Snark-Infested Waters by Mike Bailey

Snark-Infested Waters by Mike Bailey

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The Week In Politics – August 24, 2012

Friday, August 24th, 2012

Adam G. Chaprales, Republican candidate for US Representative of the Ninth Congressional District, this week picked up a new endorsement from Jeffrey D. Perry, current Barnstable County special sheriff and former state representative and candidate for Congress.

In addition to praising Mr. Chaprales’ positions on the economy and various traditional conservative social issues, Mr. Perry highlighted the fact the candidate is a true local and not a fake local (my term, not his) like Congressman William R. Keating and Christopher Sheldon. Rep. Keating relocated from Quincy to Monument Beach so he could run for the Ninth District (Quincy is in the soon-to-be-eliminated 10th District and will become part of the revised Eighth), and Mr. Sheldon moved to Plymouth in November.

“As you know, there has been a disturbing trend of politicians relocating their residence for the sole purpose of running for office,” Mr. Perry wrote in his endorsement. “Unlike Adam’s primary opponent and the sitting Congressman, Adam did not have to move into the District to run for this office.”

I’m not a fan of carpetbaggers, but residency is sort of a tricky issue when your territory consists of dozens of towns. Mr. Chaprales’ opponents could argue he’s not fit to serve the district because he’s a lifelong Sandwich resident and has never lived in Middleborough or Nantucket or New Bedford.

For good or ill, our laws allow quite a bit of flexibility when it comes to candidates meeting residency requirements, so my advice is to worry less about who lived where and for how long and more about important issues.

***

Senate President Therese M. Murray (D – Plymouth) has responded to Republican challenger Thomas F. Keyes’ challenge to a series of eight hour-long debates.

An official statement from the Murray campaign stated that they are holding dates for two debates, one to be held on the Cape and the other in Plymouth, but otherwise will not commit to anything until after the primary election is done and out of the way.

There’s been no response from the Keyes campaign so far, and I’m hoping he doesn’t try to spin Sen. Murray’s answer of “We’ll get back to you on that” as an attempt to “dodge” debates. It’s only a refusal when someone actually says “no.”

***

Bob King and Tobin Wirt, proprietors of Cafe Chew on Merchant’s Road in Sandwich, tonight welcome R. Patrick Ellis, Democratic candidate for State Representative of the Fifth Barnstable District.

The fundraiser for Mr. Ellis runs from 5:30 PM to 7:30 PM, and the candidate is scheduled to speak at 6:30 PM. The requested donation for the event is $75 per person and made be made at the door.

***

Final reminder: State Representative Randy Hunt’s (R – Sandwich) Texas BBQ and trap shoot fundraiser is tomorrow from 4 to 8 PM at the Monument Beach Sportsman’s Club in Bourne. It’s $35 per person for admission and dinner, plus $10 to shoot ($5 if you bring your own shells). Go to www.electrandyhunt.com/events.html for details on this and other campaign events.

Political news and announcements may be e-mailed to Michael Bailey, senior political reporter, at bailey@capenews.net.

The Importometer Reading For August 3, 2012

Friday, August 3rd, 2012

10 ) Chick-fil-A experiences a boom sales day thanks to national “Support Organizations That Actively Discriminate Against Homosexuals And Try To ‘Cure’ Them Of Their Sexual Orientation Day.” Oh, sorry, I mean, “Chick-fil-A Appreciation Day.”

9 ) Rick Gorka, aide to Mitt Romney, tells reporters accompanying the candidate on his European tour to “kiss my ass” after they complain about a lack of access. Maybe Romney isn’t the one whose diplomacy skills need brushing up.

8 ) Nearly all of Cape Cod will get a chance to vote on whether to support a national effort to overturn Citizens United. Because voters are people, my friends.

7 ) New Yorker writer Jonah Lehrer resigns in disgrace after he is caught making up quotes by Bob Dylan. I can understand why he thought he could fudge that information. “Hoomahheennnnggg hoomazzooooom!” totally sounds like something Dylan would say.

6 ) The war of words continues between state rep candidate Brian Mannal and former employer Marie Parente. The most recent press release from Mannal referred to himself as rubber while Parente was made of glue, while Parente’s latest statement acknowledged that she knew what Mannal was, but wondered what she was.

5 ) Peter Jackson decided to turn the two-movie adaptation of The Hobbit into a trilogy. Seems like an awful long series for such a short character. PS: Rankin-Bass told the whole story in one 90-minute TV special. Just sayin’.

4 ) Rapper Snoop Dogg reinvents himself as “Snoop Lion” following a visit to Jamaica, and says he plans to start making music “my kids and grandparents can listen to.” I suspect this rebirth will fade as soon as the massive high does.

