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Secretary of state race stirring
Secretary of state race stirring

Politico

time15-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Politico

Secretary of state race stirring

2026 WATCH — There's one potential significant Democratic primary brewing for next year: State Sen. Becca Rausch has been fielding calls about running for secretary of state, according to a person familiar with the situation. Rausch's interest in serving as the state's top elections official wouldn't be coming out of left field: The Needham Democrat is pushing several election reform bills this session, including wide-ranging legislation that would 'make several sorely needed improvements to voting access and elections infrastructure,' according to the bill summary. Secretary of State Bill Galvin hasn't officially said whether he'll seek another term, but multiple #mapoli observers we checked in with expect him to run again next year. Galvin broke the record to become the longest-serving secretary of state in Massachusetts when he won his eighth term in 2022. Galvin has fended off a series of primaries from younger, more progressive challengers in recent years — mostly recently from the NAACP's Tanisha Sullivan in 2022 and from then-Boston City Councilor Josh Zakim in 2018. Raucsh has been steadily padding her campaign coffers in recent months — she had more than $113,000 on hand at the end of June. But that's likely to be far less than Galvin, who had more than $1.8 million in his campaign account at the end of last month. GOOD TUESDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Meanwhile in New Hampshire … A group of prominent Democrats in the Granite State is launching a campaign to bring Democrats with national profiles to the early primary voting state with an eye toward 2026 — and 2028. Rep. Ro Khanna will kick off the town hall-style series Aug. 31, and more meetings are in the works for the fall, organizers told Playbook. Jim Demers, a longtime Democratic strategist and former New Hampshire state representative, is leading the effort along with New Hampshire state Sen. Rebecca Perkins Kwoka, state Rep. Alexis Simpson, and Democratic National Committee members Bill Shaheen, Donna Soucy and Joanne Dowdell. The goal isn't just to draw presidential hopefuls to New Hampshire amid a battle over the state's longtime 'first-in-the-nation' primary status, though some involved are pushing to bring the long-standing tradition back to New Hampshire. While some of the speakers 'may see it as an audition for 2028,' Demers told Playbook, 'I think we really see it as an opportunity to make the voters aware that the Democratic Party is alive and we have leaders who are willing to stand up on the issues they care about.' The conversations, hosted at St. Anselm College in Manchester in conjunction with the New Hampshire Institute of Politics, will have two parts: A reception where voters can meet and lob questions at the visiting politician and a traditional town hall. TODAY — Gov. Maura Healey has no public events. Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll testifies on the Mass Ready Act, Healey's infrastructure bond bill, at 1 p.m. at the State House. Sen. Ed Markey hosts a press conference announcing the reintroduction of the State-Based Universal Health Care Act at 9:30 a.m. in D.C. Rep. Ayanna Pressley hosts a press conference to launch a Community Safety Agenda at 2 p.m. in D.C. Boston Mayor Michelle Wu kicks off the third phase of a program that uses city-owned land to create homeownership opportunities at noon in Dorchester. Have a tip, story, suggestion, birthday, anniversary, new job, or any other nugget for the Playbook? Drop me a line: kgarrity@ DATELINE BEACON HILL CASH DASH — A group of lawyers and energy executives is hosting a 'Clean Energy Leaders for Maura' fundraiser Thursday in Boston, per the invite. Among those listed on the host committee: Alicia Barton, the CEO of Vineyard Offshore, an offshore wind company founded by the same team that established Vineyard Wind; Dan Berwick, the CEO New Leaf Energy; and former Somerville Mayor Joe Curatone, now president of The Alliance for Climate Transition. Suggested donations range from $250 to $2,500. — Healey cost-cutting plan gets cool treatment from Mariano by Chris Lisinski, State House News Service: 'The top House Democrat will need to 'think long and hard' about Gov. Maura Healey's request for additional cost-cutting powers over the state budget as Beacon Hill braces for potential fiscal upheaval. Ten days after Healey rolled out her budget vetoes and new legislation designed to prepare for federal funding cuts, House Speaker Ron Mariano said he and his team had not yet talked much about what kind of response they will offer.' MORE — Gov. Healey had quasi-public agencies in mind amid push to expand budget cutting powers by Chris Van Buskirk, Boston Herald: 'As [Gov. Maura] Healey signed a $61 billion yearly spending plan earlier this month, she also filed legislation to grant her more authority to slash spending across all of state government instead of just the executive branch that she oversees. Her office argued that Massachusetts could face fiscal troubles as a result of actions taken by President Donald Trump over the past seven months. After an unrelated event at the State House Monday, Healey said the same budget-cutting rules that apply to executive branch agencies should apply to quasi-public agencies.' TRAVEL LOG — After her office declined to share details while she was away, Gov. Maura Healey told reporters Monday that she spent the last week in France with her family and returned Saturday. More from the Boston Herald. — Drought management not included in Healey's $3 billion environmental bond bill by Bhaamati Borkhetaria, CommonWealth Beacon. WHAT'S ON CAMPBELL'S DOCKET — Campbell, state AGs sue Trump over $6.8B in frozen school funds by John L. Micek, MassLive: 'Democratic attorneys general and two governors from two dozen states sued the Trump administration on Monday, arguing the Republican White House unconstitutionally froze more than $6 billion in public school funding. The loss of the cash, previously approved by Congress, threw a wrench into summer and after-school programs across the country, Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea