STATE HOUSE SHUFFLE — Gov. Maura Healey may have just handed Republicans a state Senate seat. Not that it would change the Democratic-run chamber's dynamic. Democratic state Sen. Anne Gobi is heading to the Healey administration next month to serve as the governor’s rural affairs director, capping a two-decade run as a state lawmaker and opening up a competitive district in the central part of the state. The pool of potential replacements runs deep in the House. Three Republicans — state Reps. Kimberly Ferguson of Holden and Donald Berthiaume and Peter Durant of Spencer — live in Gobi’s Worcester and Hampshire district. So does Democratic state Rep. Jon Zlotnik of Gardner. Zlotnik is in. The 33-year-old six-term state representative — who overlapped with Gobi in the House and remains close to her — told Playbook he’s running for her Senate seat with a continued focus on “bread-and-butter issues” like education and economic development. Kate Campanale, a former GOP state representative who ran for lieutenant governor last year alongside gubernatorial hopeful Chris Doughty, is considering jumping in, according to a person familiar with her thinking. She is Durant’s wife. Ferguson is out, telling Playbook that while she’s “truly honored by the outpouring of support I have received encouraging me to run” she believes she has “much work to do in the House, and I am happy to remain there.” A GOP victory would grow Republicans’ ranks in the Senate to four. Democrats' supermajority in the 40-member chamber would remain intact. And even if her party loses a seat, Healey benefits from adding a respected advocate for rural communities to her team. Still, the coming special election will test the new heads of the state Democratic and Republican parties. And both of them are bullish on their chances (not that they would publicly say otherwise). “This is a very winnable seat for Republicans,” MassGOP Chair Amy Carnevale told Playbook, citing how the district voted for former President Donald Trump in 2020. But Democrats don’t appear to be sweating it. Gobi shed more than half a dozen Trump towns and picked up several communities — including Zlotnik’s home of Gardner — that voted for President Joe Biden in 2020 as part of the Legislature's 2021 redistricting process. “The way that the seat is right now, having [a slice of] Worcester, Gardner, Holden — which are the three largest population-wise" and that voted "very heavy Democratic" in the last election presents "a good opportunity for Democrats to retain the seat," Gobi told reporters at the State House yesterday. New MassDems Chair Steve Kerrigan is similarly keen on Democrats’ chances, telling Playbook that the district has “been represented by great Democrats for decades now” and that the party will make sure its eventual nominee is “fully prepared and resourced” for the general election. But first, Gobi has to resign so the special election can be scheduled. She told reporters that her last day will be June 4. She starts her new gig the next day. GOOD TUESDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. This is the second special election Healey has triggered by plucking a lawmaker from their chamber. The special general election to fill now-Veterans Secretary Jon Santiago's 9th Suffolk state House seat is next Tuesday, as is the one to fill the 10th Suffolk representative seat Ed Coppinger vacated for MassBio. The remaining contest is a formality for Democrats John Moran and Bill MacGregor, who are unopposed after winning their respective 9th and 10th district primaries earlier this month. TODAY — The Senate budget debate begins in earnest. Healey is at the Democratic Governors Association’s spring policy conference in Michigan through the afternoon and attends the Massachusetts Academy of Trial Attorneys dinner at 7 p.m. in Framingham. Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll speaks at a Military Friends Foundation event at 9:30 a.m. at the State House, the Massachusetts Ambulance Association’s “Convoy of Champions” event at noon at Gillette Stadium and Health Care for All’s annual event at 7:30 p.m. in Boston. Sen. Ed Markey headlines a New England Council climate change program at 10 a.m. at the New England Aquarium. Boston Mayor Michelle Wu honors local veterans at 11 a.m. at City Hall Plaza. House Democratic Whip Katherine Clark holds a press conference on the debt ceiling at 11:30 a.m. at the U.S. Capitol. Tips? Scoops? Running for Gobi's seat? Email me: lkashinsky@politico.com.
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