, convicted ex-mayor Jasiel Correia asks to delay prison sentence,” by Jo C. Goode, Herald News: “Convicted former mayor Jasiel Correia II is asking for a seventh temporary or permanent stay pending his case before the First Circuit Court of Appeals on his 2021 conviction for fraud and government corruption. It will, again, be the decision of federal Judge Douglas Woodlock who will likely make a ruling by Monday since Correia is to report to prison the following day by noon.”

DATELINE D.C.

— SUNUNU ON TRUMP: GOP New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu roasted former President Donald Trump as “[expletive] crazy” at a D.C. dinner filled with Washington A-listers. POLITICO’s Rachael Bade has the details.

— “House lawmakers give weed the green light at the federal level,” by Matthew Medsger, Boston Herald: “‘The criminalization of marijuana is inherently racist in its enforcement, unscientific in its foundation, and out of step with public opinion and the law in 18 states,’ U.S. Rep. Katherine Clark said in a release after the bill’s passage.”

— “Why Democrats hope Romney will support Ketanji Brown Jackson,” by Seung Min Kim, Washington Post: “Just days ahead of Jackson’s likely confirmation this week, [GOP Utah Sen. Mitt] Romney remains one of the most intriguing holdouts on her nomination, sending clear signals that he is weighing not just Jackson’s qualifications and legal philosophy but also the historic nature of her nomination as the first Black woman who would serve on the Supreme Court.”

 

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IT'S NOT EASY BEING GREEN

— “With climate change accelerating and despair growing, how far are activists willing to take their protests?” by David Abel, Boston Globe: “With few nations responding to the gravity of the mounting crisis, activists in Boston and beyond are feeling a mix of resignation and desperation. What else, they ask, can they — or should they — do to call attention to the urgency of the warming planet? Their answers vary, ranging from a kind of inertial despair to a determination to take their protests to another level.”

— “Is ‘green gentrification’ driving displacement in East Boston? Researchers say yes, but locals push back,” by Danny McDonald, Boston Globe: “East Boston, transformed in recent years by development large and small, is a prime example of what a pair of researchers who specialize in environmental justice call ‘green gentrification’ — where new green spaces contribute to the exclusion of marginalized groups and the displacement of working class residents. It’s a controversial argument that has received significant pushback from residents and advocates.”

FROM THE 413

— “‘They don’t know us’: With a VA hospital threatened with closure, veterans warn that community caregivers are not prepared to treat those with military experience,” by Will Katcher, MassLive: “The future of the Edward P. Boland VA Medical Center is far from settled. … More than 24,000 former service members rely on treatment at the medical center. If it were to close, some of the hospital’s services would be redirected to VA facilities in Springfield and Connecticut. For urgent care needs, or for the veterans who hope to receive their primary and specialty care closer to home, the VA intends for community providers to absorb the additional load of patients. But going to a standard doctors’ office — whether it be the local community chiropractor or Main Street optometrist — is not as simple as it sounds for many veterans.”

THE LOCAL ANGLE

— “Mass General Brigham withdraws plans for suburban surgical centers,” by Jessica Bartlett, Boston Globe: “Mass General Brigham on Friday withdrew a controversial proposal to build three outpatient surgical centers in suburbs outside Boston, a plan that had drawn opposition from competitors, insurers, and community organizations. The move came after staff at the Massachusetts Department of Public Health declined to endorse the planned expansions in Woburn, Westborough, and Westwood, according to Mass General Brigham. However, the department staff did give its support to two other big MGB projects: the $1.9 billion expansion at Mass. General Hospital in Boston, which would include two new towers, and a $150.1 million renovation and expansion of Brigham and Women’s Faulkner Hospital.”

— “Somerville landlord’s lawsuit against Tufts student journalists is dismissed,” by Tonya Alanez, Boston Globe: “The short-lived lawsuit brought by a Somerville orthodontist and landlord against two Tufts University student journalists over coverage of a renters’ protest outside his office has been dismissed, court records show. Both parties mutually agreed to the dismissal on Friday, according to filings in Middlesex Superior Court. The case was dismissed with prejudice, meaning it cannot be refiled.”

— “Cape Cod businesses struggle to find workers ahead of expected banner summer,” by Amanda Beland, WBUR: “Businesses all along Cape Cod are seeing a shortage of workers, particularly seasonal workers who help the region in the busy summer months. Restaurants, hotels and other businesses typically depend on teenagers, college students, and international workers visiting on J-1 and H-2B visa programs to pad Barnstable County's workforce, which typically increases by roughly 20,000 seasonal jobs in the summer. But factors like the pandemic, housing stock and costs, and even international affairs are impacting this year's availability of workers.”

— “Emergency remote teaching and the learning loss that came from it; Were Mass. educators properly trained to teach remotely?” by Tristan Smith, MassLive: “Maria Garcia’s classroom turned into a tug-of-war competition for attention during the 2020-2021 school year. The coronavirus pandemic forced the Jackson Street Elementary School kindergarten teacher to teach virtually for the majority of the school year. Garcia found herself pitted against action figures, pets, iPad apps, video games and other childhood delights, as she attempted to teach her class of over a dozen 5-year-olds over Zoom.”

— “About 75 Protest Catholic Memorial’s Marty Walsh Award Dinner,” by Matt McDonald, New Boston Post: “About 75 pro-lifers protested Friday near the hotel where Catholic Memorial honored former Boston mayor Marty Walsh, a supporter of legally and publicly funded abortion.”

— “Pride, BLM flags continue to fly at Nativity School against wishes of Worcester bishop,” by Steven H. Foskett Jr., Worcester Telegram & Gazette: “The administration at the Nativity School said Sunday the Black Lives Matter and gay pride flags that the Lincoln Street school has been flying for more than a year show families the independent Jesuit middle school is a safe and welcoming place. Diocese of Worcester Bishop Robert J. McManus said he sees the meaning of the flags differently, and reportedly demanded they be taken down. McManus said in a statement Sunday that the flags can be construed to represent concepts that contradict with the Catholic faith.”

— "After weeks of wrangling, MIT's grad student union will come to a vote this week," by Max Larkin, WBUR.

— “Despite overall lower participation, Mass. graduating seniors achieved top marks on AP exams in 2021,” by Colleen Cronin, Boston Globe.

REWIND — I joined GBH’s Jeremy Siegel, Paris Alston and Peter Kadzis to talk about the North End’s food fight with Mayor Michelle Wu and the nationalization of Boston politics.

SPOTTED — Climate envoy John Kerry driving an electric scooter through Georgetown on Saturday, telling one of my POLITICO colleagues in D.C. that it’s “the only way to get anywhere.”

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to former Sen. Mo Cowan, Michael Forbes Wilcox, Springfield City Councilor Jesse Lederman and Sam Doran of State House News. Happy belated to state Rep. Jon Santiago, who celebrated Friday.

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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