Tuesday, November 8, 2022
VOLUME LXXXIV, ISSUE 10
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
LOCAL
Public safety, immigrants’ rights on the ballot with Question 4 by Aditya Acharya News Editor
GRACE ROTERMUND / THE TUFTS DAILY
Medford City Hall is pictured on March 12, 2021.
UNIVERSITY
Contributing Writer
Leading up to the midterm elections, Tufts political groups have organized across campus, urging their peers to head to the voting booths. Tufts Democrats has been canvassing for a variety of causes, including “Yes on 1” which would apply a 4% surtax on personal income exceeding $1 million annually, and “Yes on 4” which would allow state residents to obtain driver’s licenses regardless of immigration status. In addition, Tufts Democrats has been phone banking, holding discussions about the midterms and collaborating with other chapters of college Democrats for their canvassing initiatives. Tufts Republicans declined to comment on their midterms activities. Mark Lannigan, the president of Tufts Democrats, is optimistic that the Democrats can turn out in substantial numbers on Nov. 8. He points to relative-
see LICENSE, page 2
LOCAL
Student groups organize around midterm elections
by Hannah Cox
This election day, Massachusetts voters will determine on the fate of a bill that would allow undocumented immigrants to obtain driver’s licenses. On Nov. 8, Question 4 will ask voters to either accept or reject the Work and Family Mobility Act, a state law passed in June which would allow undocumented Massachussetts residents to apply for driver’s licenses, effective July 2023. State representatives Christine Barber, Patricia Jehlen, Paul Donato, Sean Garballey, Mike Connolly and Erika Uyterhoeven — who represent Somerville, Medford and West Medford — have publicly advocated
for a “Yes” vote, which would affirm the Work and Family Mobility Act. “This was my bill,” Barber told the Daily. “I was a sponsor, worked on it for about four years … It was signed into law in June. The governor actually vetoed it and we overrode the veto in the House and Senate.” Although the bill passed the Massachusetts State Legislature, the activist group Fair and Secure MA pushed to put the law on the ballot for a referendum. The group’s website claims Question 4 will increase undocumented immigration to the state and increase the likelihood of voter fraud. Rep. Uyterhoeven, who represents part of Somerville, described
Somerville School Committee, city councilors endorse millionaire tax ballot question
ly high early vote totals and an increase in voter participation in recent years. “What’s really been inspiring has been youth turnout, which we’ve seen increase pretty astronomically since 2016 and even 2018 and 2020,” Lannigan told the Daily. “Youth turnout has always been on the rise, and it’s continuing to be on the rise now.” Lannigan also notes that emotionally charged issues like abortion provide reasons to be hopeful that people will vote in these midterms. “What a lot of our membership is concerned about is what would happen if Congress flips to a very radical Republican party that has already said that they would support a national abortion ban [and] that would look into overturning the election,” Lannigan said. “I think the Supreme Court [and] abortion have been really scary issue areas that people have been motivatsee ORGANIZE, page 2
by Evelyn Altschuler
Executive Newsletter Editor
The Somerville School Committee has unanimously endorsed voting “Yes” on Question 1, a ballot initiative proposing the Fair Share Amendment. If passed, the Fair Share Amendment would apply to Massachusetts residents whose annual household income is above $1 million. The so-called “millionaire’s tax” would impose an additional 4% income tax on income above $1 million. Raise Up Massachusetts, an organization that pushes for higher wages and expanded social services for the working class, proposed the Fair Share Amendment to the Massachusetts state legislature. The amendment was subsequently approved and added as a ballot question for Massachusetts voters in the upcoming midterm elections. “For years, the highest-income households in Massachusetts – those in the top 1 percent –
NICOLE GARAY / THE TUFTS DAILY
A Somerville ballot drop box is pictured on Powder House Boulevard on Sept. 28, 2020. have paid a smaller share of their income in state and local taxes than any other income group,” Raise Up Massachusetts states on their website. According to the Tisch College’s Center for State Policy Analysis, the millionaire’s tax would affect about 0.6% of Massachussetts households. The cSPA predicts the tax would raise about $1.3 billion in 2023. All money raised
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by the tax would be reserved specifically for public education and the maintenance of roads, bridges and public transportation. “The Fair Share Amendment would finally move MA towards a more fair tax structure where the very richest top 0.6% pay a 9% rate on all of their income over $1 million per year to fund public see MILLIONAIRES, page 3 NEWS
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