3 ) Rumors swirl that Robert Pattinson was about to propose to unfaithful girlfriend Kristen Stewart. The entertainment media had to take her at her word that she was upset, since no one could tell by looking at her.

2 ) PETA buys a brick for Fenway Park and has it engraved with a message that, secretly, spells out “Lobster Liberation.” Still the least insane thing the group has ever done.

1 ) “Octomom” Nadya Suleman is begging fans to donate $150,000 so she can buy a new house. In other words, she needs both her fans to cough up $75,000.

The Week In Politics – August 3, 2012

Friday, August 3rd, 2012

First of all and most importantly, I must issue a correction to last week’s column. I said that Brian R. Mannal, who is challenging State Representatives Demetrius J. Atsalis (D – Barnstable) for the Democratic nomination, had requested — and was denied — an endorsement by his former boss, former state representative Marie J. Parente.

That was a goof on my part, plain and simple. Ms. Parente called me last week and spoke at some length about her shared history with Mr. Mannal, and I misunderstood her account of how her endorsement for Rep. Atsalis came about, so I offer an apology and a mea culpa on that aspect of the story.

That part was all me, but other parts? Not so much.

The match that lit this particular fuse was Ms. Parente’s endorsement last month of Rep. Atsalis. Mr. Mannal responded by pointing out various dark spots on Ms. Parente’s professional record — allegations of pension-fudging and ties to the probation department scandal — as if to say, “Well, she’s a bad person so her endorsement is worthless.”

Ms. Parente took offense at these accusations, and in a letter to the Enterprise that ran last week she made some accusations of her own against Mr. Mannal, detailing a four-month tenure in her office allegedly marked by excessive absences based on untruths — the classic, “Yeah, well, you’re not so great yourself” defense.

Mr. Mannal this week issued a brief response to the response, in which he flatly denies that he was fired by Ms. Parente or resigned under threat of termination, and reiterates that he never solicited an endorsement from Ms. Parente. “I choose not to dignify the remainder of Marie Parente’s statements with a lengthy response,” he wrote.

Both Ms. Parente and Mr. Mannal have indicated that they just want to move on from this issue, much of which happened behind closed doors and is within the realm of “he said/she said.” Good call. This sort of public spitting contest is doing only one person any good: Rep. Atsalis, who has wisely remained quiet throughout this brouhaha.

And, if I might be so bold: maybe Ms. Parente and Mr. Mannal should talk to each other, directly and privately, rather than bicker via press releases and letters to the editor. It sounds like there is a lot of lingering hostility and unresolved conflict between them that needs to be addressed, if not laid to rest.

***

In other Second Barnstable District news, which will, hopefully, not generate even more unnecessary drama, Congressman William R. Keating (D) has formally endorsed Rep. Atsalis for re-election. In a one-page statement issued last week, Rep. Keating praised Rep. Atsalis’s dedication to his constituents and work in helping the small business community.

Rep. Atsalis also received endorsements from legislative colleagues State Representatives Timothy R. Madden (D – Nantucket) and Sarah K. Peake (D – Provincetown).

Now, over on Mr. Mannal’s side, this Sunday is (and this is his name, not mine) “Mannal-Palooza” in Osterville. The Fred Clayton Band, Alicia Mathewson, and Mr. Mannal himself will be among the musical acts performing at the Veterans Hall (a.k.a. The Fox Hole) at 753 Main Street from 6 PM to 10 PM. The event is a campaign fundraiser for the candidate.

Go to Mr. Mannal’s website (linked above) for more information.

***

Let’s spread the controversial love elsewhere, shall we?

It was brought to my attention that Stephen M. Palmer, who is challenging Senate President Therese M. Murray (D – Plymouth) for the Democratic nomination, once dropped out of a political race amidst allegations of signature fraud on his nomination papers.

According to a Boston Globe article dated July 23, 1989, Mr. Palmer, at the time a South Boston resident, withdrew his candidacy for an at-large seat on the Boston City Council after city officials accused him of forging voter signatures on his papers – which is, legally speaking, perjury.

A key paragraph in the story reads, “Palmer, who did not deny that some signatures may have been forged, said yesterday: ‘I’m going to pull out, and I hope it doesn’t go to a grand jury. It just doesn’t look good. I’m taking full blame. I don’t want to see it go to court’.”

To reiterate: Mr. Palmer did not explicitly deny committing fraud and was clearly worried he’d be prosecuted – which he was not, nor was he ever charged with anything. Added note: I can find no similar allegations raised in connection with Mr. Palmer’s unsuccessful attempt to unseat former Senate President William M. Bulger in 1990.

While this casts some doubt on the candidate’s integrity, I don’t think Sen. Murray’s camp has anything to worry about. As I’ve noted here previously, the man is running a campaign so under-the-radar it’s practically subterranean. Sen. Murray is better off saving her energy for Republican Thomas F. Keyes, who will undoubtedly pose a much stiffer challenge.

