Progress Report: Economic Development Void in RI; GOP Fans Father-Daughter Dance Flames; James Diossa


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Downtown Providence from the Providence River. (Photo by Bob Plain)

It seems RI Future and RIPEC agree on at least one thing. “Rhode Island does not have a clear vision of how to expand its economy or a governmental structure that helps create jobs, encourage companies to expand, attract businesses and develop workers’ skills,” reports the Providence Journal about RIPEC’s report on the EDC this morning. We may not agree what to do about it, though. We think the state should invest more heavily into this sector.

The Cranston School Committee last night agreed to petition the state legislature to lift the state ban on father daughter dances. The reality is few people are actually worked up about this and the name isn’t a longstanding tradition in Cranston. It’s just about local Republicans trying to drum up animosity using the ACLU as their boogieman.

Good luck to Central Falls City Councilor James Diossa, who launches his campaign for mayor today.

Here’s Gina Raimondo on NPR’s Talk of the Nation yesterday talking about Rhode Island’s early effort to reform public sector pension benefits.

URI professors, who are teaching without a contract right now, are among the lowest paid college professors in the region, according to the ProJo this morning … yet political pressure from the Chafee Administration prevented them from getting an already-agreed upon pay raise. Stay tuned.

Here’s why Romney is losing.

Hilarious Saturday Night Live skit on some of the questions undecided voters are still asking.

On this day in 1957: “Under escort from the U.S. Army’s 101st Airborne Division, nine black students enter all-white Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas.”

And on this day in 1690, the first newspaper was published in the new world. It was called Publick Occurrences Both Forreign and Domestick.

Rhode Island Custodians Consider Going on Strike


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About 600 janitors in Rhode Island may go on strike at the end of the month if they aren’t able to negotiate a new contract that would guarantee them more hours and better wages, said Rachel Miller of the SEIU 615.

They work for CVS, Citizens Bank, Textron, TF Green Airport, Fidelity, Bank of America and FM Global, she said, “yet they are having to work two and three jobs just to get by.”

The 600 Rhode Island custodians are organized with SEUI 615. There are 14,000 custodians in New England who may go on strike when their current contract expires on September 30.

According to a press release from the SEIU:

Fair wages and the opportunity to work increased hours can mean the difference between a good, middle class job and living in poverty. Many janitors are offered only 20 hours a week and janitors in Rhode Island earn as little at $39 a day. Workers are working harder and having to supplement with other income just to make ends meet. New England now has an opportunity to go forward—towards good jobs and stronger communities—instead of backward to poverty wage jobs that do not support their families and neighborhoods.

The custodians voted to authorize a potential strike on Saturday. Here’s a video of the vote:

Obama Fundraiser Tonight at Blaze


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Want to do your part to help Barack Obama get reelected? Or maybe you’re just looking for something fun to do tonight? Now you don’t have to choose as there is a fundraiser tonight for the president at Blaze on Hope St. at 6 p.m.

“There will be great food, fun and lively conversation,” said progressive activist, RI Future founder and city of Providence attorney Matt Jerzyk in an email about the fundraiser. “And if you want Obama-Biden “swag” this is the place to be!  Obama lawn signs, bumper stickers, t-shirts, buttons or Dog/Cat collars.”

How the Koch Brothers Would Hurt Rhode Island


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Rhode Island progressives Kate Brock of Ocean State Action and Pat Crowley of the NEA-RI join forces with the Stop the Greed agenda to call attention to how the uber-wealthy Koch Brothers are conspiring against Rhode Island.

According to a press release from Patriot Majority, the Koch Brothers’ right-wing agenda would hurt the Ocean State by “cutting Pell Grants by over $800 for every RI student, privatizing Social Security for RI’s 200,000-plus recipients, and take away health insurance of over 40K who would get it under Obamacare.”

Patriot Majority’s “Stop the Greed” bus – which is touring the eastern part of the country and will meet up near St. Louis with its western-states counterpart in about a month – will be at Kennedy Plaza today at 3:30.

Here’s the full press release:

On Monday, September 24, 2012, at 3:30 pm EDT, Providence concerned citizens will call out the billionaire Koch Brothers who have threatened to spend $400 million this year on a “greed agenda” that will weaken America. The Koch Brothers have advocated for more tax breaks for mega-billionaires like themselves, while cutting needed protections and programs for middle class Americans.

Community leaders including Kate Brock, Executive Director of Ocean State Action, and Patrick Crowley, of National Education Association Rhode Island, will gather at Kennedy Plaza to argue that the Kochs’ Greed Agenda has been destructive to the Rhode Island middle class.

The news conference is part of a national initiative that Patriot Majority USA launched in August. In September, the group expanded its presence with a paid ad campaign in states, and with a national bus tour—complete with more than 30 stops in 23 states.  More information about the campaign can be found at www.stopthegreedagenda.com.

Patriot Majority USA has a multi-year bipartisan primary purpose, and is working on economic solutions and encouraging job creation throughout the United States. Patriot Majority USA’s future legislative advocacy, in 2013 and beyond, at both at the national and state levels, is based on the goals of the Patriot Majority Action Plan. See more at http://www.patriotmajority.org.  

In Providence, Kate Brock, Patrick Crowley and others will speak as part of a national bus tour called “Stop the Greed Agenda,” a project of Patriot Majority USA.

Green Party of RI Endorses Abel Collins in CD2


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The Green Party of Rhode Island has endorsed environmentalist and public transportation advocate Abel Collins in the contest to represent the 2nd congressional district of Rhode Island.

In a press release sent out by the Green Party this morning, Collins said his is “proud to be the peace candidate in the race, and proud to have the endorsement of the Green Party.”

He added, “Of course it’s possible to challenge the two-party system,” Collins declared. “What’s not possible is to sustain the unsustainable, to make more fossil fuels, or create a peaceful society when people are motivated by fear, and not by love.”

Here’s the rest of the release from the Green Party:

At a state committee meeting in Providence, the Green Party of Rhode Island has voted to formally endorse Abel Collins, independent candidate for Congress in Rhode Island’s 2nd District.

“Abel has common sense, common decency, and a plan to bring Rhode Island into the 21st Century,” said party secretary Kathleen Rourke. “We’re proud to endorse his campaign. We urge all of our supporters in the 2nd District to vote for Abel Collins.”

Green Party leaders said they were impressed by Collins’ commitments to reform the financial system, promote fair trade, and push legislation to fight climatechange, while bringing high-paying jobs to Rhode Island in emerging green technologies. His pledge to oppose further U.S. involvement in Afghanistan, and bring all U.S. troops home, also drew enthusiastic praise from the party’s peace activists.

“Abel is without doubt the best congressional candidate Rhode Island has seen in decades,” said party chair Tony Affigne. “He’s a genuine peace candidate, and he’s absolutely determined to get big money out of congressional politics. His election would be very good news for those who love peace, and those who long for true democracy, everywhere in America. He has our complete support.”

Dems Disagree Doherty Can Protect SS, Medicare


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Brendan Doherty

Democrats disagree that Brendan Doherty, the Republican running against Congressman David Cicilline for the CD1 seat, can offer what the conservative former state trooper calls an “iron clad pledge to protect Medicare and Social Security benefits.”

While Doherty is holing a press conference today at 10 a.m. to tout as much, the RI Democratic Party called his “pledge to preserve Social Security and Medicare an empty one, given that leaders in his party have been attempting to undermine these programs for years.”

Bill Fischer, spokesman for the Democratic Party, said in a statement released this morning:

Mr. Doherty is a Romney Republican who has clearly stated he would repeal the Affordable Care Act; raise the eligibility age on Social Security; and will vote for Republican control in Congress. This is an agenda that is bad for Rhode Island’s seniors. The hard truth is that Mr. Doherty is making a pledge to seniors today that he can’t deliver because his party has other plans in mind. The harm the GOP has attempted to inflict on the senior safety net is intensive and Mr. Doherty jumped on the bandwagon when he joined his colleagues in their goal to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

If Doherty were serious about protecting seniors, he wouldn’t be calling for the repeal of our historic healthcare reform. Maybe he doesn’t understand the enormous benefits Rhode Island seniors have already received since its passage. Thanks to President Obama’s Affordable Care Act, 128,390 people on Medicare in Rhode Island have access to preventative health care services, such as colonoscopies and mammograms. In Rhode Island’s First Congressional District alone, 7,300 seniors have saved over $4 million on prescription drugs because the Affordable Care Act closed the donut hole.

