Monday, November 09, 2009
Monday, November 02, 2009
Springfield City Election Endorsements...
The race between Michael Fenton and Thomas Sullivan has been among the more competitive in Springfield's first in a generation Ward elections. Both candidates have expressed a strong desire to improve the city's fortunes.
E. Henry Twiggs, Oliver's opponent, has served in various capacities for the local Democratic Party. The Democratic party in Massachusetts is not my favorite branch of the national institution. However, it is certainly a venue where in Twiggs has taken in a broad range of information and experience about government in general, but also met a large cross-section of people. Such a point of view would hopefully encourage Twiggs to execute the office less provincially than Oliver may given what his campaign implies.
However, there is the problem of Tom Walsh. By all accounts he is a really good guy, who probably could have rocked the vote had he run. Walsh, Mayor Domenic Sarno's Communications Director, did not however for any number of reasons. Indeed, as many as 55 people may have written his name in last September. Much of the movement seems to stem from Wright's non-opposition to Longhill Gardens, an irony since Walsh's boss, the mayor, approved the project. Although Walsh has yet to have an "if nominated I will not run, if elected I will not serve" moment, his candidacy is the wish of others and without the "candidate" actually campaigning unlikely to succeed. Voting for him might draw support away from Wright and propel Rivera forward with his hopeful, but flawed promises. That said, if you really cannot bring yourself to vote for Wright, WMassP&I cannot in good conscience condemn a write-in vote, but we beg that you consider the consequences of your actions.
John Lysak has been a persistent and thus far undeterred city council candidate for years. He ran two years ago and failed to break the wall of incumbents, but with Ward 8 able to elect its own councilor he may have a chance at last. Ward 8, which includes Pine Point, the eastern Boston road area, and Indian Orchard has long been starved for political attention. The Eastfield retail area has been neglected by the city, if not by developers, as city leaders looked elsewhere for retail development. Despite this and a lack of direct highway access, Eastfield remains the city's largest single retail area and a major source of property taxes. With Wilbraham's sudden interest in developing retail along its stretch of Boston Road, it cannot be taken for granted any longer. Lysak has taken an interest in Boston Road. Indian Orchard itself has also been neglected as neither of its reps in Boston live in Springfield. Often folded into the Ludlow House district to which it belongs, it too has suffered a decline, far less noted than that of parts of Forest Park and elsewhere . John Lysak is man to represent IO and all of Ward 8 at 36 Court.
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Thursday, October 29, 2009
Ward Elections, First Responses...
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Wednesday, October 28, 2009
On the Verge of Election Day...
That being case, WMassP&I has dispatched emails loaded with probing questions to all of the candidates for City Council in Springfield who have email addresses available on the Web. We want to applaud the City Council candidates who have published web page in this most crucial election. Some may say, especially in the Ward races, that such an effort is unnecessary. WMassP&I would argue that even in the poorest neighborhoods, having a means to communicate with candidate could be priceless especially for those who may find it impossible to attend scheduled campaign events. Even so, how would they find out where the events are? Community bulletin boards ain't what they used to be.
We will post the responses from those that we receive. The following candidates we could not contact via email.
Ward 1: Gumersindo Gomez and Zaida Luna.
Ward 3: Martin Loughman
Ward 4: Norman Oliver and E. Henry Twiggs
Ward 5: Clodo Concepcion and Carol Lewis-Caulton
Ward 7: Michael Patrick Rodgers
Ward 8: Orlando Ramos
At-Large: Tim Rooke, Jose Tosado, Thomas Ashe, Robert Francesca, Morris Jones, Vera O'Connor.
Twiggs, Ramos, and Ashe all have websites, but they did not list any contact information or a contact forum appropriate for submission of these questions. Some of the candidates we have contacted do not websites and/or use an alternative web presence, but we were able to secure an email address.
