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Recall effort against Tassinari fails by wide margin

A recall effort against Town Council member Max Tassinari has failed by a wide margin, marking the latest in a string of defeats for a small but persistent group of Winthrop residents and outside allies.

As town officials wrapped up their count of the signatures submitted by opponents of Mr Tassinari, they found the opponents had collected only about 2,000 signatures, well short of the 2,863 required to schedule a town-wide vote on the question.

Mr Tassinari won election to a four-year at-large seat on the Town Council in November 2023 by a nearly 2-1 margin among voters town-wide. But a mix of local and out-of-town allies nevertheless waged the recall campaign, raising a variety of complaints, largely centering on their opposition to a statewide housing law.

The law, known as 3A, requires nearly all cities and towns around Boston to increase the share of their community that allows multifamily housing or face cuts in state funding. The state law doesn’t actually require any new housing in Winthrop, because of the town’s existing high density. But the opponents, including Winthrop’s Town Council president, Jim Letterie, have complained that even granting technical agreement with the law feels like a surrender of authority – even though the state government holds clear constitutional authority over zoning matters.

With one current vacancy on the nine-member Town Council, Mr Tassinari is among four members who have concluded that technical compliance with 3A is better than subjecting Winthrop taxpayers to the potential loss of hundreds of thousands of dollars in state aid and the legal fees necessary to defend the law-breaking.

The group calling for Mr Tassinari’s removal was led by a daughter of another Town Council member, Suzanne Swope. The recall group has previously waged failed removal campaigns against council members Hannah Belcher and Joseph Aiello, and threatened such campaigns against council members John DaRos and John Munson.

Opponents of the recall effort said that the removal option, outside of a regular election, should be reserved for government officials suspected of high crimes and misdemeanors, and argued that even Mr Tassinari’s opponents never raised those kinds of allegations.

“It is unfortunate that a small group of residents continues to target councilors who disagree with them on how to best address issues impacting our community,” said Cassie Witthaus, a founding member of the community group Winthrop Working Together.

“Now that a third recall effort against a third councilor has failed, I hope they will direct their efforts toward effecting positive change,” Ms Witthaus said. “If they were putting this effort toward knitting blankets for folks in shelters or something with a tangible positive outcome, can you imagine the good they’d be accomplishing for others?”

Massachusetts state Senator Lydia Edwards, who represents Winthrop, had a similar reaction. “I think people are getting exhausted with the fighting and really want some solutions,” Senator Edwards said. “I just want to work on how we get the state money and laws Winthrop needs to thrive.”

Far short of recall requirement

Winthrop municipal rules required the petitioners to collect the signatures of 20 percent of the town’s registered voters to force a ballot question on Mr Tassinari’s removal. In the case of an at-large council member such as Mr Tassinari, that means 2,863 signatures town-wide, and the petitioners got only about 70 percent of that.

Leaders of the recall alternated through their campaign on the question of their primary motive, sometimes listing Mr Tassinari’s willingness to comply with the state’s 3A law, other times citing often-related policy disagreements. The opponents complained about his decision to temporarily abstain from 3A votes while awaiting a clear opinion from Massachusetts officials, who eventually agreed that he did not need to recuse himself because of his employment with the state Department of Transportation.

The opponents also cited his request for the Town Council to clarify the status of a council member with multiple absences, and his disagreement with the Town Council president over the choice of an appointee to fill the vacant council seat.

Leaders of the recall effort accused Mr Tassinari of acting “with arrogance, entitlement, and political manipulation.” One of those recall effort leaders, Sheryl Howard, a local real estate agent, argued that people in Winthrop were afraid to sign their papers.

“If this was on the ballot where one could privately share their opinion, we would have our 3,000 signatures already,” Ms Howard said in one social media posting.

Mr Tassinari, however, won his 2023 town-wide election overwhelmingly, by a 2,652 to 1,368 margin, over an ally of the recall campaigners.

Anti-3A campaigners see no sunset to campaign of division

Despite losing three straight recall attempts, and failing to win any court or legislative battles over the 3A law, the 3A opponents have made clear they intend to keep pursuing ways of bypassing the expressed will of voters at the state and town level.

