2016-11-30

sovay: (Claude Rains)
So I spent most of today feeling like a damp rag, which in combination with the chill and the pouring rain and the early dark meant I did not make it to the protest at the Kennedy School, but after making dinner with [livejournal.com profile] derspatchel (chowder and biscuits) I actually got out of the house for the Somerville Democratic City Committee's meeting with Mayor Curtatone, which was great. The turnout was impressive for a cold rainy weeknight, with a visible range of ages and ethnicities in the audience; I took over five pages of notes and got to talk to the mayor himself twice, once while I was signing in beforehand (I hadn't realized I was expected to RSVP, but did not mind leaving my name and ward on a clipboard), once afterward with [livejournal.com profile] rushthatspeaks. I think I was running a fever the entire time, but I don't think I hallucinated that we have an ethical and responsive mayor who said firmly things like "Now is the time to double down on who we are, on humanity, civility, compassion" and "I promise you, we will take no part in breaking up families, rousting people from their homes" and encouraged everyone in the audience to become involved in their community, in local politics, and in the active aid and protection of their neighbors. He talked about the "broken system" of immigration and the myths that surround the ongoing refugee crisis: "Don't let the lie become the truth about why people come to this country, what they're escaping and our role in it." He thought it was perfectly possible for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and/or the City of Boston to futz around with the Green Line Extension to the point of delaying its completion indefinitely, but not for Trump to kill it. I really appreciated his readiness to admit when he didn't have a handy answer or when one of his constituents was asking for something the city was still working on or hadn't yet figured out how to implement. I'm also fine with his philosophy of planning for the worst and then working overtime to make sure things don't slip that far. Rush-That-Speaks asked afterward how the City of Somerville was handling Trump's threat to pull federal funding from sanctuary cities and he responded without hesitation that even if Trump managed to yank the $6 million in question out of the city's annual budget, it would find ways to fund the necessary programs itself; Somerville would not abandon its people or let itself be blackmailed. He talked about his parents, who were themselves immigrants from Italy; he mentioned that his own first language was not English. He slightly has the politician's tendency of hitting on a resonant phrase and using it repeatedly, but he didn't talk in ruts. The thing where he's been mayor of Somerville for six and a half consecutive terms now makes sense to me. I would definitely vote for him over even an ethical artichoke if he ran for governor, but if he just stayed mayor, I would be okay with that, too.
Page generated 2025-09-12 22:05
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios