Sunday, September 26, 2010

CMassPolitics.com Interview with Rep. Jim McGovern

Interview with Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Worcester), candidate for reelection to U.S. Congress in the Third Congressional District.


CMassPolitics.com Interview with Rep. Jim McGovern sound bite

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Press Release: U.S. Senator Brown Endorses Evangelidis For Sheriff

The following press release was sent by Lew Evangelidis (R-Holden), candidate for Worcester County Sheriff.

United States Senator Scott Brown Endorses Lew Evangelidis

WORCESTER - Worcester County Sheriff candidate Lew Evangelidis announced today that he has received the endorsement of United States Senator Scott Brown. The endorsement was officially announced at an event for Evangelidis which Brown attended this past weekend.

In his address to the overflowing crowd at Coral Seafood on Shrewsbury Street, Brown said, “It was my pleasure to serve with Lew Evangelidis in the legislature where he earned his reputation as a reformer. It was important for me to come out to Worcester to support Lew’s campaign because I know the challenges he will face going up against the political machine.”

Brown continued, “I spent a great amount of time in Worcester County during my campaign for Senate and I know the voters will be receptive to a new kind of sheriff who is professional and independent."

Evangelidis said, “Senator Brown’s election to the United States Senate this past January sent a clear message that folks are ready for new leadership that is independent and not part of the old political machine. I truly appreciate Senator Brown’s endorsement and his support throughout the remainder of our campaign.”

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Lamb discusses bankruptcy, challenges McGovern to limit spending

Marty Lamb (R-Holliston) filed bankruptcy a decade ago because of nearly a quarter-million dollars in credit card debt, a report in yesterday's Telegram revealed. Lamb, who is a favorite of the Tea Party and is running on a platform of fiscal responsibility, told the Telegram he ran up the debt while trying to save his law practice:
Martin A. Lamb of Holliston, the GOP candidate for Congress promoting fiscal responsibility, filed for personal bankruptcy in 1999 and was cleared of more than $226,000 in credit card debt....

An opponent of government bailouts for private institutions, he has called for major cuts in federal spending and says the country should be paying off the national debt.

In an interview, the 53-year-old said he amassed significant debt while trying to keep his fledgling law firm afloat. He said he started a law practice with a partner 15 years ago. The business struggled, so Mr. Lamb poured more money into it — more money than he had.

“Most people, when they start a business, it's a failure,” he said. “Sometimes it goes bust. I'm a business creator. I understand the hardships and the pitfalls, the good and bad — unlike Jim McGovern, who's never created jobs and doesn't understand.”
Coincidentally, Lamb and the third candidate in the race, Patrick Barron (U-Worcester), each proposed measures Thursday to limit campaign spending. In a press release, Lamb challenged Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Worcester) to keep spending under $300,000:
"If Congressman McGovern wants to pretend that he is not the incumbent in an attempt to hide from his record, then why not give up his war chest too," challenged Lamb. "Let's go message to message."

Lamb is proposing a $300,000 spending cap for the General Election. That figure will give candidates roughly $1 per voter to spend.

"Does he believe enough in his message to accept my challenge? As the incumbent, he has more name ID so this is more than a fair offer," said Lamb.
The most recent campaign finance reports indicate that McGovern has nearly $1 million in cash on hand and holds roughly a 100-to-1 edge in that category over Lamb, who reported $9,500 to spend.

For his part, Barron called on both candidates to sign a pledge eschewing donations from "Special Interests" and asked them to return any unspent special interest money. It reads, in part:
I pledge to never take any special interest money from any corporation, union, any other political action group or representative thereof. I will not take any special interest money for any position I may seek, any candidacy I may have or any position I currently hold.

If I have previously received special interest money for a position I have sought or now hold, if this money is available and not clearly and verifiably committed it will be immediately returned from the largest donor first to the smallest.
Although Lamb has received support from Political Action Committees, the pledge is clearly aimed at McGovern, who has a 400-to-1 edge in available cash on the unenrolled Barron.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Feeley-Knuuttila endorses O'Neill-Laperriere, shuns fellow Democrat

Democratic Party unity is dead along the Mohawk Trail, as yet another fallen Democrat has declined to endorse the winner of a state house primary.

Colleen O'Neil-Laperriere (U-Gardner) announced on her website this afternoon that she had received the endorsement of Democratic runner-up Amy Feeley-Knuuttila (D-Winchendon) in her quest to win the representative's seat in the Second Worcester District.

Feeley-Knuuttila lost Tuesday's primary to Pat Gerry (D-Gardner) by a nearly two-to-one margin, despite winning three of the five towns in the district. Gerry won Gardner overwhelmingly on his way to the nomination.

Earlier today, Lee Chauvette (D-Athol) in the neighboring Second Franklin District announced that he would not be supporting nominee Denise Andrews (D-Orange).

Chauvette declines to endorse Andrews in Second Franklin race

Saying that he supports "voter choice," Lee Chauvette (D-Athol) announced this morning that he is declining to endorse nominee Denise Andrews (D-Orange) in the race for state house in the Second Franklin House District.

In declining to offer his support, Chauvette acknowledged that he is breaking a "unity call and agreement to move forward with the winner."

"Party unity is a great thing but my message became that of trying to fight for the voters and to be a clear and unattached voice and support electing the person not the party," said Chauvette in a written statement. "This is a value that I hold very high.  I have decided to step away from the normal and expected process and support voter choice in the 2nd Franklin District for the November 2 election."

Saying that his decision "is not based on 'sour grapes' for losing the election," Chauvette, who finished last among the four candidates vying for the nomination, said he would like his supporters to consider and evaluate all three candidates, including Steven Adam (R-Orange) and Genevieve Fraser (U-Orange).

"I hold nothing but respect for Denise, Genevieve and Steve and have zero personal issues with any of them," Chauvette said, "but this is an open seat election and I believe that best form of Democracy from this point forward is to allow you the voters the right to decide on who you feel most comfortable in supporting."

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Thursday Roundup: Foley wins Sheriff race

Thanks to this year's late primary (September 14 is the latest possible "second Tuesday") and the early general election (November 2 is the earliest possible "Tuesday after the first Monday"), candidates are left with a seven-week sprint to the finish in their effort to win election.

For most, that race began within hours after the polls closed, but for Tom Foley (D-Worcester), the start of the general election campaign had to wait until Wednesday. From the Telegram:
Mr. Foley, a former superintendent of the Massachusetts State Police, will face Republican Lewis G. Evangelidis, a state representative from Holden who had no opposition in the primary, and independent candidate Keith E. Nicholas of Warren. Mr. Warren is a UMass Memorial Medical Center policeman and part-time Warren police officer.

Mr. Foley, a Governor’s Councilor, received a call from his primary opponent, Scot J. Bove of Holden, conceding the election about 8:45 a.m. yesterday. Mr. Bove is an assistant deputy superintendent at the Worcester County Jail and House of Correction in West Boylston.

Mr. Foley took 52 percent of the vote, winning the primary by 1,660 votes, according to unofficial results. About 40 percent of the victory margin of Mr. Foley, who still lives in his native city of Worcester, came from Worcester, which he won by 676 votes.
As first reported by CMassPolitics.com, Bove decided around 1:00 am Wednesday to wait until results of several cities had been reported before conceding. At the time, Bove trailed by just over 1,000 votes with Milford, Gardner, Southbridge among the precincts not yet reported.

New England Cable News also reported on Foley's victory.

Elsewhere, while candidates gear up for the sprint, reporters and editors were catching up on rest and recharging the batteries...

13th Worcester House District
An advisor to gubernatorial candidate Charlie Baker (R-Swampscott) told the State House News Service that the loss of Margot Barnet (D-Worcester) in the state house primary showed the weakness of the Lt. Governor Tim Murray (D-Worcester) "political machine." The advisor suggester that Barnet was Murray's "preferred candidate;" Murray's campaign noted that Murray did not endorse anyone in the race.

Second Congressional District
Rep. Richard Neal (D-Springfield) is feeling some heat from the left, as the Progressive Democrats for America and "Jobs for Justice" organizations protested the lack of job growth at the Springfield Federal Building. Organizers said it was the ninth time they had requested a meeting with Neal, to no effect.

Second Franklin District
The Telegram notes that the next state representative will definitively be from Orange, as Republican nominee Steven Adam, Democratic nominee Denise Andrews, and unenrolled candidate Genevieve Fraser all hail from Franklin County's Easternmost burg.

Second Worcester House Update

In a report Thursday night that Pat Gerry (D-Gardner) had secured the Democratic nomination for state representative in the Second Worcester District, CMassPolitics.com omitted the names of the two unenrolled candidates that had qualified for the ballot.

