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The Mass. GOP wants to flip this Taunton state House seat

The Mass. GOP wants to flip this Taunton state House seat

Yahoo3 hours ago

Good Monday morning, everyone.
It's a few days before the polls open in Taunton. And Lisa Field is very busy indeed. She was between stops when MassLive reached her for a quick phone interview.
Field is the Democratic nominee in Tuesday's special election to fill the vacant 3rd Bristol District seat in the state House of Representatives. It includes parts of Taunton and neighboring Easton.
And Field said she's hearing one thing from voters: 'People are sick of partisanship — let's get to what matters. Health care. Food on the table. A roof over their heads,' she said.
Field, who's been ubiquitous on Beacon Hill thanks to her top perch at the influential Massachusetts Nurses Association, laughed when she was asked why she'd want to give up all that clout for the relative obscurity of the state House's backbenches.
'My mother keeps asking me, 'Why?'' she quipped.
The short answer is that the South Shore contest pitting Field against Republican Larry Quintal, a Taunton City Councilor and local funeral home owner, is kind of a big deal.
The two are vying to fill a seat left open by the death of former Democratic Rep. Carol Doherty, who lost a battle with pancreatic cancer in February, at age 82.
Doherty won a special election for the seat in 2020, replacing Republican Shauna O'Connell, who now serves as Taunton's mayor.
Republicans, encouraged by President Donald Trump's strong showing in Bristol County in 2024 — and the fact that GOP state Sen. Kelly Dooner flipped a seat held by Democrat Mark Pacheco — want the seat back.
Republican strategist Holly Robichaud, who's working with Quintal, downplayed a suggestion that the race is proof-of-concept for an ongoing red shift in the southern part of the state — though that is something that is undoubtedly happening.
The race is 'more about Larry Quintal,' and his qualifications to serve, Robichaud told MassLive in a brief phone interview last week.
'He's a proven leader,' Robichaud said, adding that concerns about affordability and taxes, not the '20,000-foot view,' will be what brings voters to the polls on Tuesday.
Field's tenure as a Beacon Hill activist has opened up a line of attack for Quintal, one that he's seized on in campaign advertisements.
'I'm not a lobbyist or obligated to any special interest groups addicted to our tax dollars, like my opponent,' he said in one such spot posted to his campaign's official Facebook page. 'As your next state representative, I will work for you.'
Democrats have pushed back, calling those attacks 'a lame attempt by the MassGOP to disparage a woman who has stood up for some of the hardest-working people anywhere, our nurses,' WPRI-TV reported.
'The MassGOP should worry more about what Donald Trump's disastrous economic policies will do to the average Massachusetts family instead of attacking Lisa Field, someone who goes to work every day fighting for working people,' state Democratic Party Chairperson Steve Kerrigan told the station.
Field, meanwhile, told MassLive that she's running to honor Doherty's legacy and to continue it.
'She was a compassionate representative and wanted to make sure that continued,' Field said.
The polls are open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Tuesday.
Days into Pride Month, and amid nationwide rollbacks of DEI efforts, Boston's City Council unanimously codified Mayor Michelle Wu's Office of vote Advancement into law last week.
The 11-0 vote came after dozens of community groups rallied outside City Hall on behalf of the proposal — and to celebrate the start of Pride Month, The Boston Globe reported.
Wu, a Democrat running for reelection this fall, created the office through an executive order. The vote makes it permanent, the newspaper reported.
'In order for us to be a sanctuary city, we need protections in place,' City Councilor Henry Santana told the Globe. 'Codifying the LGBTQIA2S+ office ensures it stays here — no matter who the mayor is.'
Santana was referring to a March council vote that declared Boston a sanctuary city for transgender and LGBTQIA2s+ residents.
If you're unfamiliar with the acronym, it stands for 'Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer (or questioning), Intersex, Asexual, and Two-Spirit.' The plus sign, meanwhile, is meant to include all other sexual identities or expressions.
Kimberly Rhoten, the director of policy and strategic initiatives in the Mayor's LGBTQIA2S+ office, told the Globe that last week's vote is far more than symbolic.
'Right now, our office exists only by executive order. Codifying it into law makes it one step harder to remove us,' Rhoten said, according to the Globe. 'Most other offices in our cabinet are already codified. We're one of the last.'
In case you missed it, state lawmakers paused last week to honor National Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) and Automatic External Defibrillator (AED) Awareness Week.
And the top Republican in the state Senate is backing legislation that would make CPR training a graduation requirement for Massachusetts high school students.
'CPR is a basic skill that can come into play at any moment to save a life, and we should not miss an opportunity to equip graduating students with that skill,' Senate Minority Leader Bruce E. Tarr, R-1st Essex/Middlesex, who's sponsoring the legislation, said in a statement. 'A modest investment of time for training can translate literally into a life saved.'
The bipartisan bill also would 'ensure that instruction in these practices adheres to the most current national guidelines, and incorporates hands-on training into students' education,' Tarr's office said.