The truth is, Medicare and Social Security are under attack by a Republican-controlled House and Doherty would vote to maintain Republican control, allowing these same folks to continue their assault on programs seniors depend on. Democrats recognize Medicare as a fundamental right for seniors, who have earned it, while Republicans view Medicare as a negotiable budget item that can be cut as they see fit. Voters will see past Doherty’s empty rhetoric and realize the difference between the two views.

 

Progress Report: Voter ID vs. Health Exchange; Doherty Pretends to be Moderate; Riley’s Fib; Smithfield Patch


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Rhode Island sure is a complex place politically. While Pat Smith points out this morning that we’re the only state with a Democratic-leaning legislature and without a Republican governor to pass a voter ID bill, the New York Times points out we’re also the only state without a Democratic governor to move forward with a health care exchange. Does this make us moderate, or erratic?

Brendan Doherty’s job for the next couple weeks is to make himself seem more liberal than he actually is, or would be if elected to Congress … and while the conservative, Mitt Romney-supporting, former state cop will begin that effort in earnest today, Dan McGowan offers a great primer on the differences between him and Democratic incumbent David Cicilline.

While Ted Nesi points out that Mike Riley, the Ayn Rand acolyte running against Congressman Jim Langevin got mentioned on a national blog, Politfact points out that his message to Rhode Islanders, as evidenced by his radio ads, has included “a gross distortion of very common practices allowed by law and the U.S. Constitution.” Going back to the gold standard may well be a good idea (according to the Ron Pauls and John Galts of the world) but if anyone’s acting like a “shark” in the campaign for second congressional it’s Riley.

If you’re keeping score at home: House Speaker Gordon Fox isn’t supporting Rep. Jon Brien’s write-in campaign but conservative Woonsocket state Senator Marc Cote is … most interesting that both Reps. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt and Bob Phillips decided not to weigh in.

As we predicted on Twitter a few weeks back, there’s a new Patch site coming to Rhode Island real soon … Smithfield Patch will launch within a week, according to Johnston Patch editor Joe Hutnak who will edit both sites.

Here’s a scary statistic: 28 percent of Rhode Island parolees return to the ACI within a year. Are we letting bad people out of jail or do we need to do a better job of rehabilitating prisoners and helping them readjust to life on the outside?

Please, for the sake of our state’s reputation across the country, let this rumor not be true. Buddy Cianci is smart, well-connected and a very nice guy … but Rhode Island needs him back in office like we need another 38 Studios fiasco…

How bad is economic inequality getting in America? This from NPR: “One recent study suggests the income gap might be greater today than even during colonial times – even when you account for slavery.”

Please Sign: Petition to Repeal RI Voter ID Law


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Mitt Romney could still win this election. The other day I was reading an article by Robert Reich on Four Reasons Why Romney Might Win. Reason #4:

As they’ve displayed before, the Republican Party will do whatever it can to win — even if it means disenfranchising certain voters. To date, 11 states have enacted voter identification laws, all designed by Republican legislatures and governors to dampen Democratic turnout.

The GOP is also encouraging what can only be termed “voter vigilante” groups to “monitor polling stations to prevent fraud” – which means intimidating minorities who have every right to vote. We can’t know at this point how successful these efforts may be but it’s a dangerous wildcard.

Except in RI where it was a Democratic legislature and an Independent Governor!! It struck me again how strange it is that RI is one of the 11 states.

The Voter ID laws are simply a new form of voter suppression, being sold as a way to end non-existent voter fraud. That’s why I created a petition to The Rhode Island State House of Representatives, The Rhode Island State Senate and Governor Lincoln Chafee, which says: “The undersigned urge the RI State legislature and the Governor to vote to repeal the state’s discriminatory Voter ID law.”

Will you sign my petition? Click here to add your name.

Doherty Must Be Kidding


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Brendan Doherty pointing – again

Brendan Doherty recently put out a tv spot titled “Gotta Be Kidding Me.” In the ad, Doherty claims that politicians in both parties find it tough to cut wasteful government spending, which he eloquently follows up with “You’ve gotta be kidding me. Those guys don’t know what tough is.” Doherty then talks about fighting crime and says, “After fighting real criminals, these guys in Washington don’t scare me one bit.”

