Archive for October 24th, 2010

October 24th, 2010

AP unearths damaging Baker “Big Dig” memo

by DickH

The Associated Press has come into possession (in the person of former Lowell Sun reporter Glen Johnson according to Blue Mass Group) of a memo written while Baker was the state’s Secretary of Administration and Finance that documented for his then boss, Governor Paul Cellucci, the runaway spending of the Big Dig, the enormous deficits it was causing and the extreme cuts to future road and bridge projects that would be needed to pay for it (although Baker urged Cellucci to not announce the cuts until after he was safely re-elected).

In Glen Johnson’s analysis, this memo corroborates the charges of fiscal recklessness that Governor Patrick has been hurling at Baker in this campaign while at the same time raising doubts about the validity of Baker’s denials of these charges.

October 24th, 2010

Globe Congressional Endorsements Summarize Case for Dems

by PaulM

The Boston Globe not surprisingly endorsed all the Democrats running for re-election for the state’s Congressionals seats along with the one Democrat seeking an open seat. The editors’ reasoning is a good summary case for keeping the Democrats in the majority in Washington, DC. Read the endorsements here, and get the Globe if you appreciate the journalism.

October 24th, 2010

Maureen Calls a Foul on Thomas and His Court

by PaulM

Columnist Maureen Dowd in today’s NYTimes reviews the origins of Justice Thomas and reminds us that bad decisions do have consequences. She also points out the conservative activism seen recently at the Supreme Court may be a lot more damaging to regular folks than the liberal activism of the past that aimed for fairness. What happens in Washington, DC, doesn’t stay there. It shows up on Main Street, USA. Read her opinions here, and subscribe to the NYT if you appreciate the thinking.

October 24th, 2010

When JFK Was Not Killed

by Marie

Author and CNN contributing writer Bob Greene gives us a look into an earlier attempt on the life of President – then President-elect – John F. Kennedy in an on-line story today. He tells of the New Hampshire postal clerk who planned to kill JFK in Florida in December, 1960:

From an Associated Press dispatch, December 16, 1960, dateline West Palm Beach, Florida:

“A craggy-faced retired postal clerk who said he didn’t like the way John F. Kennedy won the election is in jail on charges he planned to kill the president-elect.

“Richard Pavlick, 73, was charged by the Secret Service with planning to make himself a human bomb and blow up Kennedy and himself.”

Events of the day including  a horrific collision of two airplanes over New York City that killed 134 people, let the Pavlik story slip under the radar. After stalking the president in Hyannisport, Georgetown and Palm Beach, it was his first attempt in a car loaded with dynamite that nearly robbed the country of its 35th President. The attempt on December 11th was aborted because Kennedy left for Sunday Mass that morning in Palm Beach accompanied by Jackie, Caroline and John, Jr.  Pavlik did not want to hurt the Jackie or the children.

By the next attempt on December 15th, the Secret Service had been alerted by a New Hampshire postmaster about some disturbing postcards sent by Pavlik. The course of history was changed.

Read Greene’s article with his observations about the incidents and the interesting New Hampshire connections here on CNN Opinion.

 

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October 24th, 2010

Panagiotakos honored by local Democrats

by DickH

The Greater Lowell Area Democrats honored State Senator Steve Panagiotakos with the group’s “Distinguished Democrat Award” today. Three Democrat candidates, all on the ballot a week from Tuesday and all veterans of the 2007 special election to fill the Fifth Congressional seat, began the succinct speaking program.

First up was Barry Finegold said that Steve Panagiotakos was an inspiration to all who have served with him at the State House. Eileen Donoghue said she was honored to be the Democratic nominee in the First Middlesex Senate District (now held be Panagiotakos) and assured everyone she knew what big shoes she will have to fill should she be successful on election day. Congresswoman Niki Tsongas said that Steve Panagiotakos has always been a problem solver who has always made a difference. She said she was grateful for Steve’s level-headed approach during these tough economic times. He always exhibited tremendous integrity and everyone who deals with him enjoys the experience.

UMass Lowell Chancellor Marty Meehan formally introduced Panagiotakos. Meehan said that Steve truly does love Lowell and fully understands the connection between the state’s system of higher education and our economy (80% of state college graduates stay and work in Massachusetts). Meehan credited Panagiotakos for the funding for two new buildings on the UML campus and allowing state colleges to retain tuition paid by out-of-state students at the campus so that the schools can be more entrepreneurial.