The Bay State's college and university students are all graduated and safely home for the summer, but here's a bit of news to follow them into that break: They saved some big money thanks to a statewide expansion of financial aid, according to the Healey administration.
Here's how that breaks down:
$110 million: That's the total savings on college attendance in the 2023-2024 academic year.
34,000: The number of students (give or take) who benefited from that savings.
$3,856: The average savings for each of those students.
The savings, the administration argued in a statement, underlined the effectiveness of the 2023 expansion of the state's MASSGrant Plus financial aid program.
The initiative, underwritten by 'Millionaire's Tax' revenue, benefits students enrolled in the state's public institutions, including its 15 community colleges, nine state universities, and its four University of Massachusetts undergraduate campuses.
But efforts on Capitol Hill to slash federal Pell Grants would boost costs by $57 million a year statewide, the administration noted.
'This is bad for our students and bad for our economy, as it would hold back our next generation of workers from being able to afford to go to school‚' Gov. Maura Healey said.
Mass. lawmakers get bad grades on industry report card. But who's failing whom? | John L. Micek
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Mayor Wu defends calling ICE 'secret police' after Mass. US attorney's criticism
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'I did the humane thing': Worcester city councilor stands by actions at ICE arrest
'A lot of those papers, I would have to look back at them and be like, 'You're being deported. They're taking you out of the country.' And I would have to watch people cry.'
— Marcelo Gomes da Silva, the Milford High School student athlete arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, reflected on his time in custody. He was released last week.
The Berkshire County branch of the NAACP will hold its annual Juneteenth celebration from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sunday, June 15. The observance will include a broad array of events, the civil rights group said.
The day gets rolling with a flag-raising at Pittsfield City Hall, where Mayor Peter Marchetti and a 'special guest' from the Massachusetts 54th Regiment Reenactment Unit are expected to read proclamations.
That's followed by a Freedom Walk to Durant Park on the city's historically Black West Side, where a community worship service will open the festival, organizers said.
Other events on the day include the unveiling of the design for a new Massachusetts 54th Regiment mural, which will be installed at Durant Park later this year.
Formed after the Emancipation Proclamation, the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry Regiment was one of the first Black regiments to serve in the U.S. Civil War, according to the National Parks Service.
During the Pittsfield observance, children can participate in hands-on learning with a coloring book about the Massachusetts 54th Regiment and Berkshire soldiers, whose ranks included the Rev. Samuel Harrison, a Black abolitionist and chaplain from New England, organizers said.
Get those blinding lights ready: The Weeknd brings his 2025 tour to Gillette Stadium in Foxborough on Tuesday (tickets and info here). Playboi Carti and Mike Dean open the show. The artist, born Abel Tesfaye, released his most recent long-player, 'Hurry Up Tomorrow,' in January. And it's expected to be the last one he releases under his nom de stage. From that record, here's 'Reflections Laughing,' featuring Travis Scott and Florence + The Machine.
The nonprofit Freedom from Religion Foundation, which ardently advocates for the separation of church and state, says it's experiencing its second 'Trump Bump.'
The organization, which also advocates for 'nontheism,' has seen its national membership grow by 2,024 members since last October, reaching a total of 42,450 by March 2025, according to Religion News Service.
Here's the germane bit:
'Over the last few years, the group has hovered around 40,000 members but had been losing a couple hundred members a month before the bump, said Annie Laurie Gaylor, co-president of FFRF.'
'The group also saw a 56% increase in membership from 2016 to 2017, when Donald Trump won his first presidential term, growing by 10,000 net new members.'
'Other American secular civil liberties and freethought groups have seen similar increases in membership, and in contributions, since Trump was elected last year.'
'The American Humanist Association, a nonprofit that promotes secular humanism, reported a 68% rise in donations since Trump won the 2024 election — and a 77% increase since he took office, said Executive Director Fish Stark."
''Not only are people joining — or re-joining — the movement, but existing members are digging deeper and putting their trust in the humanist movement to defend our rights at a time when lots of institutions have failed us,' Stark said. 'We're using the increase in donations we've received to provide significantly more support to local groups and increase staffing in our legal center to defend nontheist civil rights.''
That's it for today. As always, tips, comments and questions can be sent to jmicek@masslive.com. Have a good week, friends.
Mass. lawmakers get bad grades on industry report card. But who's failing whom? | John L. Micek
Math is hard. Midterm math is harder. The lessons Mass. needs to learn for 2026 | John L. Micek
The piece of the Mass. budget that passes all understanding | John L. Micek
Read the original article on MassLive.