Which “guys” (no gals?) is Doherty referring to? Has it slipped his mind that Republicans control the House? One would hope that he’s not too scared of his fellow Republicans.

But, I agree with Brendan Doherty that we should indeed be scared of the Republicans who have been running the House. Those “guys” want to repeal Obamacare, continue the war against women, end Medicare as we know it, and want to keep giving tax breaks to the rich. That’s exactly why we shouldn’t send Brendan Doherty, another Republican, to Washington.

Brendan Doherty, you’ve gotta be kidding us. You are one of “those guys” that you’re trying to warn us about. You’re in lockstep with the Republican agenda that aims to set our country back.

And by the way, Brendan, according to your own campaign website, government spending is down by $1,000,000,000 since last week and is still going down.

Truth About Anti-Union Movie ‘Won’t Back Down’


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The anti-teachers’ union movie “Won’t Back Down” will soon come to Rhode Island pushing the concept of parent trigger laws, where 51% of parents can close down a public school.

“Won’t Back Down,” Diane Ravitch put it, “is a movie celebrating the ALEC-inspired ‘parent trigger, encouraging the public to think that parents should seize control of their public school, fire the staff, and hand the school over to a charter corporation.”

It stars Viola Davis, a product of the Central Falls schools. Shame on her for pushing propaganda, exaggerations and untruths about life in a public school, especially in the city where Commissioner Gist and Central Fall’s Superintendent Gallo fired the teachers in 2010.

The movie is full of misrepresentations, such as saying several times that the union forbids teachers from staying in the school where they teach after 3 p.m. This is factually untrue. In fact there was a new study done by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation called Primary Sources: America’s Teachers on the Teaching Profession that stated teachers work 10 hours and 40 minutes a day on average. That’s a 53-hour work week!

I encourage you to read Valerie Strauss’s Washington Post article explaining the survey and the hours teachers put in beyond the regular school day.

Leonie Haimson, a New York parent activist and co founder of Parents Across America, says the movie’s plot regarding parent takeover has no resemblance to reality and that parent trigger has a 100 percent failure rate and has pitted parents against parents. Interesting since Michelle Rhee and her school-reformer friends use techniques to pit teachers against teachers.

As Fall comes upon us tomorrow officially, there will be many movies for you to go and see. Don’t let this propaganda film for corporate profit makers be one of them…Don’t get caught up in the hype. Don’t let your movie money support such a misleading movie. Support your teachers by avoiding this corporate school reform distortion message. Don’t let the corporate rich and school reformers like Rhee, Jindal, Chris Christie, Mayor Bloomberg , Gates, Murdoch & others fool you into believing this anti union movie for that is exactly what it is…..

Sour Grapes: Jon Brien is Wrong for Woonsocket

Just nine days after a narrow defeat to local firefighter Stephen Casey in September’s Democratic primary, Woonsocket representative Jon Brien announced — without a whiff of humility — that he would be running a write-in campaign to retain his seat in the General Assembly.

Brien claimed that administrative errors by the Board of Canvassers sent voters to the wrong polls on primary day, and that this caused many of his supporters to show up at the wrong polls — and out of frustration — did not cast their votes.

While this may be true, it speaks to two pertinent points.

First, Brien has not generated any palpable enthusiasm in the electorate — or in his base for that matter.

If after being told that they were at the wrong poll, these folks weren’t willing to get to their proper polling place — most of which are less than a five or ten minute drive from any other polling place in the city — to support their chosen candidate, they either thought that Brien would cruise to victory by a wide margin or, more likely, the voters in Woonsocket have begun to see through the thinly veiled Republican in Democrat’s clothing.

Second, in such a close race — Casey took the primary by 52 votes — if this was happening to Brien’s supporters, it was happening to those who turned up at the polls to support his opponent at the same rate.

It may be hard for Brien to believe, but maybe — just maybe — Casey’s supporters had a little more resolve when faced with an “administrative error” because they actually felt strongly that their candidate was the man for the job, and Brien’s would-be supporters resigned themselves to, “Whatever, maybe we need a change, anyway.”

