Politics

News, Politics

Chuck Turner to Sue City for ouster

Chuck Turner to sue City for ouster by: Jamarhl Crawford, Blackstonian Chuck Turner has secured the legal counsel of Chester Darling, storied conservative legal champion, who is coming out of retirement to represent Turner in what will now become the proverbial federal case.  Darling made his name in legal battles in this city ranging from anti-affirmative action stances to the banning of gay people from South Boston’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade.  After a highly publicized 11-1 vote to remove Turner, Darling sent a 3 page letter warning the Boston City Council not to go through with procedures to hold a special election to replace Turner after his federal conviction on felony charges. Atty. Darling has stated he will file a complaint in US District Court in the next week.The Boston City Council has slated the special election for February 15th with the final election on March 15th.Turner faces sentencing on January 25th in US District Court. FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE STORY Turner’s not going away without a fightLawyer Darling says voter rights at issue http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2010/12/16/turners_not_going_away_without_a_fight/

News, Politics

City Council to Vote on Special Election to replace Turner

City Council to Vote on Special Election to replace Turner by: Jamarhl Crawford, Blackstonian City Council President Michael Ross has filed the motion to set the date for the Special Election to fill the City Council seat of Chuck Turner.  City Council will most likely make their final decisions today as to the dates for Special Election. The preliminary election is slated for February 15th, with the final election one month later on March 15. The special election has become necessary after the conviction of Councilor Chuck Turner on Federal charges. Boston City Council has a rule that no one convicted of a felony can serve on the Council and held proceedings which resulted in an 11-1 Council Vote to oust Turner.

News, Politics

For top aide, echoes of governor’s journey

For top aide, echoes of governor’s journey William “Mo’’ Cowan will fill a larger role on Beacon Hill as the governor’s chief of staff. (David L. Ryan/ Globe Staff) FULL STORY HEREhttp://www.boston.com/news/politics/articles/2010/12/13/for_top_patrick_aide_echoes_of_governors_journey/

News, Politics

Boston City Council: Chuck Turner's Last Stand. For Now.

Boston City Council: Chuck Turner’s Last Stand. For Now.Published Dec 01 2010, 11:12 PM by Chris Faraonehttp://thephoenix.com/blogs/phlog/archive/2010/12/01/boston-city-council-chuck-turner-s-last-stand-for-now.aspx Chuck Turner is absolutely right. I’m not being sarcastic. The expelled councilor is right that the FBI’s case against him was overblown and petty, that “people don’t think critically in this society,” and, most of all, that today’s Boston City Council meeting (and vote regarding his stature) was “a difficult situation for all of [the councilors].” Despite prevailing public sentiment, the Roxbury representative’s work on important but unpopular progressive issues is respected by his colleagues. So I hope Turner meant it when he said: “I appreciate the fact that we’ve been able to work together as a group of men and women focused on the welfare of the people of this city…I’m honored to have served with you all.” The councilors are far from perfect, but they’re certainly not “devils,” as one protester suggested, or “arch-segregationists,” as Turner another once labeled Councilor John Connolly. Through the prosecutorial circus that’s consumed the public, press, and all those in between for the past two years, there have essentially been two opposing sides in the Turner saga. On the defensive end are his diehard supporters, hundreds of whom rallied outside of City Hall today chanting: “Regardless of what they do or say, we stand with Chuck Turner anyway.” On the other side is “they,” who, at this point, is just about everybody else – the rhetorically aggressive Turner has made sure of that. But as Councilor Felix G. Arroyo, a former aide and longtime friend of Turner’s, noted in his brief but emotional comments, these are not black and white issues – not literally, nor metaphorically. I’ve been sitting at my desk for hours with a rare case of writer’s block trying to negotiate that notion; it’s what kept me from covering his trial, and continues to haunt me. I have little reason to defend Turner. The man hates me with a passion that he otherwise reserves for Fox 25 and George W. Bush; this past September, two years after the fact, he scolded me for my coverage of his arrest. We initially ran his entire letter to the editor, and I’d since interviewed him several times about other issues, but in the lead-up to trial Turner rekindled his grudge. I wish I never engaged Turner. But as he pursued the most selfish fight of his career – perhaps the only selfish fight of his career – the councilor’s crusade for self-preservation inspired the worst in me as well. And even when I realized that this wasn’t about me – regardless of how badly Turner ripped the media at press conferences – I still had trouble entertaining the plausible idea that his prosecution was about something greater than just him. There’s been tons of chatter in the past few days about Turner comparing himself to civil rights pioneers. And while I don’t fancy myself an arbiter of black activist status like Boston Herald columnist Joe Fitzgerald, all the noise over Turner’s Rosa Parks comments did remind me of a scene from the early 1970s that is detailed in the timeless Boston narrative, Common Ground. In it, Turner, then a community organizer, helps rescue a group of white passengers from a bus surrounded by an angry mob in Roxbury. Looking back on his career, some people will remember Turner as an effective leader, and as a compassionate councilor who fought for disenfranchised people in his district and beyond. Others will recall the self-righteous fool who stood before the council earlier today, forcing a painful and unnecessary vote, and grandstanding through his last conspiratorial note. In reality, I now realize, the truth lies somewhere in the middle. Read more: http://thephoenix.com/blogs/phlog/archive/2010/12/01/boston-city-council-chuck-turner-s-last-stand-for-now.aspx#ixzz173zaMOxl

