http://bostonglobe.com/opinion/letters/2011/11/10/come-globe-show-you-not-biased/FcUEP7FI2NK2GdhIgOveHP/story.html
STEREOTYPES ABOUT Boston: provincial, elitist, racist. Will the Globe’s coverage reinforce or rebut them?
Strike one: The celebration of the opening of the new Ashmont MBTA station, serving 17,000 riders and capping decades of struggle for transportation equity on the Red Line, draws the attention of senior politicians such as Senator John Kerry and Governor Deval Patrick. The Globe’s T coverage? Replacement shuttle service on the Cambridge end of the Red Line.
Strike two: A talented, charismatic African-American woman, Ayanna Pressley, tops the at-large race for Boston City Council. The Globe’s initial election coverage? A front-page story the next day focusing on Michael F. Flaherty’s loss.
Next pitch?
We’re watching.
Jenny Moye
Dorchester
I guess that they got a lot of complaint, because she is on the frontpage today.
http://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2011/11/10/hard-work-pays-off-for-pressley-city-council-election/dyPNS3Qf1LqrGsxS32eIuK/story.htmlwith this article (first paragraph only as it is the only thing the globe lets you see
Hard work pays off for Pressley in City Council election
Pressley’s perceived constituency widens in at-large council win
By Andrew Ryan | GLOBE STAFF NOVEMBER 10, 2011
Ayanna Pressley’s meteoric rise and first place finish in Tuesday’s City Council election can be traced to a groundswell of support that in many neighborhoods transcended race and traditional politics, capturing votes from Dorchester to Back Bay. In all, Pressley placed first in more than half of Boston’s 22 wards. She dominated in the African American community, winning 85 percent of the vote in the Roxbury ward that includes Dudley Square. But she also placed first in the section of the city that encompasses much of Jamaica Plain and Roslindale. And Pressley, who is black, took second in largely white West Roxbury, capturing 53 percent of the vote there.
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