One of their next steps – with the backing of Mr Letterie, the Town Council president – is to overhaul the town’s very governing structure. Winthrop’s current nine-member Town Council consists of six members who are each elected only by residents of the geographic precinct in which they live. The other three, including the council president, are elected in town-wide votes. The town reviews its organizational charter every five years, and for this year’s review, Mr Letterie appointed a panel that has suggested cutting the Town Council to only seven members, each representing the entire town on an at-large basis, without any precinct distinctions.

Mr Letterie has argued that the change is necessary because too many of the precinct-specific seats in recent years have lacked competitive races, meaning they haven’t had at least two candidates running within the precinct. But multiple academic studies of the question have concluded that at-large municipal elections generally discriminate against smaller demographic groups and require more money to participate.

And opponents of the change in Winthrop have warned that there are other more significant reasons for Winthrop residents being unwilling to enter Town Council races – including, several have told the council, the caustic treatment of Mr Tassinari and others before him in recent years who have been personally attacked to try to force them from office, in a local replication of some of the toxic politics being seen at the federal level.

The formal petition to the town for Mr Tassinari’s removal argued, without citing evidence, that recall organizers were responding to “bad behavior from a self-dealing individual.” And in the final days of the process of collecting signatures on the removal petition, according to multiple accounts, a petitioner collecting signatures outside the US Post Office station on behalf of the recall effort told two young girls in reference to Mr Tassinari: “He’s a bad man and does bad things.”

8 responses to “Recall effort against Tassinari fails by wide margin”

  1. ecstatic52b255330a Avatar
    ecstatic52b255330a

    This is great news! Now we must all lobby the counselors who voted against compliance to schedule a new vote to approve the Zoning Board’s 3A compliance plan–which, because of the Zoning Board’s excellent work, will result in no new housing actually being built–so that Winthrop will be eligible for the thousands of dollars of grants and other funding that we are missing out on now. Just as people across the country are starting to understand and reject the toxicity, nastiness and constant lying of the current federal administration, so too we in Winthrop should reject the meanness and mendacity of the small but loud anti-3A group. Otherwise, we will find ourselves without thoughtful and public-spirited residents willing to run for office. Carina Campobasso

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    1. CrabbyPaddy Avatar
      CrabbyPaddy

      You bemoan meanness, when are you going to hold your side accountable for their meanness? I’ve been watching these shenanigans for the last 6 months. And now I find myself on youtube watching old meetings. I’ll say this, the behavior of Joe A. and now Max T., has been very unprofessional. Why aren’t you contending with that? You’re attacking a group of citizens for disagreeing with you, I’ve seen no meanness from their side, can you point to some of it?

      This “news” medium seems more like a propaganda machine.

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      1. ecstatic52b255330a Avatar
        ecstatic52b255330a

        Dear CrabbyPaddy:  You write that the article above is a “load of crap” (lovely), yet you do not point to a single statement in it that is false or misleading.  On the other hand, the anti-3A people have made numerous false statements, including:

        1. That the Supreme Judicial Court “dismiss[ed] the case against Milton” (Diana Viens, Winthrop Sun Transcript, January 16, 2025).  In fact, the SJC upheld section 3A of the MBTA Communities Act. The one defect it found–that the guidelines were unenforceable–has now been corrected and Winthrop will lose out on thousands, if not millions, of dollars in grants and other funding for items like the new fire house and education, if we do not come into compliance.

        2. That Town Councilor Max Tassinari has an “acknowledged special interest in 3A” (Diana Viens, Winthrop Sun Transcript, July 24, 2025, p. 4).  In fact, as Mr. Tassinari fully explained in a Transcript article on July 31, 2025, he has no conflict of interest, and recused himself initially from discussions on 3A out of an excess of caution.

        3. That Councilor Tassinari has a conflict of interest in an ANONYMOUS text sent after the July 31, 2025 Transcript article was published, seeking to induce residents who may not know the facts to sign the recall petition.

        4. In the same ANONYMOUS text, that Councilor Tassinari was “aggressively targeting and openly disrespecting duly-elected Community members” and that his conduct is “hostile” and “self-serving”, statements that anyone who attends Town Council meetings knows is false.  The anti-3A people have a political disagreement with Councilor Tassinari and it seems to me that, because a political disagreement cannot be the basis for a recall, they are reduced to making specious claims about his conduct.