In addition to facing Rich Bastien (R-Gardner), Gerry will also contend with Carolyn Kamuda (U-Gardner) and Colleen O'Neil-Laperriere (U-Gardner) in the November election.

Kim Roy qualifies for ballot in Worcester and Norfolk Senate District

According to an update posted yesterday on her Facebook page, State GOP Committeewoman Kim Roy (R-Sutton) has easily qualified for the Republican nomination for state senate in the Worcester and Norfolk District.

Roy was not on the ballot and needed to receive at least 300 write-in votes to qualify for the general election slot opposite Sen. Richard Moore (D-Uxbridge). According to her Wednesday post, she had received at least 800 votes. In an update this morning, Roy estimated that she would ultimately wind up with as many as 1,000 votes once write-ins had been certified in all of the towns in the district.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Lamb to face McGovern, says he "will not be silenced"


Marty Lamb checks election results as his supporters look on.
(Photo by Emily Hopkins)
NORTHBOROUGH -- The national wave of Tea Party successes swept into Massachusetts last night, as Marty Lamb (R-Holliston) defeated four other candidates to claim the GOP nomination for representative in the Third Congressional District.

Lamb will challenge Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Worcester)  and Patrick Barron (U-Worcester) in the general election in November.

Lamb, who announced his candidacy at a Tea Party rally last year and specifically courted "Tea Party Patriots" in his radio advertisements, told supporters that he and they will "not be silenced" in November.

"These lambs won't be silenced anymore," said Lamb, referencing the Academy Award-winning film Silence of the Lambs. "McGovern ignored us.  When we protested Obama care, he didn't listen.  When we complained about government spending, he didn't listen.  These lambs won't be silenced.

"McGovern can run but he can't hide from us."

For his part, McGovern shows no intention of hiding. In a statement last night, McGovern congratulated Lamb and proposed a series of debates in the coming weeks.

"I congratulate Marty Lamb on his hard-fought victory in the Republican primary," McGovern said. “I call on both of my opponents to join me in a series of debates around the district to allow the voters to hear our competing views for moving our communities forward.”

Lamb told CMassPolitics.com that he expects to compete for voters of all political persuasions in the run to November. "It's all about jobs and the economy, for Democrats and Republicans alike," he said. "I'm not campaigning for Republicans or Democrats, I'm campaigning for everyone."

Emily Hopkins of Worcester Wired contributed to this report from the Lamb post-election headquarters in Northborough.

Foley confident of sheriff victory

WEST BOYLSTON -- This time six years ago, in another Democratic sheriff primary, Guy Glodis was dancing to the tune of "I Shot the Sheriff" at Union Station in Worcester, as seemingly every town's return pointed to an upset of incumbent Sheriff John Flynn.

Last night, the acoustic guitarist set the tone around 9 p.m. with another Bob Marley tune, singing, "Don't worry about a thing, every little thing's gonna be alright."

There was a lot of time for worrying. From 8 p.m. until 10 p.m., Foley's guests at the Wachusett Country Club had few indications of how the election was going, other than grapevine news that it was too close to call. As reports trickled in, Foley kept a consistent lead of 1,000 to 1,200 votes -- the apparent nominee, but close enough that a landslide losses in a few unreported towns could change the result.

Foley kept his vigil until 2:30 a.m., waiting for all but a few precincts to report. By the end of the night, his campaign's unofficial count stood at 20,349 for Foley, 18,825 for Scot Bove, but Foley said he wouldn't declare victory officially until final numbers were reported later on Wednesday.

In remarks to his supporters much earlier in the night -- just before 10:30 p.m. -- Foley had acknowledged his slim lead in the polls and the tough challenge represented by Bove and by the Democratic winner's general election opponents, Republican Lewis Evangelidis and independent Keith Nicholas.

"I would like to have sent a very clear message, [winning] 4-1, but these are some very crazy times," Foley said. "This was a little tighter than I would have liked. ... I know the next run is going to be very, very negative. I'm still going to stay positive. I think qualifications should count."

Foley repeatedly said that of the two Democrats in the race, he was the one who took the high road and focused on issues and policies rather than personalities. He also chided the media.

"Get rid of the politics; let's deal with facts," he said. "I'm disappointed that people are listening to that spin out there. We're in such a cynical time that it's very difficult to run for office. Please take a second, wipe the B.S. off the top, and actually see what the positions are."

Leicester Selectman Thomas Brennan Jr., a Foley supporter, echoed the Worcester Democrat's assessment of his own campaign, saying Foley had run a "positive, upbeat campaign."

Later that night, Foley promised not to "engage in negative politics" during the general election campaign.

Video: Golnik accepts the GOP nomination for congress in the Fifth

Sheriff's race won't be settled until Wednesday

With a handful of cities still left to report, Scot Bove (D-Holden) told CMassPolitics.com that he will wait until Wednesday to determine whether or not to concede defeat in the race for the Democratic nomination for Worcester County Sheriff.

As of 1:00 am, Bove trailed Tom Foley (D-Worcester) by 1,020 votes. However the cities of Gardner, Milford, and Southbridge had still not reported results to the Associated Press, along with a handful of smaller towns.

The winner of the primary will face off against Lew Evangelidis (R-Holden) and Keith Nicholas (U-Warren) in the November 2 general election.

Bove within 910 votes of Foley, some cities still out

According to the Associated Press, Scot Bove has cut Tom Foley's lead in the Sheriff's race to 910 votes, with a number of towns still to report.

Cities and towns not yet reporting results:
Blackstone
Gardner
Milford
New Braintree
Southbridge
Sterling
Sutton
Westborough

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Feeley-Knuuttila concedes Second Worcester race, Gerry wins

According to a post on her Facebook page, Amy Feeley-Knuuttila (D-Winchendon) has conceded defeat to Pat Gerry (D-Gardner), her opponent for the Democratic nomination for state representative in the Second Worcester District.

The Associated Press reports that Feeley-Knuuttila still leads at this hour, with Gardner yet to report. However Feeley-Knuuttila wrote on Facebook that Gerry had overwhelmingly won Gardner on his way to the nomination.

Gerry will face off against Rich Bastien (R-Gardner) in the November general election.

Reich, Harrington cruise to wins in First Middlesex

Jesse Reich (D-Ayer) and Sheila Harrington (R-Groton) have won the chance to face off for the open seat in the First Middlesex House District.

With all towns except Pepperell reporting, each candidate leads their respective races with over 58% of the vote.

If the interest in the primaries are any indication, Harrington has the advantage going into the November general election. Nearly 1,000 more voters in the district pulled Republican ballots in today's primary.

Durant to win in Sixth Worcester District

Peter Durant (R-Spencer) will defeat Mike Jaynes (R-Southbridge) in the race for the GOP nomination in the Sixth Worcester House District. Durant will face incumbent Geraldo Alicea (D-Charlton) in the general election.

With seven of twelve precincts reporting, Durant had a nearly three-to-one lead. The Spencer selectman's lead appears to be insurmountable; Jaynes would need to pull in nearly all of the votes from his hometown of Southbridge in order to pull off the upset

Tom Wesley Wins 2nd District

According to the Boston Globe, the AP has officially declared Tom Wesley the winner of the 2nd District Republican primary over Jay Fleitman. With just 27 out of 223 precincts left to report, Wesley held a 55% to 45% edge, with nearly 2,000 more votes.

Bove's chances looking "grim"

With over 75% of precincts reporting, Tom Foley's lead over Scot Bove in the Worcester County Sheriff's race has widened to about 1,100 votes, according to reports from Bove headquarters. Bove would have to win the remaining quarter of the votes by about a 60-40 margin in order to close the gap.

After the latest round of results, a Bove supporter reported to other Bove backers at the party across the street from headquarters that the numbers looked "grim."

Lamb Wins, According to McGovern

The Worcester Telegram is reporting that Marty Lamb has won the 3rd District Republican Primary, at least according to Democratic incumbent Jim McGovern, who offered Lamb his congratulations even though Lamb's opponent Brian Herr has yet to officially concede.

Still, the writing is on the wall, as Lamb now boasts a lead of 6,317 to 4,990 with 178 of 190 reporting. Even without access to complete voter registration rolls, we're doubtful that there are enough potential voters left to even theoretically bridge that gap.

So, there you have it: according to McGovern and the laws of mathematics, Marty Lamb is the Republican nominee.

Sam Meas Concedes 5th District; Jon Golnik Earns Nomination

According to our man on the scene, Sam Meas has just conceded to Jon Golnik in the 5th District Republican primary.

