Are angry MAGA Republicans on the cusp of seizing control of the Mass. GOP? They sure sound like it, based on the ruckus they’re constantly creating within the party. But the Herald’s Joe Battenfeld has a good column in which he argues that uber-moderate Charlie Baker — the former Massachusetts governor, in case you’ve forgotten – still holds sway over the state party, as evidenced by the fact that two of his non-MAGA “disciples” are currently running for governor. … As Joe notes, Baker’s poll numbers continue to run high in Massachusetts, more than two years after leaving the Corner Office, thanks largely to his moderate positions on issues. …
Not to give MAGA types advice, but they should stop focusing on statewide races. The statewide numbers simply aren’t there for pro-Trump types. Instead, they should be focusing on district races in western and central Massachusetts, as I suggested earlier this week (scroll down). But as I also noted, political purists, such as MAGA types, rarely think in such practical political terms.
Knicks fans were out in obnoxious force last night after their team lost at TD Garden. … Even their corrupt mayor got into the sore loser act: “B—K FOSTON” … The response of Boston fans to the uncouth ruffians in their midst? Typically polite, calm and considerate. Saintly, even.
Don Gillis, who served in Mayor Ray Flynn’s administration back in the day, has a new book out on the Flynn years at City Hall, “The Battle for Boston: How Mayor Ray Flynn and Community Organizers Fought Racism and Downtown Power Brokers.” He also has an op-ed at the Globe on the Flynn years (“Boston wasn’t always a progressive bulwark. Then came Ray Flynn.”) I have a few quibbles with some of Gillis’s assertions in his op-ed. But let me say first: I think Ray Flynn’s legacy will indeed be tied, as the book title suggests, to how he handled the city’s awful racial tensions when he first became mayor in 1984, following the start of court-ordered busing in the 1970s. In a Nixon-goes-to-China kind of way, Flynn’s South Boston roots and his prior anti-busing stance gave him a form of political cover to reach out to a Black community that understandably had little trust in the white establishment. He wasn’t totally successful. But Flynn’s first term in office, in my mind, is when the racial healing truly began in Boston. Ray Flynn was the right mayor at the right time for Boston.
So, without having read his book, I think Gillis is right to emphasize Flynn’s fight against racism as one of his great legacies. But Ray Flynn as some sort of seminal figure who first lit and then passed the torch of progressivism to Tom Menino, Marty Walsh and ultimately Michelle Wu, helping the “city to become the progressive bulwark it is today,” as Gillis asserts in his Globe piece? I don’t know. Sounds like he’s stretching things a bit. I always viewed Flynn as a rather complicated man who, yes, had a progressive streak, if you want to call it that, but he also had a very conservative streak, such as his staunch anti-abortion stance and his deep religious beliefs that led to his becoming ambassador to the Vatican and later to defend Cardinal Law even after the church sexual-abuse crisis erupted in Boston. In between those two extremes was a rather pragmatic pol bordering on populist pol, or so I recall.
To get a more insider-ish take on Flynn, I turned to a long-ago contributor to Hub Blog, Brighton Reader, a true Boston political junkie. Brighton Reader’s response to my query about Flynn’s alleged progressiveness:
“I would not call Ray Flynn a progressive. The term meant nothing when he was in politics. People would either say someone was a liberal, a la Mike Dukakis, or a conservative, as in Ed King. Or today pundits might proclaim him a Pope Leo XIV Catholic, maybe? … ‘Progressive” is a label. It is irrelevant to describing anyone other than Michelle Wu. She is the only ideologue who has served as Boston’s mayor, and it shows. All the others since Kevin White were pragmatists. …
“I would not call any Boston mayor except Michelle Wu a progressive as the term is understood today. While perhaps Menino, and likely Walsh, would say they are, it would more be as a way to position themselves than a commitment to an ideology. Neither was an ideologue.”
Brighton Reader has more fascinating thoughts about Boston’s modern string of mayors. I hope to share some of those observations in coming posts.
Update — From a Hub Blog reader: “I saw Ray Flynn on TV last week interviewed about the Pope – he looked and sounded great.
“Ray Flynn did not govern as a Progressive. He was a type that has become nearly extinct in Boston politics and entirely extinct in national Democratic politics – a moderate, with strong liberal approaches on some issues and traditional culture on others. I do not know the man but I think his Catholic faith was central to how he worked with people throughout all of Boston. He believed in human dignity and acted upon it.
