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Reading the delegation receipts

Reading the delegation receipts

Politico14 hours ago
BANK SHOT — There aren't any open congressional races in Massachusetts next year — at least not yet — but that hasn't stopped members of the all-Democratic delegation from getting their fundraising operations going. Let's dive into their latest Federal Election Commission reports:
PRIMARY PROTECTION — Sen. Ed Markey topped the delegation's fundraising last quarter, with $713,745, ending June with more than $2.5 million in his campaign account. That's well over the $29,835 that Alex Rikleen, the first-time candidate and writer who's officially filed to run against him in the Democratic primary, has raised since getting in the race. Rikleen ended June with $10,675 on hand. Markey's haul is also a signal to anyone thinking about launching their own bid against the 79-year-old senator that he's prepared to put up a fight.
On the other end of the spectrum, Reps. Jim McGovern and Bill Keating had the slowest quarters of the incumbents, raising $77,010 and $80,348 respectively.
IS THE RACE ON? — Jamaica Plain Attorney Patrick Roath outraised Rep. Stephen Lynch. Roath pulled in $287,691, which includes $20,000 he loaned himself, more than the $167,439 the incumbent brought in in the second quarter of the year.
It's a solid showing for the first-time candidate, but Lynch still has a serious cash advantage. The South Boston Democrat ended the quarter with more than $1.06 million in the bank.
THERE'S ALWAYS A MASSACHUSETTS ANGLE — With former Massachusetts Sen. Scott Brown officially in the race for New Hampshire's open Senate seat, it's only a matter of time before Massachusetts becomes a punching bag. (Democratic Rep. Chris Pappas, who's also in the race, has already thrown some shade at Brown's Bay State ties in a video montage posted on X). But Pappas is still raking in some Massachusetts cash — his second quarter report featured a handful of Massachusetts-based donors.
All told, Pappas raised more than $1.8 million and ended the quarter with more than $2 million on hand. We won't know much about Brown's fundraising until the fall; he filed with the FEC on July 1, after the second quarter had already ended.
GOOD WEDNESDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Tips, scoops, FEC tidbits? Drop me a line: kgarrity@politico.com.
TODAY — Gov. Maura Healey and Boston Mayor Michelle Wu attend a Sail Boston event at 12:30 p.m. Healey and Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll swear in Rep.-elect Lisa Field at 1:15 p.m. at the State House. Healey attends an event an event announcing a new visitors center at Hanscom Air Force Base at 2:30 p.m. Driscoll chairs a Governor's Council meeting at noon at the State House. Wu speaks at the launch of the third day of senior programming at the Elks at 9:45 a.m. in West Roxbury and holds a campaign event on housing at 11 a.m. in Roslindale. Sen. Ed Markey co-hosts a hearing on access to birth control at 1 p.m. in D.C. Attorney General Andrea Campbell tours an affordable housing at 12:30 p.m. in Becket and visits with youth and staff at the Railroad Street Youth Project at 2:30 p.m. in New Barrington.
DATELINE BEACON HILL
SHOT — Healey wants to define when a beach becomes public. One of her wealthy donors has pushed a similar bill for years. by Matt Stout, The Boston Globe: 'Governor Maura Healey is resurrecting a proposal at the center of a long-running legal dispute between wealthy property owners on Martha's Vineyard's that, if passed, could redefine when a beach in Massachusetts is considered public. Healey tucked the measure into a $3 billion environmental bond bill she filed last month, using language that mirrors a proposal long pushed by Richard Friedman, a colorful developer and Healey donor who's slated to host a fund-raiser for Healey this weekend at his Edgartown home. Friedman for years has battled his neighbors in court over access to a stretch of barrier beach separating Oyster Pond in Edgartown, where he bought property four decades ago, from the Atlantic Ocean on the island's southern shore.'
CHASER — Healey's Vineyard fundraiser this weekend is slated to take place at the Friedman Property on Sunday evening, according to the invite. Suggested contributions range from $250 for attendees to $5,000 for hosts.
— Massachusetts emergency shelter spending just shy of $900M for FY25, latest state data shows by Chris Van Buskirk, Boston Herald: 'Gov. Maura Healey's administration spent just shy of $900 million on emergency family shelters and related services last fiscal year, but the final total is expected to increase to nearly $1 billion as the state settles the final bills for the past 12 months, according to a report released Monday. Taxpayers are on track to shell out more than $1.8 billion over the last two fiscal years on shelters housing homeless families with children and pregnant women. An influx of migrants in 2022, 2023, and 2024 spiked demand, but caseloads have fallen significantly since January.'
