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Marty Walsh, John Connolly vie for endorsements from Black, Latino and Asian communities

Yawu Miller
Yawu Miller is the former senior editor of the Bay State Banner. He has written for the Banner since 1988.... VIEW BIO
Marty Walsh, John Connolly vie for endorsements from Black, Latino and Asian communities
State Rep. Martin Walsh is endorsed by former mayoral candidate Charlotte Golar Richie during a press conference in front of the First Parish Church in Dorchester. (Left-right) Laura Younger, State Rep. Gloria Fox, Richie, Walsh, City Councilor Felix G. Arroyo, and former mayoral candidate John Barros. (Yawu Miller photo) (Photo: Yawu Miller)

Author: Yawu MillerPastor William Dickerson gives his endorsement to City Councilor John Connolly in his campaign for mayor. Looking on are Thomas Cross (seated), Connolly (center), Miniard Culpepper (second from left) and Robin Charlton (left). (Yawu Miller photo)

State Rep. Marty Walsh turned up the heat in the mayoral race, kicking off last week with a one-two punch — endorsements on Tuesday from former candidates Felix G. Arroyo and John Barros.

Walsh’s salvo went unanswered. For one day. And from Connolly’s perspective, it wasn’t a bad move. With a schoolbus drivers’ strike dominating the headlines, Walsh’s endorsements were relegated to the back pages.

When the smoke cleared, Connolly began his fusillade of endorsements, Wednesday with Rep. Aaron Michelwitz, whose district includes the North End and Back Bay, City Councilor Sal LaMattina and Everett Sen. Sal DiDomenico, whose district includes East Boston and the North End East Boston.

On Thursday Connolly kept up the barrage of endorsements, first from a group that included members of the Mass. Association of Minority Law Enforcement Officers and Nation of Islam Minister Don Muhammad, then from a cadre of black ministers.

Finally, Walsh fired back Saturday morning with an endorsement from former mayoral candidate Charlotte Golar Richie, who was flanked by Barros, Arroyo, State Rep. Gloria Fox and former State Rep. Royal Bolling.

That same morning, Walsh was in Dudley Square to receive the endorsement of a coalition of community groups including Right to the City Vote, the Latino political organization ¿Oiste? and Chinese Progressive Political Action.

The mayoral candidates backing Walsh pledged to merge their campaigns with his, adding staff and office space to his operation.

“We started out with 12 campaigns,” Walsh said during the Richie announcement. “We’re ending up with one.”

In addition to the mayoral campaigns, the activists in the Dudley Square endorsement also pledged to add muscle to Walsh’s campaign.

“We look forward to integrating into the strategy and the organization of this campaign,” said Mariama White-Hammond, a Dorchester resident and coalition organizer.

Walsh’s endorsements may give his campaign a much-needed shot in the arm. Last week Walsh was trailing Connolly by eight points in a UMass Lowell poll of 375 likely voters.

And Walsh has taken hits for sponsoring a bill in the legislature that would remove the ability of the Boston City Council to overrule an arbitrator in the negotiation of public union contracts. Critics say Walsh’s bill would remove a critical check on the power of public employee unions and could have a devastating impact on municipal finances.

Both Connolly and Walsh are contending for votes in the city’s black, Latino and Asian communities, which are widely seen as critical to the success of any city-wide campaign. Voters in those communities went heavily for Golar Richie, Barros and Arroyo, as did many white liberals.

Whether those voters will follow their former candidates into the Walsh camp is an open question. Some prominent Richie backers have joined the Connolly campaign, including former Menino operatives Darryl Smith and Brook Woodson and business owners Clayton Turnbull and Brooke Gary Webster.

Several veteran political organizers were present for the Connolly endorsement Thursday, including Ed Cooper and Shirley Shillingford of the Caribbean American Political Action Committee.

Pastors present included Miniard Culpepper, William Dickerson and Thomas Cross. Bruce Wall, who was in New York during the endorsement press conference, sent a statement in support of Connolly’s candidacy.

“I’ve walked the streets with John Connolly through the toughest neighborhoods,” Culpepper said during the press conference. “I’ve walked with Marty Walsh. He’s a good man, but at a time like this, we need a man like John Connolly.”

Richie’s endorsement, held at the First Parish Church of Dorchester on Meetinghouse Hill, included a wide array of political activists, including Ward 15 co-chairwoman Sandi Bagley, Boston schoolteacher Barry Lawton, former Democratic Party Director Stacey Monihan and a host of former Richie operatives — Laura Younger, Kevin Peterson, Brother Kinney and Linda Monteiro.

Richie told reporters she is not concerned about Walsh’s close relationship with organized labor.

“In my view, it’s Marty’s experience working with unions that will help him,” she said. “Neither candidate wants to bankrupt the city. Marty supports the rights of working people.”

More endorsements are likely in the coming days. State Rep. Gloria Fox said a group of black and Latino elected officials met with Connolly and Walsh Friday and is in the process of making a decision.

Her own endorsement of Walsh was informed by her experience of working with him in the Massachusetts House, Fox said.

“I know how he is on women’s issues,” Fox said. “I know how he is on health and human services issues. I know how he is on diversity in jobs. He’s worked with the Black and Latino Caucus on many of these issues.”

Monday, Walsh picked up the endorsement of the legislature’s Progressive Caucus in a press conference in front of the State House that was attended by representatives Marjorie Decker, Ruth Balser, Jay Kaufman, Chris Walsh, Dave Rogers, Denise Provost and Frank Smizik.