Biographies “Mass. Senate Democrats differ most on biographies - Boston Herald” plus 2 more |
- Mass. Senate Democrats differ most on biographies - Boston Herald
- Democratic differences? - Sentinel & Enterprise
- Mass. Senate Democrats differ most on biographies - abc40
Mass. Senate Democrats differ most on biographies - Boston Herald Posted: 24 Oct 2009 10:39 AM PDT In the race to replace the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, similarities between the Democratic candidates are much easier to spot than differences. All four favor abortion rights and gay marriage. Each opposes the death penalty. All are for some form of national insurance overhaul. Each has questions about more troops in Afghanistan. That broad agreement helps explain why biography and record — not philosophy — may be the defining factor when the party primary is held Dec. 8. "There's no ideological distinction between the four of them, and with the exception of (Celtics [team stats] co-owner Steve) Pagliuca, they all pretty much have the same money," said Democratic political analyst Mary Ann Marsh. "So, in such a short race with such a uniform field, the thing that may determine the winner are the characteristics they had going into the race." The story lines for each candidate are already clear: Attorney General Martha Coakley casts herself as the inevitable winner, Pagliuca touts his business background, Rep. Michael Capuano presents himself as Kennedy's liberal heir, and City Year founder Alan Khazei is running as an outsider skilled at building coalitions. Marsh said "the die was cast" for the field after more conservative candidates, such as Rep. Stephen Lynch, an abortion opponent, decided against seeking the Democratic nomination. The clearest philosophical contrast will now come in the brief general election campaign, taking place from Dec. 9 until Jan. 19. State Sen. Scott Brown of Wrentham has already submitted the required signatures to qualify for the Republican ballot. On Monday, the Democratic candidates square off twice, during a morning forum focused on the economy and organized by the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce, as well as a debate in the evening convened by the Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the U.S. Senate. It will mark the candidates' first head-to-head meetings after a series of forums where each spoke successively. All the candidates are vying to succeed Kennedy, a liberal Democratic icon who died Aug. 25 of brain cancer. His Senate seat is being held on an interim basis by Paul G. Kirk Jr., a close friend and chairman of the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation. Coakley, the state's first female attorney general, has sought from the start to create an aura on invincibility by being the first candidate to draw nomination papers, the first to submit the required number of signatures and by outraising the field the first month of the campaign. She touts her background as Middlesex district attorney and as the state's chief law enforcement officer. "We more than doubled our fundraising goals for the month of September thanks to supporters who recognize my record of getting results as attorney general," Coakley said on Oct. 1. Pagliuca has spent the bulk of his career as a managing director at Mitt Romney's former venture capital firm, Bain Capital. A multimillionaire, Pagliuca has tapped his personal fortune to air the campaign's most extensive early advertising blitz. "They have experience in politics; I have experience in business," he said when he announced his candidacy on Sept. 17. "We really don't have anybody that has on-the-ground business experience." Capuano, a six-term congressman, highlights his tenure in Washington and has cast himself as the philosophical heir to Kennedy. He also has focused his attention on Coakley, most recently accusing her of not taking a public position against the Iraqi war and Patriot Act. Capuano voted against both. "If you remain silent," he said Oct. 18 during a forum at Merrimack College, "you should be held accountable." This content has passed through fivefilters.org. |
Democratic differences? - Sentinel & Enterprise Posted: 19 Oct 2009 03:29 AM PDT NORTH ANDOVER -- A prosecutor. A politician. A businessman. And a citizen activist. The biographies of the four Democrats vying to replace Edward Kennedy in the U.S. Senate could determine whom voters choose in a primary election that features a field of candidates with remarkably similar policy positions on everything from the war in Afghanistan to health care. "I wish I was running against George Bush and the differences were painfully obvious," joked U.S. Rep. Michael Capuano, acknowledging that little separates him from his opponents when it comes to the issues. The four Democratic candidates for U.S. Senate -- Capuano, Attorney General Martha Coakley, Celtics co-owner Stephen Pagliuca and City Year co-founder Alan Khazei -- participated in a candidate forum Sunday afternoon at Merrimack College, the first such event of the young campaign in which all four candidates submitted to extended questioning.Though the forum was not quite a debate, each took questions for 30 minutes, explaining why voters should choose them in the upcoming Dec. 8 primary. The event was sponsored by the Greater Lowell Area Democrats, the North Andover Democratic Town Committee and a host of other regional organizations. "Of all the candidates, I have actually been doing the job for the past 11 years in the House, and I have a long