In his speech accepting the nomination, Golnik vowed to continue the battle against Democratic incumbent Niki Tsongas, stating several times that he doesn't believe Tsongas represents the interests of the 5th District. Instead, he said that she votes with Washington rather than for her constituents and said that during the remaining 49 days before the general election he would push hard to make sure he and the Republican party were successful in defeating Tsongas.

Golnik also vowed to continue what he called a clean campaign, stating that "we will bring civility back to the process." He also said that while it is easy to look backwards at the mistakes that have been made, he prefers to look forward towards the future instead.

Lowell Reports! Still Not Enough for Meas

The long wait is finally over, as Lowell has reported in the 5th District Republican Primary. And while Sam Meas did in fact carry the city, the margin wasn't nearly enough to allow him to overcome Jon Golnik's lead, making it increasingly likely that Golnik will win the nomination.

With 162 of 196 precincts now reporting, including all 33 of Lowell's wayward precincts, Golnik leads Meas 8780 to 6,244.

More to come when things become official.

Early Returns -- Picture Becoming Clearer

We're still burning the 10:30 oil here at CMassPolitics, but two of our four outstanding races are nearing their conclusions and it's starting to look like a good night for Tom Wesley in the 2nd District and Marty Lamb in the 3rd District.

With 183 of 223 precincts reporting in the 2nd District Republican primary, Wesley has opened a lead of more than a thousand votes over Jay Felitman, 7,865 to 6,427.

Meanwhile, in the 3rd District's Republican primary, Marty Lamb has similarly pulled away from Brian Herr to the tune of 5,562 to 4,567 with 162 or 190 precincts in.

We haven't received word of any concessions yet in either race, but we'll let you know as soon as they happen.

Report From Jon Golnik's Headquarters

Our man on the scene at Jon Golnik's campaign headquarters has sent us this photo of Golnik studying the results as they come in. We can't actually see what's on his screen of course, but it's nearly certain that he's reading CMassPolitics to get his news. And thus, when he sees this picture of himself reading this post about himself, the circle will be complete -- or the universe will implode. One or the other.




And to update things: with 118 of 190 precincts reporting, Golnik is still ahead of Meas 38% to 25%. But again, Lowell only has one of its 33 precincts in, and that one went 41 to 5 in favor of Meas. So until the folks in Lowell finish their game of minesweeper and count up the votes, we won't know for sure what's happening with the 5th District.

Results -- Treasurer, 2nd Worcester House District

A couple of results here for you. Steve Grossman has defeated Steve Murphy in the Democratic race for State Treasurer, while Patrick Gerry has defeated Amy Feeley-Knuttila in the 2nd Worcester District Democratic primary. Both of these blurbs courtesy of the AP by way to the Worcester Telegram.

Early Returns -- The Night is Still Young, Somewhere

We've got three barn burners on our hands tonight along with one barn that's mostly already burned down, which all adds up to a long night for people who do things like blog election results. Here's a quick rundown of where we stand right now:


2nd District Republican Primary

With 123 out of 233 precincts reporting, Tom Wesley has opened a bit of a gap between himself and Jay Fleitman, with the count currently at 4,971 to 3,783.


3rd District Republican Primary

With 94 out of 190 precincts reporting, this one is about as close as it can possible get, as Brian Herr leads Marty lamb by just 18 votes, 3,246 to 3,228. Nails will be bitten.


5th District Republican Primary

With 115 of 196 precincts reporting, Jon Golnik remains well ahead of Sam meas to the tune of 6,975 to 4,528. But Lowell still hasn't reported, so anything is possible if they have a massive turnout there.


Worcester Sheriff Democratic Primary

With 127 out of 233 precincts reporting, Tom Foley has opened a slight lead over Scot Bove, 10,343 to 9,683. Still far too early to call though.

Mahoney squeaks by Barnet, looks ahead to Franco

WORCESTER -- Telling his supporters that they will need to work just as hard for the next six weeks as they have in the run to the primary, John Mahoney (D-Worcester) accepted his party's nomination for state representative in the 13th Worcester District.

"After what we did in the primary, we're going to kick ass in the fall!" said a jubilant Mahoney, just moments after second-place finisher Margot Barnet (D-Worcester) called to concede defeat.

Mahoney credited his victory to his on the ground in the days and weeks leading up to today's primary. "I met so many people who told me 'I wrote in your name two years ago,'" he said. "And so many others told me that they had met me at there home.

"I only missed four days of the campaign and our hard work paid off in the end."

Unofficial results showed that Mahoney had defeated Barnet by about 120 votes out of only 5,600 or so cast.

Speaking earlier in the evening, Barnet thanked her supporters and told them that their efforts had not gone for naught. "We can hold our heads up high. We fought for a positive future for all of us."

Barnet also lamented the lower-than-expected turnout. "Only about half of the voters who told us they were supporting us came out to vote," Barnet said to a crowd of about 30 supporters. "We found that a number of them took out Republican ballots."

Mahoney said he was not concerned that the low turnout in the Democratic primary would be a problem for him in the general election race against Paul Franco (R-Worcester) and Ronal Madnick (U-Worcester).

Early Returns -- 5th District

Jon Golnik has opened up a significant lead over Sam Meas in the Republican primary for the 5th District, but he still has an ace up his sleeve, as only one of Lowell's 33 precincts has yet reported. Still, with 110 out of 196 precincts tallied, the figures look like so:

Jon Golnik -- 6,564 votes
Sam Meas -- 4,362 votes
Tom Weaver -- 3,467
Bob Shapiro -- 2,792

Will Lowell make a big enough difference for Meas? He was expected to be strong in Haverhill, his home town, and indeed won by a significant margin there, while Lawrence also proved to be a Meas stronghold as expected. One thing that could be a problem, though, is low voter turnout; less than 900 people voted in the Republican primary in Lawrence out of a population of over 70,000. If Lowell follows suit with that kind of low turnout, it's probably over for Meas.

Glodis Concedes; Bump Wins

According to the Telegram, Guy Glodis has conceded the race for the Democratic nomination for State Auditor to Suzanne Bump. He said he will support her in the general election. The concession comes with less than half the votes tallied; only 48% of the precincts have reported according to the Glode, which currently gives Bump the edge by a wide margin at 49% to 32%.

An excerpt from the telegram report:

"“Sue Bump ran a great campaign,” Mr. Glodis, who served eight years in the
Legislature and six as sheriff, said about 9:30 tonight. “I want to thank the
voters of Worcester County for their overwhelming support over 14 years.”

You can read the rest here.

2nd District Results -- Andrews Wins

According to MassLive.com, Denise Andrews has won the Democratic Primary for the 2nd District. Here are the final figures:

Denise Andrews -- 1,490 votes
David Roulston -- 971 votes
Roxanne Wedegartner -- 746 votes
Lee Chauvette -- 705 votes
Martin McGuane -- 134 votes

Both Roulston and McGuane were hindered by lack of support outside of Greenfield, where Roulston received 717 of his 971 votes and where McGuane received all but 30 of his. Meanwhile, Chauvette had the opposite problem, bringing in only 68 of his 705 votes in Greenfield. Andrews was the only candidate who polled well across the board, hence the win.

Early Returns -- 3rd District

With almost a third of the votes tallied -- 60 out of 190 precincts reporting in this case -- Marty Lamb holds a slight edge over Brian Herr in the Republican primary for the 3rd District seat. The numbers, via the Boston Globe:

Marty Lamb -- 1,895
Brian Herr -- 1,654
Michael Stopa -- 1,184
Everyone else -- Bupkis

Early Returns -- Sheriff

Scot Bove and Tom Foley are in a knock-down brawl for the post of Sheriff; according to the Boston Globe, with 61 out of 223 precincts reporting, Foley holds a narrow margin of just 51% - 49%. The numbers:

Tom Foley -- 5,229
Scot Bove -- 4,929

More to come, of course.

Early Returns -- State Auditor

With 32% of the votes tallied so far, Suzanne Bump is maintaining a healthy lead over Guy Glodis in the race for Auditor. The raw data one third of the way through the counting:

Suzanne Bump -- 58,019 votes -- 49%
Guy Glodis -- 38,723 votes -- 32%
Mike Lake -- 22,883 votes -- 19%

This with 60% of Worcester included in the vote. However, no portion of Worcester county north of the city itself has yet been tallied, meaning much of the Glodis base of support has yet to be figured in. Still, CMassPOlitics sources indicate that the Glodis camp believes their chances are "dwindling by the minute."

Stay tuned.