***

Finally, US Senator Scott P. Brown (R) will be on the Cape next week to attend a Cape Cod Chamber of Commerce luncheon in Hyannis. That event, at the Hyannis Golf Course, is scheduled to being at 11:30 AM on Wednesday, August 8.

Admission is $28 per person, and you can make reservations by registering via the chamber’s website at www.capecodchamber.org, by calling 508-362-3225 extension 532, or sending an e-mail to priscilla@capecodchamber.org.

Political news and announcements may be e-mailed to Michael Bailey, senior political reporter, at bailey@capenews.net.

The Week In Politics – July 27, 2012

Friday, July 27th, 2012

Well! Things just took an interesting turn in the race between State Representative Demetrius J. Atsalis (D – Barnstable) and his primary opponent Brian R. Mannal – courtesy of Mr. Mannal’s former boss, former state representative Marie Parente.

Last week I mentioned that Ms. Parente formally endorsed Rep. Atsalis, and Mr. Mannal tried to take out that endorsement out at the knees by pointing out some issues that arose following her departure from office – trying to goose her pension by factoring in standard perks for legislators, ties to the probation department scandal, etc.

For your reference, here is that release: Mannal Press Release Re Parente Endorses Atsalis and Brown.

On Tuesday Ms. Parente called me to rebut Mr. Mannal’s rebuttal, and summed it all up by calling his accusations an “unforgivable lie” and portrayed his condemnation of her endorsement as “the act of a bitter, disgruntled ex-employee.”

According to Ms. Parente, Mr. Mannal worked for her for all of four months, took a great deal of time off, and was terminated when she caught him in a lie about why he took some time off (a dentist’s visit that allegedly was not as lengthy as Mr. Mannal claimed). She also said that prior to her endorsement of Rep. Atsalis, Mr. Mannal contacted her repeatedly to request her endorsement, which she refused to give due to his work history issues.

Here, complete and unedited and uncorrected, is Ms. Parente’s response, a letter to the editor submitted to the Enterprise on Wednesday:

The recent remarks by candidate Attorney Brian Mannal about my public service and values are alarming indeed. However, they can serve as insight to his character.  I write to the voters of the 2nd Barnstable district not only to set the record straight but to inform them of the untruths contained in Mannal’s public statements  that are nothing more than a, “say anything about anybody to get elected.”

When I composed my endorsement of Rep. Demetrius Atsalis (D) of Barnstable, I, intentionally,  did not include any negative remarks about his opponent Atty. Brian Mannal.

Perhaps it is better this way. Now, the voters of the 2nd Barnstable District will realize, in my opinion, they have a professional storyteller seeking their votes.

Brian Mannal was employed in my state house office from February 7th, 2000 to June 27, 2000, a total of four months and 20 days including week-ends and his excessive absences from work.  I fired him mid-June 2000 for the following reasons.

The first day of his state house employment he asked for approximately three weeks off to attend a friend’s wedding in India.  The second request for time off was made a few weeks later when Brian came into my office crying real tears, literally, and again asked for a week or two week leave to assist a friend who had been assaulted in Ohio. The third request for leave was bizarre.  A few weeks after returning from Ohio,  Brian came in the office on a Friday morning and complained about a painful tooth ache. Further, he informed my chief of staff he had scheduled an appointment with a Beacon Hill dentist and would be gone about an hour or so.  As the day progressed, it became obvious  Brian Mannal was not going to return to work.

My chief of staff, concerned about his “condition.”  called the dentist She was told by the dentist that Brian Mannal canceled the appointment and told the dentist he had to meet his lady friend at Logan airport and they were going to spend the day on the Cape.

This is when I decided to test Mannal’s inner value system.  Already obvious was his  constant need to roam the hallways of the State House compounded by his penchant for  taking time off from his tax-payer funded job.

On the Monday morning following Mannal’s cancelled dental appointment, I invited him into my office and asked him to describe his Friday dental visit.

He described the dental procedure as a tortuous one. According to Brian the tooth extraction involved pulling and twisting the target tooth and cause severe injury to his gums. He described his bloody clothes as being in need of change ergo he needed to return to the Cape whereupon he was so ill from the painful extraction he decided to recover at home. I expressed my disappointment that Brian concocted such a deceptive story  I  told him his fallacious story cast doubt on all his previous requests for his absences from the work place. An untruth is wrong for many reasons, but mostly because one can never trust the perpetrator again. I asked him for his resignation.

I heard through the grapevine  Mannal gained employment in Washington and obtained a job using my name for reference. Chutzpah indeed.