This list is not meant to embarrass the candidates, but rather to invite them to contact WMassP&I so that they may answer the questions we have put forward for our city officials-to-be. If any of our readers know the candidates listed personally please encourage them to contact WMassP&I or submit their email yourself to wmasspi@yahoo.com!
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Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Boston Beat: He that Would Be Mayor (Again)...
Third, and perhaps more importantly, this is a commonwealth. Note this fact, as it will come up again in future posts. Although the term is legally synonymous with state as far as the Feds are concerned and functionally the same where Massachusetts itself is concerned, there is a deeper meaning. Although this fact is true of the 46 states that name themselves as such, Massachusetts, along with Pennsylvania, Virginia, and Kentucky all call themselves commonwealth because, to put it bluntly, we are all in this together. What happens in a our neighboring towns is just as important to us as that which happens in ours. This need not to escalate into nosing into others' business, but it can take on balanced dimensions. If East Longmeadow is set to be the site of a Lowes that will attract choking traffic and massive trailers through Springfield's neighborhoods, it is not just an East Longmeadow issue. If Springfield is seeking assistance from the state, it helps when all 351 communities, especially the city's suburbs recognize and push for state help. And when our state capital expects us to pony up money to help its mass transit system or funnel more money into this project or that, we have a right to know, understand, and ask questions of those who run said city.
The man at the helm in Boston is Thomas M. Menino. Menino never won a mayoral election without some
of the benefit of incumbency. When predecessor Ray Flynn was appointed to be Ambassador to the Vatican by President Clinton, Boston City Council President Menino ascended to Boston's throne. There he has remained.Now, we will not tear Mumbles Menino down without an at-least somewhat balanced assessment. A comment on our previous Boston Beat article seemed irked that we did not give Menino the same fair treatment that the Globe tepidly offers. However, in that case, WMassP&I decried specific development projects and the intentions of the mayor in approving them.
Tom Menino has, despite some recent claims to the contrary by some residents, whipped city services into shape. Constituent services, such as trash removal, code enforcement, etc, go through a well-oiled machine that give neighborhoods their own mayoral liaisons. Residents can contact this person (how directly, admittedly WMassP&I does not know) and relay their concerns and/or request for help acquiring city services. Moreover, Menino has poured millions into neighborhood improvements from parks to beautification projects. He is present in all neighborhoods from East Boston to Brighton to Roslindale. It has earned him the title of "urban mechanic." Moreover, billions of dollars of private investments has been steered into Boston since his tenure began. That added tax revenue, needed in light of simultaneous untaxed non-profit expansions, has allowed Menino to maintain a respectable modicum of city services and fund improvements.
However, it has not all been rosy. As pointed out by the Globe both in its editorials and its articles, a number of issues remain. We will largely forgive Menino of public safety. Although important, Boston's homicide rate remains far away from its all time high, if often double its most recent all time low. To do otherwise, would smack of hypocrisy when WMassP&I decries--justifiably--how statistics seem to continually violate Springfield while belying the actual, often safe situation. However, Boston's schools have not shown the kind of improvement they need in light of the better access to local funds and less reliance on state aid than Springfield has. Menino's "better" services has not done much to lift the poverty rate in some of the city's poorest neighborhoods except by the mighty hand of gentrification. Any improvements might be better attributed to the late 1990's boom in tech that burned quite powerfully in Metro Boston.
Indeed outside of residential and high end service development, commerical real estate projects in Boston have been somewhat muted this decade. During the late 90's, new office towers rose throughout the city. By the 2000's very few reached skyward unless already funded and underway before the Tech Bubble in 2000-01 (pictured 111 Huntington, completed 2002). Those that have like the 1,000 foot skyscraper and the Columbus center have faltered or relied heavily on the high-end residences that compromised part of a mixed-use development. Indeed, many statistics about the mayor's accomplishments will measure dollars spent since he ascended to office. Very few articles note how much came when the city was flush during the Clinton years before state budget cuts and foreclosures took a meat axe to Boston's revenue.Menino has also been criticized for failing to bring the Boston Fire Department to heel. Despite report after report, calls to action, promises from Menino himself, pension and disability scandals, and 3 dead firefighters in the past two and a half years alone, little has been done to enact far-reaching change. The average firefighter is caught between a union whose leaders seem more interested in their own power than anybody else, and a mayor more than willing to compromise good decisions for political expediency.