News, Politics

Would-be councilors lining up

Would-be councilors lining upBy Christine McConville  |   Wednesday, December 1, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Politics HOPEFUL: Gov. Deval Patrick’s political director, Tito Jackson, at the polls last year, is considered the top contender for Chuck Turner’s City Council seat.Photo by Ted Fitzgerald As Chuck Turner faces what could be his last day as a city councilor, Roxbury insiders say there’s a small group of politically wired contenders for his seat. Tito Jackson, a Grove Hall native and Gov. Deval Patrick’s political director, tops that list, and for good reason: Turner has already hand-picked him as a successor for the 7th District seat. “I told (Jackson) that I would support him in a special election if I am removed from the council or in next year’s regular election if allowed to stay,” Turner told the council in October. “He indicated he is interested and ready to run for City Council either immediately or next year.” Jackson played it coy yesterday, responding to the Herald’s questions with an official “no comment.” Community organizer Natalie Carithers, on the other hand, was quite clear about her political aspirations. “I’m most definitely interested,” said Carithers, a former aide to Rep. Willie Mae Allen. “I’ve always wanted to run, and this is my opportunity.” If elected, she said, she’d push for job creation and better access to health care. Other rumored candidates are Monica Dean, a mental-health counselor who worked as former state Sen. Dianne Wilkerson’s aide; ex-state Rep. Althea Garrison; Candace Sealey, a staffer for U.S. Rep. Mike Capuano; Robert Terrell of the Roxbury Neighborhood Council; and Hassan Williams, a lawyer and failed state rep candidate. None returned calls yesterday. Carlos Tony Henriquez, who just won the 5th Suffolk rep’s seat, said their silence makes sense. “Out of respect to Councilor Turner, a lot of people are keeping quiet now — but there’s a lot of talk out there. You hear it at City Hall and at neighborhood meetings,” he said. Turner, a recently convicted felon, first won the seat in 1999 . If he’s forced out today, the city will have a special election in the next 120 days, and whoever wins will be in prime position to secure the seat for a full term in the fall 2011 general election. “It’s going to be a sprint,” Henriquez said, “rather than a marathon.” Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/politics/view.bg?articleid=1300012

News, Politics

Chuck Turner: I’m a ‘paragon of virtue’ Vows fight to keep City Council seat

Chuck Turner: I’m a ‘paragon of virtue’Vows fight to keep City Council seatBy Richard Weir  |   Wednesday, December 1, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Politics ‘PHOENIX’: City Councilor 
Chuck Turner talks about his felony corruption conviction 
in his City Hall office yesterday.Photo by Angela Rowlings Facing the biggest City Council vote of his career, an unrepentant Chuck Turner yesterday laid out the case he plans to make to his colleagues, arguing it would be a “moral mistake” to expel him from office despite his federal corruption conviction. “It’s a question of whether the council will rise to the level of moral integrity as opposed to political expediency,” the 70-year-old Roxbury councilor told the Herald on the eve of today’s vote on a motion by Council President Michael Ross for Turner to be stripped of his position. “Moral integrity says, ‘No. He’s been a paragon of virtue during our 11-year experience with him, and it’s clear the government decided to try to tear him down,’ ” said Turner, who still maintains he “didn’t take the money” and was framed by a corrupt U.S. Attorney’s Office. “Political expediency says, ‘Get rid of the bum. Follow the mayor’s advice.’ ” Mayor Thomas M. Menino has little sympathy for Turner’s fight to keep his $87,500-a-year job after his conviction last month of accepting a $1,000 bribe. “Chuck was one of the better city councilors, but he broke the law, and under the City Council statute, he must resign, and I think the council will do that tomorrow and take that vote,” Menino said yesterday. But Turner vowed to plead his case on the council floor. He said he will remind his peers that he’s been one of the council’s fiercest “fiscal watchdogs,” for example having voted against giving Liberty Mutual a $16 million tax break when it hauled in $31 billion in profits, and against awarding firefighters a raise for agreeing to drug tests when the city was laying off low-level workers. He will also mention how he spent $180,000 of his own money, loaned to his campaign, to help run his full-time district office — a “little City Hall” in Roxbury that spawned the Boston Workers Alliance. “I am not a rich man. That came from my salary,” Turner said, adding, “I’m the only councilor who did that.” Scores of Turner’s supporters are expected to hold a rally outside City Hall prior to today’s vote, which will take place before the public at Turner’s request. Questioning the council’s authority to remove Turner, former state Rep. Mel King said he may attend to support his friend. “On what grounds or legitimacy do they have?” King said. “All of this is murky.” Ross said an analysis of established case law, the City Charter and the council’s own rules shows “we’re on solid footing here” to expel Turner, an unprecedented move. Never before in the council’s 100-year history has a councilor been removed. “This was not an easy decision,” Ross said. “It’s a reluctant decision, but in the end it will be the right decision for the City Council.” Turner said he expects to be sentenced Jan. 25 to prison. However, the Harvard-grad-turned-community activist said his life is not over. Next week he plans to file papers for a business he’s long dreamed of launching: “The Roxbury Institute of Space Exploration . . . to help people understand how they can explore their inner space.” Greeting supporters yesterday, he told one: “People see me as going down. But I think I’m coming up. I’m the phoenix rising from the ashes of destruction.” Thomas Grillo contributed to this report. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/politics/view.bg?articleid=1299993