I question his prowess as an attorney. He slandered my name without  researching  the truth of his statements. Most important, he never called me for a statement.

I have never been charged or spoken with by any official source about recent probation issues. A disgruntled constituent who had contacted me six times for herself and members of her family, was told that I could not help her with her seventh request for political intervention. I hesitate to discuss this issue in minute detail as the case is ongoing for the participants involved.

As for the “pension” increase accusation made by Mannal, my request for a pension adjustment was based on the request made by UMass President William Bulger who was allowed to  include the value of a university campus home that he never lived in as a non-salary benefit to enhance his $300,000 salary. . It was granted and later confirmed by the Supreme Court as falling within the statute i.e. “salary includes compensation in any form.”  The statute was changed shortly after my request. I know of no employee who would not want the same benefits fellow employees receive.

I am sorry that the voters of the 2nd Barnstable District have to endure negative talk during this election season, However, Attorney Brain Mannal chose to bring  his despicable campaign methods to their doorsteps. I strongly advise Atty. Mannal to review the state’s slander laws and at the same time revisit his sporadic employment record at the Massachusetts State House where he is seen  as an example of insincerety and undependability.  He owes all of us a public apology.

I anticipate a response from Mr. Mannal rather quickly. That too will be posted here in its entirety.

***

This week’s column offers some friendly advice on how to deal with LaRouchies.

LaRouchies, for the unfamiliar, are followers — disciples, if you will — of Lyndon LaRouche, an eight-time failed candidate for president who served six years of a 15-year prison sentence for credit card fraud, and an all-around nutjob (in my humble opinion).

They have been seen in significant numbers across the Cape lately and appear more active than in past election cycles. LaRouchies are easily recognized as they like to set up small tables in public spaces and display a poster-sized photo of President Barack Obama sporting a Hitler mustache. They’re very proud of their complete lack of historical perspective and their surplus of hyperbole.

They are also notoriously shy around media-types and do not like to be interviewed or photographed.

Some of the more outrageous things LaRouche and his minions are responsible for include – and believe me, I had a HUGE list to choose from:

  • The dissemination of fraudulent and often racist and homophobic materials to discredit critics;
  • Frequent “discoveries” of alleged assassination plots against him, often by Manchurian Candidate-style brainwashed assassins;
  • Telling supporters to make any and all personal financial resources available to the movement, and take out bank loans for LaRouche if so requested;
  • During his 1976 presidential campaign predicting the extinction of the human race by 1995;
  • Accusing Ronald Reagan’s campaign staff of conspiring with Iran to delay the release of 52 hostages in order to leverage Reagan’s 1980 election win;
  • Declaring AIDS an invention of the Soviet Union, having far greater communicability that it actually did, equating HIV-positive individuals to “a person with a machine gun running around”, and in his 1988 campaign vowing to quarantine HIV-positive citizens as a public health measure;
  • Calling the attacks of September 11 an “inside job.”

The man also has an inexplicable hatred/fear of Great Britain, which he adamantly believes the U.S. is still beholden to financially and politically.

Recommended techniques for dealing with LaRouchies: giving them a dollar and, when they look at you funny, saying, “Oh, I thought this was some sort of weird performance art”; shaking your head in pity and tsk-ing audibly as you pass; declaring, “Hey, why is Obama made up to look like Charlie Chaplin?”; and having a normal conversation with them while affecting a pronounced British accent.

This last one is most effective if you end by saying “I have confirmation on the targets. The game is afoot – repeat, the game is afoot. Tally-ho!” into your phone as you walk away.

The best approach, however, is to ignore them completely. They thrive on attention just as a misbehaving 5-year-old would, so don’t play into their game. Besides, it’s only a phase. They’ll grow out of it.

Political news and announcements may be e-mailed to Michael Bailey, senior political reporter, at bailey@capenews.net.

The Week In Politics – July 13, 2012

Friday, July 13th, 2012

Two Democratic candidates for the Ninth Congressional District faced off for the first time last week, and a surprising number of very local issues popped up during the discussion.

The de facto incumbent, Congressman William R. Keating (D) faced off against C. Samuel Sutter, Bristol County district attorney, on a live NECN debate with Jim Braude serving as moderator. Over the course of about 22 minutes, the two candidates traded ideas on major issues and some in-our-own-backyard concerns.

First, I’ll recap the predictable Democratic Party-approved lip-service: cut military spending! Troops home now! Tax the rich! Create jobs! Reach across the aisle and hug a Republican!

Now, onto the good stuff. Cape Wind came up early on. Mr. Sutter offered the “right idea, wrong location” sound bite and with a metaphorical “Whatcha gonna do?” shrug said the thing was a done deal, so time to suck it up, cupcake. Rep. Keating spun his previous opposition to the project as “concern” over its chosen site, but said the prospect of jobs for Cape Cod and a step toward breaking the nation’s dependence on foreign oil (another Democratic oldie but goodie) outweighed the project’s siting-related drawbacks.