Brien also claimed that low voter turnout contributed to his political demise.

This is patently false. In fact, the Casey/ Brien race brought more voters to the primary polls in District 50 — 1,392 to be exact — than the three-way race in the 2010 midterm primary, which drew only 1,105 voters in the district.

What we have here, my fellow Villa Novans, is a severe case of sour grapes.

Brien has gotten a taste of power, and he is loath to surrender it; all the more reason to support Stephen Casey.

I have met both of these men, and I can say Steve Casey is a man who has strong opinions, but chooses his words and actions carefully. As a firefighter, he understands that one cannot go off half-cocked, rushing into situations of which he does not know the full gravity.

Brien, on the other hand, is an abrasive loudmouth who shoots from the hip, consequences be damned. His approach to politics only alienates other legislators and citizens, and a pig-headed, uncompromising representative to the state legislature is the last thing our great city needs given our tenuous financial and social situation.

Dave Fisher, a Woonsocket resident and the ecoRI.org editor, will be posting about why Jon Brien should not be reelected every Monday up until the election … but hopefully not after.

Gamm Theater Presents Play About Radical Politics


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Diana Buirski (Emma), Ben Gracia (Miguel) in “After the Revolution” by Amy Herzog, directed by Tony Estrella, at The Sandra Feinstein-Gamm Theatre. (Photo by Peter Goldberg)

RI Future isn’t the only place in Rhode Island where one can get their fill of progressive politics. In fact, now through October 14 you can get it at the Gamm Theater in Pawtucket, which is running “After the Revolution,” renowned playwright Amy Herzog’s semi-autobiographical look at a family of radical leftists.

As a bonus, if you go on Sunday, URI labor professor Scott Molloy will be leading the post-play discussion.

Reviewed here in the New York Times, the Gamm describes it as being about:

Three generations of a loving and radically leftist family gather to celebrate the law school graduation of its youngest torchbearer, Emma. But news of a forthcoming book with shocking revelations about late Grandpa Joe – a famously blacklisted Marxist – casts a pall on the party and throws the family into an inter-generational tailspin. Shaken to the core, Emma must reconcile her fierce politics and family loyalty to decide if the end ever justifies the means.

In this piece by Herzog, the playwright, she describes how she ended up writing this play loosely based on her own upbringing.

In my household, Walt Disney was a villain, Fidel was misunderstood, and the Boy Scouts was a paramilitary organization. I knew the pledge of allegiance represented some mysterious evil before I knew what most of the words in it meant. Communism, far from being a bad word, carried the cozy association of my grandparents’ apartment in Greenwich Village where I spent countless weekend afternoons half-listening to the grown-ups’ good-natured but voluble political arguments over televised tennis and G&T’s.

Here’s the link for tickets.

Progress Report: David Cicilline Predicts Dems Can Capture House; Dan Yorke, Bill Fischer on Polls vs. Push Polls


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Downtown Providence from the Providence River. (Photo by Bob Plain)

It’s well established that things are looking pretty good for David Cicilline, and now Cicilline is predicting good things for Democrats prospects of retaking control of the House of Representatives. The incumbent congressman told RIPR’s Ian Donnis, “The reality is we need 24 seats to take control away from the Republican Tea Party caucus that is now leading the House . I think it’s absolutely possible for Democrats to take back the House.”

Cicilline might be right. Mitt Romney’s 47 percent comments have completely rejiggered congressional contests all over the country, and strategists think it could cost the GOP the Senate.

Speaking of the 47 percent, here’s how the 53 percent benefit from government subsidies.

Dan Yorke had a great and informative conversation with Dem spokesman Bill Fischer yesterday afternoon about polls … if you want to know more about the difference between polls and push polls, listen to the segment. There’s been a lot of misinformation going around about the difference.

This should be a huge concern for Rhode Island: “More than a fifth of children in Rhode Island are living in poverty, and over 10 percent are in extreme poverty.”

New York Times columnist Joe Nocera had a great piece on the Chicago teachers’ strike and the so-called education reform movement. He writes, “teachers are fighting for the things industrial unions have always fought for: seniority, favorable work rules and fierce resistance to performance measures. City Hall is fighting to institute reforms no top-performing country has ever seen fit to use, and which probably won’t make much difference if they are instituted.”

