logo
Kitty Dukakis, behind the scenes

Kitty Dukakis, behind the scenes

Boston Globe24-03-2025

Advertisement
In July 1986, Kitty attended my father's 70th birthday party and brought with her a proclamation from Mike declaring that day 'Lewis Gaines Day in the Commonwealth.'
Get The Gavel
A weekly SCOTUS explainer newsletter by columnist Kimberly Atkins Stohr.
Enter Email
Sign Up
At my father's memorial service in 1987, Kitty spoke of their friendship and their common bond. She said, that 'while I was able to deal with my demons, although he tried, Lewis never did. Nonetheless, he had a huge heart and I loved him dearly.'
I am forever grateful for Kitty Dukakis and the Dukakis family and send them my sincerest condolences.
Peter Gaines
Chatham
The writer's brother, Richard, was editor of The Boston Phoenix and co-author of a 1988 biography of Mike Dukakis.
I wrote, she called, and a decrepit playground was reborn
One afternoon in mid-1986 the phone rang in my Chelsea kitchen; it was Kitty Dukakis. I had written to her a week earlier about the possibility of her Program on Public Space Partnerships at the Kennedy School taking on a neighborhood problem: a decrepit nearby playground, where drug dealing had taken over. The dealers were in the park and the children were playing in the street.
She came out and looked around. When I pointed out that the park was clearly visible from the windows of the mayor's office a half a block away, she didn't say much. But not long thereafter a State Police cruiser appeared on the scene.
Advertisement
Students in landscape architecture from the University of Massachusetts Amherst got to work on a playground redesign with kid-friendly amenities, and the state awarded Chelsea a $240,000 grant to fund the improvements. A local church received a Gateway Cities grant to fund a supervised recreation program for young children. We handed out T-shirts with the message: 'Bosson Park is a Wonderful Place to Play.'
All of this occurred largely over a two-year period when Mrs. Dukakis was reportedly struggling with personal issues as well as commitments related to her husband's presidential campaign. But what our neighborhood saw was someone who showed up for us.
Kitty Dukakis was the real deal.
Barbara Donlon
Stoneham

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Starmer to visit Canada amid Trump threats
Starmer to visit Canada amid Trump threats

Yahoo

time20 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Starmer to visit Canada amid Trump threats

Sir Keir Starmer will visit Canada for security talks next week amid Donald Trump's threats to annex the country. The Prime Minister will meet Mark Carney, his Canadian counterpart, on June 14 for discussions concerning security and economic co-operation, according to The Times. It comes after the US president warned that he was prepared to wreck the Canadian economy in an attempt to force it to become the 51st US state. Mr Trump has already doubled tariffs on steel imports to 50 per cent, piling pressure on Ottawa following a meeting with Mr Carney in Washington. Fears have been raised of 'catastrophic' job losses, factory closures and disruption to supply chains in Canada in the wake of the tariffs. The UK is exempt from the 50 per cent tariff following a deal between London and Washington. But the US president, in a post on Truth Social, said there would be financial consequences of Canada remaining independent. He said the country would be faced with the $61 billion (£49 billion) cost of being covered by his proposed Golden Dome missile defence system. However, he added it would be 'zero dollars if they become our cherished 51st State'. The post was written hours after King Charles opened the 45th Canadian Parliament in May. During his speech the King underlined the Commonwealth country's sovereignty in 'dangerous and uncertain' times. Mr Carney told the Canadian broadcaster CBC he wished to join ReArm Europe, a plan designed to beef up European defence, in a drive to make Canada less reliant upon the US. The EU has also indicated it is looking to forge stronger ties with Canada given its links to Nato and the level of support it is offering to Ukraine. Mr Carney said: 'Seventy-five cents of every [Canadian] dollar of capital spending for defence goes to the United States. That's not smart.' The Canadian prime minister, in an interview with Sky News last month, was highly critical of Mr Starmer's decision to offer the US president a second state visit to the UK as the move had sparked fury in Canada. 'To be frank, we weren't impressed by that gesture … given the circumstance. It was at a time when we were being quite clear about the issues around sovereignty.' He made clear that the invitation for the King – Canada's head of state – to be in attendance at the opening of Parliament in Ottawa was 'not coincidental'. Sir Keir, who is yet to meet the former Bank of England governor since he won the Canadian election in April, wished to hold talks with Mr Carney due to them both being centre-left leaders within the G7. Number 10 has declined to comment. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

With DEI under attack, here's how Virginia's diverse slate of candidates talk about identity
With DEI under attack, here's how Virginia's diverse slate of candidates talk about identity

Yahoo

time11 hours ago

  • Yahoo

With DEI under attack, here's how Virginia's diverse slate of candidates talk about identity