Controversial Energy Facility Chat Number Two was about Pilgrim Nuclear in Plymouth. Mr. Sutter claimed Rep. Keating was dead silent on the issue of the plant’s re-licensing until he criticized said silence earlier this year, but Rep. Keating said he visited Pilgrim during his first month in office, and co-sponsored H.R. 1242, The Nuclear Power Plant Safety Act.

Rep. Keating boasted about his job creation successes and specifically highlighted $540,000 in federal funding he secured for Falmouth Hospital and money that trickled down to the Falmouth Fire Rescue Department, all of which saved jobs. Mr. Sutter berated the Congressman for coming in “at the last minute” and taking credit for his “small roll” in securing that money, which had been “in the works” for years.

I know it’s traditional for pundits to name a winner and a loser in debates, but neither man really shined or tanked. It was a rather tepid discussion with a few jabs but no knockout punches.

Go to www.necn.com to view the full debate video.

***

We should soon know who will be Barnstable’s new representative for the Barnstable County Assembly of Delegates — and, in all likelihood, that town’s candidate-to-beat for the November election.

Last week I reported that Terry Duenas, executive director of the Cape Cod Community Media Center, and Patrick Princi, chairman of the Barnstable Democratic Town Committee, had filed letters of interest with the Barnstable Town Council, which will choose one of the two men to replace former delegate Thomas K. Lynch.

J. Gregory Milne, former town councilor and two-time candidate for the Barnstable County Board of County Commissioners (2002 and 2008), also submitted a letter of interest just before the July 3 deadline.

On a related note, Ronald R. Beaty Jr. of West Barnstable has withdrawn his candidacy for the assembly and is now running for…nothing. He previously planned to run for the Barnstable County Board of County Commissioners, then entertained the notion of running for both the board of commissioners and the assembly, then dropped his county commissioner run.

***

State Representative Randy Hunt (R – Sandwich) is hosting a golf day campaign fundraiser in Sandwich. The event is scheduled for Monday, September 17 with a 1 PM shotgun start, and will be held at the Ridge Club in Sandwich. A reception follows at 5 PM.

Further details are pending, just to keep you all in suspense. Go to www.electrandyhunt.com for additional info as it becomes available.

Political news and announcements may be e-mailed to Michael Bailey, senior political reporter, at bailey@capenews.net.

The Week In Politics For June 22, 2012

Friday, June 22nd, 2012

Have you seen this candidate?

I’d attach a picture of Stephen M. Palmer of Plymouth to this column, but I can’t find one. Nor can I find out anything about this guy, who is allegedly running against Senate President Therese M. Murray (D – Plymouth) in the Democratic primary.

I say “allegedly” because so far all anyone knows about the guy is his name. Town clerks in Bourne, Falmouth, and Sandwich, which fall within the Plymouth and Barnstable District, reported receiving nomination papers from the fellow, and he’s been mentioned in a few other media outlets as a candidate, but he has no Internet fingerprint and has yet to pop up on the Massachusetts Office of Campaign and Political Finance database.

It’s looking like Mr. Palmer might belong to that rare species of candidate, the guy who goes through all the steps of getting on the ballot but never actually running.

***

On a similar note, it looks like Peter A. White of Mashpee is ending his campaign for Congress. He’ll instead focus his energy on supporting Green-Rainbow Party candidate Dr. Jill E. Stein.

In addition to citing family obligations, Mr. White — as he did when he dropped out of the 2010 Congressional race — implied the fault for his withdrawal lay with voters who did not rally to his side. “People are being herded into the Wall Street Empire’s two-party crap trap once again,” he said, “so what’s an activist for democratic social change to do?”

Let’s call a spade a spade here: Mr. White is your standard angry-at-the-system one-note candidate. He hates big business, he hates big oil, he hates the war, and he hates the current government system, and never have his press releases strayed from those specific bones of contention.

Not that any of these concerns are without merit, but when your every statement is a verbal fist-shake at your chosen pet peeves, why should any voter believe you’d dedicate any energy to issues outside such a limited area of focus? Or even be fit to handle the dry nuts-and-bolts responsibilities of the job?

Righteous indignation, now matter how justified, is not the most important qualification for elected office.

***

Readers might recall that some time ago, I offered a similar criticism of Ronald R. Beaty Jr., candidate for the Barnstable seat on the Barnstable County Assembly of Delegates.

Well, it appears he took that critique seriously and could be withdrawing from the race.