        5.  A person collecting signatures at Michael’s Mall last week stated, as noted in the article, that Councilor Tassinari is a “bad man and does bad things” and also falsely stated that signing the petition would allow the Council to remove him, not that it would simply put the question to the voters on a ballot.

        Anonymous statements full of falsehoods, and yes, meanness, like your false statement, CrabbyPaddy, that Councilors Aiello and Tassinari’s conduct has been “unprofessional” (Mr. Aiello made one unmeasured comment, for which he has apologized), are why I do not engage on anonymous social media platforms. What is your real name, CrabbyPaddy?

        Carina Campobasso

        (Note: In my earlier post, I incorrectly referred to the “Zoning Board”.  It was the Planning Board that developed the excellent 3A-compliant plan that will result in no new multi-family housing being built. We should all be asking why the anti-3A people cannot take yes for an answer.) 

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  2. CrabbyPaddy Avatar
    CrabbyPaddy

    Whata complete load of crap. Who wrote this article? I hope not someone who calls themselves a journalist. Where are your sources? Who actually wrote this article? Lame

    Like

    1. ecstatic52b255330a Avatar
      ecstatic52b255330a

      I’m sorry CrabbyPaddy, what did you say your real name is again? Are you too afraid to reveal it after using such crude and nasty language? Carina Campobasso

      By the way, Winthrop has just lost out $346,112 in Municipal Vulnerability Preparedness (MVP) funds because of our noncompliance with 3A. I hope the residents on Morton Street (and everywhere else) whose houses have repeatedly flooded (and are at risk of worse flooding in the future) understand the stakes of our noncompliance with 3A and will vote accordingly in November.

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      1. CrabbyPaddy Avatar
        CrabbyPaddy

        Just like you to avoid the tough questions, why not contend with my questions and comments that are facts about your boys? And really? You don’t engage with fake names? Then why did you in the first place? Yeah, first sign of being exposed for what you really are and you cut and run.

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  3. Carina Campobasso Avatar
    Carina Campobasso

    Dear Beyond the Transcript, Thank you for encouraging respectful and constructive dialogue. I appreciate why you removed the offensive posts by CrabbyPaddy that told me, among other things, to not match my “physical uglyness [sic]” with my “ugly personality”. However, I did not object to the post for this reason: Responding to factual information like that contained in your original article and in my posts with offensiveness (“whata complete load of crap”) and personal attacks against me (“Are you jut pissed off because you are so ugly and look like a man?”) simply highlights the weakness of the anti-3A position. If the people against compliance with 3A had meritorious arguments, they would make them and not be reduced to irrelevant, ad hominem (ad feminam(?)) attacks.

    I think that seeing these offensive comments brings home to thinking people that the anti-3A people have no good response to the fact that, Winthrop, by rejecting a 3A compliance plan that would have resulted in no new housing, has lost out on hundreds of thousands of dollars in state funding (and will lose out on hundreds of thousands more). The complete absence of a good reason to oppose 3A compliance is illustrated by Town Council President Letterie’s answer when asked why he opposed compliance with 3A: that obeying the law leaves him “with a bad taste” in his mouth (Beyond the Transcript article, July 3, 2025). Every resident in Winthrop will suffer because of the bad taste in Mr. Letterie’s mouth.

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    1. CrabbyPaddy Avatar
      CrabbyPaddy

      by the way Carina…. In regards to the MVP Grant. When we applied for that Grant we were in compliance with 3A because we hadn’t reached the deadline yet. So legally we were compliant.

      so If the state actually did withhold this Grant as you say they did then they did it illegally and an impressive and tyrannical manner because we were not out of compliance.

      still still want stand by your silly and misguided statements that we won’t be forced to build? The state is corrupt… That’s what happens when you give them power. I’m sorry that you did not pay attention in history class.

      Like

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Winthrop Pilot (formerly Beyond The Transcript) is a new independent newspaper for Winthrop, MA. It has no affiliation with any other news organization. The editors can be reached at beyond-the-transcript@proton.me