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GOOD MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS.
TRUMP'S TAKE ON 'STRANGE' DEM IDEAS — Should we ditch the Electoral College? Sen. Elizabeth Warren thinks so. Lower the voting age to 16? Count Rep. Ayanna Pressley in. What about court packing? Rep. Seth Moulton says it ought to be on the table.
President Donald Trump knocked all three ideas that have been floated by the state's high-profile Democrats in a late night tweet around midnight.
"The Democrats are getting very "strange." They now want to change the voting age to 16, abolish the Electoral College, and Increase significantly the number of Supreme Court Justices," Trump said in a tweet. "Actually, you've got to win it at the Ballot Box!"
Warren called for getting rid of the Electoral College during a televised town hall Monday. And yesterday, she launched a full-on offensive, gathering signatures on a petition to abolish the Electoral College via her email and text message lists.
And judging by his tweets, it's pretty clear Trump is paying attention to Warren's proposal.
"Campaigning for the Popular Vote is much easier & different than campaigning for the Electoral College. It's like training for the 100 yard dash vs. a marathon," Trump wrote on Twitter around 10 p.m. last night. "The brilliance of the Electoral College is that you must go to many States to win."
But here's the thing: Trump used to see things differently. "I used to like the idea of the Popular Vote, but now realize the Electoral College is far better for the U.S.A.," he said last night.
Around this time last year, Trump advocated for doing away with the Electoral College. He said it was "rather have a popular election," during an interview in April 2018.
Why the turnaround? The president didn't explain further last night, but it's no secret Trump is eager to take shots at Warren's 2020 prospects and he openly says he wants the chance to run against her.
Have a tip, story, suggestion, birthday, anniversary, new job, or any other nugget for the Playbook? Get in touch: smurray@politico.com.
TODAY — Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito chairs a meeting of the Governor's Council. Tom Steyer's Need to Impeach campaign delivers 95,000 impeachment petition signatures to Rep. Richard Neal's Springfield office. State Rep. Carlos Gonzalez, chair of the Massachusetts Black and Latino Legislative Caucus, acknowledges changes to the Department of Correction prison visitation policy. Boston Mayor Marty Walsh attends the 2019 Boston Marathon banner unveiling and visits the Benjamin Franklin Institute of Technology.
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| DATELINE BEACON HILL |
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- "LEGISLATION EYED TO FORCE GENDER PARITY ON BOARDS," by Kaitlyn Budion, State House News Service:"Legislators and advocates called Tuesday for gender parity on public boards and commissions, and Speaker Pro Tempore Patricia Haddad said legislators have a "strong obligation" to improve the situation. Haddad and Sen. Jason Lewis spoke at an event with the Eos Foundation, which released a report about the gender representation on 50 public boards and commissions. Lewis and Haddad have sponsored an act to ensure gender parity on public boards and commissions."
- "New England Patriots players will lobby for Massachusetts education funding bill," by Shira Schoenberg, Springfield Republican: "Three players for the New England Patriots will be at the Massachusetts Statehouse Friday to advocate on behalf of a bill that would increase funding for public education. Devin McCourty, Duron Harmon and Jason McCourty will speak at a legislative hearing in support of the PROMISE Act. The three Patriots are members of the Players Coalition, an independent nonprofit founded by NFL players in 2017 to address social injustice and racial inequality. The players advocate for policies related to criminal justice reform, policing, education and economic advancement in low-income communities."
- "Ed funding debate takes Pioneer detour," by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Magazine: "THE DEBATE OVER increased state funding for education took a detour last week as the Pioneer Institute and its critics tangled over a reform proposal designed to give the state more leverage at the local school level. It started on March 10, when Charles Chieppo and Jamie Gass of the Pioneer Institute proposed in a CommonWealth op-ed that the state should invest more in K-12 education but that the additional aid should come with the power to appoint a proportional number of local school committee members. If a community gets 50 percent of its school funding from the state, then the state should get to appoint 50 percent of the school committee members."
- "Mass Cultural Council skips talk of belt-tightening at budget meeting," by Lisa Kashinsky and Joe Dwinell, Boston Herald:"The Massachusetts Cultural Council reports it is "in good shape" with its budget — especially with casino cash about to flow into its coffers — but any belt-tightening wasn't on the agenda at Tuesday's fiscal update in Waltham. Board members discussed the arts council's finances while noshing on grilled Tuscan chicken sandwiches and sipping on Perrier at a meeting in the function room of the Rose Art Museum on the Brandeis University campus. The council wasn't charged for use of the room — but it will be billed for the food, a university spokesman said."
- "Baker opposes Mass. deal to bypass Electoral College," by Sean Philip Cotter and Mary Markos, Boston Herald: "Gov. Charlie Baker says he opposes the pact Massachusetts joined that would effectively bypass the constitutionally mandated Electoral College system of weighting presidential votes — as U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren joins a Democratic call to abolish the institution. "My biggest problem with going to a majority vote is you basically put the election in the hands of a whole bunch of big states and everybody else doesn't matter anymore," Baker told the Herald."