13th District Goes to Mahoney by 80 Votes

The Telegram is reporting that John Mahoney has defeated Margot Barnet in the race for the 13th District.

According to their article, the margin was a slim 80 votes, with Mahoney ending up at 1,352 compared to Barnet's 1,272. Figures for the other four candidates were not immediately available.

Note that the figure of 80 votes is significantly different from the 140 which Margot told her supporters she had lost by. Not sure where the discrepancy lies, but it's probably not enough to change the outcome.

Barnet announces to supporters she has lost

Margot Barnet just announced to her supporter that John Mahoney has won by 140 votes. The results are unofficial. WIll update with comments from the candidate.

Early Returns -- 2nd District

We're up to 13 out of 17 precincts reporting in the race for the 2nd District Democratic nomination and so far Denise Andrews still has a lead over David Roulston. Her lead is widening, though, as it now stands at 1174-878. Those earlier figures were comprised entirely of Greenfield's nine precincts, so it looks as though Andrews is picking up steam away form the big city, while Roulston is fading.

It should also be noted that none of Lee Chauvette's three home town Athol precincts have yet reported, but with only 227 votes so far he has a long way to go to make up the gap. His support, though, may spell trouble for ROulston's efforts to make up ground on Andrews.

Early Returns -- 13th District

According to the Telegram, it looks like it's narrowing down to a two horse race in the 13th District; with Paxton having reported along with 7 of the 10 Worcester districts, Margot Barnet is unofficially leading John Mahoney by the razor-thin margin of 1161-1127. Gina DiBaro has faded to a distant third with 687 and the other three are making mimosas as we speak.

You can read the whole thing here.

Early Results -- 2nd District

With over half of the precincts reporting, the race in the 2nd District Democratic Primary is neck and neck and neck according to masslive.com. Here are the figures with 9 out of 17 precincts and 53% of the votes tallied:

Denise Andrews -- 734 votes
David Roulston -- 717 votes
Roxanne Wedegartner -- 547 votes
Martin McGuane -- 104 votes
Lee Chauvette -- 68 votes

Looks like our interview with Chauvette earlier today was a little too late to provide the patented CMassPolitics Bump.

Bove, Foley neck and neck in Worcester

With 32% of the precincts reporting (16 of 50), Scot Bove is within inches of Worcester native Tom Foley, trailing 52% to 48%.

Unconfirmed reports out of Paxton had Bove winning in the town.

Early Election Returns -- 8:40

The Telegram has more figures on the race for the 13th District. Here they are, fresh off the internets:

Ward 1, precinct 3, Assumption College

Mahoney, 114
Barnet. 81
Smith, 61
Perotto, 36
Sharry, 36
DiBaro, 31


Ward 1, Precinct 4

Barnet. 227
Mahoney. 160
Smith, 132
Sharry, 64
DiBaro. 51
Perotto, 37


Some quick napkin math tells us that Barnet is so far slightly ahead of Mahoney to the tune of 401-389 with three precincts reporting (well, two plus Paxton), while DiBaro and Smith are still relevant at 278 and 266 respectively. Perotto and Sharry so far look like they'll have plenty of time to tweak their fantasy football rosters after tonight, with totals of 136 and 178 so far.

Note: the Telegram's main page also has totals including the 2nd precinct, but not the 3rd, so there's a lot of intense math going on somewhere. We'll bring you updates as soon as we can figure them out.

First results from Worcester -- Barnet up in first results

1 of 10 Worcester precincts have officially reported (no word on which one):

Barnet 132
DiBaro 22
Mahoney 20
Smith 15
Perotto 6
Sharry 5

Calls coming in from Paxton have DiBaro winning there, followed by Mahoney and Barnet.

Early Election Returns -- 8:35

Some statewide races are also being contested tonight of course, and much as the rest of the state hates to admit it, Central Mass is part of the state. So with that in mind, we're keeping an eye on the race for Auditor, featuring local favorite and driver of the big black bus, Guy Glodis.

Early returns from the Boston Globe have Glodis trailing, though. Maybe he isn't our Guy after all? Or maybe 1% of the vote isn't enough to call the race just yet. But here are those early figures:

Suzanne Bump -- 3,790
Guy Glodis -- 1,401
Mike Lake -- 1,045


Steve Grossman is continuing to pile up votes as well and has taken an overall lead of 4,434 to 1,593 according to the Globe.

Early Election Returns -- 8:28

In the Democratic primary for State Treasurer, Steve Grossman appears to have gotten the (very) early jump on Steve Murphy according to the Worcester Telegram. Their figures:

Auburn
Grossman 852
Murphy 366

Paxton
Grossman 349
Murphy 189


Also, according to the Boston Globe, someone likes Sam Meas in the Republican primary for the 5th District Rep; with a whopping 1 out of 196 precincts reporting, Meas has a commanding 79% of the vote. Which sadly for him is only 41 votes. But if the season were to end now...

Live from Margot Barnet's Headquarters

WORCESTER - I've just settled in to a table at Nancy Chang restaurant on Chandler Street in Worcester to wait for results to come in. I chose the Barnet headquarters because I know they have wi-fi access. As a bonus, they have TELNET election reporting software hooked up to one of the big screens, so not only vcan I blog, but I can get official results as they come in.

To give you an idea of how focussed the folks here are on the 13th Worcester Race and that race alone, the national results are coming in on the Fox News Channel on a TV across the bar. I'd guess this is the first time most of the Barnet supporters have been in a room with Bill O'Reilly on TV for longer than it takes to switch channels.

Some results are starting to come in by phone...

Early Election Returns -- 8:17 PM

Our first election data of the evening is rolling in courtesy of the Worcester Telegram and it comes from the scenic and influential town of Paxton. The headliner? Scot Bove took a shovel to Tom Foley in the Sheriff race to the tune of 321-71.

Also straight outta Paxton are the following figures in the race for State Rep. for the 13th Worcester District:

Gina DiBaro - 196
John Mahoney - 115
Margot Barnet - 93
Donald Sharry - 78
Joffrey Smith - 73
Mike Perotto - 63

The Telegram is attributing these results in part to an active Tea Party presence in Paxton. So there's that.

On the trail with Joff Smith, 13th Worcester rep. candidate

WORCESTER -- CMassPolitics.com caught up with Joffrey Smith, Democratic candidate for state representative in Paxton and part of Worcester, at his Barry Road polling place at The Willows on primary election day.



Don't forget to check back at CMassPolitics.com this evening for results and analysis from the 13th District Democratic primary vote!

On the trail with Don Sharry, 13th Worcester rep. candidate

WORCESTER -- CMassPolitics.com caught up with Don Sharry, Democratic candidate for state representative in Paxton and part of Worcester, at the Temple Emanuel polling place on primary election day.



Don't forget to check back at CMassPolitics.com this evening for results and analysis from the 13th District Democratic primary vote!

On the trail with John Mahoney, 13th Worcester rep. candidate

WORCESTER -- CMassPolitics.com caught up with John Mahoney, Democratic candidate for state representative in Paxton and part of Worcester, at the Assumption College polling place on primary election day.



Don't forget to check back at CMassPolitics.com this evening for results and analysis from the 13th District Democratic primary vote!

On the trail with Margot Barnet, 13th Worcester rep. candidate

WORCESTER -- CMassPolitics.com spoke with Margot Barnet, Democratic candidate for the state House in Paxton and part of Worcester, at her Pleasant Street campaign office this afternoon.



Don't forget to check back at CMassPolitics.com this evening for results and analysis from the 13th District Democratic primary vote!

On the trail with Scot Bove, Worcester County Sheriff candidate

FITCHBURG -- CMassPolitics.com spoke with Scot Bove, candidate for Worcester County Sheriff, as Bove campaigned outside the Knights of Coumbus in Fitchburg.

On the trail with David Roulston, 2nd Worcester District

ATHOL -- CMassPolitics.com spoke with David Roulston, candidate for state representative in the Second Worcester District, as Roulston campaigned in downtown Athol.

On the trail with Lee Chauvette, 2nd Worcester District

ATHOL -- CMassPolitics.com spoke with Lee Chauvette, candidate for state representative in the Second Worcester District, as Chauvette campaigned in downtown Athol.

Stay with CMassPolitics.com on Election Day

CMassPolitics.com is the place to be all day for coverage of the primary races in Central Massachusetts.

While the polls are open, editor Lance Harris will be in the field, filing reports and video updates from the candidates as they work to meet voters and get out the vote.