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ABC's Terry Moran is suspended following his social media post calling Trump and Miller haters
ABC's Terry Moran is suspended following his social media post calling Trump and Miller haters

Associated Press

time21 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

ABC's Terry Moran is suspended following his social media post calling Trump and Miller haters

NEW YORK (AP) — ABC News has suspended correspondent Terry Moran for calling Trump administration deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller a 'world class hater' in a since-deleted social media post. Moran's post was swiftly condemned by officials in the Republican administration, including Vice President J.D. Vance. ABC News, in a statement, said it 'stands for objectivity and impartiality in its news coverage and does not condone subjective personal attacks on others.' The New York-based network said Moran was suspended pending further evaluation. Moran, who interviewed President Donald Trump a few weeks ago, said in his post on X at 12:06 a.m. on Sunday that the president was a world-class hater, too. But he wrote that for the president, his hatred is a means to an end, 'and that end is his own glorification.' For Miller, Moran's post said, 'his hatreds are his spiritual nourishment. He eats his hate.' Vance, on X, said that Moran's post was 'dripping with hatred.' The vice president wrote: 'Remember that every time you watch ABC's coverage of the Trump administration.' Miller, on X, said Moran's 'full public meltdown' exposed the corporate press. 'For decades, the privileged anchor and reporters narrating and gatekeeping our society have been radicals adopting a journalist's pose. Terry pulled off his mask.'

A Texas Republican new to Congress, Brandon Gill has a knack for getting noticed
A Texas Republican new to Congress, Brandon Gill has a knack for getting noticed