Aaron Regunberg also wrote about the Chicago teachers’ strike for GoLocal.

Bob Kerr on the father-daughter dance controversy in Cranston: “This is nonsense. There is legal cover for it, but it is nonsense. It sounds like a spoof on political correctness, but it is far too real.”

Rest in peace, Mary Carpenter … Rhode Island owes the entire Carpenter family a debt of gratitude for helping to make Matunuck the community it is today.

Today in 1938, a hurricane hits Rhode Island.

Doherty Distances Himself from 47 Percent Remark


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Brendan Doherty

Brendan Doherty has distanced himself from Mitt Romney’s politically devastating comments about the 47 percent, according to the Providence Journal.

“I don’t agree with Mitt Romney’s characterization,” Doherty said in a statement to the ProJo.

Exactly what part of Romney’s diatribe against income tax-less moochers with no personal responsibility Doherty disagrees with wasn’t clear. He didn’t actually talk to the reporter, John Mulligan, rather Doherty just sent a press release about it, it seems.

But at least Mulligan got a release. I made several overtures to the Doherty campaign and they ignored them all. (And Dave Layman and I are friends!) It’s almost as if Doherty disdains progressives the way Romney does the 47 percent.

What is clear is what Doherty, who has endorsed Romney for president, has said about him in the past: “Mitt Romney is a proven leader who will stand by his convictions while seeking consensus to find real solutions to the daunting challenges facing our nation.”

It’s hard to make the case that Romney is a consensus builder after he got caught on video saying “my job is is not to worry about those people. I’ll never convince them they should take personal responsibility and care for their lives.”

It’s also going to be hard for Doherty to make the case that he doesn’t share Romney’s belief that poor people are lazy and lucky. Especially when he then campaigns with other right-wing Republicans like Devin Nunes, about whom Democratic Party spokesman Bill Fischer said, “Nunes has described Medicaid as a program ‘imposed on the poor’ and has stood with Paul Ryan in support of radically altering the safety net for our seniors.”

Similarly, Doherty wants to repeal Obamacare but extend George Bush’s tax cuts for the rich.

Doherty may say he doesn’t agree with Romney’s off-color comments about the 47 percent, but if elected you can bet he would vote as if he agrees with them.

Jon Brien Lays Blame

Joining an ever growing list of sore losers, most recently his friend Doug Glabinske, Jon Brien announced a write-in candidacy for House District 50 today; the same seat he lost in the recent primary to Stephen Casey. Citing administrative issues for people not being able to vote or being sent to the wrong polling place, Brien wouldn’t lay blame on anyone or group specifically, but alluded to the fact that he lost because constituents couldn’t vote. The problem with that line of reasoning, though, is that even if voters were at the wrong polling place and couldn’t go elsewhere or weren’t helped, they could have cast provisional ballots that would have been counted later, if necessary.

Brien then went on to blame the public employee unions for targeting him. However when naming his opponent, he went out of his way to say about being a union member, “There’s nothing wrong with that.”

Brien blames the city’s fiscal woes on public unions but doesn’t attend Budget Commission hearings, even though he’s been asked multiple times by chairman Bill Sequino. If he did educate himself about the city’s finances, he might learn that every one of the municipal unions in the city has made concessions over the past two contract cycles, with the firefighters giving up the most. Speaking about what he believes to be the cause of the city’s problems, Jon Brien should take the time to learn exactly why the city’s finances are the way they are.

However, as stated above, he’s never attended a  hearing of the state-appointed body that may ultimately decide the city’s future. Instead he cites professional obligations. Isn’t part of his professional obligation to his constituents to be current on matters concerning the city he represents? How much different is attending a 3 pm meeting of the budget commission than getting to the State House for the Rise of the House? Disengaging from problems demonstrates irresponsibility, not leadership.

Much of the fiscal woes facing the city today are a direct result of a lack of leadership. For years, city administrations refused to raise taxes. While that worked to get re-elected, it put the city in a deep hole. Most of the blame is now laid on the school department, but looking deeper, the school committee will respond that they were in debt years ago when the school funding formula vote was taken in the RI House, supported by Rep. Brien, and that caused the struggling system even further into debt.

