Sentinel & Enterprise

Today’s Dems more openly criticizin­g Baker

- By Matt Murphy

For years, with both Democrats and Republican­s in the corner office, the leadership of the Legislatur­e has basically been able to do what it wants.

Speakers and Senate presidents — always Democrats — have controlled enough votes to set the agenda, override vetoes and ignore or compromise with the governor as they see fit. The difference between then and now? They didn’t always talk about it.

Increasing­ly, however, House and Senate lawmakers are not only frustrated with Gov. Charlie Baker over the things they can’t control, but they’re willing to say it publicly. Lawmakers have been clashing with Baker and his administra­tion on everything from the distributi­on of vaccines to climate legislatio­n and the return to inperson learning for thousands of young students (though Baker has largely gotten his way on schools).

This week there was more tension over the administra­tion’s urgent request made in February to quickly authorize $400 million in borrowing for the constructi­on of a new Holyoke Soldiers’ Home, and the administra­tion’s plans for billions in discretion­ary federal relief funding from the “American Rescue Plan.”

“I don’t want to feel like the red-headed stepchild as a member of the Legislatur­e and being left out of this, and I’m sure my colleagues don’t want to feel (that way) about it. And I don’t think we’re going to anymore, hopefully,” said Rep. John Barrett, a former mayor who has been in the executive’s shoes.

Barrett’s commentary was directed at Administra­tion and Finance Secretary Michael Heffernan at an oversight hearing where legislator­s were demanding to play more of a role in how the federal relief funding gets spent.

Heffernan wouldn’t say, exactly, whether Baker plans to file a budget bill proposing how to spend the relief money, but that’s one way the governor could give back a bit of agency to the Legislatur­e.

Speaker Ronald Mariano and Senate President Karen Spilka also came out jointly to say that they would insist municipal employees, including teachers, can take advantage of a proposed COVID19 paid leave program that is still under negotiatio­n.

The governor supports the creation of the new leave program, but Baker returned the bill last week with several amendments, including one supported by the Massachuse­tts Municipal Associatio­n to eliminate a mandate on cities and towns to offer their workers up to a week of paid-time off to recover from COVID-19, care for a family member or to get vaccinated.

The program, as recommende­d by Baker, would cover most other employers and state government, but the administra­tion said municipal workforces tend to be “highly unionized” with strong leave benefits already in place.

Speaking of taking time during work hours to get vaccinated, Gov. Baker rolled up his right sleeve on Tuesday and got a dose of Pfizer at the Hynes Convention Center.

“I’m happy to report I feel good,” the 64-year-old said the next day from Revere, where he was touring a different vaccinatio­n clinic.

Massachuse­tts passed a milestone this week with more than 1.5 million people fully vaccinated with either two doses of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine, or one dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

By the end of the week, the total was actually up above 1.6 million.

But the spread of new variants continues to compete with the vaccine for control of the pandemic’s trajectory, and the number of communitie­s in the high-risk category climbed by 22 this week to 77.

With so many people vaccinated and the general, healthy public a little over a week away from becoming eligible, Baker got asked about the concept of vaccine passports — a digital tool that New York launched and other states are considerin­g to make business reopenings easier.

Madison Square Garden is among the early adopters, but Baker said, “No, no, no,” about plans for something similar in Massachuse­tts.

It wasn’t a no, never. But more of a no, not now.

“I want to vaccinate people. Let’s get people vaccinated,” Baker said. “I think having a conversati­on about creating a barrier before people have even had an opportunit­y to be eligible to be vaccinated, let’s focus on getting people vaccinated.”

More than half of the 1.5 million residents who preregiste­red for a vaccine have been contacted already with a chance to book an appointmen­t, but for the 700,000 people still waiting more locations are being added to the system.

Baker said that two regional collaborat­ives with vaccine sites in Northampto­n, Amherst and Marshfield were being added this week to the preregistr­ation system that already connects people with seven mass vaccinatio­n sites, and more regional sites would be added this month.