“I have been giving quite a bit of thought to your [comments] regarding the expected vacant Barnstable seat on the county assembly,” Mr. Beaty wrote to me in an e-mail. “The more I reflect upon it, the more you seem to be right on this particular matter…perhaps the time has finally come for me to let other Cape citizens discuss, debate, and fight over the current issues involving county government on Cape Cod.”

“Perhaps I should just completely remove myself from the equation all together,” he wrote. “I am sure that eventually other more qualified individuals will step forward to do what needs to be done.”

I maintain that it is always in the best interests of the voters to have a choice in candidates, and competition forces candidates to work a little harder to prove they have the best ideas. I also believe that if a given candidate is in a race to grind an ax and has no interest in addressing a broader range of issues, they’re not doing voters any favors. Running for any elected office should be about serving the public and not one’s own interests.

(I know, that’s cock-eyed optimism on my part, but a man can dream, can’t he?)

***

Andrew V. Putnam of Falmouth, candidate for the Barnstable County Assembly of Delegates, is holding his campaign kick-off event on Wednesday at J.R. Brody’s Roadside Tavern in East Falmouth. That runs from 5 to 7 PM and it’s an open-invitation shindig, so drop on in after work.

***

Finally, R. Patrick Ellis, Democratic candidate for State Representative of the Fifth Barnstable District, has launched his official campaign website. Go check it out at www.electpatrickellis.com.

Political news and announcements may be e-mailed to Michael Bailey, senior political reporter, at bailey@capenews.net.

The Week In Politics – June 15, 2012

Friday, June 15th, 2012

Hi there, everyone. I’m back from vacation and ready for action.

I’ll mark my return with something from the Shoe’s On the Other Foot File. I’ve reported here previously that Bristol County DA C. Samuel Sutter, who is challenging Congressman William R. Keating (D) in the Democratic primary for the Ninth Congressional District, was under the microscope for alleged misconduct by his office tied to a 2010 murder case.

Mr. Sutter’s office was earlier this month cleared of any wrongdoing in that case, but now Rep. Keating is under similar scrutiny. While still in office as the Norfolk County DA, Rep. Keating’s office allegedly failed to turn over documents to a defense attorney involved in a statutory rape case.

The case was later dismissed without those documents ever being turned over to the defense attorney, and last month the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled that the DA’s office displayed “egregious prosecutorial misconduct” for its actions.

Rep. Keating defended his former office, claiming that withholding those documents was in the best interests of the alleged victim and the office was under no legal obligation to hand the information over.

Meanwhile, Mr. Sutter’s office is still under investigation for a second alleged instance of misconduct tied to a 2011 murder case that ended in dismissal over a recanted testimony, which the office allegedly failed to tell a grand jury about.

Frankly, it’s tough to take either of these situations as a major issue. Yes, all our candidates should have sterling ethics and spotless records, but in this day and age it’s hard to find anyone in politics with a flawless background. Unless either of these reveals a serious ethical lapse on the direct part of the candidates, voters would be better off trying to learn where they stand on the issues.

***

However, don’t expect to be educated through a debate this week on WBSM-AM 1420, because Rep. Keating has refused to participate. Why? Because on-air personality Phil Paleologos was tapped as the moderator, and he’s a Republican. Mr. Sutter said he planned to show up anyway.

Rep. Keating is calling his decision a matter of political principle, but I’m calling it silly posturing. Personally, I’d be very interested in hearing a debate guided by a moderator who holds politically contrary positions as compared to the participating candidates.

***

On another Congressional note, Republican candidate Christopher Sheldon of Plymouth has secured his spot on the ballot. Mr. Sheldon announced on May 31 that he had submitted more than enough certified signatures to qualify for the race.

***

Someone who won’t be on any ballots is US Senate candidate Marisa DeFranco, who was planning to challenge Elizabeth Warren for the Democratic nomination. Ms. DeFranco failed to receive 15 percent of the delegates at Democrats’ June 2 state convention, and under the party’s rules she is not eligible for the ballot.

While DeFranco had no realistic chance of beating Ms. Warren, it would have been nice if voters had a choice in September. It’d also be nice if all the signatures she collected to get on the ballot actually mattered more than internal party processes.

***

Linell and Steven Grundman of East Sandwich will host tomorrow (Saturday, June 16) a campaign event for R. Patrick Ellis, Democratic challenger to State Representative Randy Hunt (R – Sandwich). The event is scheduled to run from 7 to 9:30 PM and will be held at 51 Wing Boulevard E in Sandwich.

Shoot an RSVP e-mail to grundmans@comcast.net. Campaign contributions will be accepted but are not requested.

***

Thomas F. Keyes, Republican candidate for State Senator of the Plymouth and Barnstable District, welcomes former state auditor candidate Mary Z. Connaughton to town on Monday. Ms. Connaughton is the special guest at a campaign reception for Mr. Keyes at the Nimrod in Falmouth, and that runs from 7 to 9 PM.