— Lawmakers looking for tools to close gaps in life expectancy, disease rates by Katie Lannan, GBH News: 'Backers of state legislation proposing a broad approach to closing gaps in health care access and outcomes say now is the time for Massachusetts to double down on its commitment to health equity. Members of the Health Equity Compact, a group of leaders of color from across the health care realm, rallied outside the State House Tuesday before making their case inside the building to lawmakers holding a hearing on the bill.'
— Lawmakers hear 'generational' tobacco ban bills by Matthew Medsgar, Boston Herald: 'You can't smoke 'em if you don't got 'em. That's the idea behind a pair of bills before the state Legislature which would ban tobacco sales to people born before 2006. The proposal went before a hearing of the Joint Committee on Public Health on Monday. If enacted, it would be the first such statewide law in the nation, though not the first implementation of the idea altogether. Residents of more than a dozen-and-a-half commonwealth communities already live under similar bans through local ordinances.'
— Massachusetts legislators hear testimony on decriminalizing active ingredient in 'magic mushrooms' by Greta Jochem, MassLive.
— Kate Walsh reflects on her time as Massachusetts health secretary by Martha Bebinger, WBUR.
2028 WATCH
ISLAND TIME — Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro is heading to Nantucket this weekend for a Saturday night fundraiser, according to the invite. Suggested donations range from $1,000 to $10,000.
THE RACE FOR CITY HALL
— How Wu and Kraft plan to tackle housing affordability by Tréa Lavery, MassLive: 'Mayor Michelle Wu and mayoral candidate Josh Kraft butted heads Tuesday over what both said they consider one of the most significant issues of the campaign: the high price of housing in Boston. During a candidate forum hosted by the Massachusetts Affordable Homeownership Alliance in Roxbury on Tuesday evening, Wu and Kraft shared their respective visions and plans to reduce housing costs. Both candidates agreed that housing is too expensive in the city, but they disagreed on the most effective ways to tackle the problem.'
One point of disagreement: The luxury real estate transfer fee that would tax real estate sales over $2 million. Wu proposed the tax early in her term, but it has yet to gain much support on Beacon Hill. Kraft said Tuesday he's opposed to the transfer fee, though he left the door open to revisiting it down the road.
FALL RIVER FALLOUT
— Did Fall River have enough firefighters for the Gabriel House fire? by Liz Neisloss, GBH News: 'Fall River Fire Chief Jeffrey Bacon said Tuesday he couldn't say for sure if more lives would have been saved if more firefighters had been at the scene of the devastating fire at the Gabriel House Assisted Living Residence — a claim made by fire union leaders.'
— New Bedford senator urges thorough report on assisted living facilities after deadly fire via The Herald News: 'State Sen. Mark Montigny, D-New Bedford, is urging the Massachusetts Assisted Living Commission to extend its reporting deadline to the Legislature following the deadly fire at the Fall River Gabriel House that claimed the lives of nine residents. The commission was created in 2023 to examine health and safety standards in assisted living facilities. It was supposed to issue a report and recommendations, including any proposed legislation, by Aug. 1.'
— Fall River Fire at Gabriel House what happened on Tuesday: 'Budgets are politics' by Dan Medeiros, Emily Scherny and Bailey Allen, The Herald News.
MIGRANTS IN MASSACHUSETTS
— Massachusetts health centers, Head Start worry federal change will imperil services to immigrants by Deborah Becker, WBUR: 'Massachusetts community health centers and Head Start leaders are among the groups worried about a federal policy change that would cut off services to immigrants in the country without authorization. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced last week that it will narrow a policy that allowed many immigrants to receive federal benefits. The announcement specifically mentions community health centers and Head Start, which provides early education and other services for low-income children and their families.'
PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES
— Over 450 MBTA riders evacuated from Blue Line train in tunnel under Boston Harbor by Asher Klein, NBC10 Boston: 'Hundreds of people were evacuated from an MBTA Blue Line train stuck in a tunnel that goes under Boston Harbor on Tuesday, the T confirmed. A communications wire was down in the tunnel between Aquarium and Maverick stations, which are on either side of the harbor, MBTA officials said. That was reported about 2:30 p.m., and it prompted trains to be held and shuttle buses to be brought in to replace service. About 465 people were escorted off the train stuck in the tunnel, which remained there as of about 4:45 p.m., by Boston firefighters, MBTA transit police and MBTA staff, according to the officials. No one was reported injured.'
DAY IN COURT
— In court testimony, Boston ICE official recalls pressure from above to arrest Rümeysa Öztürk by Giulia McDonnell Nieto del Rio, The Boston Globe: 'A top Boston immigration official testified in federal court Tuesday that supervisors instructed him to prioritize the arrest of Tufts PhD student Rümeysa Öztürk, the first time he's ever received such a directive from Immigration and Customs Enforcement in his career working at the agency. Patrick Cunningham, an assistant special agent in charge at the Homeland Security Investigations office in Boston, which is part of ICE, said his supervisors gave him the impression that he should focus on the arrest of Öztürk after her visa had been revoked.'
— Galvin asks judge to reject lawsuit over voter rolls by Christian M. Wade, Gloucester Daily Times: 'The state's top election official is asking a federal judge to dismiss a lawsuit from a conservative group with ties to Republican President Donald Trump that claims it was denied access to state voter registration records. The lawsuit, filed in October by the Ohio-based Voter Reference Foundation, alleges that Secretary of State Bill Galvin's office is violating a provision of the National Voter Registration Act of 1993, requiring states to publicly share how they maintain their voter lists for a period of at least two years.'
— Republic Services sues Teamsters over alleged actions on picket line as strike passes two week mark by Ally Jarmanning, WBUR: 'Trash company Republic Services is suing Teamsters Local 25 amid the union's ongoing strike in a number of Massachusetts towns and cities, alleging that union officials shouted slurs at replacement workers, slashed vehicle tires and may have stolen a truck. The company and the union have been at a standoff since July 1 when 450 local workers went on strike calling for better wages, benefits and stronger labor protections. The strike expanded last week, and now the Teamsters say more than 2,000 employees are striking or honoring picket lines nationwide.'
FROM THE 413
— Judge in Springfield faces choice: Keep man detained? Or release him, only for ICE to deport? by Daniel Jackson, The Springfield Republican: 'The magistrate judge hearing the case of a Guatemalan man charged with illegal reentry said he would likely be deported if she released him ahead of his trial. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested Noe Yolindo Ambrocio-Perez in Springfield at the end of May, two weeks after an ICE agent called 911 to report he had witnessed Ambrocio-Perez crash his van into a concrete pole. Springfield police had responded to the collision, learned that Ambrocio-Perez was driving with an open container of beer, and arrested him before he was later released.'
THE LOCAL ANGLE
— Billerica Select Board members signal intent to censure colleague by Peter Currier, The Lowell Sun: 'Tension flared up again in the Billerica Select Board Monday as some members signaled an intent to have a vote to censure member Dina Favreau for alleged conduct outlined in an outside investigative report. After a 4-0 vote, with Favreau recusing herself, to release the redacted exhibits from the investigative report, the board then considered a vote on possible actions to be taken against Favreau for her actions as described in the report. For this, Favreau participated from the podium with attorney Roland Milliard by her side.'
— Attleboro City Council rejects tax break for developer by Rhianwen Watkins, The Sun Chronicle.
HEARD 'ROUND THE BUBBLAH
TRANSITIONS — Eva Millona has joined the Eastern Bank Foundation as a fellow.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to Sheel Tyle, Andy Bromberg, Maddie Conway and Daily Hampshire Gazette alum Sarah Crosby. Happy belated to Conan Harris and Ché Anderson, assistant vice chancellor for city and community relations at UMass Chan Medical School, who celebrated Sunday.
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Mamdani meets with AOC, NY congressional delegation and Sanders
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Mamdani meets with AOC, NY congressional delegation and Sanders