With all the focus on the pandemic and figuring how to get shots in people’s arms, it’s easy to forget sometimes that next year is a gubernator­ial election year and under different circumstan­ces Baker might be getting asked daily about his plans.

Harvard professor and political theorist Danielle Allen seems to be inching closer to a run as she announced a beefed up staff with Liberty Square Group and media consultant Josh Wolf among those climbing on board. Wolf ran Steve Grossman’s 2014 campaign for governor.

Meanwhile, declared Democratic candidate Ben Downing overcame some technical glitches to roll out his climate agenda, which includes Massachuse­tts becoming a 100% clean energy state by 2040, or 10 years earlier than Baker and the Legislatur­e set the goal to achieve netzero carbon emissions.

The jockeying comes as the Democratic Governors Associatio­n took an interest this week in Baker’s underwhelm­ing fundraisin­g in March, and really for the whole first quarter, suggesting the incumbent with enduring but diminished popularity may be vulnerable.

Baker raised just $25,456 in March and $102,687 over the first three months of the year, but Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito was more active on the fundraisin­g front and most people assume that if he does decide to run Baker will be able to crank up the money operation quickly.

“The governor and lieutenant governor are focused on managing the pandemic response, not electoral politics,” Baker’s campaign committee spokesman Jim Conroy said.

Next week attention will also turn to managing the state’s finances when the House is expected to release its version of the fiscal 2022 budget.

This week’s continuati­on of strong tax collection­s in March gave budget writers more reasons to be optimistic about the future.

One additional expense the Legislatur­e will have to plan for, however, is added expenses in the MassHealth program. Over the past year, the MassHealth caseload has increased to more than 2 million individual­s, and President Biden’s decision to extend the COVID-19 emergency through 2021 means the state can’t comb its rolls and kick out people who might no longer be eligible.

Secretary Marylou Sudders told the Ways and Means Committees this week that MassHealth’s budget — already the largest slice of the overall pie — might end up being $1.4 billion higher than in the governor’s budget.

The Massachuse­tts Taxpayers Foundation, however, predicted the increased expenses will be more than offset by the enhanced reimbursem­ents the feds are making for Medicaid.

There will undoubtedl­y be more budgetary surprises in the months to come as the coronaviru­s and economy continue down their unpredicta­ble paths, but acting Boston Mayor Kim Janey caught very few people, if anyone, off guard this week when she announced that she would, in fact, seek the job on a more permanent basis.

Janey entering the mayoral contest boosts the field to six serious contenders for City Hall, and the Roxbury resident used perhaps her biggest advantage in the race — the fact that people call her mayor right now — to get out into the city and sell an agenda that included using federal stimulus funding to make buses free in Boston.

Many state and local officials have warned about using relief funding for services that won’t be affordable once the federal aid dries up, but Janey said she was eyeing a pilot to start.

“I understand that there are challenges which is why I hope — at the state level as well as the city level — I am looking at that federal money and I hope our state partners are as well,” she said.

Next week attention will also turn to managing the state’s finances when the House is expected to release its version of the fiscal 2022 budget. This week’s continuati­on of strong tax collection­s in March gave budget writers more reasons to be optimistic about the future.

STORY OF THE WEEK: Baker takes one in the arm, a few on the chin.

 ?? MATT STONE / BOSTON HERALD ?? Gov. Charlie Baker waits in the observatio­n area after receiving his COVID-19 vaccine at the Hynes Convention Center in Boston on Tuesday.
MATT STONE / BOSTON HERALD Gov. Charlie Baker waits in the observatio­n area after receiving his COVID-19 vaccine at the Hynes Convention Center in Boston on Tuesday.
 ?? NANCY LANE / BOSTON HERALD ?? Acting Boston Mayor Kim Janey stops for breakfast at Twin Donuts on Thursday in Quincy.
NANCY LANE / BOSTON HERALD Acting Boston Mayor Kim Janey stops for breakfast at Twin Donuts on Thursday in Quincy.

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