News, Politics

Mayor Menino calls for Chuck Turner to resign

Mayor Menino calls for Chuck Turner to resignBy Thomas Grillo  |   Tuesday, November 30, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Business & Markets Photo by Stuart Cahill (file)Mayor Thomas M. Menino reiterated his call for City Councilor Chuck Turner’s resignation today. “Chuck was one of the better city councilors, but he broke the law and under the City Council statute he must resign and I think the council will do that tomorrow and take that vote,” Menino said following the swearing-in of District 6 City Councilor Matt O’Malley. “It’s unfortunate, because (as a public official) you have the public’s trust and … every action you take is for the benefit of the public.” Menino said he has not talked to Turner or given him any advice on how to handle the matter. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/business/general/view.bg?articleid=1299848

News, Politics

An army of support for Chuck Turner Expulsion vote expected tomorrow

An army of support for Chuck TurnerExpulsion vote expected tomorrowBy Dave Wedge  |   Tuesday, November 30, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Politics Photo by Ted Fitzgerald (file) An army of left-wing radicals is flooding city councilors’ e-mail in-boxes with calls to keep Councilor Chuck Turner on the job as the Roxbury lawmaker faces an expulsion vote tomorrow. “Why would they go after a 67-year-old man except to shut my mouth?” Turner said yesterday. “This is all about the U.S. government trying to silence a black man who stood up for 44 years and spoke truth to power. And now the council is being asked to go along with the plot to silence me.” Petitions to “keep Chuck Turner on Boston City Council and out of jail” have been posted on the leftist Web site RevLeft.com as well as the International Action Center, a New York-based social justice organization. Several city councilors have been bombarded with hundreds of e-mails from across the country. “We think this is a huge political attack by the FBI,” said Edward Childs, a spokesman for the International Action Center’s Boston chapter. “This is a political attack on the civil rights movement in this country — no different than they did with Martin Luther King and Malcolm X and many others.” The petition calls for supporters to e-mail everyone from President Obama to the council, as well as the federal judge sentencing Turner. Turner, who was convicted last month of taking a $1,000 payoff and lying to federal agents, was re-elected last year and supporters want him to be allowed to finish his term. “Mr. Turner’s prosecution must be seen as part of a national campaign to oust African-American elected officials by demonizing them and prosecuting them,” the petition states. “The Boston City Council need not and should not lend itself to being any part of this ugly conspiracy.” The council is set to vote tomorrow on a motion by council President Michael Ross to boot Turner from office. Childs said a large crowd of protesters is expected at the hearing. “We are not above the law and none of us is above the rules,” Ross wrote in a three-page memo calling for Turner’s ouster. “If we act as if we are, this body loses its credibility.” Councilors John Connolly and Mark Ciommo each said they’ll vote to expel Turner, while others didn’t respond to inquiries. dwedge@bostonherald.com Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/politics/view.bg?articleid=1299748

News, Politics

Sources: Murphy has votes to be council president

Sources: Murphy has votes to be council president By Dave Wedge  |   Wednesday, November 24, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Politics The City Hall battle to succeed Council President Michael Ross appears resolved as longtime Councilor Steve Murphy has the votes needed to become the board’s next leader, several sources told the Herald this morning. Murphy had been lobbying for the post for several weeks and nailed down enough votes last night to win the January election, sources said. Murphy, who declined comment, has been the chair of the council’s Public Safety Committee and most recently lost a bid for state treasurer. A source close to the negotiations said Murphy was able to sway several councilors who had previously been uncommitted. As part of the leadership change, Councilor Michael Ciommo will become head of the council’s Ways and Means Committee while Councilor John Connolly will take over the top post on the Education Committee. Ross and several other councilors either did not return calls or declined to comment. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/politics/view.bg?articleid=1298626

Economy & Business, News, Politics

City gives Mattapan Square a boost

City gives Mattapan Square a boostNovember 9, 2010 Boston yesterday named Mattapan Square a part of the city’s Main Streets program, meaning it will qualify for federal grant money and be considered a target area for economic development. In a news release, Mayor Thomas M. Menino said Mattapan Square has “potential for a successful shopping district that brings people here to dine and shop,’’ and acknowledged the longtime struggle of local leaders to bring the Main Streets program to the square.

Scroll to Top