All of this aside, Menino has not been a bad mayor by most measures. Without casting aspersions on the city's two other living former mayors (only three men have held the position since 1968) Menino may be the most honest man running the city in century's time.
However, Menino has started to believe his own press. Although this blog does not favor term limits, it does not support career politicians in general especially when the same seat is occupied for eternity. Menino should have planned to exit this December on a relatively high note, proud of his accomplishments, mindful and humble about his failures, and thanking the city's residents for giving him the opportunity to serve them.
That did not happen.
Putting on a brave face and promising to lead Boston "forward" opposite Flaherty's call for passing the torch, Menino and/or his campaign have not run the most respectable campaign. Reports flood the Beantown media about implicit threats made to minority police supervisors not in league with the mayor. Internal campaign memos suggest knowledge of a small business owner that backs Flaherty and targets city workers who would do likewise. City workers blur the line between public servant and political activist, reminding us why the Hatch Act prohibits Uncle Sam's non-political employees from engaging in partisan activity.
If the most unscrupulous activity is true, Menino may find himself sitting in a position all too familiar to those who know what CREEP stands for. The risk only grows if the email controversy at City Hall, wherein a political advisor deleted thousands of emails in violation of state law, exposes more unethical or illegal activity.
Richard Nixon probably did not order the
Watergate break-in. Had he thought things through, Tricky Dick would have realized the absurdity of spying on a party that was ready to nominate a man for Vice-President who had electro-shock treatments. Paranoia and a tragic self-destructive nature made him make a ridiculous, if criminal situation worse. If nothing else, however, it can be argued that Nixon had encouraged an environment, both at the White House and in CREEP (the Committee to Re-Elect the President) that dirty tricks and outright criminality were okay in order to win. To Nixon, it was to fight off the same tricks and vendettas his opponents had against him. His subordinates only saw that they had to do whatever was necessary to win period. Never mind what the other guy thought, planned, or had (or did not have) up his sleeve.Menino could find himself in a similar situation. Menino is not psychologically troubled, but he mind find that his drive, his seemingly altruistic insistence on another term could put him in Nixon's shoes. His subordinates, as committed as Menino is to winning, may not find the law terribly conducive to their plans. If they push the boundary a little further, and a little further until suddenly something statutory happens, Menino may be facing his own Watergate.
For the most part, Menino's demeanor has not suggested that of a Nixonian egomaniac. The mayor is painfully aware of his own verbal trainwrecks and usually takes it in stride. Unrelenting media observations of his temper sufficiently lowered debate expectations such that as long as the mayor's volume remained civil and he never told his opponents to fornicate with themselves he would come off as downright congenial. However, the debates did show cracks in that humble exterior that lets Bostonians overlook his failures and disquieting personal comfort with extending his tenure even further.
When asked to note what his biggest failure was, Menino's answer was downright pandering. Not as bad as former President George Bush's inability to think of a mistake, but just as self-absorbed, Menino lamented not getting Beacon Hill leaders to give Boston more money. What? True, dollar to dollar per capita, Boston receives less than Springfield under legal funding formulas. However, Boston receives plenty under "additional aid" compared to Springfield's perennially paltry amounts. Let's not forget the Big Dig, an army of State employees that fuel the city's economy, 1% on the dollar of all items subject to the sales tax that goes to fund his city's mass transit system and much, much more. Plus the recent meals tax option allows for more money to go directly into the mayor's budgets, including money spent by Bay Staters who come to their state capital for official business. The answer should have made the blood boil of anybody who does not live in Boston, but the average Boston voter, lost in the moment might raise a fist and cheer the mayor, unaware how they were just made Menino's pawn.
