Archive for November 2nd, 2010

November 2nd, 2010

Tsongas, Democrats win big in Massachusetts

by DickH

Niki Tsongas won an overwhelming victory today, defeating Republican challenger Jon Golnik, 112,845 to 87,397, a 13 point margin of victory (55% to 42%). But Tsongas was not alone: all of her Massachusetts House colleagues were easily reelected and Bill Keating won the vacant southeastern Massachusetts seat by a healthy margin over Republican Jeff Perry. Add to that Governor Patrick’s seven point victory over Charlie Baker (the same margin declared by the Suffolk University poll throughout October) and the 14 point defeat of Question 3 (the rollback of the state income tax) and Massachusetts stands as a national breakwater against the Republican tide that seemed to be sweeping across the nation this November.

Here’s a breakdown of the Tsongas-Golnik race in Greater Lowell:

Billerica – Tsongas won by 560 votes, 7326 to 6766;
Chelmsford – Golnik won by 237 votes, 7253 to 7016;
Dracut – Golnik won by 334 votes, 5441 to 5107;
Lowell – Tsongas won by 6297 votes, 13,694 to 7397;
Tewksbury – Golnik won by 166 votes, 5599 to 5433;
Tyngsborough – Golnik won by 429 votes, 2426 to 1997;
Westford – Tsongas won by 59 votes, 4725 to 4666.

Compare those numbers with the Patrick v Baker results from the same communities (with Cahill omitted):

Billerica – Baker won by 3154 votes, 8121 to 4967;
Chelmsford – Baker won by 2321 votes, 8036 to 5715;
Dracut – Baker won by 2877 votes, 6305 to 3428;
Lowell – Patrick won by 1838 votes, 10,792 to 8954;
Tewksbury – Baker won by 2772, 6472 to 3700;
Tyngsborough – Baker won by 1248, 2699 to 1451;
Westford – Baker won by 1377 votes, 5209 to 3832.

In these seven Greater Lowell communities, Baker beat Patrick by 11,911. In those same communities, Tsongas beat Golnik by 5750. That’s a swing of 17,661 votes towards Tsongas which is a pretty good measurement of the scale of her victory.

November 2nd, 2010

Let’s Not Forget: Bombs in Baghdad Kill 63, Wound 285

by PaulM

Not only because Lowell historian Mehmed Ali and others from the city, the Merrimack Valley, and beyond are on duty in Iraq, but also because the death and destruction goes on every day in that world turned upside down, we must remember there’s a war there. Each day in November, rh.com is posting a remembrance of a life lost in World War I. One of the subtexts of this blog is “history as it happens.” Read the cnn.com report on yesterday’s bombings across Iraq’s capital city.

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November 2nd, 2010

Eugene Robinson of Wash. Post Puts It in Words

by PaulM

Read columnist Eugene Robinson’s opinion piece in today’s Washington Post. He wonders what’s really got the anti-Democrat, anti-federal government crowd so worked up, and concludes that it is because President Obama is “different.”

November 2nd, 2010

‘It’s the Economy, Stupid,’ Repeats Outgoing Sen. Bayh

by PaulM

Outgoing Democratic Senator Evan Bayh of Indiana writes in the NYTimes that Democrats at the national level must be more aggressive about rebuilding the economy and controlling the federal budget in order to address the main concerns of the public and regain political momentum. Read his opinion here, and get the NYT if you appreciate the media outlet.

November 2nd, 2010

City of Lowell reaches agreement with Patrolman’s Union

by DickH

Here’s a press release from the office of City Manager Bernie Lynch reporting that a contract agreement has been reached between the city and the Lowell Police Patrolman’s Union.

Lowell Patrolman’s Union and City Reach Contract Agreement

Lowell, MA- The City of Lowell and its Lowell Patrolman’s Union, Local 10 achieved a resolution on Tuesday, November 2, 2010 when the City Council approved funding of an agreement reached by the City Administration and the Union. The agreement which represents mutual compromise, addresses wage increases, medical benefits, fitness incentives as well as organizational details that promise to aid both parties in future discussions.

A key compromise in the agreement is the implementation of a pay increase to become effective July 1, 2010 as opposed to a July 1, 2007 retroactive pay increase. As with other Union contracts settled after the 2008 cuts to local aid, there will not be a retroactive payment for the past contract period (July 1, 2007 – June 30, 2010). Instead the Patrolman will receive an award of 8% costing the City an additional $715,000 outside of the police budget for FY11. The increase reflects consideration of the percentages awarded to the City’s other unions that settled contracts both before and after local aid cuts and the amount awarded to the Police Superior’s Union.

The Patrolman agreed to offer membership a PPO health care option that greatly benefits the Patrolman as well as the City and eliminate the costly Master Medical option for new employees. The PPO option is currently available to all other City employees. The Patrolman also agreed to language regarding the institution of bi-weekly payroll, a February 2011 implementation of direct deposit and future coalition bargaining over plan design issues.