It's the most diverse Republican ticket in Virginia history. In her bid for the commonwealth's top seat, Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears could become the country's first Black woman governor. John Reid, as the nominee for lieutenant governor, is the first openly gay person on the state's ticket. And Jason Miyares, running for a second term as attorney general, was the first Hispanic man elected to statewide office in 2021. But while Earle-Sears and Reid have spoken openly about their identities, they, alongside the Republican party, have distanced themselves from diversity efforts more broadly. 'Here's my 'pride' flag,' Reid wrote on the social media platform X earlier this month alongside a photo of the U.S. flag. 'My goal as a modern Republican leader in Virginia is to find common values and goals amongst diverse people and help deliver a prosperous, peaceful, upstanding, and free society.' 'I'm running to work for you — not for headlines, and not for identity politics,' Earle-Sears posted on X in April. 'Yes, I'd be Virginia's first Black female governor. But that's not why I'm in this race. I'm running to lead and lift up every Virginian.' Republicans have simultaneously taken a hard line stance against initiatives such as DEI. Miyares was among the state attorneys general who signed onto a letter calling on Costco to remove its DEI practices. Earle-Sears's campaign did not respond to repeated requests for an interview for this story. But some analysts see her messaging as an intentional distancing of her identity from her politics. For example, she often highlights her experience as an immigrant from Jamaica over her experience specifically as a Black woman, said Jatia Wrighten, a political science professor at Virginia Commonwealth University who researches state legislatures, Black women and leadership. In one campaign ad, Earle-Sears says: 'A buck-seventy-five. When Dad came to America, that's all he had. But for a little girl in Jamaica, that little bit of change changed everything.' 'That is very different than how (other) Black women candidates talk about themselves and talk about their identity,' Wrighten said. 'Oftentimes, their identity is seen as a strength, and I think with (Sears), because she is a Republican Black woman, it's strategically beneficial to her if she underplays the fact that she is a Black woman.' Democrats also are running a diverse slate of candidates. A Black man and white woman are running for attorney general, and the crowded lieutenant governor field includes two Black men, an Indian-American woman, a Pakistani-American man, a Latino man and a white man. But that pool of diversity is less of a talking point than it might have been a few years ago, experts say. ___ In the last decade, Democrats at the national level have held onto their multiracial coalition, but Republicans have gained ground among non-white voters. In the 2024 presidential election, about 20% of Republican voters were people of color, compared with 10% in 2012. There's little evidence to suggest that in 2025, most voters feel compelled to vote for candidates who match their own identity, said Kyle Kondik, managing editor of Sabato's Crystal Ball, a political analysis newsletter from the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia. Virginia's gubernatorial race already is historic — with the state guaranteed its first female governor. Earle-Sears' opponent is Abigail Spanberger, a former U.S. House member and intelligence officer who is white. 'There's not really any evidence to think that Winsome Earle-Sears should get some sort of bonus among Black voters for being a Black Republican,' Kondik said. 'There's been a bit of erosion for Democrats and Black voters, but you still expect Black voters to vote pretty overwhelmingly for Spanberger.' A recent poll commissioned by Virginia FREE, a pro-business advocacy organization, put Spanberger ahead in the governor's race by 4 points. When support was broken down by race, the poll found 32% of likely voters who are Black supported Earle-Sears over Spanberger. That's actually a little less than the percentage — 36 — of likely Black voters who said they approved of Gov. Glenn Youngkin's performance. Youngkin, a Republican, is white. In January, there were rumblings that Democratic U.S. Rep. Bobby Scott was considering a run for governor, apparently out of concern that Spanberger would be unable to drive Black voters to the polls. But Scott, who is Black and Filipino, never entered the race, and Spanberger became the Democratic nominee without a primary. 'I will say that Democrats are probably not getting quite as good of Black turnout as they would like, particularly in Southside Virginia and in Hampton Roads,' Kondik said. 'I think she's an underdog in this election, but if (Earle-Sears) were to win, it probably would be one of the factors that would go into her winning — not that she would be winning a substantially higher share of the Black vote than Republicans typically get, rather it would probably be that Black turnout is poor, and that Spanberger maybe isn't getting the kind of turnout she needs.' ___ Shortly after Reid became the Republican nominee for lieutenant governor, Youngkin called him and requested he step down from the race, pointing to a social media account that included reposts of images of men in states of undress and matched the username Reid uses for other social media platforms. At the time, Reid said the attacks were a direct result of him being openly gay. Youngkin's request was embraced by evangelical Christian groups but proved to be a miscalculation of where the bulk of the Republican party is — Reid refused to drop out. He said issues of identity were no longer preeminent among Republican voters. That's a change from the past decade he attributed in part to President Donald Trump. 