Menino's biggest albatross remains the one for which he has been perhaps most criticized: development. Most detractors will often point to the boys club nature of the Boston Redevelopment Authority, controlled by Menino. In other words, you need to be connected to really have a chance, although Dianne Wilkerson also taught us that a bra full of cash will do the trick (although interviewed by federal investigators, Menino is not suspected of any wrong-doing in Wilkerson's influence peddling, liquor license-flinging behavior). However, the quality, efficacy, and longtime economic contribution of the development is what WMassP&I pointed to in our last post.
Certainly a lot could happen in this last week, but other than Attorney General Martha Coakley's investigation of the case of the mysterious disappearing emails, there have not been any October surprises. That investigation will not be completed until after the election and its ramifications may outlive Coakley's own tenure in the AG's office if she is elected to the United States Senate. If wrongdoing is found, Menino may feel a lot like Tricky Dick except, perhaps to his benefit, he cannot fire the Attorney General. It would be unfortunate for a career as generally successful as Menino's to crater out because ambition and a hunger for power won out over reason and the acceptance that eventually everyone's fifteen minutes will come to pass.
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Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Boston Beat: Fashion, Fenway, Foolishness...
In the past week, the Boston Globe reported a series of new developments in the pipeline for Boston. As the credit markets froze over, many such developments in the city were put on hold, perhaps most infamously the redevelopment of Downtown
However, with credit easing even as high unemployment persists, investors and banks are starting to open their wallets. Where they have not done so the Commonwealth of Massachusetts seems more than willing to do so. In particular are three projects, which have been resuscitated and/or unveiled that point to a resurgence of development in Beantown. Unfortunately, these projects may not be in the long-term interests of the city or, as symbols of similar developments elsewhere, the overall economy.
The projects in question are the relocation of upscale retailer LouisBoston to the South Boston waterfront; the Fenway Center to be built over the Turnpike near Kenmore Square and Fenway Park; and more generally, the redevelopment of the Boylston Street area near Fenway Park.
Not too long ago, the Globe reported that LouisBoston would vacate its Newbury Street building upon the expiration of its lease for a then-unspecified trendier location. The Globe article dates to before the worst of the recession hit, however
The Globe blurb on the relocation to Fan Pier (the specific site) notes that it is part of a larger project that includes restaurants, residences, and office space. These offices and more importantly residences will be geared primarily to the higher end of tax brackets. This is not at all surprising, given that any waterfront property will have prime prices and undemocratic as it is, that's the way the market goes. What is troubling is the sudden jump of a retailer across the city to unproven territory. If our insights are correct, LouisBoston will not start a trend, but if it does, what becomes of Newbury Street? What becomes of still-
Another project of note is the Fenway Center. Unveiled some time ago, the project calls for converting a swath of parking and (with the help of a platform over the highway) the nearby stretch of the Turnpike into offices, residences and amenities. The project stalled along with others like it, in part because of the cost of building a platform over the Turnpike. Governor Deval Patrick's administration recently announced state support for the platform's construction. The cost will be paid back in the form of lease payments, but somehow it will end up costing taxpayers something. Aesthetically, the project is designed to integrate into the area well. It will respect much of the low slung space nearby and is a model for transit oriented development. However, it is doubtful that the offices and
Additionally, the influx will, assuming the Red Sox and Boston University retain their fans and students respectively, dramatically inflate real estate prices. Affordable, family oriented food service could easily dry up once current leases are up. Students at BU and the other nearby colleges, not all of whom are flush with Mommy and Daddy's money, could find themselves priced out of the establishments that take the place of the old. Perhaps more insidiously, if economic conditions falter again, which of course they will albeit perhaps not as badly, a turnover of higher end establishments
On top of the Fenway Center there exists a push, emanating largely from City Hall to scale up the overall Fenway neighborhood, largely because that is where Fenway Park is. Why this is so necessary is hard to say. The Fenway area is not the city's best or most polished. It is a grab bag of students and professionals who have chosen it for its proximity to schools and medical facilities. That alone has led to an increase in real estate prices, but not changed the character of the neighborhood dramatically. Crime is not overwhelming, but noticeable and the Fens, the park from which the baseball park and neighborhood get their name, is notorious for late-night, ahem, couplings, shall we say? Either way, Fenway Park is in a decent neighborhood compared to Yankee Stadium and is better integrated into the overall urban landscape, than the Sports Complexes in South Philadelphia.