Beyond such direct assistance to UMass Lowell, Meehan said that Panagiotakos’s fingerprints are on every major development in Lowell. He recalled how Governor Patrick recently said that Steve’s departure from the legislature is a great loss to the state. Meehan said that Steve still has much to contribute; that’s the plus of his leaving politics while he’s still in his prime. He ended by saying that Steve Panagiotakos has made a difference in the lives of generations to come.

Once Steve got a chance to speak, he offered two pieces of advice to other elected officials. He said always remember that it’s not your seat; it’s the people’s seat. And remember that every one of us is replaceable; Democracy will go on without us. If you remember those two things, you won’t lose touch with your constituents. After you’ve been on Beacon Hill for a while, there’s a risk that you will substitute the institutional view of things, but you have to represent the views of the people who elected you. Steve said that all the awards he’s been receiving lately would more appropriately be directed to the many family members, friends and supporters who have helped him along the way.

Steve continued by saying he was proud to be a Democrat but that the Democratic Party faces many challenges. We have to welcome everyone; we can’t afford to marginalize anyone and have to find a way to reach compromises. He said that compromise isn’t selling out, it’s an attempt to keep moving towards your goal. Using a football analogy, Steve said the route to success was not throwing a Hail Mary pass each time, but to keep moving the ball forward, rolling up a series of first downs. He warned of the sentiments driving the Tea Party. He said those folks shouldn’t be written off as extremists but we should try to understand what’s gotten them so angry and ask why aren’t they with us. He concluded by saying we need to be tolerant and civil, and when we have power, we must do what’s best for all American people.

Besides Tsongas, Donoghue and Finegold, other elected officials in attendance were Middlesex County Sheriff Jim DiPaola, Governors Councilor Marilyn Devaney, State Representatives Dave Nangle and Jim Arciero, Lowell City Councilors Rita Mercier and Bud Caulfield, State Rep candidate Jesse Reich, and the entire Tyngsborough Board of Selectmen.

For more information about Greater Lowell Area Democrats, check out this site’s GLAD page.

October 24th, 2010

Wife and Mother – A New Litmus Test for Electability

by Marie

You hear in the ads. “I’m a mom.” You see it on the campaign trail. You hear in the speeches – as a virtue for a certain candidate and an accusation against an opponent. Out in Oklahoma – marriage and motherhood seem now to be the dividing line of competence and qualification to be elected the first woman governor in the state’s history.

According to Sean Murphy’s HuffingtonPost article today, the Democratic nominee Jari Askins offers a career resume as -   “a judge, a legislator, the head of a state agency, and a corporate attorney” – but she cannot check-off ”wife and mother” :

But what she hasn’t been is a wife. The 57-year-old career woman, who now serves as the state’s lieutenant governor, has never been married or had children. And as this historic race between two women candidates for the state’s top office nears its conclusion, that gap in her biography is attracting increasing attention.

Mary Fallin – the GOP nominee – touts her recent remarriage and her blended family of six children as key assets – in fact, her best qualifications – in her quest to be governor.

At rallies and other appearances, opponent Rep. Mary Fallin, 55, a Republican congressman, regularly mentions her new husband and their combined six children. Fallin, who had two children from a previous marriage, married a divorced father of four in November. She says her family and her experience as a businesswoman and officeholder have made her most qualified to be governor.

What does the highlighting of the “wife, mother, family” experience in races across the country mean for election night results? The lack of marriage and children was noted frequently in discussions of  recent Supreme Court nominees and now members of the Court – Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan. Where are we we today in the role of women in politics and government when marital status and motherhood are campaign attention-getters from Alaska to Oklahoma and even to Massachusetts?

Read the full article here on HuffingtonPost on-line.

October 24th, 2010

Lowell-based “The Fighter” Deemed a Surprise Hit

by Marie

In today’s USAWeekend distributed with local Sunday newspapers including the Lowell SUN, film critic Claudia Puig and her colleagues rate movies as  “the best of the season.” Puig has an interesting take on her pick for “surprise hit” of the season. In choosing “The Fighter” she writes:

The Fighter (12/10) Inspirational true story of Dicky Ecklund (Christian Bale), an ex-boxing legend who squandered his talents and his shot at greatness.

Lowell folks want to know – who is the star in “The Fighter”?

Read the full article with Puig and her movies critic colleagues here at USA Weekend on-line.

October 24th, 2010

A Tale of Two Exchanges – Massachusetts vs Utah

by Marie

In today’s New York Times  – writer Robert Pear presents the Massachusetts and Utah plans as what he calls the “book ends” of state health insurance exchange models. High on the agenda when state legislatures convene next year, health insurance exchanges hold the key to health care overhaul.

Read his full article here in the New York Times 0n-line.