The Democrat in Name Only State: Rhode Island


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Ask any conservative and they’ll tell you that the state’s problems are inextricably linked to the dominance of Democrats. This is not untrue, but what they aren’t telling you is that many of the Democrats in the General Assembly are more closely aligned with their own ideology than that of the party’s typical platform.

Our reporting on ALEC this week brought that rarely-mentioned truism to the center of debate this week. Not only is ALEC’s lone Democrat on its board of directors Woonsocket’s own Jon Brien. But for a supposedly liberal state, ALEC has no small toe hold on our General Assembly – more than 20 percent of legislators are members, and half of them are Democrats.

Ian Donnis, of Rhode Island Public Radio, picked up on the theme writing, “Rhode Island might rank among the most bluest states, but you wouldn’t know it from the General Assembly.”

By way of example, he cites our ALEC reporting, last year’s voter ID bill (not surprisingly, that effort was spearheaded by Brien) and the legislative leaderships’ reluctance to embrace income tax increases as a way to get out of debt, noting that, “Speaker Fox and Senate President Paiva Weed seem in tune with Chamber of Commerce types.”

David Sharfenberg of the Phoenix compared Smith Hill legislators’ stance on tax policy to that of their congressional counterparts, writing:

Senator Sheldon Whitehouse got all kinds of attention for his “Buffett Rule” push, calling on the wealthy to “pay their fair share.” Meanwhile, on Smith Hill, the General Assembly seems all but certain to kill legislation that would raise taxes on the rich.

It’s as good an illustration as any of the striking gulf between state- and federal-level politics in Rhode Island – the former rather conservative, the latter pretty liberal.

While Sharfenberg notes that this phenomenon is particularly acute in Woonsocket, Pawtucket and Tiverton, I would add all of Rhode Island save for South County and the West Bay to the list – though Woonsocket is certainly ground zero for conservative Democrats.

Consider this comment posted by Jef Nickerson, who blogs at Greater City: PVD:

“Is there a decoder-ring for the different flavors of “Democrat” in this state,” he wrote. “Moderate-Democrat, Conservative-Democrat, Rightwing-Democrat, Woonsocket-Democrat.”

And similarly, a nonpartisan State House insider, who asked not to be identified, said to me earlier in the week, “In Woonsocket, Democrat is French for Republican.”

But while Woonsocket is the poster child for DINO’s (Democrats in name only), it by no means lays the only claim to a share of this market.

There’s also Karen MacBeth, of Cumberland, who is sponsoring the ultrasound bill that would make it both more onerous for women to get an abortion, and more humbling. And who can forget Rep. Peter Palumbo, who called Jessica Ahlquist “an evil little thing” for sticking up for the Constitution rather than religion in the case of the Cranston prayer banner.

Or how about House Speaker Gordon Fox, who is openly gay, and didn’t fight for marriage equality last legislative session. He’s only slightly less conservative than Senate President Teresa Paiva-Weed, who is well known for valuing Catholics more than constituents.

And these are just the most vocal and recently public examples; there’s also: Doc Corvese of North Providence, Peter Petrarca of Johnston, John Edwards of Portsmouth, Peter Martin of Newport and, of course, Nick Mattiello of Cranston … the list goes on and on…

Anyone who tells you this state is controlled by the political left or organized labor may as well be trying to sell you swampland in Florida. It’s simply not true anymore. For evidence of as much one need look no farther than most popular politicians in the state – Providence Mayor Angel Taveras and Treasurer Gina Raimondo – both of whom are most well known for taking on the unions. And in case you haven’t noticed, it’s been years since organized labor won a meaningful battle at the State House.

So while conservatives scoff at the notion that there is any relationship between tax cuts to the rich and the Rhode Island’s high unemployment rate (even though the correlation completely undercuts the job creator myth that so many of them espouse), it’s getting harder and harder to ignore the simple fact that as Rhode Island moves to the right it’s economy keeps getting weaker and weaker.

Netroots Offers 10 Scholarships to Annual Conference


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Looking for an affordable and socially responsible way to attend the annual Netroots Nation conference this June in Providence? If so you’re in luck because the conference of progressive bloggers and activists is teaming up with Rally.org to offer 10 scholarships to this year’s confab for those who show a prowess for progressive fundraising.

See below for details:

Netroots Nation is teaming up with Rally.org for the first-ever Raise the Future contest, which invites people from around the country to fundraise for progressive causes for the chance to win an all-access pass to Netroots Nation this June in Providence. Ten winners will receive an all-access pass to the conference, hotel accommodations and invitations to VIP events (a $1200 value).

Sign up at rally.org/raisethefuture.

It’s easy to participate: just recruit the most donors for one of the six featured causes—or choose one of your own—using the Rally.org fundraising platform. This contest is unique because its not about how much money you raise, but the number of donors you engage.

The featured causes include Elizabeth Warren for Massachusetts, National Wildlife Federation Action Fund, NARAL Pro-Choice America, Washington United for Marriage, Truman National Security Project and New Leaders Council.

There’s still plenty of time to sign up (and win!). The contest runs through May 15, with finalists announced May 17th.

It takes less than four minutes to get started. Sign up at rally.org/raisethefuture.

Who’s the Knucklehead in Woonsocket Cross Flap?


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While reasonable people can disagree about whether a religious symbol belongs on a war memorial on public property, most would agree that politicians should not call their constituents knuckleheads. Woonsocket Mayor Leo Fontaine seems to be the outlier here though.

Earlier this week he levied that insult at Freedom From Religion Foundation, an atheist group from Wisconsin, that is challenging the city’s war memorial at the fire house because it features a Christian cross. Yesterday, when I asked him about it, he extended the smack down to the Woonsocket resident who brought the issue to their attention.

