Sunday Is Crucial Deadline for September Primary

This Sunday is the deadline to register to vote in the September primary. It is also the last day for voters who have moved or changed their names since the last time they voted to re-register in order to cast a ballot on Sept. 11.

Why a Sunday? State law requires Rhode Islanders to be registered at least 30 days before an election in order to be eligible to vote. In order to register, you must be at least 18 years old by Nov. 6, a resident of Rhode Island and a U.S. citizen.

Even though the deadline falls on a Sunday, our office at 148 West River St. in Providence will be open from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. In addition, every municipality has made arrangements to enable residents to register close to home at the last-minute.

Rhode Islanders can also download a voter registration form. In order to beat the deadline, your original, signed form must be received by us or your local voter-registration location by closing time on Sunday.

September’s primary will include races for the U.S. House of Representatives as well as some General Assembly seats and municipal offices.

Marriage Equality Battle Now Squarely in Senate


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Politics is unlike baseball in that sometimes it makes sense to take your eye off the ball. That’s because sometimes the real action isn’t where the players are focusing. It was in that spirit that Phoenix editor David Scharfenberg wrote his excellent piece on the marriage equality debate at the State House.

“When same-sex marriage legislation died in the General Assembly last summer without so much as a vote, attention focused on openly gay Speaker of the House Gordon Fox. Had he done enough?,” he wrote. “But if that’s part of the story, it is only part. The truth is Rhode Island’s same-sex marriage fight is centered not in the House, but in the Senate.”

It’s true. State House sources tell me that the House already has the votes to pass marriage equality and electoral soothsayers expect that chamber will pick up even more votes. However, Scharfenberg reports that the Senate seems locked down the other way. But he breaks down the Senate races that could help swing the balance of power in that chamber:

There are some electoral battles concerning marriage equality on the Senate side too.

We’ve already highlighted Laura Pisaturo’s challenge to Sen. Michael McCaffrey. She’s a lawyer and a lesbian in a longtime committed relationship and he’s the chairman of the judiciary committee and one of the biggest road blocks to gay marriage on Smith Hill.

Scharfenberg did too and he also found some others:

Two-term Democratic Senator Michael Pinga of West Warwick, a gay marriage opponent who won a close primary fight in 2010, is facing energetic same-sex nuptials supporter Adam Satchell in the primary.

Republican Senator Bethany Moura, a same-sex marriage opponent who represents Cumberland and Lincoln, faces a likely rematch with Democrat Ryan Pearson, a gay nuptials proponent she edged by just 343 votes last time.

And freshman Senator Glenford Shibley, a Coventry Republican opposed to gay nuptials, will have to run his first re-election campaign during a presidential tilt sure to drive Democrats to the polls in large numbers.

Then he finished his piece by bringing the attention to the most critical player in Rhode Island’s debate over marriage equality: Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed.

The focus, until now, has been on Speaker Fox and the legacy he’d like to leave. But the real question is: what kind of legacy does Paiva Weed want to build?

Does she want to be remembered as the principled defender of traditional marriage or as a leader who stepped aside, despite her own reservations, to let history make its jagged march to progress?

Progress Report: State Senate and Marriage Equality; Dismantling the EDC; Angel, Gina and Campaign Cash


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Greenwich Cove. (Photo by Bob Plain)

The must read piece of the day – if not the summer, to date – is Phoenix editor David Scharfenberg’s excellent piece on the marriage equality debate in the state Senate. So great is this piece that I’ll be taking a closer look at it later today, too.

As pleased as I am with Scharfenberg’s piece, I am equally upset with Phillipe and Jorge’s tasteless joke … I might not be Polish myself but I happen to be madly in love with someone who is.

The Projo reports this morning that those who typically want to shrink government now want to “dismantle” the EDC, and are using the 38 Studios debacle as the impetus. Rhode Island may well want to look at new options for how the public sector helps the private sector, but it’s important to remember that the 38 Studios mess is Republican Don Carcieri’s doing; EDC was just doing what he told them to do.

Ian Donnis says money won’t likely be the deciding factor if Angel and Gina square off for governor in two years. That’s good news for the mayor of Providence, because the state treasurer has proven she can raise significant cash from out-of-state donors who might perhaps benefit from her top-down, finance first style of governing.

Dan McGowan keeps hammering on the back and forth over who’s more Rhode Island: Senator Sheldon Whitehouse or Boca Raton Barry Hinckley.

And over at Prosperous Rising (if the Center for Freedom and Prosperity and Anchor Rising are going to report the same stuff, we may as well give them one name) Monique Chartier says there is going to be a protest against the proposed Sakonnet River bridge toll today. This should be a progressive issue, too. It’s a very regressive way to raise revenue and will adversely affect the working class people of the East Bay who commute back and forth across the bridge. It would be imminently better for the state’s economy to make us East Greenwich residents pay a toll to commute to our white collar jobs in the big city.

Anyone who has ever gone through depression should reads the great column in today’s Projo about how Bruce Springsteen did too. Anne Michaud writes: “It’s startling that a person so fabulously successful could have been depressed. Even more surprising, depression hit after his breakthrough commercial album “Born to Run” in 1975. But without role models for healthy recovery, individuals may reject treatment for fear they’ll be mistaken for “crazies” who dye their hair orange and allegedly hunt movie patrons. They rob themselves of the chance for recovery.”

Don’t forget to watch the Perseid meteor shower Saturday night. And, when you do, wish upon a shooting star. But do so judiciously, as it is likely to come true…