After the polls close, a team of reporters will fan out across the district to bring reaction from the winners and losers in the biggest races in the region:

Harris will be on the scene in the 13th Worcester House District, where six candidates are vying for the Democratic nomination to succeed outgoing Rep. Robert Spillane (D-Worcester).

Michael Ballway, a freelance journalist from Worcester with nearly a decade of experience reporting and editing across Worcester County, will be covering Tom Foley (D-Worcester) and Scot Bove (D-Holden) as they wait to see who prevails in the spirited and sometimes contentious race for Worcester County Sheriff.

Emily Hopkins, a writer with Worcester Wired, will be checking in from the headquarters of the candidates in the Third Congressional District, where five Republicans are fighting for the chance to face off against Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Worcester).

And Scott Harris, a freelance reporter from Clinton, will be updating town-by-town results as they come in.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

CMassPolitics.com Interview with Tom Weaver

Interview with Tom Weaver (R-Westford), candidate for U.S. representative in the Fifth Congressional District.


CMassPolitics.com Interview with Tom Weaver sound bite

CMassPolitics.com Interview with Mike Stopa

Interview with Mike Stopa (R-Holliston), candidate for U.S. representative in the Third Congressional District.


CMassPolitics.com Interview with Mike Stopa sound bite

Saturday, September 11, 2010

P.O. Box 13: 'A great campaign' ending (Part 5)

The latest part of our look at campaign mailers in the 13th Worcester House District race. Also see Part 1, Part 2, Part 3 and Part 4.

As you'll recall, we received solid mailers from each of the front-runners on Thursday. Two of them sent more the next day. Here's what we received Friday and Saturday, Sept. 10-11.

Gina DiBaro
"Have You Heard?"
Gina DiBaro checks in for the first time this month with four testimonials -- half of them from Paxton (!), all from "regular people" and not government or political officials. That's either a good thing or a bad thing. The reverse (not pictured) says DiBaro will bring "a New Voice, New Vision and New Results ... my priorities are job creation, public safety and fiscal responsibility. It is time for Full Time Representation!" Not sure I like the capitalization, but I'm definitely detecting an attack on state Rep. Robert Spellane, who's leaving this seat. That would make this the first mailer (or the first since we started keeping track) to mention Spellane, even in a veiled fashion.

John Mahoney
"You're Getting Soaked"
Say what you will about Joff Smith's "silhouette" mailer, but this is the first entirely negative mailer of the campaign: the only mention of its sender, John Mahoney, is in the return address. In a mailer that complains about negative attacks, the text begins with: "Under Joff Smith's failed leadership ..." (the reverse, aside from address information, shows a man being drenched, with the legend: "Feel like you're being soaked? You are.").

Another question: Since all of Worcester's woes are attributable to Smith's "leadership," is Mahoney conceding that Smith is a leader on the council? One attack that does hit home: Mahoney mentions Smith's vote to grant city councilors a pay raise.

Joff Smith
"My Name is Joff"
With a bare minimum of decoration, Joff Smith rehashes his résumé in a letter to voters. Do voters see an inconsistency in his arguments? "Government has neglected taxpayers ... can't fix problems by sending political insiders" ... but ... "I am the only candidate with experience governing through a fiscal crisis." So Smith, the only current elected official, is not a political insider? Overall, though, this mailer is a winner. He gets his message across and cites some specific votes and actions.

John Mahoney
"A Great Campaign"
The only mailer to arrive Saturday, and though John Mahoney has my full attention, he doesn't have much to say. The reverse (not pictured) is simply "John Mahoney - State Representative - September 14" in huge letters and a photo of him with his son. The phrase "this has been a great campaign" makes this seem a valedictory mailing -- will Mahoney be absent from what I assume will be a massive mailer crush on Monday?

This is the fifth in a series of "P.O. Box 13" blog posts about campaign mailers in the 13th Worcester House District race. The opinions expressed are those of a 13th Worcester District voter and not necessarily those of CMassPolitics.com. The series will continue.

P.O. Box 13: Testify, testify! (Part 4)

Part 4 of our look at campaign mailers in the 13th Worcester House District race. This review includes mailings received on September 9. Also see Part 1, Part 2, Part 3 and Part 5.

Thursday, Sept. 9, produced a bumper crop, all from the supposed "front-runners" of the campaign. Margot Barnet, last heard from more than a week ago, again had multiple entries. Here they are:

Margot Barnet
"Your Vote Matters"
Here's another union mailer from SEIU (see Part 1). It's got the hallmarks of a statewide mailer, with no specifics about Barnet's policies and no mention of Worcester or Paxton -- just "... an important primary election for our community." Also, if you don't know where to vote, visit wheredoivotema.com (a state-run website) or call 800-462-VOTE. Nothing groundbreaking here.

Margot Barnet
"Someone We Trust"
This one's from Barnet's local office and focuses on her résumé as a community volunteer and organizer in Worcester: "We know we can trust her to be a champion for our concerns, because that is exactly what she has been doing for decades in our community." It's Barnet's strongest selling point and this is probably her most effective mailer yet.

John Mahoney
"Mahoney Momentum!"
Another big one -- 8.5" x 11". I just had to show the front side, because it's got that great headline, but the back is probably more interesting ... the entire purpose of the mailer is to show seven testimonials, including one from a Paxton resident. Mahoney gets a great cross-section to endorse him, from elected officials (Councilor Barbara Haller and School Committeewoman Dianna Biancheria) to former Police Chief Edward Gardella, a teacher and a senior citizen.

Next time the post office has to raise the price of a stamp because business is down, don't blame John Mahoney. The information on this mailer could have easily fit into a card half this size, but he's still paying to send the largest mailers the campaign has seen so far.

Joff Smith
"What People Are Saying"
I've got to go with first impressions here -- the color scheme is awful; a lot of dark-text-on-black. That said, Smith strikes back with his own list of testimonials, leading off with former School Committee member Dotty Hargrove and city boxing star Jose Rivera. Nobody identified from Paxton. Still, folks who risk eye damage to read the thing learn about Smith's attention to education, neighborhoods and seniors.

It should be said that while testimonials are better than vague promises, they're still not as good (in this voter's opinion) as specific promises or beliefs. I'm learning not to expect specifics in the mail, though.

This is the fourth in a series of "P.O. Box 13" blog posts about campaign mailers in the 13th Worcester House District race. The opinions expressed are those of a 13th Worcester District voter and not necessarily those of CMassPolitics.com. The series continues here.

P.O. Box 13: Smith goes negative (Part 3)

Part 3 of our look at campaign mailers in the 13th Worcester House District race. This review includes mailers sent through September 8. Also see Part 1, Part 2, Part 4 and Part 5.

Entering the last week before the election, Joff Smith took the offensive with the first negative mailer of the campaign (or at least, the first one since we began keeping track), while John Mahoney followed up his first, biographical effort with one focused more on issues.

John Mahoney
"A Fresh Take on the Issues"
Finally, Mahoney lets us know he's more than just a tall guy, with another mammoth 8.5" x 11" job with nice, big type. Mahoney "will fight for tax incentives to entice businesses to locate in and around Worcester and Paxton." He also says the right things about education, protecting children from crime and bullying, and constituent service ("no issue is too small").

Don Sharry
"Vote for Don Sharry"
Exact same postcard as Sharry's last, and addressed to the exact same person, so it's probably not a case of being listed twice on his address list. If I was going to read it the second time, chances are I'd already read it the first time. See my reaction here.

Mike Perotto
"Experienced and Accomplished"
This Sept. 8 mailer is essentially the same message as the previous Perotto postcard, but in larger size (11" x 6"). His priorities are: "Create and retain jobs ... Increase Chapter 70 funding for education ... Lower taxes and spend wisely ... Service constituent requests." Lotta controversy there.

Joff Smith
"Stood Up for Taxpayers"
An 8.5" x 5" mailer that Rosalie Tirella hates, so it's got that going for it. Obverse is a four-paragraph letter with the usual "I know firsthand that we need to support our small businesses" and "change can't happen on its own" type of sentiment. Reverse is where the controversy is: Joff lined up next to silhouettes labeled "John Mahoney" and "Margot Barnet," and a paragraph next to each one. Joff's highlights his lowest-residential-tax-rate votes. Mahoney's blurb accuses him of being "part of the group" that wants a cut in the business tax rate, which would raise residential tax rates. Barnet's says she's "opposed to a bill that would create 15,000 new jobs in MA." It would be nice to know what bill this is (Tirella argues convincingly that it's the casino bill; Barnet is the only one of the six candidates to oppose casinos). The mailer implies that Barnet is controlled by special interests that want to raise property taxes. In both cases, the candidates' relationships to proposed residential tax hikes are a bit more nuanced than the mailer suggests; this is politics, but in terms of this week's catch, it's the only one to go negative, so it's an outlier in terms of tone.

