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Massachusetts Senate's 3rd Essex district

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Map of Massachusetts Senate's 3rd Essex district, based on the 2010 United States census.

Massachusetts Senate's 3rd Essex district in the United States is one of 40 legislative districts of the Massachusetts Senate.[1] It covers portions of Essex county.[2] Democrat Brendan Crighton of Lynn has represented the district since 2018.[3]

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Transcription

Even after independence, or especially after independence, Boston remains a revolutionary place. And one of the most significant achievements of this generation is the creation of the Massachusetts Constitution, which is the oldest functioning written constitution in the world. Now, initially the old provincial assembly, which the governor had suspended in 1774, kept meeting as a provincial congress and simply declared the office of governor vacant once we had declared independence in July of 1776. So, this Provincial Congress continues to meet, continues to be elected as a Provincial Congress, meeting in the Old State House in Boston. But then, the Provincial Congress is calling on people to pay taxes and to go into the military, and in fact over the course of the war almost a third of the man who serve in the Continental Army will come from Massachusetts. The people start asking what gives the Provincial Congress the power to enlist us in the military or ask us for taxes? And the Provincial Congress has said that the office of governor is vacant, well what gives them the power to do this? They're operating under the Charter of 1691. The charter was granted by the British monarch, we no longer recognize the authority the monarch. Where does their authority come from? So, in 1778 the Massachusetts assembly drafted a new constitution, they said this will be the fundamental law of Massachusetts. They sent it to the towns of Massachusetts for ratification, and much to their surprise the people in the towns rejected it. They said that this body, the Provincial Congress, does not have the authority to pass a constitution. A constitution is a fundamental law that derives from the sovereign power the people of the Commonwealth. You can't have a legislative body drawing up a Constitution which is the fundamental law. So, in the fall of 1779 a constitutional convention is elected, this convention will represent the sovereign power of the people of Massachusetts and will be able to devise a fundamental law. It's fortunate for us that John Adams happened to be in town at the time, he had come home on a six-month leave from his job as a minister in Europe. He comes home, is elected by the voters of Braintree to be one of their delegates to this assembly, this convention which assembled in Cambridge. Adams goes to the convention, there are about three hundred other people there, and they formed a committee to draw up a constitution, and as Adams said, the committee put him on a subcommittee, the subcommittee was John Adams, Samuel Adams, and James Bowdoin, and then the subcommittee created a sub-subcommittee which consisted of John Adams to draft a constitution. And this Constitution creates the, or devises the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and it begins with a declaration of rights, the fundamental rights that people will enjoy, and the purpose of government is to protect these rights. It also creates a system of government, a balanced system. Adams believe there had to be a balance between rich and poor, as well as between the executive and legislative power. He thought that the government works best when there are checks on the different branches of government. So, the Massachusetts example: we have an assembly that represents the towns, in fact the people of the towns needed to have a moderate income to vote, you had to pay a pound in taxes every year, the equivalent to about forty dollars today. It is a property requirement but not an onerous one, it really is meant to represent a middle-class as we might configure it today. And to be a member of the assembly you had to have an estate worth at least 100 pounds in the town you represented, and each town would have one representative for every 150 taxpayers, or "ratable polls." Everyone in Massachusetts paid a one pound per person head tax, so for every person in town paying this tax, or for every 150 people paying this tax you have one representative in the assembly. So, the assembly would be quite large but would be very broadly representative of the people in the towns. To balance this, there would be a state senate, the senate would represent property. In order to be a member of the senate you had to have an estate worth 600 pounds, that is six times what you would need to be a member of the assembly. This body was to represent property, because Adam saw that those with property and those without property, or with less property, formed different interests. And if you simply let the rich people trample over the poor people that wouldn't be a suitable government, nor if you simply let the poor people overwhelm the rich people, because both have a certain role in society. The senate would represent property, there would be 40 senators and senatorial districts were determined by tax levies, so there would be eight senators from Suffolk County, which is where Boston is, eight from Essex County, where Salem is, one from Barnstable County, Berkshire County. The counties that contributed less in tax revenues would have fewer senators. So this balance is the rich against the poor, and Adams wrote that the "Great art of law giving is balancing the rich against the poor in the legislature." In addition, there will be governor someone who will govern. The governor will be elected directly by the people, and Massachusetts is the only state to have the governor elected by a popular vote. He is supposed to be a balance against parochial interests of the senators and the representatives. The governor has to be very rich person, he has to have an estate worth 1000 pounds, ten times what it would take to be a member of the assembly. And the idea is a really rich person is not as susceptible to bribery as someone with less means. And the governor also has to be a professing Christian. Now, most of these property qualifications have been dispensed with over the two centuries and more since the Constitution was created. So, Massachusetts creates a government with the fundamental idea of balancing different interests in the society, and Adams also wrote that the "You have to balance the executive again the legislative branch because their natural rivals, whichever doesn't have control over the other will ever be the lamb in the paws of the wolf." Periodically politicians denounced gridlock, typically if their party doesn't control the other branch of government they say you should give us control. Adams thought the gridlock with a good thing, it was an essential thing to protect liberty. And so the Massachusetts Constitution has this balance and these fundamental checks, it recognizes that people have interests but also isn't going to give your interest predominance in this system. So, it's a very carefully constructed government which recognizes that people have interests which they might pursue to the detriment of the liberty of others. So it's a marvelous achievement of 1780, creating this system of government with also a judiciary, a legal system, or a judicial system, and it also calls on the legislature to cherish education and says not only the college at Cambridge, but the grammar schools in all the towns, wanting in educated citizenry here for this new commonwealth being created. So, the Massachusetts Constitution, created in 1780, is still the fundamental governing system in Massachusetts with a three-part system, a governor, assembly, and a judiciary. The governor, elected in 1780 for a one-year term by a popular vote had a veto over legislative acts, the only governorship created in the 1770s-1780s who had a veto, also the only one who was popularly elected, and it does in some way become a model for the United States Constitution which is created seven years after the Massachusetts Constitution.