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| FROM THE HUB |
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- "Colin Rose Is Taking on Equity in Boston's Public School System," by Linda K. Wertheimer, Boston Magazine: "The way the principal at Dorchester's Dever Elementary School created order out of classroom chaos may have made perfect sense to some: students walking down the hall, single-file, in one direction on a yellow line and the other way on a blue one. But Colin Rose, an assistant superintendent in charge of reducing racial inequities in Boston Public Schools, cringed as he watched the children during a 2017 visit. He flashed back to his first job out of college, teaching literacy skills to inmates in Boston's Suffolk County House of Correction at South Bay. When the prisoners left class and returned to their cells, they were forced to walk on lines painted on the floor while corrections officers watched. Like the inmates, the students at the Dever were mostly black and Latino."
- "Andrea Campbell: New Budget Will Include Resources For Safer Streets," by Tori Bedford, WGBH News: "Boston City Council President Andrea Campbell said she's hoping to invest more financial resources into traffic safety, an issue that has become a major talking point across the city. Campbell said a council hearing last week was a wake up call: To make Boston's street's safer, it will take more than the slower speed limits proposed by Mayor Marty Walsh."
- "Anger grows over design of green line stations that limit access and add distance for disabled," by Marc Levy, Cambridge Day: "State transportation officials are likely to get an earful at an open house Wednesday meant to explain what's happening with the green line extension, as residents and officials don't like what they already know. At Monday's meeting of the City Council, residents and officials rallied behind an order by councillor E. Denise Simmons to rework plans for a Union Square stop, where the design will make it harder to board for riders coming from Cambridge or for people with disabilities or mobility issues. Councillors called the situation "deplorable" and raised the prospect of a lawsuit."
- "MTA raises legal concerns about New Bedford charter deal," by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Magazine: "A BID BY NEW BEDFORD OFFICIALS to peaceably resolve a dispute with a local charter school hit a potential roadblock on Tuesday, as the Massachusetts Teachers Association said a key element of the deal is illegal. The deal calls for the Alma del Mar Charter School to add 450 seats in New Bedford rather than the 1,188 it had originally sought. In return, the city agreed to turn over to the charter school a shuttered school building, the former Horatio A. Kempton Elementary School, at no cost. The arrangement, brokered by state Education Commissioner Jeff Riley, is seen as a possible way around divisive charter expansion battles."
- "Austin hires assistant city managers for mobility, safety," by Daniel Salazar, Austin Business Journal: "There's someone new at Austin City Hall focused on one of the region's biggest challenges: mobility. Gina Fiandaca has been hired as Austin's assistant city manager in charge of departments and projects focused on mobility, according to a March 19 announcement. That role will preside over the city's Public Works, Transportation, Aviation and Fleet departments — an expansive purview that touches road maintenance, parking, Austin-Bergstrom International Airport, scooters and other issues tied to how Austinites and visitors get around the city. Fiandaca has been commissioner of Boston's transportation department since 2015. She helped lead the department pursuing "Go Boston 2030," the Massachusetts capital's long-range transportation plan. She is a lifelong resident of East Boston."
- "Ticket quotas are illegal, legal expert says after prosecutors in Mass. State Police OT probe say troopers had to issue specific number of citations," by Scott J. Croteau, Springfield Republican:"Ticket and citation quotas are illegal in Massachusetts, a Boston-based attorney said, citing a Massachusetts Appeals Court decision and state law. The discussion of quotas being issued by police was rushed to the forefront after federal prosecutors claimed Massachusetts State Police troopers working a specialized patrol - one that was part of widespread abuse within the department - were expected to issue a minimum number of citations per each overtime shift."
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| DAY IN COURT |
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- "Prosecutors offer deal to drop charges against Robert Kraft, other defendants," by Travis Andersen and Lucy Morgan, Boston Globe: "Florida prosecutors have offered to drop misdemeanor prostitution solicitation charges against two dozen defendants including Patriots owner Robert K. Kraft, if they agree to conditions including an admission that authorities had enough evidence of their guilt, authorities said. Kraft, according to a person familiar with the Kraft legal strategy, would also be required to appear in a Palm Beach courthouse to publicly resolve the case against him, something that is contrary to the usual practice for misdemeanor cases in the Palm Beach courthouse."
- RELATED: "Anti-human-trafficking activists want Robert Kraft banished from NFL." Link.
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| WARREN REPORT |
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- "Warren's crackdown on Big Tech has a history," by Hiawatha Bray, Boston Globe: "Massachusetts US Senator Elizabeth Warren is supposed to represent the hard left of the Democratic Party. But her call for tough antitrust sanctions against Internet giants Facebook, Google, and Amazon is far from radical. If anything, it fits within a historic cycle of tech-industry innovation, followed by aggressive federal regulation. And through it all, the US tech sector has risen to global dominance."