'The social issues were at one point very polarizing, and Donald Trump, shockingly, is the one who opened up the tent of the Republican party and said, as long as you are solid and you're conservative and you're smart and you're willing to work hard, then you have a place at the table and you may even have a job in the administration and in the party,' Reid said in an interview. Earle-Sears has not appeared publicly alongside Reid since he became the nominee. Separately, recent reporting found that in 2024, she included a hand-written note stating her moral objection to a bill that prevents denying marriage licenses on the basis of sex, gender and race. Trump has appointed some LGBTQ people to his current administration, including Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent, and Kennedy Center Executive Director Ric Grenell. At the same time, Trump has dramatically rolled back protections for LGBTQ people. Some candidates of color say Trump's rhetoric has toxified the political landscape. Democrat Levar Stoney, a Black candidate for lieutenant governor, said Virginia politics today feels more charged than when he first ran for Richmond mayor in 2016. 'People feel like they can do things, say things, that 10 years ago we would consider certainly disrespectful and in bad taste,' Stoney said. 'Go look at social media, and you will see it … It looks like misogyny, it's racism, xenophobia, you see it all throughout those social media platforms, and there's no accountability for it.' But several candidates this year said it's an encouraging sign both parties have changed to grow more accepting of candidates from different backgrounds. Ghazala Hashmi, the first Muslim state senator in Virginia, said she was initially inspired to run in 2019 in direct response to anti-Muslim statements from Trump. Now, she's one of six Democrats in the lieutenant governor's primary. 'We have probably the most diverse slate of candidates running statewide that Virginia has ever had before,' Hashmi said. 'And yet, it hasn't been a real topic of conversation, and in some ways, that's great news. That means we are accepting that diversity is really part of Virginia, and we are running candidates that look like Virginia.' Other Democratic candidates in the lieutenant governor's race also made clear they were not running solely, if at all, on identity politics. 'My immutable characteristic as a Latino does not define my policy imperatives,' said former prosecutor Victor Salgado. Salgado also rejected the idea that Republicans are more tolerant of a multiracial coalition than they were historically. 'I would question the premise that Republicans are running a diverse slate, because I don't think that they meant to,' he said, adding he thought establishment Republicans favored Pat Herrity, who dropped out of the election citing health concerns. Former Gov. Doug Wilder, the first Black governor in the country post-Reconstruction, thinks it's a good thing identity appears to be less of a focal point in the 2025 election. 'I never mentioned color, I never mentioned race,' he said, reflecting on the campaign before his 1989 election. 'It doesn't matter if it's a woman or a man. What have you done, what are you going to do, and how do I know that you can do it?' ___ While Virginia's Republican slate includes more diverse backgrounds, the candidates themselves have called for the dismantling of programming designed to promote diversity, equity and inclusion. 'I just think DEI is in the rearview mirror for most people,' Reid said. About 52% of Americans say DEI efforts in the workplace are a good thing, down from 56% last year, a Pew Research survey found. 'Democrats think minorities can't succeed without DEI — that we need their help, their labels, their permission,' Earle-Sears said in one post. 'But I'm the Lt. Gov. of Virginia — the former capital of the Confederacy. I didn't get here through victimhood — but through faith, education, and grit.' In interviews, Democratic candidates said they supported DEI policies — several criticized the weaponization of the phrase DEI in a way they said demonized people of color. Babur Lateef, chairman of the Prince William County School Board, said he would challenge Trump in court before he would let the president's administration dismantle DEI programming in the county schools. 'We didn't cut any program or rename any programs, and we are continuing to proceed as usual on the work we're doing with these communities and our schools,' Lateef said. 'We've completely just told the administration that we are not breaking any laws.' On social media, Earle-Sears has labeled Spanberger 'the DEI or die candidate.' The lieutenant governor praised University of Virginia's decision to shutter its DEI office in March and on social media repeatedly has shared a clip of Spanberger saying 'When we win here, we will be doing right by the people who have devoted themselves to the prospect of and the promise of diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility.' Meanwhile, Spanberger has not referenced DEI on her social media at all since June 2020, when she co-wrote an op-ed in the Richmond Times-Dispatch highlighting structural racism. When asked about her stance on DEI programming, she said in a statement, 'As a former intelligence officer, I can tell you that what has kept our nation safe — and made our human intelligence operations the best in the world — over the past few decades has been our understanding of the strength and benefit that comes from differing experiences, perspectives, skill sets, and backgrounds. Initiatives, employers, and communities that seek to leverage that diversity do so to their — and our shared — benefit.' Wrighten said Spanberger was likely trying to appeal to a more centrist audience by not explicitly endorsing DEI programming on the campaign. 'She's being strategic as well,' Wrighten said. 'She's not going to say negative things about DEI, but she's also not going to be a proponent of it because she knows that's going to isolate some of her base.' The fact that candidates are highlighting diversity less on the trail is a sign something has shifted, Wrighten said. 'We find ourselves in a political climate where the pendulum has shifted back to a time where we no longer celebrate these differences,' she said. 'We see these differences as threats to the American way of life. 'I think the lack of focus on these identities is a clear signal that something has shifted in the political climate, and that is absolutely reflected in the way we see these really diverse candidates running and what they are focusing on.' Kate Seltzer, 757-713-7881,