Admission is a donation to Mr. Keyes’ campaign, payable at the door or make arrangements in advance by calling 774-208-3480.

***

Finally, Andrew V. Putnam of Falmouth has filed his nomination papers for the Barnstable County Assembly of Delegates, making him the first 100-percent-official candidate for the county’s legislative body.

Mr. Putnam will have a campaign kick-off event next week, details TBA, but in the meantime, go groove to his new campaign website at http://andrewputnam.org.

Political news and announcements may be e-mailed to Michael Bailey, senior political reporter, at bailey@capenews.net.

The Week In Politics – June 1, 2012

Friday, June 1st, 2012

Welcome to me pre-vacation column. I’ll be out next week enjoying some well-deserved time off, so I’d appreciate it if everyone refrained from doing anything important until I get back.

State Representative Randy Hunt (R – Sandwich) has a few campaign events coming up. On Saturday, June 9 is a hoedown (no kidding, a hoedown!) at 305 Pine Street, West Barnstable, featuring Tex-Mex food (okay, now I’m interested), country music, and a horsemanship demo. This runs from 4 to 8 PM. To RSVP for this, shoot an e-mail to philip_n_wallace@hotmail.com.

On Tuesday, June 12 Tomatoes in Sandwich is hosting a Flag Day flag collection and reception from 5 to 7 PM. Contact Lisa Perry at flaldp@aol.com or 508-888-3094 to RSVP for this event.

Rep. Hunt goes country again on Saturday, August 25 with a Texas BBQ and trap shoot event at the Monument Beach Sportsman’s Club in Bourne from 4 to 8 PM. The details on that are still being firmed up, so visit the candidate’s events page at www.electrandyhunt.com/events for the latest details.

***

Barnstable County Commissioner Sheila R. Lyons has officially kicked off her re-election campaign.

Ms. Lyons held a campaign launch event last week at Tugboats in Hyannis, which saw such special guests as Congressman William R. Keating (D), State Senator Daniel A. Wolf (D – Harwich), State Representatives Demetrius J. Atsalis (D – Barnstable) and Cleon H. Turner (D – Dennis), and fellow incumbent County Commissioner Mary L. (Pat) Flynn.

This week’s trivia: Ms. Lyons and Sen. Wolf ran against each other in 2010, vying for the Democratic nomination for state senate.

Political news and announcements may be e-mailed to Michael Bailey, senior political reporter, at bailey@capenews.net.

Friday, May 18th, 2012

The race for the Ninth Congressional District got a little more concrete last week, which marked the deadline for candidates to submit their nomination papers.

The de facto incumbent, Congressman William R. Keating (D), announced last week his team had submitted his nomination papers and he was “on the ballot,” even though, technically, all those signatures must first be certified.

(I say “de facto” because Rep. Keating is running for a second term, but he is currently representing the 10th Congressional District. The 10th as it exists now will be eliminated and many of its communities will be rolled into a new Ninth District.)

The other party candidates in the race — fellow Democrat C. Samuel Sutter, Bristol County’s DA, and Republicans Christopher Sheldon of Plymouth and Adam Chaprales of Sandwich — have filed their nomination papers according to local town clerks.

Two announced non-party candidates, Daniel Botelho of Fall River and Peter A. White of Mashpee, have until July 31 to file their nomination papers.

***

Senate President Therese M. Murray (D – Plymouth) is holding her Cape Cod-area campaign kick-off event tonight at 6 PM in the Atlantic Room of the Brookside Club in Bourne. If you’d like to attend, give a call to 508-591-0230 and see if there is still room.

Sen. Murray held a kick-off event last week in Plymouth, and the Massachusetts Republican party has offered an interesting opinion on that. In an e-mail to supporters sent out Monday, the GOP noted that the Plymouth event was preceded by “scant media notification and no announcement on the Senate President’s Facebook page.”

“Everyone in politics knows you announce bad news on a Friday, so clearly the Senate President believes her own candidacy for re-election isn’t good news for the Commonwealth,” Peter Blute, deputy chairman of the Mass. GOP remarked in the e-mail. “I agree with the Senate President that she should be ashamed of her record.”

By “her record,” Mr. Blute means the passage of a sales tax increase, revoking the sales tax exemption on alcohol sales, and the fact that “on Senator Murray’s watch, three state Senators went to jail.” Those three would be Anthony Gallucio (drunk driving), Dianne Wilkserson (who this year was sentenced to jail time for accepting bribes), and James Marzilli (sexual harassment).

(One note in the interest of full context: these Senators’ respective offenses were committed while they were in office, but they were all convicted after resigning from the Legislature.)