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New York's tech elite give Mamdani points for 'charisma' — and engaging with them at closed-door meet
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Business Insider

time17 minutes ago

  • Business Insider

New York's tech elite give Mamdani points for 'charisma' — and engaging with them at closed-door meet

Zohran Mamdani had no deck, but plenty of pitch when he met with New York City's tech community on Wednesday night. At an invite-only fireside chat with venture capitalist Kevin Ryan, the New York City Democratic mayoral candidate tried to sell a room of tech workers and startup investors on his vision for a city that works for the working class. And he mostly avoided the controversy surrounding his views on Israel and tax hikes for the city's millionaires and billionaires, according to multiple people who attended the event. Fresh off a primary win powered by the blunt message that New York is too expensive, Mamdani spent about an hour taking questions from New York's tech workers at an event hosted by the Partnership for New York City, Tech:NYC, and AlleyCorp, Ryan's venture capital firm that incubates and invests in startups. The crowd of some 200 people included startup founders, angel investors, and general partners from venture capital funds. The event, held at a gleaming skyscraper in Midtown, offered a stark contrast to the candidate's grassroots campaign, which was built around free city buses, a freeze on New York rents, and tax hikes for millionaires. Mamdani leaned in, fielding questions with a mix of what attendees who spoke to Business Insider characterized as "charisma" and pragmatism. Ryan told Business Insider that when someone in the audience raised President Donald Trump's social media post about Mamdani, which referred to him as "a 100% Communist Lunatic" who "looks TERRIBLE," he joked that it must have hurt Mamdani to hear he looked terrible, drawing scattered laughs. During their discussion, Mamdani and Ryan pinballed from the state of affairs in New York's tech scene to initiatives across housing, childcare, transportation, healthcare, and government efficiency, attendees said. Last week, Mamdani collided with tech's more conservative wing on social media after a Sequoia Capital investor's viral comments referring to the candidate as an "Islamist." Ryan said the post didn't come up during the chat, but one audience member did ask Mamdani about his past comments on Israel. Mamdani deflected, Ryan said. "He was trying to focus on being mayor of New York," Ryan said, "not mayor of the Middle East." Mamdani was somewhat vague, Ryan and other attendees said, when asked about his previous comments about billionaires. "I don't think that we should have billionaires because, frankly, it is so much money in a moment of such inequality," Mamdani said in a TV interview in June. He seemed to be reaching out to the business community, nonetheless. "He didn't have to meet with the CEOs," said Ryan, referring to a Tuesday meeting with New York's business leaders. In that meeting, Mamdani reportedly said that he would not use the phrase "globalize the intifada" and that he would "discourage" others from doing so, after months of declining to condemn the phrase that some interpret as a call to violence against the Jewish people. At Wednesday's event, one attendee, who works at an artificial intelligence company, said he saw the candidate's rhetoric soften into a more pragmatic approach. The person said that when someone asked Mamdani what he hoped to achieve in his first hundred days in office, the candidate referenced a 2009 proposal by then-Mayor Michael Bloomberg to make cross-town buses free. Mamdani has said that he plans to make every bus in New York free. "I was glad to see him being open to new ideas and working with people outside his base," said Yoni Rechtman, a Brooklyn venture capitalist who attended the event. "Over the last few months, he's done a good job moderating on issues that matter to New York." Rechtman questioned if that was because of "an authentic commitment to pragmatism" or "just typical politicking." "He's engaging," Ryan said, "even though he knows that many people in the room don't agree with a number of his positions. I will give him credit for reaching out." As an organizer, Ryan played both host and ambassador. He's among the early architects of New York's startup scene, the original " Silicon Alley insider." His hands were on many of its flagship tech companies: Gilt Groupe, MongoDB, and even Business Insider, which he started along with Henry Blodget and Dwight Merriman in 2007. Ryan, who has previously cohosted events with Mamdani rivals Mayor Eric Adams and Andrew Cuomo, and other New York politicians, said he hasn't endorsed a candidate. This event, he said, came together after Mamdani's primary win and offered a chance to introduce the candidate to the tech ecosystem — and for the ecosystem to size him up. A spokesperson for Mamdani didn't return a request for comment. Mamdani's campaign has proposed a 2% income tax hike on New Yorkers earning more than $1 million a year — a bracket that likely doesn't include most of the city's early-stage founders and startup employees, and might only graze a few of the investors in the room. Zach Weinberg, a New York tech founder who notched one of the city's biggest startup exits with the $2.1 billion sale of Flatiron Health in 2018, didn't attend the fireside chat, but he didn't mince words when asked about Mamdani's platform. While the candidate "seems like a perfectly nice guy," Weinberg told Business Insider, he believes many of Mamdani's policies, especially rent freezes and higher taxes, "will not work" and could do more harm than good. "If he pushes tax rates higher on residents, you will see people move out of the city, which actually decreases tax revenue," he said. "Super wealthy people have flexibility where they live." He pointed to hedge fund manager David Tepper's departure from New Jersey — a move that caused a drop in the state's annual tax revenue — as a cautionary tale for what happens when tax policy collides with high-net-worth mobility. Mamdani sits further to the left than most in a room full of card-carrying capitalists, said Ryan. But he tried to show on Wednesday that he's willing to engage with a spectrum of viewpoints ahead of the general election, where he will face a Republican and several independent candidates, he added. When asked about technology's role in the government, Mamdani lamented that while he can track a food delivery order on his phone, he can't monitor a complaint he's logged in NYC311, the city's information and service hotline, as easily. The public sector, he told the group, could learn from the private sector in how it applies technology. "He's a good politician and understands that we need to create jobs in the city if people want to pay for anything," Ryan said.

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