Will Trump's policies kill Massachusetts' life sciences leadership?
Will Trump's policies kill Massachusetts' life sciences leadership?

Boston Globe

time17 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Will Trump's policies kill Massachusetts' life sciences leadership?

Advertisement Although the industry is centered in eastern Massachusetts, there's a statewide benefit from all the tax dollars those businesses and workers pay. Get The Gavel A weekly SCOTUS explainer newsletter by columnist Kimberly Atkins Stohr. Enter Email Sign Up In all, Massachusetts organizations — including universities, research institutes, and hospitals — received $3.5 billion in funding from the National Institutes of Health. Massachusetts-headquartered companies raised $3.26 billion in venture capital funding. Among all drugs in the development pipeline in the United States, 15 percent were being made by companies headquartered in Massachusetts. But actions taken by President Trump and his administration — cutting funding for scientific research and universities, flirting with tariffs, fanning skepticism about vaccines — threaten to devastate the ecosystem. Today, the industry is at a precipice, and uncertainty abounds. Some companies are already feeling the pinch of terminated federal grants, while others are anxious about what might come. Taken together, Trump's policies could force some companies and scientists to take their money, talents, and products overseas. Advertisement Christopher Locher, CEO of Lowell-based Versatope Therapeutics, which develops a platform to deliver vaccines and therapeutics, said he worries the Greater Boston life sciences ecosystem is 'being flushed down the toilet.' For example, Trump is Trump's funding cuts are already having a large impact on some local companies. Part of the problem is the Trump administration isn't only cutting funding, but it's picking which technologies to fund — in some cases apparently based on politics more than science. Take flu vaccines. The Trump administration recently announced a $500 million campaign to fund the development of a universal flu vaccine, which doesn't require annual updates, using technology being worked on But simultaneously, he cut funding for other work on a universal flu vaccine. Versatope Therapeutics got $14 million in NIH funding and spent five years developing a universal flu vaccine. It had approval from the US Food and Drug Administration to begin clinical trials when Trump terminated the contract's remaining $8 million, with the reason given being 'convenience,' Locher said. Trump also Advertisement Company executives say decisions by Trump officials to disinvest in vaccine-related technology — and concerns about whether government will approve new technology — means it's nearly impossible to find private investment funding to replace lost federal dollars. 'We're faced with bankruptcy in the very near future,' Locher said. Ironically, given Trump's stated commitment to bringing businesses back to the United States, one potential option Locher is eyeing is opening a subsidiary abroad. Conducting clinical trials would be cheaper in another country, whether in Europe, Australia, or China, Locher said, and some countries are offering financial incentives to American companies to relocate. Companies also face a potential workforce brain drain. There have been MassBio officials said China has less rigorous — but faster — safety and research protocols than the US. Australia allows a faster timeline for clinical trials. If regulatory approval of medicines is held up because the FDA is understaffed, companies may seek European regulatory approval instead. The loss of talent to foreign countries will be compounded if the pipeline of local university graduates dries up. One draw for life sciences companies to Boston/Cambridge is the presence of elite schools like Harvard and MIT, with their potential for faculty collaboration and skilled graduates. Advertisement Trump is trying to Chip Clark, CEO at Vibrant Biomedicines in Cambridge, said cuts to university research funding both 'shrink the pipeline of great ideas' that form the basis for many biotech startups and translate to fewer available scientists. Clark said the administration's policies 'seem like a deliberate attempt to try to cede scientific leadership to Europe and Japan and Korea and China. ... They will be delighted to capitalize on our talent, technology, and investment capital to make their robust biotech sectors grow and ultimately compete successfully against the US industry,' he said. Don Ingber, founding director of the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University, said he has postdocs with US visas applying for jobs in Europe, and others who were accepted to work at Harvard but are going elsewhere. 'The fact that places like Harvard and MIT and American universities are magnets for the best and brightest from around the world is what's driven our technology economy and certainly the Boston/Cambridge ecosystem,' Ingber said. 'With this uncertainty, I fear we'll lose a generation.' Ingber, who was forced to stop work on two government-funded projects on drugs designed to prevent injury from radiation exposure, compared administration policies to 'eating seed corn' needed to grow crops. Advertisement Trump's vendetta will undermine one of the most vibrant state economies in the country and set back American science by years. And it's not just eastern Massachusetts that will pay a price; the entire country will. As Ingber noted, it might take years to see the impact of medicines or technologies that aren't developed because of these shortsighted cuts. Editorials represent the views of the Boston Globe Editorial Board. Follow us

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store