Call & Times

Massachuse­tts gov says choose collaborat­ion over partisansh­ip

- By STEVE LeBLANC

BOSTON — The 191st session of the Massachuse­tts Legislatur­e and the 116th U.S. Congress were both sworn in this week and Gov. Charlie Baker was quick to draw a sharp distinctio­n between the way politics is played in Boston and Washington.

Baker never mentioned President Donald Trump or Democrats in Congress – or Republican­s either – during his second inaugural address, but lamented what he called the “bickering and name calling” that he said dominates much of today’s public debate.

Baker, a Republican who refused to vote for Trump, said Massachuse­tts has chosen a different path: Work together and good things can happen.

“In this era of snapchats, tweets, Facebook and Instagram posts, putdowns and smackdowns, I’d ask you all to remember that good public policy is about perseveran­ce and collaborat­ion,” he said Thursday.

Later in the half-hour speech, he returned to the theme, arguing that many of the state’s signature achievemen­ts in recent decades were collaborat­ive efforts.

He said the story of Massachuse­tts achieving the highest-in-the-nation rate of health care coverage was written “across two decades, 10 legislativ­e sessions, five governors and four presidents.”

He said by putting the public interest ahead of partisan politics, lawmakers have helped make Massachuse­tts a better place to live.

“These days, too much of what pretends to be debate is just rhetoric or character assassinat­ion. And every time someone joins that chorus they steal time, attention and focus away from finding common ground, creating solutions and doing the work that matters,” he said, adding, “let others engage in cheap shots and low blows. Let’s make our brand of politics positive and optimistic, instead of cruel and dark.”

Baker’s appeal to bipartisan­ship is driven by a number of factors, not the least of which is political necessity.

Baker is a Republican in a state where Democrats hold overwhelmi­ng majorities in both the House and Senate, every seat in the state’s Congressio­nal delegation and every other statewide office.

In other words, he needs the support of Democratic leaders in both chambers to get anything done.

The bipartisan plea also fits nicely into Baker’s technocrat­ic approach to government, which is focused in part on literally making the trains – subway and commuter rail – run on time along with a host of other nuts and bolts priorities for his second, four-year term.

The tone contrasts sharply with Washington, where Democrats have taken back control of the House in part by pledging a heightened scrutiny of the Trump administra­tion.

Baker’s speech won applause by one of the top two Democrats in the Legislatur­e – House Speaker Robert DeLeo.

“I think that he hit upon most of the items that needed to be hit upon,” DeLeo said.

Baker’s comments also came a day after Democratic U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren announced she was launching a committee to explore a run for president in 2020.

After being sworn in on Thursday to a second Senate term, Warren flew out to Iowa for a weekend’s worth of organizing events in the state with the nation’s first presidenti­al caucuses.

Warren is known in part as being a chief rival of Trump, with the two repeatedly trading barbs on Twitter.

Although Warren has pointed to a few bipartisan achievemen­ts – including a law she pushed to increase access to hearing aids by eliminatin­g unnecessar­y regulation­s and lowering prices – she’ll be hard-pressed to avoid the more bare-knuckled aspects of politics that Baker lamented in his speech.

Warren also has a dimmer view of Washington than Baker has of Beacon Hill.

“I believe that Washington is corrupt,” she told reporters this week after attending the swearing-in of Massachuse­tts lawmakers. “I see it firsthand.”

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