“Agree with Brighton Reader that neither Flynn, nor Menino nor Walsh, were Progressives. They were much more like each other than Mayor Wu. However, the work of Flynn, Menino and Walsh making Boston a more inclusive and attractive place to live did pave the way for the current era of Progressivism – because young affluent educated professionals attracted to government in this part of the country tend overwhelmingly to be Progressive. ”
Here’s yet another example of the Trump 10/90 Rule at work, i.e., when Trump may hold a view that has a 10 percent kernel of truth to it, but then he goes 90 percent overboard. In this latest case, it’s cult follower Pete Hegseth’s recent purge of books at the Naval Academy library, one of which was a book written by a friend of Globe columnist Jeff Jacoby, who says the views of Phil Perlmutter were anything but DEI. … Past examples of the 10/90 rule here and here.
Update –5.16.25 — At Liberal Patriot, Ruy Teixeira grades Dems’ inability to acknowledge that Trump and MAGA types might actually be partly right on some issues — and how that inability is really hurting Dems.
The NYT lists what other nations, mostly European countries, are doing to recruit top American scientists to their shores amid the Trump administration’s cuts in U.S. research funding. … You can bet much of their recruiting efforts will be, and already are, aimed at Boston-area researchers. …“This is a once-in-a-century brain gain opportunity,” one Australian institute has gleefully pronounced. And they can thank DOGE for the brain-gain windfall. …The Herald had something on this subject last week. And Gov. Healey was warning about the competitive threat back in March, as the Globe reported.
It’s rather simple: when both the state and national GDPs contract in the same quarter and there’s open talk of recession, sooner or later state tax revenues are likely to take a hit. That partially explains why Gov. Maura Healey has announced a hiring freeze within state government. … It should also be noted that the Mass. GOP is making hay of all the recent negative economic news.
This poignant post about the Peace Corp funding cuts is getting passed around a lot. I got it from a former Peace Corps volunteer, who notes the ludicrousness of DOGE’s claim that it’s creating ‘efficiencies’ at an agency built entirely around volunteerism. … Here’s some other reactions to the post.
The Celts are going to have to rebuild again after only one championship season? Unfortunately, yes, probably, in the wake of Jayson Tatum’s devastating Achille’s heal injury. The Globe’s Gary Washburn explains why and how a Celts ‘reboot’ will probably unfold this off-season … Even before Gary’s excellent article came out, a Hub Blog reader wrote in:
“Given the (apparent) upcoming sale of the team and the ludicrous luxury taxes facing the Celtics, it’s easy to see them tearing it down next year and waving a fond farewell to Kristaps, Jhru and Al. If the 80s Celtics were operating under today’s NBA tax regime, they would’ve done likewise when McHale’s and Walton’s feet, and Larry’s back, went out… prepare for the Baylor Scheierman years.”
I’m not sure about the Baylor Scheierman years. But this current Celts era sadly seems over. What an awful turn of events.
The Celts’ season is probably done after last night’s loss to the Knicks. But next year’s season could be done too if the injury to Jayson Tatum is as severe as feared, i.e. an Achilles’ tear … The Globe’s Gary Washburn has more on the potential long-term repercussions of Jayson’s injury. … This could scramble the front office’s post-season roster/payroll moves. Maybe Porzingis isn’t a no-return? Who knows.
Update — From a reader: “Well this is what happens when you can’t watch the game but only the boxscore on espn… hoping for Tatum recovery. As Celtic post seasons go this is the most deeply frustrating in 42 years… “
Update II – Even before Jayson’s fall last night, the Knicks were on a roll and the Celts weren’t. Here’s what the same reader above wrote just prior to Jason’s injury: “I don’t think the Celtics have a chance in hell keeping on doing what they are doing: 7 points from Porzingis … 5 points from Al … 4 points from Holiday. Never mind 42 points from Tatum – part of the problem. Also offensive rebounds (by Knicks), apparent Paul Silas isn’t walking through that door… Sad!”
Universal Hub’s Adam Gaffin has an amazing post that captures an important part of Boston’s history, mostly a forgotten history, by telling the story behind one black-and-white photo taken in old Dudley Square in 1968. The photo appears to show one thing, then transforms into another as Adam describes how a Black student protest over a school dress code led to rioting that spread from Egleston and Grove Hall and into Dudley Square, all of it foreshadowing the school busing crisis in Boston six years later. … An accompanying photo of Louise Day Hicks, a Boston School Committee member at the time and a staunch opponent of school desegregation, is eerie. She’s just standing there, far off, all alone, monitoring events. … Definitely check out the post. It’s a piece of city history that deserves to be remembered.