Mr. Blute’s analysis of Sen. Murray’s 11th-hour event announcement is, of course, political rhetoric at its finest. He’s reading into the situation exactly what he wants to based on purely superficial evidence (why he went with subconscious self-loathing is beyond me), and preaching it to the choir. Hardly a compelling case for ousting Sen. Murray from office.

The Democrats could as easily interpret it this way: “Terry Murray has nearly $140,000 in her campaign fund and doesn’t need to go nuts promoting fundraisers.” Me, I interpret it as: “Whoops, that was really dumb. We should have publicized this better. Oh, well, we’ll pay closer attention next time.”

Political news and announcements may be e-mailed to Michael Bailey, senior political reporter, at bailey@capenews.net.

The Week In Politics – May 4, 2012

Friday, May 4th, 2012

It’s candidate roll call recap time, and things are looking a bit disappointing for the local ballot.

Tuesday marked the deadline for candidates for district and county offices (not including the Barnstable County Assembly of Delegates, more on that below) to file their nomination papers with their local registrars of voters, and the final tally is pretty sad: only five of the Cape’s 12 incumbents seeking re-election — two State Senators, six State Representatives, two Barnstable County Commissioners, and two county officers — have challengers in the coming election.

Senate President Therese M. Murray (D – Plymouth) is poised to first face a new (and so far invisible) primary challenger, Democrat Stephen M. Palmer of Plymouth, and the winner of that contest will face Sandwich Republican Thomas F. Keyes. State Representative Demetrius J. Atsalis (D – Barnstable) will take on Centerville Democrat Brian R. Mannal, and whoever prevails will go on to the November general election unopposed.

The other contested local races are State Representative Randy Hunt (R – Sandwich) and Sandwich Democrat R. Patrick Ellis for the Fifth Barnstable District; and Commissioners Mary L. (Pat) Flynn of Falmouth and Sheila R. Lyons of Wellfleet against Eric R. Steinhilber of Barnstable (see below for the latest wrinkle in this race).

There’s a chance this number could dwindle further if, during the nomination paper certification process, any candidate should become disqualified for failing to collect enough valid signatures, but this happens infrequently.

I’m truly surprised by the slim pickings considering this is a presidential election cycle, which is generally more active than mid-term elections, but I also feel sorry for voters. Solid contests are good all around: they make the incumbents work for their jobs, open up opportunities for new blood and new ideas and government, and lead to more educated voters. A greater number of contested races would have been beneficial all around.

***

On the plus side, the race for US Representative of the Ninth Congressional District is looking ever more robust. Republican Adam Chaprales of Sandwich is throwing his hat in the ring, setting the stage for a GOP primary race; Christopher Sheldon of Plymouth is already running.

Mr. Chaprales is a former one-term Sandwich selectmen whose main claim to fame is that at age 21, he was the town’s youngest-ever selectman. Now 28, he works for New York Life Insurance Co. He launched his campaign this past weekend. His official campaign website is www.adamforcongress.com.

(One bit of web design advice for the candidate: that floating “sign up for updates” bar is wicked annoying. Lose it.)

Incumbent Rep. William R. Keating (D), Democrat C. Samuel Sutter, the Bristol County District Attorney, and non-party candidates Daniel Botelho of Fall River and Peter A. White of Mashpee are also running.

The deadline for Congressional candidates with party affiliations to file their paperwork is this coming Tuesday. Non-party candidates have until mid-summer.

***

Nomination papers for the Barnstable County Assembly of Delegates were distributed this week to town clerks and Janice O’Connell, clerk of the assembly, and we already have two confirmed candidates for the county’s legislative body.

One of them is Falmouth’s Andrew V. Putnam, and the other is Ronald R. Beaty Jr. – the same Ron Beaty who was running for county commissioner…and I say “was” because none of the town clerks I spoke received his nomination papers by the Tuesday deadline.

This effectively ends Mr. Beaty’s plan to run dual races for county commissioner and the assembly. Earlier this year Mr. Beaty sought an opinion from the office of the Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth – Elections Division and was informed that he could legally could hold both seats, as long as he exercised due diligence to avoid voting on issues as a member of one board that directly impacted the other (e.g., he could not as a county commissioner vote to raise the stipend delegates receive).

Now, however, it looks like he’ll be running only for the assembly. “After carefully reevaluating the political ramifications of my non-party candidacy for Barnstable County Commissioner, I have finally decided to formally withdraw myself as an Independent Candidate,” he wrote in an e-mail, “and to throw my complete support to Eric Steinhilber and his candidacy.”

He is dedicating himself to his assembly run, and said his “various positions on the respective issues currently related to county government will now be vigorously pursued via that potent avenue!”

Political news and announcements may be e-mailed to Michael Bailey, senior political reporter, at bailey@capenews.net.

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