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State House News Service Stories of the Week – Top Ten Stories, 2025

Jan. 3: Defying expectations, House and Senate pass major hospital-oversight and drug-pricing bills on old session’s last day, and new Legislature convenes.

Jan. 11: Federal spending freeze sets off panic, triggers court orders unfreezing loans and grants.

Feb. 28: House approves legislative-procedure changes aimed at ameliorating some of the public demands for less chaos, less secrecy and more deliberation.  But they reject a voter-approved mandate to open their books.

March 21: Cuts in federal funding for health research, immigrant arrests, the elimination of the US Dept. of Education, cancellation of clean-energy support – all bring responses of fear and outrage at the State House, and some lawsuits.

April 4: Senate leaders’ announced response to Trump-administration immigration roundups draws the scorn of progressives, one calling it “comical and underwhelming.”

April 25: In the quiet of school-vacation week, House Ways and Means staffers sort 1,600 budget amendments into “Yes” and “No” piles, in advance of budget debate.

May 2: House passes $61.5 billion budget for fiscal 2026.

May 23: U.S. House passes federal budget bill that would cut billions in Mass. funding, but Senate approves increase in state spending for FY 2026.

June 20: Legislative leaders reach agreement on how to spend $1.3 billion in millionaire’s-surtax dollars targeted for transportation and education.

July 3: Legislators send Gov. Healey a $61 billion fiscal 2026 budget; first budget agreement reached by Rep. Michelwitz and Sen. Rodriguez before the Fourth of July.

July 11: With the shape of federal budget cuts still unclear, legislative leaders continue to resist suggestions of  immediate major cuts in state spending

July 18: Health Care Committee Chairman John Lawn arrested outside the State House for DUI

July 25: Bar advocates stay off the job, as lawmakers consider pay-raise legislation and a rising number of defendants with no counsel are released from custody.

Aug. 1: Legislature approves “shield law” further protecting providers of reproductive health care

Aug. 8: National Conference of State Legislatures annual meeting draws 8,000 lawmakers and staff to Boston, examining full range of state issues in the context of Trump-era changes and divisiveness

Aug. 15: Governor files mid-summer break supplement budget totalling $2.45 billion, focused on health care.

Sep. 29: Trump administration forbids further work on Rhode Island’s Revolution Wind project, raising questions about whether Vineyard Wind will be next.

Sep. 5: DPH officially decouples Mass. vaccine policy from federal CDC guidelines.

Sep. 12: SJC Gebrielle Wolohojian rejects former Sen. Dean Tran’s argument that legislative immunity protected him from facing punishment for campaign-finance violations.

Sep. 19: DPH issues new state-level rules for COVID-19 vaccination, implement the decoupling from federal guidelines.

Sep. 26: Applegreen, the top bidder for a controversial contract to rebuild Turnpike service areas, walks away from its contract and a dispute with Global Partners, the other main bidder.

Oct. 3: Revenue Commissioner Geoffery Synder tells budget writers to expect a $650 million cut in coupled federal supports for state revenue streams.

Oct. 10: The House overrides $70 million in Healey vetoes to the FY ’25 budget, even as officials warn of billions in coming federal cuts to aid for Massachusetts.

Oct. 17: Transportation Secretary Moncia Tibbits-Nutt resigns as secretary, and Gov. Healey appoints MBTA General Manager Philip Eng interim secretary. 

Oct. 24: Gov. Healey announces a new state portal to funnel private donations to food-pantries in response to the anticipated suspension of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits.

Oct. 31: R.I. federal judge Indira Talwani orders administration to fund at least partial SNAP benefits

Nov. 7: Federal judge orders full SNAP benefits released.

Nov. 14: Senate okays reform of the Cannabis Control Committee while House energy committee approves rollback of the state’s 2030 carbon-emissions mandate

Nov. 21: Filing of signatures on ballot-question petitions sets the stage for epic political battles on rent control, income-tax rates, legislative openness and the state’s primary-election system

Nov. 28: Senate President Spilka tells WCVB News: “Our budget is really in trouble with health care.”

Dec. 5: Senate rebuffs Mayor Wu’s new call for consideration of her property tax shift from homeowners to businesses as she warns of 13 percent tax increase coming in Boston.

Dec. 12: Senate leaders advance two property-tax “rate shock” bill while continuing to ignore Boston Mayor Wu’s property-tax shift legislation.

Dec. 19: Secretary State says ballot question lowering the state income tax to 4 percent from 5 percent has enough signatures to go forward

Dec. 26: Trump vs. Massachusetts is the story selected as the top Beacon Hill story of 2025 in a survey of State House reporters.  The survey’s Top 10:

  1. Trump vs. Massachusetts
  2. Goldberg reinstated, ending one drama at the Cannabis Control Commission
  3. DiZoglio vs. Beacon Hill establishment
  4. ICE rattles Massachusetts
  5. Clean energy vs. federal policy
  6. Michelle Wu vs. Josh Kraft
  7. Growing crisis in health care costs and access
  8. Phillip Eng’s double duty as T GM and transportation secretary
  9. Bar advocates walk off the job, discontent and holdouts remain after raise
  10. MCAS replacement generates new controversy
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