J. Campbell and several of her colleagues said during a news conference. The Bay State's share came out to $108 million, according to the Healey administration.' THE RACE FOR CITY HALL FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Gov. Maura Healey and Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll are endorsing Somerville Mayor Katjana Ballantyne for reelection, according to her campaign. Ballantyne is 'the proven leader we need at the local level to support our administration's efforts to reduce the cost of housing, grow our economy, tackle climate change and increase opportunities for all,' Healey and Driscoll said in a statement. — Longtime New Bedford City Councilor Linda Morad to retire by Colin Hogan, The New Bedford Light:. — Bike lanes are a hot topic in the race for Boston's top office by Andrea Perdomo-Hernandez, WBUR. PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES — Study shows MBTA costs way up since spending control board disbanded by Matthew Medsgar, Boston Herald: 'The cost of running the MBTA has climbed dramatically since the phase out of the agency's Fiscal and Management Control Board, according to a new study by the Pioneer Institute. While the study acknowledges that there have been notable improvements to the reliability of subway service and that many of the MBTA's notorious 'slow zones' have been repaired and removed, the system's operating costs have nevertheless grown by leaps and bounds since the control board was eliminated four years ago.' FROM THE DELEGATION — Moulton calls on Democrats to reboot ahead of midterms by Christian M. Wade, The Eagle-Tribune: 'U.S. Rep. Seth Moulton said Democrats need to rebrand their message to focus on the economy, immigration reform and other issues that matter to voters, if they hope to regain control of Congress in next year's midterm elections. Speaking to a gathering of business leaders Monday at the New England Council's 'Capitol Hill Report,' the Salem Democrat said the party's brand is damaged and needs to be rebuilt if it hopes to win control of Congress to push back against President Donald Trump's second-term actions.' FROM THE 413 — Will SBA reopen office in WMass? Lawmakers have questions by Daniel Jackson, The Springfield Republican: 'The head of the U.S. Small Business Administration told lawmakers last month that the agency is looking to reopen an office in Western Massachusetts after cuts in March closed the office in Springfield. The lawmakers, however, remain skeptical. Last week, U.S. Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., told fellow senators the fate of the Springfield SBA office was one of several matters where he could not get full answers from the agency. U.S. Rep. Richard Neal, D-Springfield, said in a statement Monday the agency lacked a concrete plan to reopen the office.' — Candidates emerge for town election in Amherst by Scott Merzbach, Daily Hampshire Gazette: 'A week after nomination forms for the Nov. 4 election became available at the town clerk's office, and as of Tuesday, eight residents have pulled papers to run for Town Council, which has three at-large seats as well as two seats in each of five districts. For councilor-at-large, incumbent Mandi Jo Hanneke of Foxglove Lane, has gotten nomination papers. Also getting papers are current District 2 Councilor Lynn Griesemer, of Flat Hills Road, Andy Churchill, of Pomeroy Lane, who chaired the Charter Review Committee and previously served on the School Committee, and Dillon Maxfield, of North Pleasant Street, who ran for a council seat seven years ago and has been on the town's Board of License Commissioners.' — Pittsfield narrows its open container law and sets limits on flag displays on city property by Maryjane Williams, The Berkshire Eagle. THE LOCAL ANGLE — Lax oversight of assisted living facilities may have left Gabriel House vulnerable by Marin Wolf, Jason Laughlin and Ava Berger, The Boston Globe: 'The Gabriel House assisted living facility did not perform fire drills or train workers in evacuation procedures and was also understaffed and poorly maintained, according to a current and former employee interviewed in the aftermath of the fatal fire there that killed nine residents. … Advocates for the state's seniors said there are longstanding concerns about lax oversight of assisted living facilities, which offer some personal assistance but not the type of intensive medical care provided at nursing homes.' RELATED — Fall River mayor on fatal fire at assisted living facility by Lisa Mullins, WBUR. — Newton mayor defends yellow line decision ahead of Italian festival by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: 'It wasn't a full 'mi scusi' from Newton's mayor in the wake of LineGate, but she did admit that the city 'missed the mark in communicating' about the decision to remove the red, white, and green street lines ahead of this week's Italian festival. Newton Mayor Ruthanne Fuller has been facing heat from residents after the city in the middle of the night ordered workers to paint the road lines on Nonantum's Adams Street yellow. … Before the city painted the reflective yellow center lines, Fuller said the city gave the OK for Festa volunteers to repaint the tricolors on Adams Street — moved over by 12″ or 18″ next to the double yellow center lines. The mayor stressed that the decision for yellow lines on the two-way street was for public safety.' — 7 police officers placed on leave after Haverhill man's death by Jill Harmacinski, The Eagle-Tribune: 'Seven city police officers are now on paid leave amid the continuing investigation into the death of Francis Gigliotti, 43, who died while being restrained by police Friday evening. The seven officers were not identified by Essex County District Attorney Paul Tucker, who confirmed they were placed on leave after speaking with Haverhill police Chief Robert Pistone early Monday evening.' — A city-owned grocery store in Worcester? Councilor wants to look into it by Afton Pratt, Telegram & Gazette. — Brockton settles whistleblower lawsuit with schools assistant CFO by Chris Helms and Jacob Posner, The Brockton Enterprise. HEARD 'ROUND THE BUBBLAH HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to Ariel Zirulnick, David Lippman, Jon Hurst, Stefanie Coxe and Allison Godburn.

