So the Goodwin Procter lawyer representing backers of the blockbuster tax-cut referendum says he doesn’t believe Attorney General Andrea Campbell’s office was acting in bad faith when it suggested word changes to the proposed ballot question – word changes that turned out to be inaccurate and cited by the SJC when it deep sixed the tax-cut proposal on Thursday. But the fact remains it was the AG’s responsibility, not the backers and their lawyers’ responsibility, to get the ballot wording right – and the AG’s bumbling office screwed that up, big time. … Setting aside Howie Carr’s patented vitriol, his summary of the summary controversy is fair enough: “The obvious question is, did AG Campbell make this, uh, mistake, because of a) gross incompetence, b) corruption or c) both.” … Howie votes for both. I vote for incompetence. And that’s being generous.
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Headlines of interest: … Moulton’s startup investments … Trahan AI blowback … Biotech IPO records … Noncompete loopholes … Pension play … Harvard radicals, conservative radicals … Hawthorne’s grim Boston …
Some slightly off-the-beaten-path stories you may have missed this past week:
— His wife (or whomever) must be a pretty sophisticated investor to be plunking so much dough on young companies: “Rep. Moulton holds stakes in defense-linked startups overseen by his committee” (WBUR)
— Progressive critics are not sure what they want but they know it doesn’t involve bi-partisan compromise: “Trahan faces pushback over federal AI plan” (Axios)
— It’s not all bad news on the life-sciences front: “Mass. broke two biotech IPO records in a matter of weeks” (MassLive)
— Ideally, they’d eliminate them, not fix them. But this will have to do for now: “Economic development bill would close noncompete ‘loophole’” (BBJ)
— Another fascinating under-the-radar Mass. firm: “Woburn company lands $500M federal contract to build rare-earth facility” (BBJ)
— There’s gotta be a pension play here somewhere: “House lawmakers tuck into budget a $36K raise for longtime Boston politician” (WBUR)
— Newton’s Third Law as applied to politics: “How Harvard radicals inspired the conservative legal movement” (Globe)
— A fascinating racial role reversal is under way within the party: “The Democrats’ ‘Upstairs-Downstairs’ Coalition Is at a Breaking Point” (NYT)
— Unfortunately, Miami may have the inside track if there’s ever a bidding war for him: “Celtics reportedly make trade offer for NBA superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo” (Herald)
— And his little-known piece of fiction was set right here in Boston: “Nathaniel Hawthorne’s American Horror story” (The Atlantic)
— Despite its reported faults, it sounds like a pretty good flick: “Finally, an action movie about Washington’s French and Indian War years” (Atlantic)
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Eddie Andelman: ‘the Iggy Pop of sports radio’
If you can only read two pieces on the sad death of Eddie Andelman, make them John Powers’ remembrance at the Globe and Dan Kennedy’s long-ago profile of the sports-radio pioneer. … Eddie was indeed amazing. As a friend put it: “Hard to overstate the man’s influence. … He was the Iggy Pop of sports radio. Funny as hell.” …
My friend and I also reminisced about, among other things, the ticking time bomb schtick Eddie used when a caller went on too long, such as “poor Violet from Malden (Saugus?) who was always getting blown up after praising the Red Sox for ‘all the pleasure they gave us this summer.’”
Update –– 6.17.26 — Add Howie Carr’s column this morning to the list of good Eddie Andelman remembrances.
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Explaining Healey’s popularity: ‘she did not make things worse’
Re the latest Globe/Suffolk poll showing Gov. Healey with a commanding lead over her GOP opponent despite not having a ‘signature achievement,’ a reader writes in: “The secret of her success: she did not make things worse … and it could be much worse (California, Minnesota, Illinois). It’s Massachusetts and she’s Governor so count down to the Presidential question.”
Actually, I don’t mind if she doesn’t have a signature achievement. Governors are just a ladder step above mayors when it comes to what voters expect from them: competence and fairness. They’re not looking for ‘signature achievements.’ … Read deeper into the Globe story and you’ll find that’s what some voters are thinking. … Btw: Other than his handling of two natural disasters that bookended his time in the Corner Office (the winter of 2015 and Covid), can you name a non-act-of-God-related signature achievement of Gov. Charlie Baker?
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Attention Celts fans: ‘The Knicks are currently the benchmark’
In an email slugged ‘I no longer hate the Knicks,’ a Hub Blog reader and long-time Celts fan writes in about the new NBA champs:
Maybe it’s reaching a certain stage in life. I still grimace a little every time I hear about the Knicks’ ‘first championship in 53 years’ because the Celtics were by far the best team in 1973 and were only stopped by a serious John Havlicek shoulder injury (suffered while playing the Knicks…) But even that is fading.
Two words: Jalen Brunson. Just gets it done.
Two more words: The Team. Despite stars and big salaries, they complement each other.
The Celtics did a few things differently from the Knicks in the last part of this season, and infamously during the playoffs last year:
– The Celtics started games well. The Knicks finished games well.
– The Celtics fired at will from long distance. The Knicks mixed up their offense.
– The Celtics forgot about the supporting cast that served them well during the regular season this year. The Knicks used the same people in the same ways throughout the playoffs. When they fell behind early they didn’t overuse the starters to try to stay alive. Back to *The Team* above.
Geez, the Knicks are even rivaling us on the historical front with Ewing, Oakley and Clyde the Glide showing up prominently for games!
I am not going so far as buying a blue-and-orange #11 jersey! But I hope this playoff season is a great motivator for the Celtics – because the Knicks are currently the benchmark, and one that must be respected.
I’ve heard a number of Celts fans expressing similar admiration for the Knicks. I gotta say: I’m among the admirers. I love their style of play.