Some recently built structures like Trilogy between Brookline Avenue and Boylston have integrated themselves nicely into the neighborhood. Another building further up Boylston, 1330, has struggled, but is finding ground-level tenants at least.
Menino's push for redevelopment would
All of these developments point to a policy coming out of the Mayor's office that is encouraging Boston's move toward what a recent copy of TimeOut's Boston guide called a "boutique city." In other words, a city that increasingly caters to its wealthiest residents and few if anybody else. Tourists, rich and poor, will fall into this group as well. Let's face it, whether your vacation is on a budget or an expense account, it is coming from some discretionary source. Boston is not alone in this venture. Similar charges are leveled against New York, not just on Manhattan, but recently in Brooklyn and Queens as well. Mayor Bloomberg has implied that the added income from property taxes can be used to help the poor with services. The jobs generated from such developments, however, will never allow them to move beyond any need, however real, for those services.
Whether this is Menino's intention or not is uncertain. Nonetheless, as Boston has generally charted a development path similar to New York's over the past decade and Menino essentially is emperor of development if not the whole city, it is possible. The question also must become can a city sustain such a widening swath of luxurious retailers, hotels, restaurants, and residences? Boston has incredible wealth and it a recent report that upmarket retail sales are up nationally. Upmarket in the report is considered the top 10% of retail prices.
That news should be taken with the proverbial grain of salt. The rich have always weathered these storms better than most. Even during the depression, the temporary loss of investment income for the wealthy only slowed, not ended their overall income. Moreover, luxury retailers and wholesalers could weather a storm better than their downmarket cousins for a simple reason. Their markup was higher and they could simply opt to buy less good and their distributors and the manufacturers could make like changes until conditions improved.
There is, however, a stark difference between now and then. A chronic tendency for Americans of all income brackets to overspend. The last year may have instille
d some humility in consumers, but not necessarily enough or at all in those who may not make a fortune, but still have $10,000 credit line and the will to use it. In other words, that luxury market may not be exclusively powered by high-powered stock brokers, lawyers, doctors, and Indian chiefs. Living beyond your means points to middle income earners, particularly those without families yet, to spend and charge hundreds of dollars not just because they can, but because it is there.Imagine the financial crisis of 2008, except at a to be determined date in the future. A credit card crisis could be just as devastating to the economy, if not more so. Cascading off of that would be a commercial real estate crisis, something all but the sunniest of economist fear remains a possibility even now. Above all else, almost the entire labor market remains weak and will remain so for months if not years.
Now. Let's put all of this gloom and doom aside and remember something else. It goes back to the "boutique city." Is that what we really want? A city that caters to the wealthy and increasingly excludes its most vulnerable citizens in an effort to save them while driving out everybody in between? Some legacy for the birthplace of American freedom.
Bill Dusty's Springfield Intruder recently wrote in "Build Now, Build New" about how there is an impulse in Springfield and elsewhere to build something new even if there is not obvious need for it, pointing to the Courthouse or new school buildings. If such government building programs are the crack of Springfield, leaving it poor and with bills to pay, then many of the luxury buildings and developments in Boston are that city's cocaine. Sexy and refined, but just as dangerous in the long ru
The answer is not simple and we do not pretend to have it. There are of course monumental special interests involved some of which Dusty mentioned in the Intruder like contractors and the construction unions. Others are the banks and landlords and any-greedy-body with a stake in the process. Lip service is paid to undoing damage done by highway projects like the Turnpike. The Fenway Center's website calls it suturing, but unlike the Central Artery in Downtown, the MassPike merely widened a cut built eons ago by the Boston and Albany Railroad's ancestor companies. Any wounds go back to well before the errors of highway construction.