Yahoo

time29 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

A Texas Republican new to Congress, Brandon Gill has a knack for getting noticed

WASHINGTON — Rep. Brandon Gill knows how to get attention. Now a 31-year-old Republican freshman in Congress, Gill has been courting President Donald Trump's favor since he founded the DC Enquirer, a conservative outlet in 2022. He calls liberals "deranged," says Biden unleashed "chaos" across the country, and considers Dinesh D'Souza, his father-in-law who was federally convicted of making illegal campaign contributions, a political mentor. Gill, of Flower Mound, appears regularly on conservative platforms including Fox News, OAN and high-profile podcasts — and clips of his House hearing questions have racked up more than a million views on YouTube. After moving back to Texas, and winning in his first campaign for office, his main focus, Gill said in an interview with The Texas Tribune, is to codify Trump's executive orders. 'What we want to do is make sure that all of the great work that the president is doing remains permanent,' Gill said. 'So that a future Democrat doesn't unleash the same kind of chaos on our country that Joe Biden did.' In his first five months in Congress, Gill has introduced bills to impeach a federal judge who attempted to stop some deportation flights, codify Trump's 'Remain in Mexico' immigration policy, and put Trump's face on the $100 bill. His bills have not yet made it to the House floor, and most – except his Remain in Mexico bill – have failed to garner significant support. Gill's intertwined legislative and media strategy, however, has burnished his reputation among MAGA supporters and earned him praise from other Republicans in the Texas delegation. In many ways, Gills' early political career is modeled after the path of other political figures who have made unfettered statements and disruptive moves as they made their way into the spotlight. Each in his own way tests how and if attention can translate into influence, and Gill says he draws lessons from D'Souza, a longtime conservative agitator. Such a group would also include former Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida, Trump's first pick to be Attorney General, as well as Representatives Dan Crenshaw, Keith Self and Chip Roy, all Texas Republicans. Gill himself made a political debut as a Dartmouth student leading a conservative student publication – The Dartmouth Review. After a few years working as an investment banker and a hedge fund analyst in New York, he founded and led a conservative publication, the DC Enquirer, known for right-wing framed articles, conspiracy theories and commentary pieces. Trump posted DC Enquirer stories or reposted links to the outlet more than 100 times on his social media accounts. Gill said his role there taught him how to handle the media, which he says 'sets the parameters of debate' in Washington. 'You learn how to communicate in a way that resonates with a broader audience outside of the DC bubble,' Gill said. He stepped down from his editorial role with DC Enquirer when he began his congressional campaign and the outlet has not posted any articles since Gill was sworn into Congress in January. Gill married conservative author Danielle D'Souza in 2017. Dinesh D'Souza is known for his books and films that emphasize false conspiracies about Democrats and the accuracy of the 2020 election. He was pardoned in 2018 by Trump after he pled guilty to making illegal campaign contributions in other people's names. Gill said his father-in-law has taught him how to be precise while speaking about politics and how to 'push the bounds of discussion.' 'I learned a ton from him,' Gill said about his father-in-law. 'He's sort of a political mentor of mine.' He worked with his father-in-law on the film promoting the false idea that 2020 election was stolen, '2000 Mules,' and was a producer on Dinesh D'Souza's 2023 film, 'Police State'. Gill announced his candidacy for Congress in November 2023 and received Trump's endorsement within two weeks. Trump posted on Truth that Gill is an 'America first,' candidate, 'as loyal and tough as they come,' while also highlighting Gill's connection to his father-in-law. The endorsement in the race, left open by Rep. Michael Burgess's retirement, cleared the way for Gill to sweep the Republican primary. Others who supported Gill's campaign included Gaetz, then a Florida Representative; Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan, and Sen. Ted Cruz. Later on, Gaetz would post that Gill once told a SuperPAC that Gaetz was the member of Congress he most wanted to emulate. In the November election, Gill won 62% of the vote against Democratic candidate Ernest Lineberger. Throughout the election, Lineberger said, Gill would be personable at candidate forums – talking about family or saying that it was nice to see him. But, when Gill spoke to the audience, he would – as Lineberger put it – quickly flip into 'demonizing the Democrats.' 'He is a professional disinformation spreader, and that is what he has continued to do,' Lineburger said in an interview. In his second month on Capitol Hill, Gill sent out a fundraising email that included a petition to deport Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minnesota. Omar was born in Somalia and has been a U.S. citizen since 2000, when she was 17 years old. 'We should have never let Ilhan Omar into our country,' the email said. 'And frankly, America would be a much better place if she were to be sent back to Somalia.' Rep. Greg Casar, D-Austin, told the Tribune that he has had conversations with Gill related to this incident, including about how members of Congress should take their jobs seriously and that disagreements will happen, but that there is a line. 'He can stand out based on his opinions, if he wants to, but he shouldn't stand out by saying things that put the life at risk of people that he works with,' Casar said. Gill has continued to set off sparks at House committee hearings – leading to clips that have gone viral in conservative circles – with pointed lines of questions directed at the CEO of NPR, the mayor of Chicago and the head of USA Fencing. Cruz praised Gill on his podcast, 'Verdict with Ted Cruz,' calling the freshman representative a 'rising star in the House,' and Gaetz, in a social media post, called Gill the better version of himself following the NPR hearing. Rep. Wesley Hunt, R-Houston, who serves with Gill on the oversight committee, praised the freshman. 'He's making very big waves,' Hunt said in April. 'He's doing a very good job. He's speaking our language.' In committee hearings Gill says his job is 'to highlight and to call out some of the crazy things that these deranged leftists have been promoting for so long.' Gill wrote on X in March that 'multiculturalism will tear our country apart.' The post has more than 23 million views on the platform. The congressman elaborated to the Tribune adding that immigrants need to 'assimilate to our culture and adopt our customs and adhere to our traditions,' to preserve the American identity. Gill posted on X last month that he was against House Republican social media pages posting in Spanish. He has also supported bills that would bar Chinese nationals from attending U.S. universities and from purchasing farmland in the country. Gill represents the Republican stronghold of District 26, which covers the north Dallas-Fort Worth suburbs and extends to the Texas-Oklahoma border That includes Cooke County, a rural area where the Republican chair is Chris McNamara. He told the Tribune that while Gill's method of rising politically is not how he would do things, the Republican base in his county does get excited about Gill's strategy. 'Within the district, he gets a lot of support from that,' McNamara said. 'He's probably, I would think, trying to get some national attention, some leverage attention.' Trump's endorsement during the primary was 'big,' for Gill's local support, McNamara said, adding that 'it can't hurt to be on the President's good side'. While Gill has introduced a bill to add more zip codes in the district, which has areas that experienced a population boom, and claims to have the 'best case-worker team in the country,' some local political figures told the Tribune they would like Gill to focus more on issues impacting the area – such as rural hospitals and passenger train route cancellations. On Capitol Hill, Gill has more of a position than the average freshman. He was voted by his colleagues to be the Republican freshman class president, acting as a representative for the members. Fellow freshman House Republican Rep. Craig Goldman, R-Fort Worth, said Gill has used this ceremonial role as an 'action position,' bringing the class together. Gill has also positioned himself on key committees, including the committees on the judiciary, budget and oversight – where he also serves on the Delivering on Government Efficiency Subcommittee. Roy and Self are members of the hardline House Freedom Caucus and have recently served as crucial holdouts to win policy promises from House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-Louisiana, and Trump before joining the majority on key votes. Gill was endorsed by the Freedom Caucus's PAC in his House primary and said that he would join the caucus on his first day. He told Politico that the member he most wanted to be like was Jordan, of Ohio, the first chair of the caucus, also known for provocative statements. The freshman representative has not yet been a holdout against key Republican legislation, but he went further than Johnson and party leadership in March regarding the federal judge, James Boasberg, who was attempting to stop deportation flights. Gill advocated for impeachment, while party leadership looked for other options, such as ending national injunctions. He also told the Tribune that the Freedom Caucus holdouts on the budget reconciliation package had 'excellent points,' and that the holdouts were fighting to include Trump's agenda into the final tax and spending bill. Gill had returned to Washington early, a week after his son was born in May, in an attempt to move the Republican megabill out of the House Budget Committee. The legislation was temporarily blocked by Roy and other holdouts in the committee as they pushed for more reforms. Gill has plans to continue focusing on his push to permanently defund NPR and PBS, lower border crossings, codify cuts to the federal workforce, and eliminate some of the Biden administration's climate policies. 'We should be doing … all the things that we told voters we were going to do,' Gill said. 'The things that voters saw us talking about and said, 'We need to give these people a majority in Washington.' ' Disclosure: Politico has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here. First round of TribFest speakers announced! Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Maureen Dowd; U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzales, R-San Antonio; Fort Worth Mayor Mattie Parker; U.S. Sen. Adam Schiff, D-California; and U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Dallas are taking the stage Nov. 13–15 in Austin. Get your tickets today!

