WBUR News9%
Lynch has represented his Mass. district for 25 years. A newcomer says its his turn 58%
By Anthony Brooks0%
7/17/2026, 5:48:14 AM
Keywords: Massachusetts Election, Morning Edition
BS Summary: This article contains 32 faulty reasoning types, including Hasty Generalization, Appeal to Emotion, and False Dilemma, with Halo Effect as the most egregious example at 15.3% saturation with 213 hits. Analysis detected 2,239 faulty-reasoning hits from 1,394 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 55% and a BS Rank of 58% (7,164 of 17,002 articles). This article is worse (more manipulative) than 57.90% of the article peer group.
Patrick Roath walked the path to one front door after another on a quiet tree-lined street in Stoughton.
It was a muggy July evening and he was hunting for votes — one door-knock at a time.
Many residents weren't home from work yet; others were busy making dinner for their families and politely declined to talk politics.
One woman, who came to her door, accepted Roath's campaign leaflet, but appeared uninterested in a conversation.
"I think she might not be with us," Roath said to this reporter, as he moved on to the next door.
The 39-year-old Democrat is trying to make his case to voters that he will serve them better than U.S.
Rep.
Stephen Lynch.
Mining for votes like this is part of the hard work of running for office.
Finally, Roath met a woman sitting on her porch, who seemed open to his campaign, expressing interest in a "more progressive candidate" for Congress.
"It would be very nice to have your vote, hopefully.
I'd love to earn it," Roath told her, handing her one of his campaign flyers and urging her to "spread the word."
Roath is hoping to ride a wave of anti-incumbent discontent into Congress.
He's challenging Stephen Lynch, 71, of South Boston, to represent the state's 8th Congressional District, which includes parts of Boston, the South Shore and Brockton.
Lynch has held his seat for 25 years.
The race is one of many primary contests across the country pitting the power of incumbency against a call for generational change.
After knocking doors, Roath moved on to a small gathering of Stoughton residents who came to hear his pitch.
Roath told them that "Washington is broken," and that veteran Democrats like Lynch are failing to meet the moment and to forcefully take on President Trump.
"I don't think that I see the kind of passion and urgency and bold, creative thinking that you would be putting into that job if you really thought that this country was at such an important crossroads," Roath told them.
"If they want someone who's served a quarter century in Congress already, that's very obvious who their choice is.
I'm just offering a choice, and I think people are looking for something different."
Roath favors term limits, campaign finance reform, moving toward universal healthcare and childcare, as well as new efforts to bring down the cost of housing.
And he told the group in Stoughton that Lynch is not progressive enough: "He's the last Democrat left in Washington who voted against the Affordable Care Act."
"We need to be pushing toward universal healthcare," Roath said.
A number of people in the room liked what they heard including Lindsay Weber, who works for the Department of Defense.
"I love it that he is all for term limits," Weber said, adding that Lynch "isn't in touch with the issues of the district."
"Every year we see him at the St.
Patrick's Day Parade shaking hands and kissing babies, but that's about it," she said.
"I haven't really seen any action from him."
Roath, who has a background in corporate law and voting rights, has earned endorsements from progressive groups, teachers unions and a number of prominent Democrats, including former Gov.
Deval Patrick, for whom Roath worked as a speech writer.
Patrick called Roath "wise beyond his years," and said he's running for the right reasons.
"I think he is resisting cynicism in a deeply cynical time — and that is exactly the leadership we need," Patrick told WBUR.
Regarding Roath's relative youth, the former governor said, "there's a lot to like about young people stepping up and offering themselves as servant leaders.
None of us [are] entitled to these jobs."
On the same day that Roach was in Stoughton, the incumbent, Lynch, was in Norwood with some of his longtime supporters.
Among them was Doug Jasset, who's been supporting the veteran congressman since the very beginning.
"Twenty-five years ago, Stephen Lynch announced that he was running for Congress right there at that gazebo," Jasset said, pointing to the center of Norwood Town Common.
"He promised that he'd represent the working families of this district, and he's done so," said Jasset, a retired union carpenter who also worked for the state lottery.
Lynch grew up in the South Boston housing projects, worked as an iron worker, a union officer, and state representative before winning his first congressional race in 2001.
Now, running for his 14th term, Lynch said he's still fighting for working families like his.
"My family struggled.
Having a roof over our head was not a given," he said.
" So there aren't a lot of people in Congress on either side of the aisle that have struggled like that, and know their perspective like I do."
According to Lynch, representing working families means fighting for fair wages, protecting social security and making housing more affordable.
And he rejects Roath's suggestion that it's time for new leadership in Washington — and that older lawmakers like him should step aside.
"I used the same argument when I first ran," he said with a laugh.
"The idea, 'OK, give a young person a chance,' that is as old as politics itself."
Lynch now embraces the flip-side of that argument: experience matters.
"You also need people who've been through the wars, who can get things done, that bring a perspective over time," he said.
"You don't want all brand-new people — like my opponent — who have zero experience in government."
" It's democracy that's at stake here," Lynch said, referring to his commitment to oppose the Trump administration.
"I'm not a quitter, and I'm not gonna quit this fight."
Lynch's backers echoed the idea that his long service in Washington is an asset, not a liability.
"Just because you're younger doesn't make you any smarter," said Diane Mastandrea of Norwood, who was among a group of Lynch supporters holding campaign signs for him.
A lot of them were union members, and like Mastandrea, they describe themselves as political moderates who say Lynch has a long record of delivering for their district.
"He's been instrumental in trying to get this Norwood Hospital back on track," Mastandra said, referring to Lynch's efforts on behalf of the flood-damaged and shuttered medical facility.
"And I think he's doing a good job trying to deal with — as best you can — what's going on down in Washington."
"I think change for the sake of change is not good," Mastandrea added.
Roath doesn't dispute that Lynch has long experience, but he's betting that voters are looking for change.
"If they want someone who's been in politics since I was 5 years old; if they want someone who's served a quarter century in Congress already, that's very obvious who their choice is," Roath said.
"I'm just offering a choice, and I think people are looking for something different."
Roath is hoping the Democratic primary in Massachusetts will mirror those in New York and Colorado where younger progressives swept away old guard Democrats.
Doug Rubin, a longtime Democratic political consultant, said polling suggests there's appetite for that kind of change across Massachusetts, as well.
"The old playbook for Democrats basically got us two terms of Trump and a MAGA Republican Congress — and that's not working," Rubin said, adding that "people are looking for something new."
Rubin is working for Rep.
Seth Moulton who's making that very argument in his campaign to unseat Sen.
Ed Markey.
For Roath, the dynamic offers both opportunity and challenge.
Roath shared an internal campaign poll with WBUR, which found that Lynch is leading this race by almost 30 points — largely because he's much better known.
But when the pollster described the candidates as a 71-year-old incumbent who's been in office for a quarter century versus a 39-year-old lawyer and democracy advocate, the race flips — and voters chose Roath by 15 points.
So, Rubin says Roath faces a big hurdle.
"There are so many voters who just don't know Patrick well enough," Rubin said.
Rubin said the conditions are there for someone like Roath to win, but he has a steep climb ahead of him.
And with the Sept. 1 primary just a month and a half away, time is running out.
Analysis
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