A lot of emphasis is put on affordable housing, which is of course presently a hot button issue in Springfield. Boston could certainly do more, but it should also look to steering middle-income housing developments to encourage a growth in the middle class. Springfield, by comparison, has no shortage of middle class housing, unlike the state's capital, but then again the Pioneer Valley largely lacks any demand for luxury developments. Boston should do what it can to make more of the city affordable to families--working and middle class--and not resign itself to exiling them to the suburbs.
There are forces out there guiding this beyond just the Boston Redevelopment Authority, the city's primary planning, development, and job creation agency. However, as the gatekeepers, they set the tone. "They," the individuals that run the BRA owe their position and ultimately their allegiance to largely one-man: Thomas M. Menino, Mayor of Boston.
See More Photos on this subject Here. *Mastercard, Bethesda, MD, and Menino photos from Wikipedia.
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Thursday, October 15, 2009
Senate Race Assessment...
As this race is the first exercise of the commonwealth's dubious revision of US Senate succession, it has changed the tone and obviously the length of the race. Additionally, it is taking place on a odd year, which otherwise does not happen for Senate elections. As it is an odd year, and the year after a presidential election, high profile mayoral races in Boston, Springfield, and elsewhere are vying for visibility and coverage.
Normally, a Senate race in Massachusetts would take shape over at least a year's time. Candidates would be announcing between now and February. By March, we would have a rough idea who is running for what party's nomination. Fundraising, signature gathering, etc would be going on until the signatures are certified and ballots could be printed. It would make for a much longer primary campaign ending in September. By comparison, the general election for this year's Senate campaign will be the same stretch of time as a normal Senate election would be: approximately six weeks.

Because of this truncated timeline, it seems that only the strongest and most-well financed candidates could make a stab at the race. High profile names like Attorney General Martha Coakley and Boston/Cambridge US Congressman Mike Capuano possess the renown. Stephen Pagliuca, co-owner of the Boston Celtics has money, while Alan Khazei has goodwill. Khazei co-founded CityYear, an AmeriCorps organization. On the Republican side are Massachusetts Senator Scott Brown and Canton Selectman Bob Burr. A host of other people are still being bounced around as GOP nominees, but with less than a month before the filing date more candidates are unlikely.
According to a Suffolk University's poll posted to Wikipedia, Martha Coakley blasts her other opponents for the Democratic Primary out of the water. Mike Capuano has carped in news articles and elsewhere that he is more liberal and therefore the rightful heir to Kennedy's seat. Although this no
doubt plays well in Cambridge and some of Boston's most liberal neighborhoods, it may not score him many points outside of his district. Kennedy was one of the most liberal members of the Senate, but he knew the art of the deal and recognized that ideology alone served neither his Constituents nor those Americans most in need. While it is not a foregone conclusion, Coakley, who has already proven she can win statewide, is the favorite for the Democratic nomination. Much can happen between now and December 8, the primary date. As for Khazei and Pagliuca, they simply lack the name recognition. If Coakley were not a candidate, Capuano would be the favorite, but Pagliuca's money could buy a lot of ad time and publicity to boost his chances.As for the Republicans, unless Scott Brown has Moby Dick-sized skelatons in his closet, or some other headlining Republican joins the race, he WILL be the GOP nominee. A Canton selectman does not compare to one of the Five Republican left in the Massachusetts Senate. Brown's name often comes up when the GOP voices its opposition over something the Democrats in the Senate are doing.