This is the third in a series of "P.O. Box 13" blog posts about campaign mailers in the 13th Worcester House District race. The opinions expressed are those of a 13th Worcester District voter and not necessarily those of CMassPolitics.com. The series continues here.

P.O. Box 13: Résumés on postcards (Part 2)

Part 2 of our look at campaign mailers in the 13th Worcester House District race. This review includes mailers received through September 4. Also see Part 1, Part 3, Part 4, and Part 5.

Only a couple mailers trickled in during the week after the big debate, both of them small and jam-packed with text, as opposed to the previous spacious, slick and graphics-driven efforts from the purported frontrunners:

Mike Perotto
"Leader for You"
First of the postcard-sized postcards, but also the wordiest one yet; break out the magnifying glass (don't let the image fool you -- this one was the size of an average tourist's postcard, tiny compared to the other mailers). Easily the most specifics yet; he gives highlights of his 14-year tenure on the City Council and promises to (among other things) "be an ambassador to startup and high-tech businesses"; "scrutinize the budget"; and "return your phone calls and e-mails the same day or the following morning." This is damning with faint praise, though; he still doesn't give any truly specific proposals.

Don Sharry 
"Vote for Don Sharry"
Slightly longer than a postcard; more photos than Perotto's. Under the heading "Uniquely Qualified" on the back, says he's a health insurance professional and a business owner, specializing in employee benefit plans. Well ... so is Perotto, isn't he? Can't both be "unique." Obverse is a six-paragraph letter to district voters that probably would have worked better in bulleted format, although the boldface does help. "We need someone who has the experience and knowledge to help control spiraling budgets, unfunded mandates and ever-rising health insurance costs." OK, but how? We're invited to visit donsharry4staterep.com "to learn more," but the "Issues" page there (as of today) is simply the text of the mailer, without any explanation.

If Perotto and Sharry (and Gina DiBaro) are really shaping up to be also-rans, as scuttlebutt has it, they need great mailers even more than the three "front-runners." So why do campaigns spend the big bucks to send these things out, if they're not going to take full advantage of my attention and give me a reason to vote? Knowing the names of your kids isn't going to win you my vote. Maybe the next week will bring more specifics ... keep an eye on that mailbox and on this blog!

This is the second in a series of "P.O. Box 13" blog posts about campaign mailers in the 13th Worcester House District race. The opinions expressed are those of a 13th Worcester District voter and not necessarily those of CMassPolitics.com. The series continues here.

P.O. Box 13: Barnet triplets arrive (Part 1)

Part 1 of our look at campaign mailers in the 13th Worcester House District race. This review includes mailers through August 31. Also see Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, and Part 5.

Supposing you're new to town, you don't subscribe to the newspaper, listen to talk radio or read political blogs like this one -- much less attend debates or volunteer on a campaign. How will you decide whom to choose in a six-way Democratic primary race?

Can you depend on campaign mailers? Let's take a look at how the campaigns look on paper -- in their own words -- when given a chance to bombard my house with junkmail. We'll start two weeks out, with the mailers that arrived Aug. 31, and update with other posts until the primary election Sept. 14.

Margot Barnet
"The Healthy Choice"
Here's a mailer with a Service Employees International Union logo on it (and Dorchester return address, and "authorized and paid for by 1199SEIU" disclaimer), carrying the nurses' and healthcare workers' union endorsement. SEIU says Barnet will "create and protect jobs," "protect access to quality, affordable healthcare," keep property taxes low while protecting "local services"; keep seniors and disabled independently at home. Not too much specific here, and not too much to differentiate her from Democratic opponents, who all promise the same things.

Margot Barnet
"For His Sake"
This 10" x 6.25" card also arrived Aug. 31, return address that hotbed of grassroots volunteerism, Ashburton Place on Beacon Hill in Boston. Margot has the Massachusetts Teachers Association endorsement, and apparently that's message enough because the mailer doesn't give any specifics on her education views. A quirk: the clip art of a cute elementary schooler is in color, but Barnet's mug is small and grayscale. I can't prove it but I'd bet dollars to doughnuts that identical mailers were sent to every contested Democratic primary district, with the local endorsee's name and likeness inkjetted onto the blank space in a preprinted card. Gotta love local campaigns. It's possible this was not a a district-wide mailing but rather an MTA-only effort; we have a teacher in the house.

Margot Barnet
"Her Work Made a Difference"
The third (maybe second?) Barnet mailer of the day, same size as the last one, but this one comes from her local campaign office, paid for by her local committee, and quotes a Worcester resident on the obverse. The reverse is four testimonials on how Barnet has "already made a difference in our community," and three of them are obviously local. She has Mayor Joe O'Brien's endorsement.

John Mahoney
"Head and Shoulders Above"
The 8.5" x 11" mailer that rival campaigns couldn't stop making fun of. Is he running for shooting guard? Perhaps an apple picker? The flyer is a gimmick, though, and I suppose anything that starts a conversation is fine. It took me a few looks to notice the five foreheads and haircuts that come up to waist-high on Mahoney. A little exaggeration there -- Mahoney is 6'3", which is tall, but not freakishly so. Now, this is nitpicking, but the "measuring stick" behind Mahoney is a ruler -- he appears to be 6 1/4 inches tall. And this is ridiculous nitpicking, but if you could see the ruler extend behind him, below his shoulders, it would end about half a foot (er ... about half an inch) above his wrist. So maybe he's as tall as 10 inches. Details, folks.

The back side is a positive get-to-know-me biography in bulleted format. All he really promises to do is "return your phone calls promptly, work diligently to improve your quality of life, and approach the issues from a fresh perspective." How?

I'm still surprised that Mahoney didn't mention in this mailer or (other than briefly) at the Aug. 31 debate what really sets him apart from his opponents -- he's the only one who ran for this office before it was an open seat (write-in candidate in 2008).

Next: the rest of the week.

This is the first in a series of "P.O. Box 13" blog posts about campaign mailers in the 13th Worcester House District race. The opinions expressed are those of a 13th Worcester District voter and not necessarily those of CMassPolitics.com. The series continues here.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Roundup: Neal trouncing challengers in money race; Herr, Lamb trade charges

Continuing their look at the finances of candidates for Congress in Central Massachusetts, the Telegram reported Wednesday that Rep. Richard Neal (D-Springfield) had nearly $3 million in his bank account at the end of the most recent filing period, far outpacing the two Republicans vying for the nomination to oppose him in November.

According to Federal Election Commision reports, Jay Fleitman (R-Northampton) had a little over $54,000 remaining, putting the physician at a 48-to-1 disadvantage to Neal. Tom Wesley (R-Hopedale) had even less money to spend, reporting under $27,000 in available cash. The sum is more than 111 times less than Neal has banked.

Both candidates have heavily self-financed, with Fleitman loaning his campaign over $73,000 and Wesley lending around $33,000 to his effort.

One of the best ways to cope with a lack of funds is through free media, and both Fleitman and Wesley have taken advantage of the opportunities over the last few days. On Tuesday, the two appeared on Channel 22 in Springfield for a televised debate.

Wesley appeared on WHYN-AM Radio in Springfield to talk about his campaign.

Fleitman also did a radio gig, speaking with Bax and O'Brien on WAQY-FM.

The Springfield Republican previewed the race between Fleitman and Wesley, anointing Fleitman as the "higher profile" candidate.

Neal visited manufacturing facilities in Webster and Spencer, talking to employees and entrepreneurs about jobs and international competition.

Third Congressional District
The big news in the Third District was also about campaign finance, but instead of discussing how much was raised, two of the GOP candidates for the nomination were sniping back and forth about House ethics and FEC rules violations. From the MetroWest Daily News:
With less than a week before the primary, two Republicans in the 3rd Congressional District race exchanged broadsides yesterday, accusing each other with not following election rules.


The dispute between Brian Herr of Hopkinton and Marty Lamb of Holliston stems from Herr's failure to meet a May deadline for turning in a financial disclosure form listing personal income, assets and liabilities. The snag was first publicized by the Daily News, not Lamb's campaign.
The dispute has devolved into a nice bit of schoolyard taunting:
"I am very disappointed that Mr. Herr would blatantly attempt to mislead voters, but it seems to be a pattern with him," Lamb spokesman Shane Hayes said in the statement.

Herr said his campaign would not have mentioned the filings had Lamb not repeatedly raised the tardy financial disclosure form.