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Ipswich Cigar-gate: both parents and school administrators screwed up

Sure, the lunkhead parents of the Ipswich boys lacrosse players who were suspended for smoking graduation cigars (see photo above) missed an opportunity to teach their kids some “life lessons” about integrity, as the Globe’s Matt Porter writes. But didn’t adult school authorities also miss an opportunity to teach “life lessons” about making punishments proportionate to alleged crimes/rule breaking? That a puritanical one-strike-and-you’re-out approach to rules isn’t always the fair and smart way to deal with youths? … In the Ipswich case, there’s a difference between teens developing bad lifetime habits by regularly smoking butts and kids smoking one-time celebratory cigars on a beach after high-school graduation. Isn’t the former what the MIAA no-tobacco rule is all about, not the latter? … What puritanical dummies. …Btw: You know who comes out of this absurd controversy looking pretty good? The Ipswich lacrosse players who sat out the game in solidarity with their suspended teammates, forcing the team’s playoff forfeiture. They showed adults a late-in-life lesson about standing up to stupid rules and disproportionate punishments. …
Photo above of Ipswich
criminalsstudents via CBS News. It’s kind of a classic coming-of-age photo, isn’t it? …Update — 6.15.26 –– A reader writes that the IHS controversy is indeed a “reminder of our puritanical roots and how they evolve with the times.”
Update II — 6.17.26 — The WSJ is on the story. I liked this quote from a local lawyer: “Come on, how many times you’ve been pulled over and a cop has said, ‘Ahh, go ahead?’ … There is always discretion, right?” Nope. Not in ‘America’s Best-Preserved Puritan Town.’
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Curious timing: Globe runs puff piece on AG Campbell three days after her older brother’s conviction on multiple rape and sexual assault charges
Sooner or later the Globe was going to have to focus on Attorney General Andrea Campbell’s political prospects heading into the fall general elections, if only so it could say it covered a non-election election that everyone knows the Dem incumbent will win. But did the Globe really have to run a puff piece on Campbell less than three days after her older brother Alvin was convicted on 21 counts of rape, sexual assault and other charges, in what even the Globe describes as a “harrowing weekslong trial” of a serial rapist posing as a ride-share driver to prey on drunk women? … Not even a passing reference to Alvin’s high-profile legal saga that ended late Thursday afternoon? Nope. … I’m not saying the Globe had to pull a Howie Carr regarding the Alvin-Andrea connection. But couldn’t the Globe at least bury a mention of the trial in today’s piece or perhaps even wait a week or two before running the political-activists-just love-her bonbon?… Gee, it’s almost as if they had the story waiting in the can for just such a moment …
Update – 6.15.26 — The Globe’s Joan Vennochi isn’t pulling punches:
To the delight of activists, Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Campbell has sued the federal government more than 50 times since Donald Trump became president in 2025.
If only she showed similar zeal for standing up to local power brokers. But that would mean taking on fellow Democrats.
And, yes, she mentions Alvin, appropriately toward the bottom.
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The MGB-CVS partnership: Regulators know it’s a bad deal but will let it proceed anyway
They know it will cost consumers $40 million. But the BBJ reports regulators are effectively letting the proposed MGB-CVS partnership proceed under the assumption it will somehow help relieve the primary-care physician shortage in Massachusetts. … And I have a bridge to sell you in Boston. … The Globe reports David Joyner, chief executive of the $400-billion publicly traded CVS, says it’s all about addressing the primary care crisis in the state. … And I have two bridges to sell you in Boston. … Before the Health Policy Commission’s non-action action, Paul Hattis and John McDonough were giving cautious support to the planned MGB-CVS deal. … But not me. See prior rants here and here.
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Headlines of interest: … Starter-home hope … Minogue’s token Dem … Lemonade stand stickup … City Council circus … ‘Gen-Z socialism’ … Pied-à-Terre envy … Gordon S. Wood, RIP
Some slightly off-the-beaten-path stories you may have missed this past week:
— The referendum is not nearly as radical as some think: “Research: Starter Homes Ballot Question Would Unlock Hundreds of Houses Per Year” (Banker & Tradesman)
— He couldn’t find another Democrat to vouch for him, not one? “In new ad, she’s a Democrat backing GOP gubernatorial hopeful Mike Minogue. Left unsaid: She’s also his neighbor” (Globe)
— WTF? “South Boston lemonade stand robbed at gunpoint, police say” (Herald)
— The Boston City Council’s latest circus act: “Youth-jobs protesters shut down City Council budget deliberations; seven arrested” (Universal Hub)
— An interesting look at the economic views of modern democratic socialists, but it glosses over the entire social-justice/identify politics aspect of today’s democratic socialism: “Gen-Z socialism, from Zohran to Zack and beyond” (Economist)
— Speaking of democratic socialists, they’ve suffered a political setback in an unlikely place: “San Francisco Rejects a Tax Hike on Companies With Highly Paid Executives” (WSJ)
— The Times’ core white upper-middleclass readership loves this stuff: “A Paris Pied-à-Terre, Designed for a Daughter” (NYT)
— Speaking of white upper-middleclass sensibilities: “Cape Cod planning board denies Trader Joe’s, citing expected ‘chaos’” (BBJ)
— Russia’s historic view of warfare is entirely different from our view of warfare: “Putin’s deliberate brutality in Ukraine has a backstory” (Washington Post)
— The sad death of a scholarly giant: “Gordon S. Wood, Pioneering Historian of Early America, Dies at 92” (NYT)
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Summer jobs and those lazy teens: It’s not what you think
At the WSJ, Roland Fryer, an economics professor at Harvard, blows away all the laments about today’s youths and how fewer of them have summer jobs. There’s actually a good news/bad news explanation for the decades-long decline in summer teen employment. Among other things, he uses Cape Cod ice cream parlors to make his point. …