Coalition: Lack of press shield law makes Mass. an outlier
Coalition: Lack of press shield law makes Mass. an outlier

Yahoo

time12-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Coalition: Lack of press shield law makes Mass. an outlier

BOSTON (SHNS) – Massachusetts is one of just nine states without a 'press shield law' that a media advocacy coalition says would to protect journalists from being required to disclose their confidential sources and other sensitive information in court. Coalition members including the Massachusetts Broadcasters Association, Massachusetts Newspaper Publishers Association and Boston Globe Media say they're making a stronger push this session for a bill (S 1253, H 1738) that would provide 'clear safeguards' for confidential sources and sensitive material so that journalists can fulfill their 'constitutionally protected watchdog role.' 'It is absolutely obvious that we are in a time where we need to pay attention to the shortfall and failure, to date, of Massachusetts to actually pass a press shield law that we so desperately need, given what is happening in the national sphere,' longtime bill sponsor Sen. Becca Rausch said on Wednesday. No version of the bill has ever cleared the Judiciary Committee. Organizers said the bill has been proposed for around 15 years, but that they tracked the concept back to the 1970s. The bill is modeled after the federal Press Act, which the U.S. House passed unanimously in 2024. According to Bob Ambrogi, executive director of the Massachusetts Newspaper Publishers Association, one of the reasons the coalition chose the federal bill as its model was because it had been 'vetted by pretty much every major news organization in the country' and leading media lawyers. If passed, journalists would not have to name sources or disclose confidential newsgathering information unless the disclosure is necessary to prevent 'an act of terrorism' or 'a threat of imminent violence, bodily harm, or death.' Unless a court finds similar threats, state officials would not be able to force third-party email or phone providers to disclose sensitive records, and journalists and news organizations would be notified before their records are sought by state officials. Organizers referenced Massachusetts cases in which journalists were challenged when protecting their anonymous sources, namely a 2022 case between the Berkshire Eagle and the Springfield Diocese and another case involving the Boston Globe, Dana Farber Cancer Institute and a physician at the hospital. Chief Operating Officer and General Counsel of Boston Globe Media Dan Krockmalnic said the Globe has filed more than a dozen motions in the last few years to fight subpoenas for information about reporters and sources. The financial burden and time-consuming nature of those kinds of cases, House bill sponsor Rep. Rich Haggerty said, puts local news specifically at a disadvantage. 'Every single time we see a local news organization challenged, spending resources and money on protecting what should be a First Amendment right already protected — and this law would help that — we know they're not spending those resources on informing our communities,' Haggerty said. Past opposition includes law enforcement, which media lawyer Jon Albano said was concerned that its ability to investigate a crime that has been in the news could be stymied if they aren't able to subpoena a reporter to find out who they've spoken with. 'In general, there's probably some other way they can figure out how to get to that source or get to that information, but it's kind of a shortcut to subpoena the reporter and say, 'Where did you get this information?'' Albano said. While concerns have existed in the past about shield laws potentially unduly protecting sources in criminal investigations, 41 states and Washington, D.C. have a press shield law, Krockmalnic said. 'The sky has not fallen anywhere there. It will not fall here. And we know that authorities in those jurisdictions regularly and successfully prosecute crimes that are reported on by the press despite the existence of a robust shield law,' Krockmalnic said. 'But here in Massachusetts, sources provide their information at their own peril. They know that their names and information that they provide can be demanded by the government or by private litigants and must rely on the press's ability and funds to fight on their behalf to try to convince the court that we deserve protection.' The bill defines a 'covered journalist' as 'a person who regularly and credibly gathers, prepares, collects, photographs, records, writes, edits, reports, investigates, or publishes news or information in a professional manner that concerns local, national, or international events or other matters of public interest for dissemination to the public.' 'It is our intention to not overly constrain how a journalist or journalism or the act of newsgathering is defined in legislation,' Krockmalnic said. 'If you are plausibly engaged in the act of newsgathering, then the law should apply to you.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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