“I said that they were so…” Fontaine said, not quite finishing the sentence, when I asked him if he thought residents who agree that the cross violates the separation of church and state clause of the Constitution are also knuckleheads. “For them to go forward surreptitiously to try to file a complaint over a monument that has been there for over 90 years yeah my belief is that there is a better avenue to try to resolve their differences.”

On the other hand, Annie Laurie Gaylor, the co-president of Freedom From Religion, seems to think it’s somewhat knuckle-headed for a mayor to not see merit in her complaint.

“It’s like saying the Founding Fathers are knuckleheads because they created a secular government,” she told The Associated Press.

Not surprisingly, Fontaine doesn’t see it this way. “There is core foundation that this country was founded on our judeo-christian values.”

He’s wrong actually. While our founding fathers may have held judeo-christian values, those are not the values they based our democracy on. In fact, in their infinite wisdom, they made certain to keep their private beliefs separate and distinct from the kind of government they created. To confuse the two is, well, knuckle-headed.

RI Progress Report: Arbor Day, Netroots Nation, Medical Marijuana, Muslim Brotherhood, Maria Cimini, ALEC


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Happy Arbor Day, Rhode Island! Hug a tree today. Or, even better, plant one.

Don’t expect much protest at Netroots Nation here in Providence in June, says Ted Nesi, but do expect a visitor from the White House. Meanwhile … Netroots Sweeden starts today.

In the federal governments’ latest attempt to trample state’s rights and squash the will of Rhode Island voters, US Attorney Peter Neronha told Gov. Chafee that landlords who rent to medical marijuana dispensaries could risk having their property taken away.

I’m not saying foreign policy expertise is the most important qualification for a senate candidate, but Rhode Island deserves one that knows the difference between Egypt and the Muslim Brotherhood.

Rep. Maria Cimini, the House sponsor of a bill to return some tax equity to Rhode Island, gets a nice nod from Dan McGowan. She sure does deserve it.

Here’s hoping this trend continues.

It’s not just here in Rhode Island that ALEC is being exposed. It’s actually a nation-wide trend.

Millennials Will Be the Optimistic Generation


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The Great Recession, spiraling debt crises, suicidal austerity, roads falling apart, the war on women, Wall Street bailouts, anti-immigrant sentiment, greater political power to religious zealots, global warming, etc., etc. I look at these and think; I can’t wait for the future.

That’s because I’m a Millennial, and in case you don’t know, despite having the highest unemployment rate of any generation, we’re also the most optimistic. And we should be. We’re a Hero Generation.

There’s a whole generational theory that says each one views life through certain patterns. I haven’t the space to go into it now, but essentially, both the Millennial Generation and the G.I. Generation (aka. the “Greatest” Generation) have similar life events; born in a period of laissez-faire society (’20s & ’80s), come of age during a crisis where we learn teamwork (the Great Recession & Great Depression), and then go on to build great societal institutions. Between our two generations, we’re the most left-wing generations this country has ever had. The Silent Generation, the Boomers, and Generation X are all far more conservative in their outlooks and their politics.

My personal feeling is that this has to do with the Cold War. Think Glenn Beck or Allen West these days, railing against President Obama and the Democrats as believing in socialism or communism. This works for Boomers and Silent Generation types, even Generation X to some extent. Those generations all grew up in an era when the United States was in a global war against communism. Drills demanded that children hide under their desks in the event of nuclear attack (a completely useless measure). Contrast that with the Millennials, the oldest of which would’ve been eight (depending where you say the first Millennial was born) when the Berlin Wall was knocked down. The worn nuclear bomb shelter signs in my middle school were odd curiosities, as outdated as a transistor radio or pagers.

Without the threat of the Cold War, Millennials have been allowed to flourish ideologically. How different are our beliefs? If you ask Millennials about capitalism and socialism we have a slightly more favorable view of socialism. Every other generation is locked into this Cold War struggle. And for those saying Occupy Wall Street is totally socialist, guess what? Those who support Occupy Wall Street hold more favorable views of capitalism. In general terms, Millennials genuinely want government to do more. We believe it can. We have faith in it, a faith that just isn’t matched by older generations.

But that’s to sell ourselves short. It’s not even as simple as socialism vs. capitalism. That’s a Cold War mindset, something which Millennials are escaping from. What Millennials are waking up to is a whole set of ideas that veer away from that simple dichotomy. Copyright laws are running up against the impracticality of enforcement. The internet has shown us just how constructed rules are. Markets, government, etc., even these are socially constructed. Millennials are going to ask the question “why?” in ways which will be disturbing to older generations.

My generation is America’s great divergent generation. We’re the most diverse generation in U.S. history, we’re the most educated, we’re the most optimistic, we’re the most tolerant, we care more about being a good parent than having a successful marriage. But beyond that, we got into less fights with our parents, and we respect our elders more, two-thirds say that personally taking care of an elderly parent is a responsibility we have; far more than Boomer or the Silent Generation types who’ve long since shipped their parents off to assisted living facilities.

There is a generational struggle going on. On one side you have the Cold War Generations; fitfully trying to come to terms with a world in which there is no great enemy, no terrible threat of total annihilation. And on the other you have the Millennials; optimistic, happy, filled with new ideas. We will see the generations before us buried. But we’ll do our best to see that you have good lives before we do.

Consider this before you leave. Half of the recent college graduates in the Millennials are either jobless or underemployed. Interest rates on student loans is about to double (and we have on average over $24,000 in debt). So you’ve got well-educated people facing an enormous debt increase combined with a lack of resources to address that debt. Now think about the possible outcomes.