Google Ads


Site Stats

MA-09: Progressive Dem Mac D'Alessandro Takes on ConservaDem Stephen Lynch

by: MassDemActivist

Fri Apr 23, 2010 at 10:17 AM EDT


SEIU's New England regional political director Mac D'Alessandro has taken the primary plunge against incumbent Stephen Lynch.  (Lynch, for you Progressive Punch score followers, gets a lousy 2 rating, coming from Massachusetts, and has a lifetime progressive score on "Crucial Votes" of 81.87, which drops to 71.95 when focusing on 2009-2010.)

D'Alessandro promises to be a progressive alternative to Lynch.  D'Alessandro's Facebook group, started this week, is up to almost 900 members.  I'd encourage you to join.  And he just got on ActBlue.  You can help replace ConservaDem Stephen Lynch with a real progressive by making a contribution to Mac D'Alessandro today.

D'Alessandro has also introduced himself to the local progressive netroots at Blue Mass Group:

Greetings, Blue Mass Group!  My name is Mac D'Alessandro.  I'm the New England Political Director for the Service Employees International Union (SEIU); and, as of this week, I am a candidate for United States Congress from Massachusetts' 9th district.  I am a progressive Democrat, and I'm running for Congress because I believe that the working families in our communities deserve a Congressman who will fight for them and who will actually be a leader on key issues that matter to them - from reforming our health care system (and building on the recently-passed reforms) to holding Wall Street accountable to investing in job creation for our communities to protecting our civil rights and ensuring equal protection under the law.

I have spent my career fighting for working families.  I've been with the SEIU for nine years.  Prior to that, I worked for Greater Boston Legal Services, directing legislative efforts to help families combat poverty.  I live in Milton with my wife Jennie, our children Sophie and Atticus, and our cat Nile.  Like most families throughout the district and across Massachusetts, my wife and I sit at our kitchen table on a regular basis, going over our bills and the family budget, paying for today while trying to save for tomorrow.  We see too often that the well-being of Fortune 500 companies are put in front of the good fortune of working families like ours.  That is why I'm running.  The 9th district deserves more than just another representative; the district deserves someone who will champion our Democratic ideals in the U.S. House of Representatives as we fight to balance the playing field for working families like ours.

There were 34 House Democrats who opposed health care reform.  Lynch was the only one from Massachusetts.  And, of those from the 34 who are running for re-election, I still don't see a lot of primary challenges.  Supporting Mac D'Alessandro's campaign can send a message nationally to Democrats wavering on other issues (like Wall Street reform).  Mac very much represents what it means to be a "Better Democrat."  Please spread the word, join the Facebook group, and contribute any amount you can.

MassDemActivist :: MA-09: Progressive Dem Mac D'Alessandro Takes on ConservaDem Stephen Lynch
Tags: , , , , , , , , , , (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email
Proceed with Caution
MA-09 is very unique among D+11 districts in that it's not that "progressive" an area. It has some country-club, Reagan Democrats in the wealthy suburbs of Norfolk County, and a lot of white ethnic "JFK Democrats" that reflexively vote the party line but are not all that liberal. It does contain a slice of Boston, but that's mostly Southie and the white parts of Dorchester, which are working class, and once again, more Democratic than liberal.

IMHO, Lynch is the perfect fit for this district. A progressive would beat a Republican in the general election, but would have a difficult time getting traction in the Democratic primary. If Democrats want a more reliable vote than Lynch out of this district, their best bet is to weaken Capuano a little in redistricting and throw progressive areas like Beacon Hill, Brookline, or Cambridge in with Lynch's territory. But I don't see how Lynch loses MA-09 as it is.

20, CD MA-03/NH-01/MA-08


Labor
As long as it was only about socio-cultural issues that don't come to the forefront very often during Democrat-controlled sessions anyway, plenty of liberals were willing to put up with Lynch, especially considering the district makeup.

If he's going to be a DINO on pocketbook stuff like health care though, that's another story. He'd have had a shot at the Senate primary against Coakley had he not bizarrely tacked to the right on health care, but as it was it was clear his labor friends weren't going to come to his aid.  

36, M, Democrat, MD-03


[ Parent ]
So the strategy here would be to focus on economic issues?
and to consolidate labor support around a single Lynch opponent?

party: Democratic, ideology: moderate, district: CT-01

[ Parent ]
Several points
*Lynch won a special primary in 2001 with a plurality against two liberal opponents (i.e. if he had only faced one he might have lost)

*Cambridge is more diverse than the parts of MA-09 (such as, say, West Roxbury or Readville) that MA-08 would grab in exchange. MA-08 can't stay majority-minority if Cambridge goes, I don't think. (Also, Brookline is in MA-04, where it should probably stay.)

*As Answer Guy mentioned, Lynch pissed off a lot of previous supporters with his health care shenanigans. The time is probably ripe for a primary challenge.

21, dude, RI-01 (registered) IL-01 (college)
please help Japan. click "donate funds" in upper right and then "Japan Earthquake and Pacific Tsunami." http://www.redcross.org/


[ Parent ]
Yeah
A one-on-one primary might be trouble for Lynch if he can't count on the labor support he's used to having at all levels. It's not an especially liberal district as the state goes, but moderate-to-conservative Democrats and independents (Mass being an open primary state) are often nowhere to be found in Democratic primaries.

I think it is possible to draw a CD in Mass that is minority-majority without Cambridge but only by including nearly all of Boston proper plus Chelsea. I suppose that's a possible map should MA-08 be vacant for 2012.

Sadly, there are likely to be higher redrawing priorities in 2012 than creating a district less hospitable for Stephen Lynch.

 

36, M, Democrat, MD-03


[ Parent ]
I really, really doubt that MA-08 is compulsory VRA
At the last census, it was 48.9% white, a huge plurality compared to the other races (23.2% black, 15.9% Hispanic, 8.2% Asian). Considering that Hispanics and Asians tend to have worse turnout than whites, MA-08 almost certainly has a majority-white voting population.

[ Parent ]

Copyright 2003-2010 Swing State Project LLC

Primary Sponsor

You're not running for second place. Is your website? See why Campaign Engine is ranked #1 in software and support among Progressive-only Internet firms. http://www.mediamezcla.com/

Menu

Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?


About the Site

SSP Resources

Blogroll

Powered by: SoapBlox