Rate relief politics
Rate relief politics

Politico

time39 minutes ago

  • Politico

Rate relief politics

Presented by Good morning and welcome to the weekly Monday edition of the New York & New Jersey Energy newsletter. We'll take a look at the week ahead and look back on what you may have missed last week. Driving the day RATE RELIEF POLITICS — Immediately after the Murphy administration unveiled its $430 million utility rate relief plan last week at a press conference flanked by Democratic lawmakers, Republican lawmakers who were not there began jumping on the plan as a kind of an election year political gimmick. But, reading between the lines of their statements, Republicans seemed not to actually oppose the plan, which will knock from $100 to $250 off electric bills in coming months, depending on a ratepayer's income. Senate Republican Leader Anthony Bucco said his criticism isn't of the plan, it's of the problem the plan is meant to address. 'They have to do something,' he said in an interview. 'But we shouldn't be in this position to begin with. And don't call it relief — it's really not relief — they are taking it from the taxpayers and giving it back to them.' What Bucco means is that money for rate relief package comes from charges and fees that utility customers have paid or will pay in some form or another. In a written press release the governor's office was clear about where the money is coming from — the state Clean Energy Fund, the state Board of Public Utilities' share of Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative proceeds and the Solar Alternative Compliance Payment account, which is funded by payments from utilities that didn't buy enough solar energy credits. Normal customers might be forgiven for not knowing what any of that means, but the Republican criticism is that the rate relief plan is basically a rebate program, though that's the way many government aid programs work. From the Democrats' point of view, by using money that wasn't intended for rate relief — like RGGI and Clean Energy Fund money, in particular — the administration was able to cushion the blow of rising rates without drawing on general fund dollars that could soon be needed for other unexpected costs. 'We have larger issues coming up,' Senate President Nick Scutari said, specifically naming holes in the state budget that could come from cuts the Republican Congress is looking to make to Medicaid. In the near term, the fight over how the rate relief plan is paid for is a sub-fight in the larger one Republicans are itching to have with Democrats over the Murphy administration's clean energy policies, which relied heavily on decarbonizing the grid by boxing out natural gas and relying on an offshore wind industry that hasn't materialized. Murphy, Scutari and Assembly Speaker Craig Coughlin all acknowledged there is a supply-demand problem facing New Jersey and that the rate relief is only a short-term fix for long-term issues. Notably, when they asked about what to do, they talked about solar, nuclear and, in Murphy's case, offshore wind. Former Senate President Steve Sweeney, who is running for governor, put out a statement urging the state, and by implication his former colleagues still in government, to 'embrace all forms of energy,' including natural gas. Republicans have been saying this for a while, but Bucco said Democrats 'conduct their business in an echo chamber' and are not open to talking. Still, Sweeney is not alone among Democrats. Assemblymember Wayne DeAngelo, the Mercer County Democrat who oversees the chamber's utilities committee, has also talked about the need for gas. It's still an open question if New Jersey will go that route, and that is going to be another main tension as Republicans look to use energy policy and power prices in the general election to elect lawmakers and perhaps even a governor who could undo Murphy's clean energy policies. — Ry Rivard TRUMP FUNDING GATEWAY — The Trump administration is recommending $700 million in the 2026 budget for the Hudson River train tunnel, the $16 billion project to bolster the connection between New York and New Jersey. The funding recommendation by the Federal Transit Administration is a sign that President Donald Trump is no longer attempting to upend the Gateway program, as he did by slow rolling it during his first term. Elements of the tunnel project are already under construction and employing union workers. According to a recent Regional Plan Association report, the Gateway program could generate 'close to $445 billion in economic benefits' in coming decades. — Ry Rivard HAPPY MONDAY MORNING: Let us know if you have tips, story ideas or life advice. We're always here at mfrench@ and rrivard@ And if you like this letter, please tell a friend and/or loved one to sign up. Want to receive this newsletter every weekday? Subscribe to POLITICO Pro. You'll also receive daily policy news and other intelligence you need to act on the day's biggest stories. Around New York — Some Long Island residents oppose battery storage, Propel transmission project. — The Times Union takes on biosolids spread on farmland. — Canadian wildfire smoke worsens air quality. — Sen. Chuck Schumer raises concern about summer LI-HEAP benefits. — Trees are under threat from invasive species. What you may have missed TORRES TALKS: Rep. Ritchie Torres is keeping a close eye on the mayor's race as he mulls a run for governor in 2026 and promotes an 'abundance' agenda. And while he remains a steadfast supporter of Andrew Cuomo, he criticized the ex-governor's decision to shutter a nuclear plant during his Albany tenure. While Torres praised Cuomo as an effective governor and 'one of the greatest builders of infrastructure in the 21st century,' there's one major decision he says was a mistake: shutting down the Indian Point nuclear plant, which he said led to more greenhouse gas emissions. 