record," Capuano said. The record includes some votes he would like to take back, such as one in 2000 as a member of Financial Services Committee to deregulate the commodity-futures market and also for pushing as hard as he did to make home mortgages available to as many people as possible.Still, in his straight-forward, self-deprecating style, Capuano said he is proud of his overall record that includes voting against the Patriot Act and speaking out against the war in Iraq. He said he believes homeownership should still be a priority with sensible regulations. The other three Democrats in the field, however, are not willing to concede the mantle of most experienced to Capuano just because he is already a member of Congress.All four candidates agreed on the need for a "robust" public health-care option, expressed skepticism about boosting troop levels in Afghanistan without a clear mission, and said they would fight to repeal the Defense of Marriage Act, which limits how state and federal agencies recognize same-sex marriages. It's the other intangibles that define "leadership," however, that could prove to be the difference. Coakley focused in on her "two and half decades" of public service from the time she was a Middlesex County prosecutor and district attorney, to the past three years she has served as attorney general. Highlighting her accomplishments as attorney general, Coakley pointed to lawsuits and legislation she has filed to crack down on predatory mortgage lending, her work to protect seniors and children from cyber crime, her efforts to go after big pharmaceutical and insurance companies that have driven up the cost of health care, and the federal lawsuit she filed to strike down DOMA. The early questioning from moderator Renée Loth, a Boston Globe columnist and former editorial page editor, focused on the one glaring weakness in Coakley's resume -- foreign policy. Coakley tip-toed her way through an answer on the growing threat of a nuclear Pakistan, but offered a more direct answer on whether President Barack Obama should send more troops to Afghanistan. "I think we need to have a clear mission about what we are doing in Afghanistan. I don't think the case has been made yet that the mission is clear and that more troops will help us accomplish that," Coakley said. Pagliuca got the afternoon started, talking about his family and humble upbringing that drives him to make sure "the American dream" remains attainable for families in Massachusetts. "I spent 25 years on the ground building businesses. I'm the only candidate with that experience," Pagliuca said. Pagliuca said he is hoping his business background investing in startups as an executive at Bain Capital will convince voters he has the chops to create jobs and get the economy moving again. He said making smart investments that will help the life-science and clean-technology sectors grow in Massachusetts will not only make the state a leader in those fields but bring manufacturing jobs back to cities like Lowell and Lawrence. He also said tighter financial regulations and stricter enforcement over Wall Street and bank lenders is necessary to prevent another economic collapse. He said potential homebuyers should have to meet strict deposit and income tests to qualify for a mortgage, and lenders who don't follow these rules should be closed. "This is why we need people in Congress who understand business," Pagliuca said. Pagliuca also admitted that not voting in several presidential primaries was a "big mistake," and said past support for Republican candidates like Mitt Romney were "out of friendship" and not philosophy. Khazei, co-founder of the community-service organization City Year, said he is not about "big government" or "big business," but rather "big citizenship." He said he is the only real reformer in the race who, despite lack of name-recognition or personal wealth, has refused to take donations from lobbyists or PACs. "We all voted for change last November, and we're not getting it and that's because of Congress," Khazei said. A bundle of energy, Khazei painted himself as the only candidate who knows how to build "a movement" for real reform and will use those skills to fight for a health-care mandate and strong public option, for better teacher pay and innovation in education, and for civil rights. This content has passed through fivefilters.org. |
Mass. Senate Democrats differ most on biographies - abc40 Posted: 24 Oct 2009 08:19 PM PDT Associated Press - October 24, 2009 11:25 PM ET BOSTON (AP) - The Democrats running to succeed the late Sen. Edward Kennedy differ little on the issues, so the biggest contrast in their short primary campaign may be over biography and record. All four favor abortion rights and gay marriage. Each favors some form of national insurance overhaul. To draw a contrast, Attorney General Martha Coakley is casting herself as an effective manager and the inevitable primary winner. Boston Celtics co-owner Stephen Pagliuca is touting his business background. Rep. Michael Capuano is casting himself as the liberal heir to Kennedy. And City Year co-founder Alan Khazei is running as an outsider skilled at building coalitions. Kennedy died in August of brain cancer. The special election primary is Dec. 8. The general election is Jan. 19. Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. This content has passed through fivefilters.org. |
You are subscribed to email updates from Biographies - Bing News To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 |
0 comments:
Post a Comment