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The Left, left out?

Deval Patrick’s famed grassroots progressives are losing steam and influence
By DAVID S. BERNSTEIN  |  October 3, 2007

071005_deval_main

More woes for Dems
In the congressional race for the Fifth District, pundits — even a few Democrats — are now wondering whether Republican Jim Ogonowski might defeat Democratic nominee Niki Tsongas in the general election later this month. And in Boston, some fear that liberal stalwart Felix Arroyo may be in danger of losing his at-large city-council seat.
After Deval Patrick’s stunning victory this past November, Beacon Hill regulars looked at the powerful grassroots network of progressive activists who’d helped elect him, and wondered: what’s next for them? Would Patrick keep them mobilized to promote his initiatives? Would they bring their energy to other political campaigns? Or would the populist surge be fleeting?

In the wake of the recent local elections, more and more observers are concluding that the energy that put Patrick in the Corner Office has come and gone.

East Boston’s Democratic primary (and, by default, the state representative seat) went to Carlo Basile, a political operative who, in addition to Democratic campaigns, worked on Republican Kerry Healey’s run for governor. Much of Basile’s support and funding came from Republicans, and the Democratic state party, chaired by former Patrick campaign manager John Walsh, openly opposed him. Nevertheless, Basile easily defeated more liberal opponents.

In Allston-Brighton, progressive favorite Tim Schofield was widely expected to win one of two available spots on the November ballot in the race to replace district city councilor Jerry McDermott. But Greg Glennon, considered the most conservative candidate in the race, pulled the upset in the preliminary and will face neighborhood activist Mark Ciommo.

These are just the latest of this year’s defeats for progressive candidates, in a streak that includes a special city-council election covering the South Boston and South End neighborhoods; a state-senate race to replace Cambridge Democrat Jarrett Barrios; and a Democratic primary for US Congress to replace Marty Meehan, who resigned this summer to take the helm at UMass-Lowell.

This current state of affairs reminds some of November 2004, when Mitt Romney’s plan to pressure state legislators by showing them he could pick them off at the polls backfired and left the legislature feeling immune to outside influence.

In these instances, we may be seeing a small backlash against liberal Democrats, who now control the legislature and governor’s office. That control was clearly exhibited in the surprising defeat of the same-sex-marriage ban at this summer’s Constitutional Convention, pulled off by Patrick, House Speaker Sal DiMasi, and Senate President Therese Murray.

Locally, City Hall insiders suggest, the trend has been exacerbated by the actions of “Team Unity” — the four minority City Councilors who, in the opinion of some, have unnecessarily aligned themselves in opposition to moderate and white constituents.

Meanwhile, the recurrence of old voting patterns seems to confirm that the progressive vigor of this past autumn has faded.

Turnout for the recent special elections and primaries has been dismal, because the less attention-getting an election, the fewer people vote. When that happens, historically the scales tip toward the “neighborhood” voters — the old Italians in Eastie, the long-time residents of Brighton, the conservative Southie Irish — who show up at every election. Ideally, that would be different now, with greater participation from younger voters, area newcomers, minorities, and others in the progressive camp who were invigorated by the Patrick campaign. Evidence suggests that this change hasn’t occurred.

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  Topics: Talking Politics , Deval Patrick, Deval Patrick, Same-Sex Marriage,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY DAVID S. BERNSTEIN
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