The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
News Features  |  Talking Politics  |  This Just In

No more Mr. Nice Council

Five-way Boston bloodbath
By DAVID S. BERNSTEIN  |  May 11, 2011

main_flaherty_220
Acrimony, accusations, alliances, and intrigue — the bricks and mortar of Boston politics — are back for the 2011 campaign.

After months of rumor and conjecture, Flaherty announced this week that he is, in fact, seeking to retake his old at-large seat on the Boston City Council this year. Although several potential challengers have begun collecting signatures for that race — including Flaherty's fellow 2009 mayoral challenger Kevin McCrea — it's Flaherty who immediately turned what might have been a quiet, off-year municipal-election season into a swirl of controversy and bitterness.

That's because all four at-large incumbents are seeking re-election. Flaherty's success would necessarily knock one of them out of office.

That could easily be one of the two newest, Felix Arroyo and Ayanna Pressley, who were both elected in 2009 to fill slots opened when Flaherty and Sam Yoon ran unsuccessfully for mayor.

Arroyo is the council's only Hispanic member. Pressley is the only black woman ever elected to the council, and one of just two women on it — and with Maureen Feeney retiring, Pressley's defeat could leave only men on the 13-member body.

Resentments about the potential racial and gender effects are already fomenting — a little unfairly to Flaherty, perhaps, who is no more targeting Arroyo and Pressley than he is the Irish-American males, John Connolly and Stephen Murphy.

Flaherty did, however, launch his campaign with an assault on the integrity of all four incumbents, painting them as pawns of Mayor Tom Menino. His press release said that "members of the council are routinely marginalized by the mayor," and he stood by that charge in an interview with the Phoenix.

"There is no independent voice" among the at-large councilors, Flaherty said. "Nobody's willing to talk about the big issues."

The incumbents and their supporters would strongly dispute that — especially Connolly, whose criticisms of schools superintendent Carol Johnson raised Menino's hackles.

That kind of talk from Flaherty is likely to accelerate what has already been an unusual level of campaign camaraderie among the incumbents. While far from running as a slate, they have shown support for one another — Murphy going so far as to speak at an early Pressley fundraiser.

As for the question of who might be most vulnerable, city political observers are up in the air.

One thing they agree upon is that turnout will be unlike the '09 mayoral-election year, when Arroyo and Pressley prevailed, and more like the previous non-mayoral election year, 2007. That year featured a similar at-large contest, with one strong outsider — Connolly — taking on four incumbents. Just 46,000 people voted, compared with more than 110,000 in 2009.

Conventional wisdom says that low-turnout elections, which minorities and younger voters historically skip, favor the "traditional" candidates — and in fact Arroyo's father, Felix D. Arroyo, lost his seat in that '07 election.

That has some speculating that Arroyo, who finished third in 2009, could suffer his father's fate. Others say that Pressley, the fourth-place finisher, is the obvious short straw. Still others say Murphy, despite the advantages of being the current council president, is most at risk after yet another attempt at statewide office. Some even suggest that Connolly, the top vote-getter last time, could be in trouble if Menino sets his mind on ridding him from the council.

And of course, Flaherty himself is no shoo-in to be welcomed back by voters. The only sure thing at this point is six months of good, old-fashioned rough-and-tumble Boston politics.

Related: Time for a big change, He's number three, City Hall writes its own report card, More more >
  Topics: This Just In , Politics, Boston, Tom Menino,  More more >
| More
Add Comment
HTML Prohibited

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
[ 05/23 ]   S.J. Chambers  @ Porter Square Books
[ 05/23 ]   "Elegant Enigmas: The Art of Edward Gorey"  @ Boston Athenæum
ARTICLES BY DAVID S. BERNSTEIN
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   GOD HATES FAQS  |  May 19, 2011
    Editors' note: We selected David S. Bernstein to serve as our resident Rapture expert, on account of his having seen all three Kirk Cameron Left Behind series film adaptations.
  •   BLISS OF RAPTURE  |  May 19, 2011
    Okay, I'm not happy , exactly, that, as a Jew, I am excluded from Saturday's date with Heaven's eternal rewards, and will instead be left to suffer through great tribulations before perishing, with the rest of the Army of the Antichrist, as a dismembered corpse beneath a waste-deep river of blood.
  •   NO MORE MR. NICE COUNCIL  |  May 11, 2011
    By announcing his campaign for city council, Michael Flaherty immediately unleashed the bitter side of Boston politics.
  •   OBAMA'S REBIRTH  |  May 05, 2011
    It was a good weekend for the president.
  •   TOM MENINO'S FINAL TERM AS MAYOR? DON'T BET ON IT.  |  April 27, 2011
    Mark this down: Tom Menino, already the longest-serving mayor in Boston history, will run for re-election in 2013.  

 See all articles by: DAVID S. BERNSTEIN

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2011 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group