'I feel like there's a growing recognition in the Democratic Party that we undervalued the role of nuclear in decarbonizing,' Torres said. Cuomo defended his decision, pointing to the safety risks of a terrorist attack or earthquake to the plant located near a major population center. 'Do you understand the danger that Indian Point poses? It would be catastrophic if anything happened at Indian Point,' Cuomo told reporters. Cuomo said he supported nuclear power upstate. The governor backed massive subsidies to keep those plants open. Torres said he had a 'bias' toward clean energy, although he didn't completely rule out gas power plants to maintain the reliability of the electric grid. Torres sees permitting as a major barrier for clean energy in New York. Earlier this week, he sent a letter to Hochul, Adams and Trump celebrating a Supreme Court decision limiting federal environmental reviews. 'As an abundance Democrat, there is a presumption against rules and regulations that inhibit the building of new clean energy, affordable housing and infrastructure,' Torres said. — Marie J. French $430M FOR NJ RATE RELIEF — POLITICO's Ry Rivard: New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy's administration is providing customers with $430 million in electric bill rate relief, a sum that the Democrat and his allies in the Legislature acknowledge is only a short-term solution for rising energy costs. The relief package includes $100 for all 3.9 million residential ratepayers in the state and another $150 for low- and moderate-income ratepayers. SLIMMED-DOWN GAS MEASURE — POLITICO's Marie J. French: Democratic lawmakers in New York are planning to include major changes to a gas transition bill that are aimed at addressing regional concerns and clearing the way for its passage. Planned amendments to the NY HEAT Act, which were obtained by POLITICO and are not yet final, include renaming the bill and allowing more flexibility for gas utilities to opt out of the transition. Limits on gas utilities expanding their service territory and language on a 6 percent affordability goal are also on the chopping block. 'There's still some changes as we speak,' said Democratic Sen. Liz Krueger, who's sponsoring the bill. SENATE MOVES MORE UTILITY BILLS: New York Senate Democrats passed another handful of utility measures aimed at reining in rate increases and expanding customer protections on Thursday. The push reflects mounting frustration with rate hikes, as another utility is expected to file a proposed increase in the coming months and several are pending before the Public Service Commission. The bills join several others on utility regulation the Senate passed in January that haven't moved in the Assembly. Only one from that earlier tranche is headed to the governor's desk — Sen. Michelle Hinchey's and Assemblymember Jonathan Jacobson's measure to limit and standardize estimated billing by utilities. The package slated for passage on Thursday includes Sen. Leroy Comrie's expanded requirement for utilities to notify customers of proposed rate hikes. Currently, utilities are required to publish in local newspapers and send notices in bills. The Department of Public Service also posts on their website. This would require utilities to additionally text or email customers. That's moving in Assembly committees and is sponsored by Assemblymember Zohran Mamdani, who is running for New York City mayor. The Senate also passed a bill allowing the commission to consider non-economic damages when penalizing utilities. Hinchey also shepherded through a measure to change the Public Service Commission by expanding it to eight members with another with consumer advocacy experience. An even number of commissioners raises the theoretical possibility of a tie vote. Her bill also bars utility employees from serving on the commission for two years. Hinchey also has a measure to require more reporting on planned capital expenditures by utilities, including specific details about projects. The rate case process includes substantial information about proposed utility capital spending, which is scrutinized by the DPS and other parties. That bill has already passed the Assembly and will head to the governor's desk. Sen. Shelly Mayer, who has slammed Con Ed's proposed rate hike, also advanced a bill to extend the time period for rate cases from 11 to 14 months. That could alleviate rate compression when utilities are entitled to recover revenues deferred during a lengthy settlement process. Mayer also proposed returning 100 percent of excess returns earned by utilities over their authorized return on equity to ratepayers. Currently, shareholders get to keep a portion while the rest is returned to customers. Policymakers view this as encouraging utilities to be as efficient as possible and preserving benefits for customers. Other bills advanced include notification requirements if customers exceed a certain cost of usage (S8062) and a 24/7 toll-free number to report outages, which utilities already maintain, according to the department (S6200). The package does little to address significant drivers of rate hikes cited by Public Service Commission members and utility officials including investments to maintain and upgrade the systems — in some cases driven by growing electrification supported by state policies — and local property taxes on new and existing infrastructure. Con Ed, the largest taxpayer in New York City, estimates that a third of customer bills go toward paying taxes. 'What we're saying is that we need transparency, we need accountability,' said Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins. 'Until we get that, until we have the Public Service Commission work on consumers' behalf, not just listening to the utility, I think we'll be at a better point.' 'We're trying to save the planet as well as save access to utilities,' said Stewart-Cousins. Hinchey also noted that gas utilities are investing heavily in their systems, including expanding the system. 'We know a lot of this is also fossil fuel infrastructure,' she said. Mayer said a significant portion of Con Ed's proposed rate hike is improving their existing system, not moving to renewables. 'Obviously they need to upgrade their existing structure, but we're trying to strike a balance here with the investment in renewables at the same time,' she said. Utilities don't build renewable generation, but do have to upgrade their systems to accommodate growing amounts of distributed renewable energy and more electric demand from EVs and building heating. The PSC has also approved billions in transmission projects to support the climate law. Upstate United, a business group, criticized Senate Democrats for failing to acknowledge costs driven by the climate law. The group backs a bill sponsored by Comrie to break out costs from state policies on utility bills. ''While it may be politically convenient to obscure the cost of government mandates buried in a utility bill, what everyday New Yorkers need is a better explanation of the factors driving up the cost of energy supply and delivery. New Yorkers deserve transparency, not finger-pointing,' said Justin Wilcox, Upstate United's executive director. — Marie J. French ATLANTIC SHORES' 'RESET' — Atlantic Shores asked the Board of Public Utilities to terminate the formal project award it received in 2021. The offshore wind farm, a joint venture of Shell and French energy company EDF, was the first in the state to receive all the federal permits necessary to build but for several years it struggled to make its project pencil out, citing supply chain issues and inflation. A petition filed this week with the BPU blames the Trump administration for canceling a necessary permit and asks the state to considered the project canceled. But the company is not giving up on building a wind farm off the New Jersey coast and called the current era a 'reset period' after which it hopes a version of the project can be built. 'This filing marks the closing of a chapter, but not the end for Atlantic Shores,' CEO Joris Veldhoven said in a statement. The project was in trouble before Trump took office and then things got worse. Gov. Phil Murphy's administration decided in February not to provide financial backing to new offshore wind projects. Atlantic Shores had previously said it needed more money to make its project work; by closing that door, Murphy killed the project, a decision even some of the governor's environmental allies have questioned. Atlantic Shores' messaging contrasts with Danish energy giant Orsted's behavior in 2023, which was to abruptly kill two wind farms planned in the state and then try to get out of paying a fee for backing out of one of the projects. Atlantic Shores' arrangement with the state, which predated the one Orsted was fighting over, does not include a penalty for exiting. Indeed, it was inked in an era of exuberance about offshore wind that has proven at very least premature if not unfounded. As Atlantic Shores notes in its filing, every single offshore wind deal between 2019 and 2022 in New Jersey, New York and Massachusetts resulted in projects either being canceled or renegotiated. Even though the offshore wind industry is on shaky ground, Murphy still seems to be confident it will eventually happen. At an unrelated event on Thursday, the governor pointedly talked about the wind industry — where every project ever approved in New Jersey is dead or delayed — in the present tense. 'We have — still, I'm going to use the present tense because we haven't given up — we have the largest offshore wind program in America,' he said. — Ry Rivard REVENGE OF THE COWS: Republican lawmakers and dairy farmers are slamming what they call a 'crazy' idea to cap the number of cows allowed on dairy farms. The proposal, advanced by New York City Democrats and environmental groups, would prohibit new permits for dairy farms with more than 700 cows. 'We're going to force these folks out and force those cows to be relocated to other states,' said Republican state Sen. George Borrello, referring to the measure's potential fallout. Milk is big business in New York, which ranks fifth in the U.S. in production. Dairy is the largest part of the state's agricultural industry too, and the state is supporting new dairy processing facilities. But dairies have also been going out of business over the past decade, facing rising costs and thin margins. The number of cows in the state, meanwhile, hasn't dropped. Lawmakers and environmental groups supporting the bill, including Food and Water Watch and Third Act, say they want to protect family farms and the environment. 'These farms, known as CAFOs, prioritize profit over the well-being of animals and the health of our environment, cramming thousands of animals into confined spaces,' said Democratic Assemblymember Linda Rosenthal, who's sponsoring the bill. CAFO stands for concentrated animal feeding operation. Assemblymember Chris Tague, a Republican from Schoharie, called it the 'most ridiculous bill' he's ever seen. Expanding dairy operations is often the only way for families to keep their operations financially viable, he said. The measure is also a non-starter for key upstate Democratic lawmakers. 'I am disappointed that a bill like this was introduced without consulting anyone involved in the dairy industry,' said Democratic Assemblymember Donna Lupardo, chair of the agriculture committee. 