Odds are Mitt Romney doesn’t much care what Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid thinks about the Republican presidential nomination battle turning into a face-off between Romney and Jon Huntsman, the […]
Romney to Huntsman: Go away
Culture of corruption, cont’d
If you thought convicted Beacon Hill lobbyist Richard “Dickie” McDonough couldn’t look like more of a snake than he already does, think again. Inspector General Gregory Sullivan is now alleging […]
Dysfunction or just democracy in action?
With all the complaints about partisan gridlock and the polarized political atmosphere in Washington, Peter Baker asks in yesterday’s New York Times “Week in Review” section, “Is this any way […]
DiMasi and black Boston
Within minutes of the news that Sal DiMasi had been convicted on federal corruption charges, messages starting flying through cyberspace among those in Boston’s black activist community. But the focus […]
Wife’s cancer leads to his firing
It seems so unfair. First, Kathy Sorabella of Natick learned she had lung cancer and her prognosis wasn’t good. Then Carl Sorabella, her husband, told his boss that he might […]
Back where they started
The state-owned building at Parcel 7 has kept a lonely watch over Boston’s Rose Kennedy Greenway for a decade now. The office structure, a relic of the Big Dig, has […]
METCO gets high marks in new report
The Pioneer Institute, in conjunction with the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice (CHHIRJ) at Harvard Law School, today published a report on the status of METCO, a […]
State workers embrace lower-cost health plans
Ninety-nine percent of active state employees have re-enrolled in health plans under an initiative state officials predict will save more than $20 million this year as more employees agree to […]
Nothing to see here, folks
There’s probably no more happy sports fans in Massachusetts than Beacon Hill lawmakers that the Bruins won the Stanley Cup. Not just because it’s yet another feather in the city’s […]
DiMasi, McDonough guilty but not Vitale
STATE HOUSE NEWS SERVICE After a six-week trial, a jury needed only hours before finding former House Speaker Salvatore DiMasi guilty on seven of nine counts in his public corruption […]
DeLeo distances himself from DiMasi
“You’re nothing to me now. You’re not a brother, you’re not a friend. I don’t want to know you or what you do. I don’t want to see you at […]
Masters of disaster
Depending on Uncle Sam’s largess and the kindness of strangers are just two of the life-altering changes facing communities hit by a major natural disaster. The Christian Science Monitor profiles […]
10 thoughts about campaigning
The 2010 elections are in the rear view mirror, and 2012 now looms large on the political horizon. As a candidate for statewide office last year, I thought I might […]
The gay marriage divide
In Massachusetts, when someone suggests that a judge’s sexual orientation interferes with both logic and law, that suggestion invites public ridicule and rebuke. In California, it’s grounds for an appeals […]
Report: Senate health plan guts savings
An amendment in the Senate version of municipal health care reform would result in the measure coming up short of the $100 million savings target because of its requirement that […]
Rainbow Boston
For all of its inglorious history when it comes to matters of race, Boston is now a national leader in diversity and multiculturalism. That’s the finding from a new look […]
Cutting the profits from nonprofits
Nonprofits, it seems, are in the official cross hairs and under assault.A bill filed by state Sen. Mark Montigny of New Bedford to stop health plans from paying “volunteer” board […]
Mitt’s “birth certificate” challenges
Could Mitt Romney and Barack Obama have been separated at birth? I ask because they each face serious questions about their legitimate membership in American society – and from some […]
Senate race no laugher
Stop us if you’ve heard this one before: Scott Brown and Martha Coakley squaring off for the Senate seat once held by the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. Last year’s […]
Who’s the fairest one of all?
It has become accepted as fact and repeated in local and national stories that Sen. Scott Brown is “the most popular officeholder in Massachusetts” since his stunning victory over Attorney […]
Arlington overrides
Could other Massachusetts towns facing a Proposition 2 1/2 override drum up a “yes” vote like Arlington did yesterday? Doubtful, but it’s worth considering the reasons that barely carried the […]
Immigration showdown
Gov. Deval Patrick waded back into the immigration quagmire again yesterday, saying Massachusetts won’t join a program sharing the fingerprints of arrested individuals with federal immigration agencies. Patrick said he’d […]
Culture of climate protection needed
Beacon Hill made a loud statement with the Global Warming Solutions Act. The 2008 law mandating an 80 percent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions put Massachusetts on the leading edge […]
In New York City schools, civil rights or wrongs?
The school reform wars have taken a dramatic turn in New York City, where 2,500 parents and students – overwhelming black and Hispanic – rallied last week to protest the […]