"The issue here is people who live in glass houses shouldn't throw rocks," he said.
The Telegram and Worcester Magazine have more. CMassPolitics.com posted both Herr's and Lamb's press releases on Wednesday.

One candidate who hopes the voters send both candidates to detention is Michael Stopa (R-Holliston). Stopa has been making the rounds on local radio, touting his platform yesterday on WCRN-AM's Peter Blute Show and speaking this morning with WTAG's Jim Polito.

Fifth Congressional District
The Lowell Sun rounds up the voting records of the four Republican candidates for the seat currently held by Niki Tsongas (D-Lowell). While earlier coverage had focused on Jon Golnik (R-Carlisle) and his eight-and-a-half year refusal to even register to vote, the Sun's piece points out that most of the other candidates also have their gaps:
...Westford's Tom Weaver was the only one of the four Republican candidates to vote in the October 2007 special election that sent Tsongas to Congress to replace former U.S. Rep. Marty Meehan, who resigned to become chancellor of UMass Lowell.

"I think your public history matters, and that's comprised of voting record, community service and involvement and where you've worked," Weaver said. "People have to put whatever weight they feel is important on that, but I've been saying, tongue-in-cheek, that I'm the only candidate who has been running against Niki Tsongas since 2007."

Golnik, Sam Meas of Haverhill and Robert Shapiro of Andover all failed to vote in that special election that gave Tsongas her first electoral victory by just 6 percentage points over Republican Jim Ogonowski of Dracut.
Tsongas is scheduled to be a guest on Channel 5's "On the Record" Sunday morning. Portions of the interview have been made available online
 
First Congressional District
Rep. John Olver (D-Amherst) touted the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act in a visit to North Adams, saying the economy needs more stimulus spending in the near future to continue recovery.
 
A post on the liberal site Firedoglake.com touts Michael Engel (U-Southampton) as a "True Activist Progressive Leftist" and says he "is a true grassroots reformer, a democratic socialist in the mold of Bernie Sanders."

Second Worcester District: Brother can you spare a dime

According to campaign finance reports filed earlier this week, the two candidates for the Democratic nomination in the Second Worcester House District had so little money in the bank at the end of the reporting period that the candidates couldn't get together for dinner without bankrupting their accounts.

Pat Gerry (D-Gardner) and Amy Feeley-Knuuttila (D-Winchendon) combined to report $114.90 in cash on hand as of August 27, the end of the reporting period.

The two combined to raise just over $6,000 in the period from January 1 to August 27. Nearly all of that money was Gerry's, as the Gardner city councilor pulled in $5,670 during the reporting period. Of those contributions, over $1,700 was provided by Gerry himself. All of his itemized contributions before August 27 came from inside the district.

Gerry also listed a $300 donation from outgoing State Rep. Robert Rice (D-Gardner). The donation came from Rice's personal finances, not from his campaign account, which explains the large gift. Donations from one campaign to another are capped at $100.

Gerry's coffers were boosted after the reporting period with an additional $1,500 from Boston donors. As reported by CMassPolitics.com on Tuesday, $1,000 of that money came in the form of two maximum donations from members of popular Boston band, The Dropkick Murphys. The other $500 donation came from the owner of a tattoo parlor, who listed the same address as one of the musicians.

Gerry had just $62.93 left in his account before the influx of money from the Boston rockers.

Feeley-Knuutila reported just $369 in total receipts for the period. Her one large donation was from Richard Dumont of Winchendon, who gave $199 to the campaign. The other $170 in receipts were un-itemized.

Feeley-Knuutila ended the reporting period with just $51.97 in the bank.

Incredibly, the two Democrats were still in better financial shape than one of the two unenrolled candidates. Carolyn Kamuda (U-Gardner) reported a negative final cash balance, at $336.14 underwater.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Senator Richard Moore draws a write-in opponent

Republican State Committeewoman Kimberly Roy (R-Sutton) has announced her intention to wage a write-in campaign for the Republican nomination for senate in the Worcester and Norfolk District.

According to a campaign flyer Roy posted on her Facebook page, the married mother of two is hoping to "stick it to beacon hill...and remove a 31 year tax-and-spend Democrat incumbent." Sen. Richard Moore (D-Uxbridge) currently holds the seat.

If Roy is successful in getting at least 300 write-in votes on September 14, she will appear on the November 2 ballot opposite Moore.

Roy is a graduate of Western New England College and has worked as a Pharmaceutical Representative for Johnson and Johnson. She was elected to her seat on the Republican State Committee 10 months ago.

Press Release: Herr Makes Phony Attack on Rosh Hashanah

The following press release was sent by Marty Lamb (R-Holliston), candidate for representative from the Third Congressional District.



Lamb: Shame on Herr
Herr Makes Phony Attack on Rosh Hashanah

Holliston, MA ...Today Marty Lamb, Republican candidate for Congress in Massachusetts Third District, is deeply disappointed with phony attack fellow Republican Congressional candidate Brian Herr has made.

Herr has taken an FEC advisory statements and suggested that they were complaints issued which is just not true. "I very disappointed that Mr. Herr would blatantly attempt to mislead the voters, but it seems to be a pattern with him," stated Shane Hayes.

Several times Mr. Herr claimed last night during the debate that his failure to file the financial disclosure statement was an FEC violation which is blatantly untrue again. Mr. Herr has violated Official Congressional Conduct rules that could result in fines up to $11,000 or 5 years in jail for failing to submit his ethics form. Presently Charlie Rangel is facing possible expulsion from Congress for omitting items off of his ethics statement. Herr just did not file.

"Mr. Herr is trying to equate apples and oranges. Mr. Lamb received an advisory notice and has done nothing wrong. On the other hand Mr. Herr is in serious trouble and has spent $13,000 to cover up a form he still refuses to produce," said Hayes. "Mr. Herr. produce your ethics form now. Ronald Reagan would have wanted you to abide by the law. Moreover, Reagan also said, "trust but verify." In this situation we can no longer trust you when it turns out you never filed for the extension and you won't produce the ethics form that is in the 'mail.'"

The Lamb campaign is also bothered that this phony attack was sent out after 5pm when Mr. Herr knew that Mr. Lamb would be celebrating Rosh Hashanah with his family.

Furthermore if Mr. Herr is looking for an FEC Violation he can look no further than his on attack press release. IT DOES NOT HAVE THE PROPER FEC DISCLAIMER ON IT.

From the Committee on Standard Official Conduct:

Failure To File or Filing False Disclosure Statements

The financial disclosure provisions of the Ethics in Government Act have been incorporated by reference as a rule of the House of Representatives, over which the Standards Committee has jurisdiction. In addition to any Committee action, EIGA authorizes the Attorney General of the United States to seek a civil penalty of up to $11,000 against an individual who knowingly and willfully falsifies or fails to file or to report any required information. Moreover, under federal criminal law, anyone who knowingly and willfully falsifies or conceals any material fact in a statement to the government may be fined up to $11,000, imprisoned for up to five years, or both.

The Committee is authorized to render advisory opinions interpreting the financial disclosure provisions of EIGA for any person under its jurisdiction. An individual who acts in good faith in accordance with a written advisory opinion shall not be subject to any sanction under the Act.

http://ethics.house.gov/Subjects/Topics.aspx?Section=114

Press Release: HERR TO LAMB: Before you throw out an attack, make sure it is not shaped like a boomerang

The following press release was sent by Brian Herr (R-Hopkinton), candidate for representative from the Third Congressional District.

HERR TO LAMB: Before you throw out an attack, make sure it is not shaped like a boomerang

HOPKINTON - Brian Herr, Republican candidate for congress, responded to Marty Lamb's baseless attacks for missing the deadline to file his personal financial disclosure. Early on, Herr owned up to missing the deadline and has since filed the disclosure statement.

"Marty's attacks are just silly. This type of political mudslinging, scare tactics and name-calling has no place in politics," said Herr. "For someone who spent the better part of this year invoking Ronald Reagan's 11th Commandment, I am surprised that he would stoop to this type of gutter politics."

Herr continued: "To make matters worse, it is hypocritical for someone who has a long and extensive history of missing deadlines with the Federal Election Commission to attack me on missing a deadline. Before you throw out an attack, make sure it is not shaped like a boomerang."

Per the Federal Election Commission's online disclosure database, here is a partial list of problems Marty Lamb has had with the FEC:

1. Marty Lamb filed his Statement of Candidacy two month's late. According to the FEC, "A candidate running for the U.S. House, Senate or the Presidency, you must register with the FEC once you (or persons acting on your behalf) receive contributions or make expenditures in excess of $5,000. Within 15 days of reaching that $5,000 threshold, you must file a Statement of Candidacy." Marty Lamb reached the $5,000 threshold on March 30th. His Statement of Candidacy should have been filed by 4/15. It was filed on 6/14.