'These hard-working men and women are some of the best stewards of the land I know.' — Marie J. French ALL ELECTRIC EXEMPTION DEBATED: The 'reasonableness' of potential exemptions to New York's requirements barring fossil fuels in most new buildings is still being defined. The compromise on all-electric buildings, passed in 2023, required the Public Service Commission to decide how a utility could determine a building is exempt when 'electric service cannot be reasonably provided by the grid.' This caveat was key to getting utility buy-in and Assembly Democrats to sign off on the measure, but environmental advocates worried whether it would gut the effectiveness of the bill aimed at limiting the expansion of the gas system. Those worries are coming into sharper relief as advocates, utilities and others respond to the Department of Public Service's proposed exemption guidelines, which recommends an exemption if necessary grid upgrades are estimated to take more than 18 months longer than providing traditional gas and electric service. The law's mandate for buildings under seven stories is set to take effect at the beginning of next year. Environmental groups in comments filed Tuesday argue this 18-month exemption is too broad and not fully justified. The Environmental Defense Fund said the commission should instead consider the actual additional time beyond a customer's requested date of interconnection and require developers to use technology to reduce electricity demand that might drive longer timelines. 'Though it is important to allow utilities to maintain grid reliability, the Commission can adopt a reasonableness standard that is narrow in scope while ensuring stable grid capacity,' the group wrote in its comments. Gas-only utilities National Fuel, Corning and Liberty Utilities joined with the New York State Builders Association to say the state should also provide exemptions based on costs. If the cost of electric-only exceeds traditional gas and electric costs, then an exemption should be permitted, they argue. The utilities and builders cite concerns about the affordability and demand for housing. An 18-month delay is also too long, they argue. 'If timeline, cost and uncertainty of building in New York become too great, developers and builders may turn to other states where these issues are not present,' they warn. 'To help avoid these unintended but very real consequences, when determining reasonableness for purposes of the Grid Exemption the Commission should consider all relevant factors where full electrification could render a project infeasible, including cost burdens that would price homes out of the reach of New York households and timing concerns associated with the availability and installation of electric infrastructure and equipment.' The state's joint utilities — Con Edison, National Grid, Central Hudson and NYSEG/RG&E — support the 18-month criteria. They also ask that developers seeking an exemption bear all the costs of required studies. The joint utilities indicate a cost-based exemption would be difficult to implement given variation in costs across different utilities. It would also require evaluating costs of both types of hookups. 'Requiring new service requests to evaluate costs based on both all-electric connections and electric/fossil fuel connections would require more resources, extend project timelines, and increase costs,' the utilities wrote in their comments. There's no timeline for the commission to make a decision, although clarity will be needed before the end of the year. The state's building codes council has also not finalized the new requirements for the coming year. — Marie J. French PSE&G MOVES AHEAD — New Jersey's largest utility is rolling out billing changes aimed at protecting electric customers from worst-case scenarios caused by rising rates. PSE&G now won't shut off service to low-income and other qualified customers by extending existing winter shut-off protections to include summer months (now through the end of September). The company is also suspending reconnection fees. Both ideas were floated last month by Gov. Phil Murphy's office and don't require Board of Public Utilities approval. 'There is now widespread recognition that New Jersey needs more power generation to address the forecasted energy supply-demand imbalance,' PSE&G President Kim Hanemann said in a statement. 'PSE&G is not the cause of the 17 percent rise in electric rates, but we can support our customers by advancing critical solutions. These actions should help relieve a burden to families and communities just as the weather is getting warmer and electricity usage hits its peak. We encourage our customers to reach out to us if they are struggling to pay their bill so we can help them access the solutions available.' PSE&G and other utilities are still waiting for the BPU to take up a broader change that would cushion summer bill spikes by deferring parts of those bills and having customers pay them back throughout the year. The plan resembles existing 'level' billing options that customers can choose to get. All these measures are designed to help take the edge off the new rates that took effect Sunday and are expected to increase the average residential power bill by $25 per month — but more in the summer months for many customers. Republicans have blasted the deferred payment concept, first proposed by the BPU, as a political stunt to help Democrats when they face voters this fall. — Ry Rivard NYISO PUSHES GAS FOR RELIABILITY — POLITICO's Marie J. French: The state's grid operator has escalated its warnings that new renewables aren't coming online fast enough to meet growing energy demand, explicitly backing additional fossil fuel plants to keep the lights on. The New York Independent System Operator has for years warned about shrinking reliability margins — the cushion of available generation to keep ACs humming and factories running. With new economic development projects, data centers and other large loads hooking up to the grid, those warnings have taken on new urgency. 'We must consider all options for investing in the grid to provide for reliability and certainty at the most efficient cost,' wrote NYISO President and CEO Rich Dewey in the annual Power Trends report released Monday.

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