Former Chafee Staffer Seeks State House Seat


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Sam Lovett, at his old desk in the governor’s office.

Sam Lovett, who worked for Gov. Chafee as a communications associate and before that on David Segal’s campaign, is running for a legislative seat in the State House to represent East Providence.

He’s 24 years old and says politically he sees things from “a millennial point of view.”

What does that mean? The Democrat says the state should focus on fending off the brain drain, helping Main Streets thrive and protecting the rights of all people.

“Without the growth of vibrant communities to empower Rhode Islanders, we will continue to see the decline of our state’s strength,” he said according to his website. “I will work with the talented parties at state and local levels who are able to assist in revitalizing our communities.”

An equally important part of his platform, he said, will concern social issues.

“Being an ethical voice for social justice in Rhode Island is a major reason why I have decided to run for this state seat,” he said on his website. “Advocating on behalf of the elderly and disabled, ensuring accessibility for the blind and deaf and hard of hearing, continuing the good work of the Rhode Island Senate in supporting the homeless, as well as protecting the rights of minority groups, and the reproductive rights of women — these will be focal issues I support with my candidacy.”

Lovett specialized is social media while with the governor’s office. In April, he left for a job with GovLoop, a social network that connects government employees and officials. He said he left on good terms. He did not yet seek Chafee’s endorsement, but says he expects his former boss will support him – and Lovett says he supports his former boss.

“I would never bet against him,” Lovett said. “With him in charge Rhode Island always has a shot.”

The governor’s office could not be immediately reached for comment (I’ll update this post when I hear from them).

Lovett was raised in East Providence and attended Boston College where he studied history.

Because of redistricting the seat won’t be contested by the incumbent. Already declared for the seat are Robert Britto, according to the East Providence Reporter, and Charlie Tsonos, of East Providence Patch.

Old vs. New in Campaign for State House Seat


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There’s no other way to say this: The old ways aren’t working, our state is moving in the wrong direction, and I need your help to fix it.

Today, John Lombardi announces his candidacy for State Representative of District 8. Mr. Lombardi has served on the City Council for almost three decades, and I thank him for his years of service to the City of Providence.  But it is time to look forward.

It’s time for new ideas and new leadership – that’s why I’m running. Our neighborhoods deserve better, and with your help, I know we can turn it around

The fact is that there’s really no difference between John Lombardi, and our current state rep, Michael Tarro – they’re both political insiders, with a stake in the old way of doing things, in City Hall and on Smith Hill.

For years, all of us in Federal Hill, Olneyville and Valley have been let down by poor leadership. And for too long, elected officials have been making short-sighted decisions in order to reward friends and get re-elected. Today we’re all living with the results. Since April, I’ve knocked on hundreds of doors and the response has been overwhelmingly positive. People are ready for a new direction, they’re tired of politics as usual, and I’m in this to fight for all of us who know that Providence can do better. I’m in this to win.

I need your help. Please donate $100 or $10 today, or sign up to volunteer.

Though the number of people seeking to represent District 8 changes today, our campaign does not.

I look forward to working with you to build a stronger Rhode Island. Please feel free to email me and let me know your concerns, to learn more about my campaign, and how you can get involved.

Progress Report: Local Health Care Reform; Purple Rhode Island; Payday Loans, Mother Jones and Diane Ravitch


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Congratulations to Christine Ferguson, who Gov. Chafee tapped to run the new Health Benefits Exchange. Rhode Island now has one of the sharpest minds in health care running one of the nation’s most innovative state-run systems. This is a phenomenon known as good news, Ocean State. Let’s do more stuff like that.

Some people call Rhode Island the most liberal state, which it isn’t (take it from someone who has lived in Oregon, Hawaii and Vermont). Nate Silver of the New York Times calls it the most elastic, or the state most “relatively sensitive or responsive to changes in political conditions.” Ted Nesi writes, “Silver’s conclusion fits with the long-running debate over whether Rhode Island is truly a blue state.”

Gina Raimondo might not like payday loans … but some of her political associates don’t seem to mind them all that much, reports Ian Donnis.

Mother Jones, the long-running lefty mag out of San Francisco, takes a look at our new Homeless Bill of Rights. It was sloppy and irresponsible of me not to include this on my recent list of progressive victories in this year’s legislative session.