When it comes to the supplemental tax, Mr. Brien states he wouldn’t vote for anything until he saw a concrete plan. However, he never met with city officials to offer any advice, leaving Rep. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt to take the leadership role on the issue. On the subject of his co-sponsorship of the 38 Studios deal, he says they were given incomplete information and the only reason his name was added was because he had been involved in EDC legislation in the past. The question remains though, if unable to vote for a incomplete supplemental tax bill, then why vote for a bill releasing hundreds of millions of dollars when not in complete knowledge of the details?

If anything was learned from this press conference, it was that one man’s ego was bruised and he can’t accept that he was voted out of office and will do anything to hold onto power.

DCCC Poll Good News for Whitehouse Too


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A recent DCCC poll also shows good news for Senator Sheldon Whitehouse. He’s leading his challenger Barry Hinckley 64 to 27 percent in the First Congressional District.

This shouldn’t surprise anyone – except maybe Nate Silver – as Whitehouse is a popular incumbent who has consistently outperformed his unknown opponent in polls. In a February WPRI poll Sheldon was at 50 percent and Hinckley was at 27 percent.

Cicilline Leads Doherty in Third Poll Since Primary


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A third poll since the primary shows Congressman David Cicillne with a comfortable lead over conservative newcomer Brendan Doherty, this one was commissioned by the Cicilline campaign and shows him enjoying a 51 to 41 edge over right wing Republican.

“Democrat David Cicilline has secured majority support over Republican challenger Brendan Doherty in the race for Rhode Island’s First Congressional seat,” said a memo from pollster Diane Feldman, of the Feldman Group, to the Cicilline campaign. “With only 8 percent undecided, the contest is not very mobile and Cicilline is the likely winner of it.”

Accounting for three-way race, “Cicilline leads Doherty 46 percent to 36 percent, with independent candidate David Vogel receiving 7 percent and 11 percent of voters undecided,” according to her memo.

The results closely mimic a recent poll conducted by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, which showed Cicilline with an 11-point lead over Doherty.

Feldman’s memo says, “Voters favor Democratic positions on many key issues facing the country, including health care reform. Seventy-two (72) percent of voters in the First Congressional District support the Democratic position favoring the Affordable Care Act, while 22 percent of voters favor the Republican position of repealing the Affordable Care Act completely, and starting the process of health care reform all over again.”

Doherty has said he is opposed to Obama’s landmark healthcare reform bill.

“The First Congressional District remains heavily Democratic,” Feldman wrote in her memo. “President Barack Obama dominates Republican challenger Mitt Romney and fully 50 percent of voters believe their families are better off if Democrats have a majority in the United States Congress, while only 16 percent of voters feel their families are be better off if Republicans have a majority.”

Progress Report: Cicilline Surging Against Doherty; GOP for Father-Daughter Dances; Affordable Housing; 47 Percent


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David Cicilline is surging. After comfortably beating Anthony Gemma in the primary it now looks like he’s comfortably ahead of his conservative challenger Brendan Doherty in polls commissioned by the Democrats. While Republicans, Buddy Cianci and other Cicilline detractors might dismiss partisan polls, it still gives the incumbent an advantage and shows momentum.

We’ll have more on Cicilline’s surge later this morning…

State House Republicans say they will join in the controversy in Cranston about what to call elementary school dances in Cranston (your tax dollars at work?). But this isn’t a partisan issue, as evidenced by David Cicilline’s position on the issue.

Three cheers to Gina Raimondo for using her political capital to advocate for affordable housing funding. She’s pushing for voters to approve a $25 million bond to build and/or rehab 600 units. This is an important economic development opportunity for Rhode Island. Raimondo is a longtime board member of Crossroads Rhode Island and her commitment to homeless people is admirable.

That said, we find it distasteful that she claims pension cuts made it possible to go out to bond for affordable housing. Of course, rolling back tax cuts for the wealthy – a move she objects to – would have a similar effect on the state’s finances. And, it would do so without pitting the working class against itself. In other words, she is arguing that the state needed to take money from teachers and state workers in order to give it to the homeless. Her logic reminds me of railroad tycoon Jay Gould’s famous quote: “I can hire one half of the working class to kill the other half.”