Additionally, the City agreed to the Patrolman’s Union proposal to increase the Legal Defense fund and establish a Physical Fitness Incentive Program, both of which mirror the awards granted to the City’s Police Superiors Union.

City Manager Bernie Lynch noted, “I am pleased that the matter is resolved with the Patrolman’s Union so we can refocus our energy to better serve the City of Lowell and its residents.” Lynch continued, “The Patrolman who advocated for their contract and the City staff who worked to put together the best options possible for both Lowell and Union are all dedicated City employees; we continue to work together to bring the best results to Lowell in these economically challenging times.’’

November 2nd, 2010

The Giants Did GO!

by PaulM

Here’s the San Francisco Chronicle story about Willie Mays’ response to the World Series win.

November 2nd, 2010

“Willie” by Dave Perry

by DickH

In honor of the victory by the San Francisco Giants in this year’s World Series, former Lowell Sun reporter Dave Perry sent along this contribution:

I dreamt of Willie Mays last night.

It was the first time in many years Mays’ slightly bowlegged visage showed up in my sleep, but there you are.

It was a strange dream, the greatest baseball player cast in newsreel black and white, in full San Francisco Giants uniform, including the turtleneck that probably kept him alive as he roamed the frozen tundra of Candlestick Park.

I thought of my father, too. This is what we do in moments like Monday’s.

The Giants brought home the first World Series to San Francisco.

Fifty-six years.

My, my.

I was born into Giants fandom, in Santa Rosa, Calif., two years after the Giants last won it all in New York, two years before they packed up for Baghdad by the Bay.

We, too, moved. Dad was a Navy pilot, so every year or two we made a new home. Florida, Washington State, Coronado Calif., Hawaii, even Texas, where Marc Brown used to chase me home from sixth grade each day, because I wasn’t from Texas.

Always, the Giants were an emotional anchor, something to remind me I had roots.

Marichal, McCovey, the Alous, Orlando Cepeda, Jim Davenport, sweet Tito Fuentes, and of course, Mays.

Over the past decade, when we visited San Francisco each summer, a former boss got me the MediaNews seats two rows behind home plate. AT&T isn’t a ballpark, but another architectural dream in a city overflowing with them.

I got my father there twice before he died in September 2007, thanks to Kevin. During a particularly confused time in my younger life, my dad and I drove cross-country from Connecticut to California. I was defeated by college, then factory work, and was returning west to resume school.

He had timed our trip to coincide with a Cubs/Giants doubleheader at Wrigley Field in Chicago.

Four summers ago, we were at AT&T Park. Best seats in the house. His grandsons sat with him. There are no words for things like this.

Another time at AT&T park, we were ushered down into the hallway that runs beneath the grandstands. Shea Hillenbrand, the former Lowell Spinner, had been traded to the Giants, and had adopted a child with his wife. My wife bought a baby blanket as a gift, and greetings from Lowell, and there we stood in the dank hallway, waiting for Hillenbrand to cross the from the locker room to the field entrance.

I kept thinking, I could die here.

I nearly did.

And down the hallway in the distance, an usher slowly led a piece of machinery.

“We’ll need to move aside as much as you can,” said the usher with us. “Mr. McCovey is coming through.”

And toward us came Willie “Stretch” McCovey, an immense man with baseball’s most disarming smile.

I froze.

All I heard was my heartbeat, pounding in my eardrums.

An usher asked if Willie would sign autographs for a couple of kids, my sons.

McCovey smiled.

I backed up to the wall behind me. Where could a guy get a new pair of pants, I thought.

“You ain’t no kid,” McCovey said with a smile to my oldest son, Ben. He signed.

My old job took me to plenty of places where I met celebrities. Never once a problem, save for meeting Steve Cropper, my favorite guitarist at the Grammys.

But Stretch?

I tried to form words, but could not. I made little groaning noises, I think, as McCovey drove off, smiling.

Being a Giants fan never felt like suffering, or torture. It was more like glee, something that connected me and my dad when nothing else did.

Yes, there was heartbreak when they lost. But you knew they would.

So last night crept up on me, slowly.

I wore out Giants caps for years. Sometimes, folks around here offered kind glances, but the sentiment attached to them was certain…pity. Others held me responsible for the sins of Barry Bonds.

I listened to Lawrence Ferlinghetti’s “Baseball Canto” before the final game Monday night. There was always poetry in baseball, but not baseball in poetry until Ferlinghetti wrote this brilliant poem about sitting in the stands at Candlestick, watching black and Latin players turn the old order upside-down.

Everything is political in San Francisco. Everything. Expect a parade like you’ve never seen.

So there was Willie Mays in my dream, and I was on the field next to him, and he smiled, and was chatting with someone. I was a reporter, I guess, and had a few questions with him.

And then he walked off, slipping his arm around another man, who never turned around but from the back looked very much like my father. Then I woke up.

Of course, Marc Brown, the Texas bully who chased me home each day, he only saw the back of me. And I was mostly fast enough to beat him home. Mostly.

But Marc, that skinny little corduroy butt you chased back in Texas?

Today, you can kiss it, my friend.