2. Marty Lamb received a Letter of Disavowal from the FEC in Q2 telling him to either file his candidacy or cease his campaign.

3. Marty Lamb filed his Q1 disclosure late, and failed to do so electronically as required

4. Marty Lamb failed to initially disclose Q1 expenditures

5. Marty Lamb filed his Q2 disclosure late, and failed to do so electronically as required

6. Marty Lamb filed his Pre-Primary disclosure late, and failed to do so electronically as required

7. Marty Lamb received a letter from the FEC dated 9/3 informing him that he had not satisfied his reporting requirements going back to Q1, prompting him to re-file all 3 prior disclosures.

8. Upon re-filing his Pre-Primary disclosure, Marty Lamb failed to record the repayment of a $5000 candidate loan and other expenses that appeared on the initial pre-primary report.

9. Upon re-filing his FEC disclosures, Marty Lamb's filings were signed by an unauthorized treasurer.


"The truth is that everyone makes mistakes and sometimes things happen. These are not the most important issues facing the voters of Massachusetts. I am disappointed that Marty Lamb would try and make this election about mistakes that the campaigns have made and not talk about the real issues like getting people back to work and cutting the size of government," concluded Herr.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Press Release: McGovern announces bid for reelection

The following press release was sent by Rep. James McGovern (D-Worcester), incumbent candidate for representative from the Third Congressional District.

McGovern announces bid for reelection

Congressman Jim McGovern formally announced today his bid for reelection to the U.S. House of Representatives in Massachusetts’ 3rd Congressional District at JimMcGovern.com/announce.

“Today, I’m proud to officially announce my candidacy for Congress because I’m anxious to keep fighting: to grow jobs, to help small businesses, to increase renewable energy, and to expand biotechnology.”

“I’m impatient. I’m impatient to get things done -- to cut through bureaucratic red tape to get people back to work and to see our economy flourish. I’ve heard a lot of rhetoric about what some people are ‘against.’ Instead, my focus is on progress, growth, development, and the future.”

In a web-only video released today announcing his candidacy, McGovern stated his strong desire to see private sector expansion in the United States, rather than overseas.

McGovern said that his agenda for the upcoming term would be aggressively focused on bringing economic security and growth to the 3rd Congressional District. “We need to invest in infrastructure, and we need to invest in education. And to the extent we skimp on education, we’re going to lose our competitive edge.”
McGovern’s announcement video also features interviews with Hopkinton businessman Dan Brown and Massachusetts Biomedical Initiatives head Kevin O’Sullivan, who discuss McGovern’s work to develop new jobs.

“With Jim McGovern’s help, what we’ve been able to demonstrate so far is job growth,” said Brown.

“I’m very proud of our team in Massachusetts, and I’m also proud that we were able to bring these jobs back from overseas because this helps us in the economy.”

McGovern said he would build on his legacy of working with private companies, developers, and investors throughout the 3rd Congressional District to stimulate growth.

McGovern also pledged to continue to be a leader in the fight to bring our troops home safely from Afghanistan. “I’m tired of nation-building over there; it’s time we do some nation building here in the 3rd Congressional District.”

CMassPolitics.com Interview: Marty Lamb, 3rd Congressional District

CMassPolitics.com spoke with Marty Lamb (R-Holliston) about his campaign for U.S. representative in the Third Congressional District.


CMassPolitics.com Interview: Marty Lamb, 3rd Congressional District sound bite

CMassPolitics.com Interview: Jane Morriss, First Middlesex House District

CMassPolitics.com spoke with Jane Morriss (D-Groton) about her campaign for state representative in the First Middlesex House District.


CMassPolitics.com Interview: Jane Morriss, First Middlesex House District sound bite

CMassPolitics.com Interview: Mike Perotto, 13th Worcester House District

CMassPolitics.com spoke with Mike Perotto (D-Worcester) about his campaign for state representative in the 13th Worcester House District.


CMassPolitics.com Interview: Mike Perotto, 13th Worcester House District sound bite

CMassPolitics.com Interview: Gina DiBaro, 13th Worcester House District

CMassPolitics.com spoke with Gina DiBaro (D-Worcester) about her campaign for state representative in the 13th Worcester House District.


CMassPolitics.com Interview: Gina DiBaro, 13th Worcester House District sound bite

What are the GOP rep. candidates thinking?

As interesting as all the personalities and "grilling" are, what do the five Republican candidates for 3rd District Congressman stand for? Here are a few of the ideas they proposed at Tuesday's debate in Westborough.

This being the Republican primary, take it as read that all five candidates dislike President Obama, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Congressman Jim McGovern (natch), amnesty for illegal immigrants, the concept of health care as a right, and "cap-and-trade legislation"; and are generally well disposed toward a broad reading of the Second Amendment, small government, tax cuts (including the "Bush tax cuts" set to expire in January), family, God, honesty and hard work. Their opinions of motherhood and applie pie were not solicited.

Robert Chipman (R-Plainville): First priority would be passing a Balanced Budget Amendment. Also supports the line-item veto (as a constitutional amendment; it was found unconstitutional when passed as a law in the 1990s). Is against the recent extension of unemployment benefits to 99 months.

Robert Delle (R-Paxton): Main economic plank is creating more enterprise zones for small businesses. All Defense Department spending should be done in the United States. Implement tax havens within U.S. territorial borders, to recapture the banking business that has fled to Caribbean islands and other low-tax or low-regulation countries. As a "free-market absolutist," believes illegal immigration is best curtailed by cutting off "free money" programs (welfare, public housing, etc.) to anyone who isn't a legal resident.

Brian Herr (R-Hopkinton): Touted potential dividends from improving local digital infrastructure, such as increased attractiveness to business, and easier sharing of medical records (to reduce the administrative costs of health care). Would send military troops to patrol the Mexican border.

Marty Lamb (R-Holliston): Has a seven-point plan to end illegal immigration. Advocates having troops on the border to defend against what he calls an "invasion." Would ask Supreme Court to interpret (not rewrite) the 14th Amendment as not applying to so-called "anchor babies" because the parents, illegal immigrants, were not "subject to the jurisdiction" of the United States. Instead of government health plans, he proposed giving tax credits for individuals to purchase insurance.

Michael Stopa (R-Holliston): Use unspent stimulus money to extend the Bush tax cuts two more years. Wants Washington out of the business of "social engineering and political payback" that drives most spending plans; would rather see partnerships with business. "These people [Democratic leadership] basically view profit with hostility. ... We're going down there not to fix the economy, but to fight with the people who are trying to destroy the economy."

Every candidate specifically mentioned wanting to repeal "Obamacare," though only a couple went into great detail. Herr said he'd like to see the health care system defined on a state-by-state basis, and said the real problem -- high costs -- can be tamed through better technology and tort reform. Stopa said he wants to follow "the Massachusetts model for dismantling Obamacare" -- he said he's the only candidate campaigning on this platform, which could have the recent health care law nullified "in 2012, with Michele Bachmann in the White House."

On Social Security, which the moderator called a "Ponzi scheme," Stopa said he'd like to raise the retirement age and perhaps privatize 1/3 of each account. Chipman agreed and added that he'd index benefits to prices, not wages. Delle called the program "Democrats at their best, free money for everyone." He would give people the option to "buy out" of the program. Herr stood against raising the retirement age, but would like to incorporate modern investment techniques into Social Security. Lamb called the existing accounts "sacred" but said he'd like to let new workers contribute to individual retirement plans instead of Social Security.

And who are these guys? Based on their own (often repeated) statements, Chipman's "the man of 'no'" on his School Committee and speaks for the "silent majority" awakened during the health care debate; Delle is a lawyer, true conservative and the only one who really understands Central Massachusetts; Herr is a small-government advocate who touts his local government experience (selectman and Planning Board) and his role helping craft a 0% increase town budget this year; Lamb is a Tea Party member (it means "Taxed Enough Already," he noted) and small business owner; Stopa is a Ph.D. physicist, "Reagan conservative" and founder of the Harvard University Tea Party ("I fight with liberals every day.").

Other takes on the Westborough debate (and I feel sorry for the two headline writers who inadvertently used the exact same phrase in this morning's newspapers):
MetroWest Daily News: Candidates Grill Each Other at 3rd District Debate in Westborough
Telegram & Gazette: GOP Candidates Grill Each Other; Victor to Face McGovern in 3rd
 

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