Dear Commons Community,
Yesterday was a political news-filled day with the confirmation hearings of Supreme Court nominee Brett M. Kavanaugh, President Trump lashing out at Attorney General Jeff Sessions, the release of sections of Bob Woodward’s new book, Fear: Trump in the White House, and Special Counsel Robert Mueller agreeing to accept written testimony from Trump on certain matters regarding his investigation. However, the day belonged to Boston City Council member Ayanna Pressley who beat 10-term incumbent, Michael Capuano to win the Democratic nomination for Massachusetts’ 7th Congressional District, an upset building on the momentum for progressives sparked by Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s victory in a New York primary earlier this summer.
Michael Capuano in a gracious concession speech said “Clearly the district wanted a lot of change,” he told supporters after his loss. “I’m sorry that this didn’t work out.”
With no Republican on November’s ballot for the district, Pressley is all but guaranteed to make history as the first black congresswoman from Massachusetts. Pressley, 44, already broke barriers in 2009 when she became the first woman of color elected to the Boston City Council.
Capuano first won his House seat in 1998. The 7th District encompasses most of Boston and much of Cambridge.
Facing an uphill battle against Capuano ― a poll for radio station WBUR showed her trailing him by 13 percentage points a month ago ― Pressley campaigned on the need to change the House’s status quo.
“I’ve been told to wait my turn,” Pressley said at a campaign event earlier this year. “I’ve been called a traitor for challenging an incumbent, told simply this isn’t the way things are done here.”
But, she added, “When the challenges we are confronted with are this big, this deep, and growing, I can’t and I won’t wait my turn.”
Those rallying to her cause included Ocasio-Cortez, the political newcomer thrust into the national spotlight when she upended veteran Rep. Joe Crowley, a House Democratic leader, in New York’s June 26 primary. Fresh from her win, Ocasio-Cortez tweeted, “Vote her in next, Massachusetts,” referring to Pressley.
Pressley’s campaign had dispatched staffers to aid Ocasio-Cortez’s get-out-the-vote efforts. And Pressley has called the New Yorker “my sister in change.”
As in Ocasio-Cortez’s race, Pressley was a progressive woman of color challenging a white male lawmaker. Unlike Ocasio-Cortez, who was running against a more moderate Democrat in Crowley, Capuano is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus with a solidly left-leaning legislative record. The race focused less on substantive policy differences and more on whether voters wanted a change in the district.
Pressley hasn’t accepted donations from corporate political action committees in her campaign. Her platform promotes progressive ideas like Medicare-for-all, debt-free college and abolishing Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Capuano also touted his years-long support for Medicare-for-all. And he positioned himself as fervently anti-Donald Trump ― refusing to attend the president’s inauguration last year, voting twice in support of impeaching him and frequently calling him out on Twitter. He was also well-known for his progressive views on foreign policy
The Boston Globe, the region’s major newspaper, gave Pressley their endorsement.
Congratulations to Ms. Pressley!
Tony