Friday, August 14, 2020

A Break in the Morse Code

SeeMorse Code

"With just weeks to go, wrench thrown in Neal-Morse congressional race" by Laura Krantz Globe Staff  August 14, 2020

For the past year, Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse has mounted an improbable congressional primary campaign against powerful Democratic incumbent Richard Neal, and the contest was poised to serve as a fascinating barometer of whether Democrats in Western Massachusetts have become more progressive.

I would say insufferable at this point.

As liberal newcomers across the country have toppled traditional Democratic long-timers, Morse was gaining steam ahead of the Sept. 1 primary, until last week, when the race was thrown into chaos and finger-pointing over accusations of serious misconduct by Morse — followed by evidence that young supporters of Neal may have ginned up the controversy to take down their opponent. Neal’s campaign has denied any involvement.

It's like Markey supporters going after Joe Kennedy's dad.

Entrenched intere$ts fight the harde$t.

According to Morse, the uproar has only served to draw more national attention to the race and underscore the need to oust longtime political insiders. His campaign smashed its prior fundraising record in the wake of the controversy, he said, bringing in $130,000 on Wednesday when the past one-day record was $27,000.

“What has come to light over the past couple of days, this is exactly what is wrong with politics and the old way of doing things, and it becomes about the politics of personal destruction rather than policy and ideas,” Morse said Thursday in a phone interview.

Trump phoned him and thanked him for the words of defense.

In a letter to Morse, the College Democrats of Massachusetts accused him of inappropriate sexual relations with college students before and during his congressional campaign and said he used his position of power for “romantic or sexual gain.”

Whether the accusations will throw off the race remains to be seen, but many of Morse’s supporters have stuck by him, calling out the attacks as attempts to undermine an LGBTQ candidate.

“It’s been a very good year for progressive challengers and for this movement, and when you think about the national implications of challenging Congressman Neal and defeating him, that’s why folks all around the country are fired up about the race,” Morse said.

It's a devil's choice: a gay predator or a corrupt $cum, and both $tink.

Given the accusations, however, it is also unclear if the race will still serve as a true indicator of political ideology in Western Massachusetts, as the accusations ripple across national headlines.

“It’s the perfect district for the experiment,” said Jerold Duquette, a political science professor at Central Connecticut State University, who specializes in Western Massachusetts politics, “but this is definitely a deflector.”

The roots are in Shay's, and $ome things never $eem to change.

The "patriot" Sam Adams sent the Guard to crush them.

The district Neal represents, Massachusetts’ First District, is in many ways a microcosm of America. Neal, 71, has represented the region since he was first elected to Congress in 1988.

The district includes Springfield, Neal’s home town and a majority-minority city, as well as suburbs and the rural Berkshires. With that comes an equally wide gamut of challenges, from struggling city schools to a lack of broadband Internet and public transportation in rural areas.

The district has traditionally been home to moderate Democrats who have shown that they value a representative who can reliably deliver federal funding and projects to the district, rather than an outspoken firebrand.

PORK, and not the kind you can eat!

Neal, the longest-serving House member from New England, has long been known for steering federal dollars to projects in his district. In Washington recently, he helped negotiate a new international trade deal with Mexico and Canada, and worked on a bill to lower the cost of prescription drugs, but lately there have been signs that ideology in the district might be changing. Springfield has seen a recent burst of political newcomers running for local and federal offices. After years of feeling disenfranchised, activists say many locals are slowly starting to realize the power of their votes.

In 2018, progressive attorney Tahirah Amatul-Wadud, with no political experience and a fraction of the money, won 30 percent of the vote to Neal’s 70 percent, an indication that Neal could be vulnerable to a better-funded challenger such as Morse, who has raised $1.3 million this cycle. Neal has raised $3.3 million.

Then, after the string of other progressive primary challengers won races elsewhere in the country this year, it seemed like Neal might have a real race on his hands.

I thought they were all real, I mean, that is what they tell us every time a (s)election comes up.

The vote matters so much, if it's a real race(?).

Morse supports policies such as Medicare for All and the Green New Deal. He had garnered the backing of a number of national progressive groups, including Justice Democrats, the group that helped elect progressive stars such as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ayanna Pressley.

(Blog author throws head back)

Neal, meanwhile, is a powerful Washington insider who chairs the Ways and Means Committee, making him one of the most influential Democrats in Congress. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi recently released a TV ad in support of Neal, saying that he “doesn’t back down” from anyone, including President Trump.

He hasn't moved on the taxes, though, and seeing her on TV makes you reflexively look for the R after the name.

The ad angered progressives because they have accused Neal of slow-walking his effort to obtain Trump’s tax returns. They have also criticized him for taking donations from large pharmaceutical companies, but at least for this week, all the attention has been focused on the accusations by the College Democrats.

I'm no longer one of them, not by a long shot. Am embarrassed I was suckered in by Sanders yet again.

The allegations were first made public Aug. 7 by student journalists at UMass Amherst. The young Democrats accused Morse, 31, of attending their club’s events as a way to meet students then sending them messages on social media.

Morse, who until recently was a lecturer at UMass Amherst, quickly apologized to anyone he made feel uncomfortable, but maintained that he had done nothing wrong, violated no university policies, and only ever engaged in consensual relationships. He warned about the “invocation of age-old anti-gay stereotypes.”

Reporting this week by The Intercept, however, revealed a string of messages between club leaders that appear to indicate that the accusations were part of an effort by club leaders, one of whom explicitly stated that he hoped to get a job with Neal, to engineer an attack on Morse.

Oh, the Globe is reading The Intercept now. Pretty much outs them as they claim no corporate interests regarding their fearless, adversarial, independent in-depth journalism and investigations into politics, surveillance, corruption, the environment and more, as they hold the powerful accountable.

Neal, who declined to be interviewed for this story, has not commented on the allegations but issued a statement saying his campaign is not responsible for the letter.

On Thursday, Neal’s spokesperson, Kate Norton, said the students named in the Intercept stories have no involvement with the Neal campaign and have never been employed by him.

“Our campaign has been entirely focused on policy, record, and experience. Richie has always run his campaigns based on ideas, and has always condemned personal attacks on any candidate, but we want to be clear — homophobia has no place in campaigns or public life,” Norton said.

Now pass the buck.

Meanwhile, UMass leaders have pledged to conduct an investigation of the accusations, which are anonymous.

You gotta believe the woman.... oh, forget it.

In the days following the allegations, Morse has lost some national backing —the environmentalist Sunrise Movement suspended its support but also does not support Neal — but most groups have stuck by his side. Earlier this week the Massachusetts Nurses Association reaffirmed its support for Morse.

“It is clear [the report] was timed with the political calendar and without enough time for an independent investigation to be completed,” said a statement from the LGBTQ Victory Fund, a national group that supports Morse.

Many local supporters have said they are sticking with Morse. State Senator Julian Cyr said the race will set a precedent for whether “vague and anonymous allegations can be easily launched against LGBTQ candidates to destroy their campaigns.”

In Western Massachusetts, the CD-1 Progressive Coalition, a group of progressive activist groups across the district, this week issued a statement saying the group continues to support Morse because they have seen “no tangible evidence” to change their position.

Erin Freed, a member of the group, said she has seen a shift in the district in the past few years, with some voters beginning to favor more progressive policies, and people have become more comfortable moving forward without the politicians who have been there for a long time, she said.

“There are still a lot of die-hards for Neal, but definitely some of them recognize that he has been doing the same old, same old,” she said.

After everything that has happened with their tyranny over COVID, I'm of the belief now that we don't them at all. 

Sink Washington into the swamp it is and let the rest of the nation go its separate ways. Let counties secede and become sovereign nations.

--more--" 

So that is what $cum looks like!

I saw a primary ballot from Democrats, and only one spot is a contested, the Senate seat currently held by Markey. The rest of the ballot looks like something from the former Soviet Union or Saddam Hussein's Iraq. No challengers and only one name.

Not that the alternative is any better in this state:

"Congressional delegation demands Baker release child-care data" by Stephanie Ebbert Globe Staff, August 13, 2020

The 11-member Massachusetts congressional delegation wrote to Governor Charlie Baker on Thursday urging him to release data on cases of coronavirus at child-care centers after the Globe reported that the administration has been denying public records requests.

In a letter written by Representative Katherine Clark, the Massachusetts representatives expressed “concern regarding the lack of transparency as it pertains to COVID-19 data in child care settings.”

Yeah, what could they possibly be hiding?

“We recognize the challenging tightrope you and your administration must walk during these uncertain times and the imperative of protecting the privacy of personal information,” they wrote, “however, we believe that access to COVID-19 data from child care providers would help Massachusetts families make informed decisions regarding sending their children back to school in the coming weeks.”

The informed decision says do not, for something wicked this way comes.

The Massachusetts Department of Early Education and Care has denied the Globe’s request for detailed data on coronavirus cases at emergency child-care centers, citing privacy concerns. The department confirmed in June there were at least 64 cases reported by the emergency day-care centers, which remained open from March through June while all other centers and schools were closed due to the virus; however, the department has refused to provide the distribution of the cases, making it impossible to tell whether there was spread at any individual center.

Well, we sure get a heaping helping of cases and deaths everyday, including probables! 

Globe has it's splashy scoreboard and graphs and everything!

The Globe has been appealing the department’s decision to the state Supervisor of Records and has requested more recent data on cases at child-care centers that were allowed to reopen June 22.

Numerous child-care providers who are still worried about the risk of reopening their own centers or homes have also requested the data from the state and been ignored, they told the Globe.

“We believe this type of data is critical for families to make informed decisions and that it can be shared without revealing the identities of the patients or the impacted child care providers,” the members of Congress wrote.....

--more--"

Here is the man to ask:

Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker.
Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker (Nicolaus Czarnecki/Pool/BH)

Time for that criminal f**ker to resign!

Related:

Cavell drops out, super PACs emerge to back Mermell in Fourth District shake-up

Jesse Mermell backs Medicare for All and supports the Green New Deal, and has carved out support from a swath of unions and reproductive rights groups.
Jesse Mermell backs Medicare for All and supports the Green New Deal, and has carved out support from a swath of unions and reproductive rights groups (Craig F. Walker/Globe Staff)

It's all to to block Auchincloss, and does she have a coke problem?

I mean, look at her!

The state AG endorsed her and will make sure she is seated somewhere:

"Settling bias allegations with four apartment brokers, attorney general wins fines, mandatory training; Says they prevented lower-income renters from using Section 8 vouchers" by Tim Logan Globe Staff, August 13, 2020

Four South Shore apartment brokers will pay fines and face state-mandated training for discriminating against lower-income renters, Attorney General Maura Healey said Thursday.

Healey’s office settled cases against the firms for violating fair housing and consumer protection laws by preventing people with federal Section 8 vouchers from renting apartments in Braintree and elsewhere on the South Shore. Collectively, the fines could add up to $110,000.

“Unfortunately, this type of widespread discrimination is representative of the barriers many face in the search for safe and affordable housing,” Healey said in a statement. “Housing providers cannot use the requirements of these programs as an excuse to refuse to rent. We will continue to hold accountable those who deny residents access to housing based on bias.”

--more--"

I don't know what they are being $haken down when hou$ing rates are still historically low.