Locales represented

The district includes the following localities:[2]

The current district geographic boundary overlaps with those of the Massachusetts House of Representatives' 8th Essex, 9th Essex, 10th Essex, 11th Essex, 20th Middlesex, and 16th Suffolk districts.[4]

Former locales

Map of the 1876 apportionment of the 3rd Essex senatorial district

The district previously covered the following:

Senators

  • George L. Davis, circa 1859 [6]
  • Horace C. Bacon, circa 1874
  • James Shaw
  • Charles Donnell Brown
  • John Stoddart
  • Cornelius F. Haley, circa 1935-1945 [7][8]
Senator Party Years Legis. Electoral history District towns

Philip A. Graham[9]
Republican 1951 –
1967
157th
158th
159th
160th
161st
162nd
163rd
164th
Elected in 1950.
Re-elected in 1952.
Re-elected in 1954.
Re-elected in 1956.
Re-elected in 1958.
Re-elected in 1960.
Re-elected in 1962.
Re-elected in 1964.

William L. Saltonstall[10]
Republican 1967 –
1975
165th
166th
167th
168th
Elected in 1966.
Re-elected in 1968.
Re-elected in 1970.
Re-elected in 1972.
Redistricted to 1st Essex and Middlesex district.

James Rurak
Democratic 1975 –
1977
169th Redistricted from 4th Essex district.
Elected in 1974.
Lost Democratic primary in 1976.

Sharon Pollard[11]
Democratic 1977 –
1983
170th
171st
172nd
173rd
Elected in 1976.
Re-elected in 1978.
Re-elected in 1980.
Re-elected in 1982.
Resigned to become Massachusetts Secretary of Energy.

Nicholas J. Costello[12]
Democratic 1983 –
1991
173rd
174th
175th
176th
Elected in 1983 special election.
Re-elected in 1982.
Re-elected in 1984.
Re-elected in 1986.
Re-elected in 1988.

James Jajuga
Democratic 1991 –
2001
177th
178th
179th
180th
181st
182nd
Elected in 1990.
Re-elected in 1992.
Re-elected in 1994.
Re-elected in 1996.
Re-elected in 1998.
Re-elected in 2000.
Resigned to become Massachusetts Secretary of Public Safety.

Steven Baddour
Democratic 2002 –
2003
182nd Elected in 2001 special election.
Redistricted to 1st Essex district.
District eliminated in 2003.
District restored in 2013.

Thomas M. McGee
Democratic January 2003 –
2018
188th
189th
190th
Redistricted from 3rd Essex and Middlesex district.
Re-elected in 2002.
Re-elected in 2004.
Re-elected in 2006.
Re-elected in 2008.
Re-elected in 2010.
Re-elected in 2012.
Re-elected in 2014.
Re-elected in 2016.
Resigned to become Mayor of Lynn.

2013–23: Lynn, Lynnfield, Marblehead,
Nahant, Saugus, and Swampscott

Brendan Crighton[3]
Democratic March 7, 2018–
190th
191st
192nd
Elected in 2018 special election.
Re-elected in 2018.
Re-elected in 2020.

Images

Portraits of legislators

See also

References

  1. ^ "Massachusetts Senatorial Districts". Sec.state.ma.us. Retrieved April 16, 2020.
  2. ^ a b "An Act Establishing Executive Councillor and Senatorial Districts", Session Laws: Acts (2011), retrieved April 16, 2020
  3. ^ a b Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Elections Division. "State Senate elections: 3rd Essex district". Sec.state.ma.us. Retrieved April 16, 2020.
  4. ^ David Jarman (July 30, 2019), "Upper legislative district ↔ lower legislative district correspondences: MA", How do counties, House districts, and legislative districts all overlap?, Daily Kos, State Senate Districts to State House Districts
  5. ^ a b c d e f Massachusetts General Court (October 17, 1866), "1866 Chap. 0120. An Act To Divide The Commonwealth Into Forty Districts For The Choice Of Senators", Acts and Resolves, hdl:2452/100042 – via State Library of Massachusetts
  6. ^ General Court, Massachusetts (1859). Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Manual for the Use of the General Court. Boston – via Google Books.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  7. ^ Public Officials of Massachusetts. 1935.
  8. ^ Public Officers of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 1945.
  9. ^ Public Officers of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 1957.
  10. ^ Public Officers of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 1969.
  11. ^ Public Officers of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 1979.
  12. ^ Public Officers of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 1985.

External links


This page was last edited on 12 January 2024, at 18:56
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