the only context for this comment was Weld's perception that Baker is weak on infrastructure, because he is. Election Day is in 12 hours. That's the "timing" at play here. Gov. Patrick hasn't been particularly involved in Boston 2024, and it hasn't been a topic of discussion whatsoever in the Governor's race to this point.
Okay, but you could have gone to anything as proof of Baker's weakness as far as infrastructure is concerned - hell, megalithic projects like the Rail Link or a new freeway are hard for people to identify with, but "my road/bridge/sidewalk looks like it came from a war zone" is easy for anyone who has to live near or rely upon a rusty bridge, pothole-scarred street, or shattered sidewalk. Baker's built his platform on the "easy" anti-tax better-government stance but as far as I can tell he hasn't done a damn thing to indicate how or if he plans to deal with the horrific state of the infrastructure we've already got.
So, given the choice between a fluff piece about "Charlie Baker, the guy who's going to fix that pothole in front of grandma's driveway" and "Charlie Baker, the guy who's going to get the Rail Link built," I would expect the former article ninety-eight times out of one hundred. The other two times are 1) because Baker and his team need the trainspotters and the rail backers to swing the election in his favor and 2) because someone's trying to bring the Rail Link back into focus ahead of its unveiling as a critical component to Boston 2024.
You'll forgive me if I don't think option 1 is terribly likely.
If you want to believe in some "inevitability" for these projects, fine. You hate the Olympics, as you admit, and you seized on an offhand comment to go after them again. Boston 2024 can light fires under people, and in every single chance that they have been given to describe their project, the organizers (as you also admit) have denied categorically that their goal is a "sweeping overhaul" of anything. You can believe whatever else you want, but I'll say it again, I'll know what Boston 2024 is proposing when they tell me, and I'll judge that.
I don't think it's an empty "belief" to say that without doing something about South Station, Boston is not going to be able to handle the level of traffic coming through the Northeast Corridor in 15~20 years, and that Boston not being able to handle that level of traffic is going to be unacceptable to the state and federal interests gearing up for service expansion - never mind expanding demand for commuter rail operations within the region. That spells a clear need for South Station Expansion and it's because of that clear need that expansion of capacity there is going to happen completely independently of the Olympics push and result of the bid.
Similarly, it's going to take just one more idiot texting in the driver's seat or falling asleep at the switch for the FTA to swoop in with an unfunded mandate for CBTC within an aggressive time-frame. I tend to be cynical about these things, but I'd like to believe that it won't actually take another wreck in the Central Subway for the MBTA to get their collective asses in gear on this; or, failing that, for the FTA to start getting a little more forward with asking.
Boston 2024 might be the push needed to get Red-Blue done for 2024, but I'm more than happy to put safe money on the steadily worsening peak utilization of Red, Orange, and Blue through downtown on forcing the issue regardless of the Olympics. If not 2024 ahead of opening day, I'm confident you'll see the Blue Line pulling into MGH by 2026, Olympics be damned.
I'm willing to give you Orange Line trains to or beyond Roslindale as something that could be part of a "reasonable" Olympics bid that similarly would require the Olympics to get sufficient motivation for doing anything. I'll also give you DMU service in that same category. After that, the list of "reasonable" Olympics projects that aren't getting done without the Olympics dries up pretty damn fast.
The fact of the matter is that it's a real bad look for the Olympics bid to come out full of necessary but boring plain vanilla projects, and lacking the spice and allure of signature items. There's simply no way that the bid book comes out and it doesn't contain at least one big-ticket construction item, and regardless of how much money John Fish wants to pump into the hype machine, the public isn't going to respond well to the biggest line item in the bid that isn't destined to be ripped down immediately after the closing ceremony being the Red-Blue Connector of all things.
As I said before, I oppose the Olympics because they're just not necessary to get most of these "reasonable" projects done, and the time frame is far too tight to get any of the ambitious projects done. And if the group of projects the Olympics is likely to get done were all going to get done anyway, and if the Olympics can't get done the projects that needed an Olympics level of motivation just to get off the ground, then there's no real reason to associate the Olympics with a city's infrastructure plans at all. You take those away, and you're left with some nebulous goals of promoting your world-classiness on the international stage, perhaps some marginal gains to housing, and a new sports venue or two if the old sports venues were showing their age or didn't actually exist yet.
And I'm sorry, but those aren't really compelling reasons for me to support the Olympics. Boston's stature among international cities is going to get along just fine without needing to be showcased.