- "Elizabeth Warren takes her policy-packed campaign to Deep South," by Liz Goodwin and Jess Bidgood, Boston Globe: " Joseph Henderson, 60, was taking in some sun outside a faded white house on Monday morning when an unusual thing happened. A presidential candidate walked right up to his porch to say hello. "My name's Elizabeth Warren and I'm running for president," the senator from Massachusetts, flanked by about a dozen reporters and photographers, announced. As has become her calling card as a candidate, Warren dispensed with the pleasantries and cut straight to the policy."
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| TRUMPACHUSETTS |
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- "Markey Rips Trump Admin's Title X Change As 'Disastrous,'" by Chris Lisinski, State House News Service: "U.S. Sen. Ed Markey, medical experts and pro-choice advocates slammed the Trump administration's proposed changes to the Title X program on Tuesday, arguing that withholding federal funds from centers that provide or refer abortion services "would turn back the clock" on women's rights and reproductive health. The Title X program offers federal grants to support family-planning services for low-income patients across the country. However, a new rule floated last year and finalized this month by President Donald Trump would cut off those funds for any provider that performs abortions or makes abortion referrals."
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| THE CLARK CAUCUS |
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- "How to fix Congress — according to Congress," by Lee Drutman, Vox: "Last week, members of Congress took turns telling a special committee of Congress what was wrong with Congress. The hearing went on for hours. Thirty-two House members spoke before the new House Select Committee on the Modernization of Congress, and another three submitted written testimony. Some came with ideas out of left field. But almost all members came with a seriousness of purpose that should inspire the committee and remind it that it has some serious and important work to do."
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| MARIJUANA IN MASSACHUSETTS |
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- "SOMERVILLE LICENSING COMMISSION WAIVES APPLICATION FEES FOR CANNABIS DISPENSARIES," by Chris Faraone, DigBoston: "The recreational cannabis licensing process is a lot like the products that stores will soon offer in Mass when they finally open. There are similarities from town to town and shop to shop, especially when viewed from afar, but look closely and you'll find multiple different shades of a colorful and complex system. In the years since voters came out in support of recreational weed, several city councils and boards of selectmen have been criticized by everyone from business interests to activists for their greed and opacity."
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| EYE ON 2020 |
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- "The Democrats' choice problem: Which candidate can beat Trump in 2020?" by Neil Swidey, Boston Globe: "THERE WAS A STRAIN OF WISTFULNESS woven through the obituaries for Mario Cuomo after he died on the first day of 2015. The tributes for the New York governor and stirring orator who was the dream presidential candidate for many Democrats in 1988 and 1992 were weighed down by a sense of what could have been, if only he had run. In the waning days of 1991, the indecisive governor nicknamed "Hamlet on the Hudson" went so far as to keep a plane idling at the Albany airport, ready to deposit him in New Hampshire before the filing deadline for the first-in-the-nation primary."
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| MOULTON MATTERS |
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- "More potential 2020 presidential candidates visit SC to consider joining crowded field," by Jamie Lovegrove, Post and Courier: "Even with the 2020 Democratic presidential primary field already overflowing with candidates, more prospects are coming to South Carolina to test the waters as they continue to consider their own potential campaigns. The latest would-be contenders to visit the critical early primary state Tuesday were U.S. Rep. Seth Moulton of Massachusetts and former Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, both of whom said they are actively exploring the possibility of joining the pack."
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| ABOVE THE FOLD |
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— Herald: "STACKING UP THE STARS," — Globe: "So far, legalizing marijuana isn't paying off for Mass."
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| THE LOCAL ANGLE |
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- "Fall River Mayor Jasiel Correia: Opponents kicked off school committee board are 'cry babies,'" by Jacqueline Tempera, MassLive.com: "Fall River Mayor Jasiel Correia II - fresh off his shocking re-election - called two opponents he removed from a school committee board "cry babies." In an interview with WPRO radio's Dan Yorke Friday Correia said that Paul Coogan, who came in second place in the special election, should have expected "political hardball" after he lost the race."
- "In rural Berlin, an ongoing mixed-use development is creating a community within the community," by Aviva Luttrell, MassLive.com: "A few decades ago, you couldn't find much in Berlin. The sleepy Massachusetts town, tucked away along Interstate 495, was filled with orchards, farmland, rolling hills and woods. But in the years since, the edges of town have become increasingly suburban. The construction of the Solomon Pond Mall in 1996 brought more commerce to the area, and development pressures have moved west from Boston, bringing more activity beyond the I-495 belt."
TRANSITIONS - David Bond joins the Everytown for Gun Safety Action Fund as director of federal government affairs. He worked as deputy chief of staff and legislative director for Rep. Katherine Clark.
HAPPY BELATED BIRTHDAY - to Abigail Webber, regional director for Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who celebrated yesterday.
DID THE HOME TEAM WIN? Yes! The Bruins beat the Islanders 5-0.
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