November 2nd, 2010

Joy In San Francisco – First World Series Win in 56 Years

by Marie

Does the joy in San Francisco today remind you of  Red Sox Nation in 2004? Check out the San Francisco Chronicle and note these reactions:

It took the Giants 19,193 days to bring a World Series championship to San Francisco, five decades of pent-up hope passed through generations that erupted in horn-honking, stranger-kissing, heart-pumping delirium Monday night.

There were tears of  joy and surprise as fathers hugged sons and mothers whispered in children’s ears that they would never, never forget this day.

Strangers high-fived in Civic Center Plaza, where thousands huddled together in the orange glow of City Hall to cheer every swing of a Giants bat and each one of Texas’ 27 outs.

Read more: here http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/11/02/MNV51G5BSV.DTL&tsp=1#ixzz148r8tWiX

November 2nd, 2010

Election Thoughts by Marjorie Arons-Barron

by Tony

These thoughts were written by Marjorie Arons-Barron yesterday, the day before polls opened, and are being cross posted from Marjorie’s own blog.

I’m not given to quoting Cardinal Sean O’Malley’s blog, but, as we embark with certain misgivings on the last 17- hour countdown till the polls open, I note that his exhortation to Catholics to vote speaks of hope guiding civic participation. I found myself thinking, yeh, but doesn’t it depend on what you hope for?

I was a big fan of Charlie Baker when he started running. He exuded competence, and his Baker’s Dozen concrete ideas for saving money and rationalizing the abuses made sense. I thought his ideas could inform the discussion during the race, even though many of the ideas had already been rejected by the legislature. I hope that Deval Patrick, if he is reelected, will do as he said, and adopt some of Baker’s ideas.

But something happened during the campaign. Despite awkward attempts to be a Scott Brown-type man of the people, Baker came across as elitist, a numbers cruncher without a sense of warmth and compassion that he can exhibit in private. We know he’d increase unemployment by 5000 people to start, the state workers he’d eliminate. And there would be more. We know his tax policies cannot be achieved without cutting into the heart of programs that government is all about, from higher education, to infrastructure to human services. We question his commitment to clean energy if that entails public investment to spur private sector initiatives. Deval Patrick has not been without flaws, some of them foolish newby mistakes, some of them a reluctance to go far enough with reforms he initiated (after four Republican governors had done nothing.) But there’s an optimism and humanity to Patrick that is very important in these divisive times.

Many will be looking to Patrick’s success or failure as a signal regarding Obama. They both have approval ratings of less than 50 percent.

Given the pessimism most voters are feeling about the economy, it’s amazing that a scant half are still somewhat approving, of both the Governor and the President. No surprise, however, that Patrick and Baker are running neck-and-neck in the race for the corner office. We have an ADD society in which people’s short attention spans don’t fuel patience with a slower than desired pace of improvements, even if we are doing measurably better than the rest of the country.

As noted in a Ross Douthat op ed in today’s NY Times, a years-long, growing tilt toward progressive policies and politics culminated with the election of Obama, but the difficulty of implementing change in the worst recession since the Great Depression has cooled the ardor. People are impatient for change. Some say that Obama overpromised, that he engendered hope he couldn’t possibly fulfill and that he would have been a great President for times of prosperity. We all have a choice to make between dashing those hopes or embracing a politics of fear. I, for one, am not ready to give up on those hopes.

Massachusetts Democrats running for Congress will probably win tomorrow and, by and large, bring competency and experience to the table. But seeing them get slapped around during this contest makes one hope they wake up to the need to become better listeners.

I suspect that Mary Z. Connaughton will prevail in the low-on-the-ballot but important race for state auditor, and I haven’t a clue as to whether Steve Grossman will defeat Karyn Polito. You know, the one who shipped at least one job out of state by hiring (it is rumored) a professional Doberman for her “watchdog” television ad.

For now, whatever the outcome, polling day will bring relief from the unrelenting harangues and endless campaign advertising. One hopes it will also being an end to – or at least a diminution of – the mean and polarizing rhetoric. We have so much to do as a nation, and soon enough Campaign 2012 will intrude on how effectively we can accomplish anything.

Please let me know your thoughts in the comments section below.

November 2nd, 2010

The Greatest of All Human Dreams – America

by Tony

This is my favorite paragraph from the wonderful novel The Great Gatsby written by F Scott Fitzgerald. In this scene the narrator, Nick Carraway looks across the bay at Long Island, New York, for the last time.

Lest we forget on this election day…the great promise of America.

And as the moon rose higher the inessential houses began to melt away until gradually I became aware of the old island here that flowered once for Dutch sailors’ eyes-a fresh, green breast of the new world. Its vanished trees, the trees that had made way for Gatsby’s house, had once pandered in whispers to the last greatest of all human dreams; for a transitory enchanted moment man must have held his breath in the presence of this continent, compelled into an aesthetic contemplation he neither understood nor desired, face to face for the last time in history with something commensurate to his capacity for wonder.

Be sure to Vote today…its our responsibility.