Steve Brown, executive director of the local chapter of the ACLU, pens a blog post about the Pleau case and the feds decision to seek the death penalty for him on the ACLU’s Blog of Rights site. He writes, “We know that the death penalty is not a deterrent, that it is imposed in a discriminatory, arbitrary and irrational manner, and that it remains capable of convicting innocent people. Even more fundamentally, as part of a civilized society, it should be unacceptable for our government to respond to a heinous crime with another act of barbarism and violence.”

“Is Rhode Island the worst state,” asks nationally-renowned education expert Diane Ravitch on her blog. “I personally don’t think Rhode Island is the worst state, as compared to states like Louisiana, Ohio, Michigan, Florida, and Indiana,” she writes. “But it deserves credit for moving in the same direction and seeking to earn its spurs in the competition for worst.”

Progressives, for the record, have nothing against charter schools … it’s when charter schools and their advocates get all anti-union that they run afoul of the left.

Fortnight Against Freedom

In the United States, Roman Catholic bishops have called for an alliterative “Fortnight for Freedom” to run from June 21, the vigil of the Feasts of St. John Fisher and St. Thomas Moore, to July 4. The bishops are calling on the faithful to use these two weeks for prayer, study and action, specifically regarding the HHS mandate, requiring employers to provide reproductive services as part of their health care. The Catholic Church, as well as many other religious, anti-reproductive rights groups, have decided this is an abridgment of their religious freedom and are waging a political and public relations war against the mandate.

Here in Providence, Bishop Thomas Tobin held a special mass and prayer breakfast at the Cathedral of Saints Peter & Paul bright and early on Tuesday morning to kick off two weeks of anti-Obamacare political partisanship. Of course, that’s not how Tobin characterized this effort to the 400 plus believers in attendance:

We need to emphasize first of all what this commitment to the defense of religious freedom is not all about. This exercise is not primarily about the Church’s teaching on contraception, although that teaching of the Church is very clear and valid. This is not a statement about women’s health or national health coverage, although that too is a very legitimate issue. Nor is this an exercise of the church participating in partisan election politics during this election year, although Catholics certainly should be and must be involved in that process as well. The defense of religious freedom that we proclaim today is just that: the defense of religious freedom.

Later, Tobin reiterated the the Fortnight for Freedom:

…is not primarily political, it is above all a matter of faith.

Tobin then goes on to explain where he got his marching orders from: Pope Benedict. The pontiff recently warned visiting U.S. bishops about the proponents of “radical secularism” who seek to stifle the church’s proclamation of “unchanging moral truths” that can be found through the church teachings on natural law. (CatholicNews.com)

The Fortnight for Freedom is truly aimed not at the average American but at the Catholic laity, “engaged, articulate and well-informed,” who have an obligation, mandated by God, to confront politicians on issues of concern to the Catholic hierarchy, especially reproductive health care issues. As Tobin explains:

This is your task. This is your mission. This is your fight. It is my task… to inspire you, to motivate you and to encourage you. It is your task to go into the world and fight the battle, challenge politicians, and change unjust laws.

It is telling that at a forum ostensibly defending freedom of religion and conscience the phrase “separation of church and state” was never once uttered, even though Roger Williams, Thomas Jefferson and JFK, just to name three of countless examples, considered such an idea to be the bedrock of true religious liberty. Indeed, Tobin expresses nearly the exact opposite of this essential concept when he says:

It is your vocation, dear brothers and sisters, to transform the secular order into the Kingdom of God.

and later:

We believe that we are endowed with dignity and freedom, and first among those freedoms is the freedom to serve the one who created us…

So much for the values we Americans hold dear. The Kingdom of God does not sound like a place where democracy, or freedom of conscience, could possibly be welcomed. The Kingdom of God sounds exactly like what it is: theocratic rule by a religious elite. An unbiased look at the current and past make-up of the Catholic Church gives one a full picture of what this theocratic Kingdom of God will look like.

The interpretation of the First Amendment advanced by Bishop Tobin and the Fortnight of Freedom is Orwellian in nature. Democracy becomes theocracy. Freedom becomes servitude.

Let’s face it: Real freedom of religion and conscience can only come when, as JFK so eloquently put it 52 years ago, “separation of church and state is absolute.”