Assuming it would Coakley and Brown, which WMassP&I is,
Coakley is the probable winner. However, it might be closer than one might expect. First of all, the off-year, off-November election date will depress turnout. Inclement weather, even more likely in January than November, could make it worse. How that will affect either candidate is thus far unknown. The Democratic operation might crank out voters even in the midst of a Nor'easter.However, anger in the Bay State is focused on Democrats. Brown can channel that anger into more votes than usual. Moreover, he does not need to surrender his House seat in order to run for the Senate (nor does Coakley need to surrender the Attorney General's office). He can be more candid, having less to lose, but he should moderate himself. Moderation will boost his appeal among independents while keeping Democrats off his back next November, who no doubt are fuming that he would even commit the offense of challenging their supremacy!
At the same time Coakley is more or less disconnected from the scandals, inertia, and bad policy spewing from Beacon Hill. All but the simplest voters will throw Coakley onto the same heap as the legislature and governor simply for being a Democrat. If anything, her status as Attorney General, which is essentially seen by most as vanguard of the people anyway, will allow her to rise above the muck.
No matter which of the two wins, it will probably not help Democrats on Beacon Hill in 2010. A Brown win would bring in money and energy for the state GOP party, while deflating both State and National Democratic parties. A Coakley win, will not have the same effect for Democrats. They will have achieved more or less the Status Quo Ante in the US Senate and Coakley will have just as big shoes to fill as Kennedy's effective successor. Additionally, Coakley will be near the bottom of the barrel on seniority. The Republicans on the state level, will be galvanized by the race even if Brown loses. An early fight to energize voters and more importantly get donors and names for next year's Beacon Hill races will be a boon. However, their campaigns next year must be more moderate than some of what Brown has proposed in
As far as WMassP&I is concerned, the platforms of the Democratic primary candidates is not fleshed out enough to really find any difference between the bunch. Certainly, as a blog interest in progress, we are nonplussed by Capuano's self-proclaimed liberalism. Liberalism when muttered, especially in Massachusetts, can be its own form of conservatism. Unwilling to look past the old liberal ideas that have failed and remain in bed with special interests whose goals are not necessarily in tune with the needs of the people could be derided as "liberal" today. However, such behavior is not, in an advancing, growing, and changing society our idea of progressive. We are not accusing Capuano of anything. We simply do not believe auto-labeling proves anything or is enough of a test for worthiness.
As for the General Election WMassP&I reserves judgment. We prefer Democrats in the Senate over Republican and hold more leftward beliefs than not. Brown is a little too conservative for us on some issues. As such we find Democrats, despite the lost faith of some since last year's election, are the better choice to move the country forward at this time.
However, we make no secret of our frustration with one-party super-majoritarian rule on Beacon Hill. Many, but not all, Democrats on Beacon Hill have grown fatter and more disconnected from their constituents than even some of their counterparts in Washington. A Coakley win would officially secure the filibuster-proof majority Democrats in Washington might need to pass important legislation. Sixty votes is not the margin that has stifled legitimate and public debate in Boston. However, one-party rule is chilling nonetheless. Requiring the votes of GOP moderates like the Senators from Maine and others is good for Democracy, the process, and for America as a whole.
For now, we must let the race unfold and see who says what, who means what, and whether they can deliver on their word. Perhaps another neglected factor is who is running for late Kennedys' old seat to establish their own legacy and who is running to claim some right to or latch onto the legacy of Ted Kennedy itself. All of the candidates could be motivated by either.
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Wednesday, October 07, 2009
WMassP&I Forward...
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Monday, October 05, 2009
This is the House the Feds Built, Y'all!...
It should seem that Mayor Domenic Sarno cannot catch a break. One may be inclined to feel sorry for him were he not the primary architect of his troubles.
Finance Control board voted to approve a lease for Springfield School Department in the former Springfield Federal Building and Courthouse. Now owned by MassDevelopment, the lease did not need to go out to bid because it was between government agencies. However, City Councilor Tim Rooke claims that the city will be spending far too much money for the lease on the former Federal Building and could get a better deal from local office building landlords.
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