Speaking of class warfare, the Providence Journal weighs in on Mitt Romney’s 47 percent comment with a pretty muddled editorial. More to the point is what the New York Times editorial board said about it: “It turns out that Mitt Romney was right. There is class warfare being waged in the 2012 campaign. It is Mr. Romney who is waging it, not President Obama, and he’s stood the whole idea on its head.” Even the conservative-leaning Washington Post editorial board writes: “Mr. Romney suggests that Obama voters are such sheep that there is no point in reaching out to them — and that their support for Democrats is purely selfish. The possibility that principles might motivate their political behavior does not even occur to Mr. Romney. It’s a demeaning, as well as inaccurate, view of the people he hopes to lead.”

GOP strategists think Romney’s comments could give Democrats the inside track for control of the Senate. And Democrats think it could put them in position to take back the House. Unlike moderate Republican candidates from across the nation, RI GOP candidates have been completely silent on the controversy.

Update: Brendan Doherty has distanced himself from the comments, according to the ProJo.

Happy birthday, Upton Sinclair. The author of “The Jungle” was born today in 1878.

And today in 173, Billie Jean King beat Bobby Riggs in tennis.

The Politics of Drought


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While 2012’s double whammy of heat and drought is making the headlines, Congress’ response to the severe damage that is being sustained by the industry of basic food production has been considerably less noticeable.

In the face of the worst drought in more than a generation, and with millions of fish being killed as waterways in the heartland run dry, Congress has done nothing to bring relief to an industry that literally feeds our population. Rather than take any action, Congress opted instead to desert their offices for five weeks of paid vacation.

To be fair, it’s not as though Washington hasn’t proposed anything.

The Senate had included funding for disaster relief inside a five-year farm bill, but in the House, partisan bickering doomed the measure. The House then passed its own version, but the Senate apparently felt that tending to the business of the people simply was not worth sacrificing any vacation time.

To me, it is reprehensible that Congress is turning its back on this industry and, by extension, on the people of the U.S. Congress is allowing food producers to suffer through a slow-motion tragedy while simultaneously hitting the rest of us with a back-door tax in the form of even higher prices for food. If this is Congress’ idea of rebuilding our economy, one wonders how congressional complacency might look.

These days, the only thing “bipartisan” about Congress is a backward set of priorities, which perhaps can be explained by the adage “Follow the Money.”

In 2008, when Congress stopped at nothing to pass a $700 Billion bailout package for Wall Street, the financial industry that year lobbied Washington to the tune of over $454,000,000 (or $848,598 for each of the 535 members of Congress); by contrast, the 2008 lobbying expenditures of basic food producers totaled just $21,000,000 ($39,252 per member). Through the first half of 2012, the financial lobby has given over $239,000,000 to Congress, while food producers have spent around $10,000,000. When one considers that the drought package was tabbed at $383,000,000, or just 0.00057 of the amount that Washington so willingly foisted upon Wall Street four years ago, the conclusion must be drawn that if the dollars aren’t coming in, Congress isn’t putting out.

The irony here is that through multiple forms of mandatory taxation, the people of this country send $2.5 Trillion each year into the federal coffers (or $4,672,897,196 per member of Congress). The message this conveys is that if the expenditures aren’t voluntary in nature and/or do not benefit individual members of Congress in some direct and personal way, the current attitude of our government is a collective “So What?”

Politifact Reverses Ruling, But Doherty Still Deceived


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Earlier this week I posted about Brendan Doherty playing fast and loose with facts and pegged it to two Politifact pieces that gave him “mostly false” grades. Then Politifact did a little additional research and reversed its ruling.

We’re not reversing our assertion though. While we agree that Dan McGowan did a better job of vetting all the facts than did the ProJo’s initial piece, that has no bearing on our premise that Doherty isn’t being completely honest.

Whether or not the loan in question was repaid by the borrower, a third party, an act of god or god herself, the loan was repaid. Not in full, mind you, but to the satisfaction of the lender. If Warren Buffett decides to paid my mortgage, I don’t owe that money any more and I’ve made good on my debt. There’s no asterisk on my credit score. In other words, it’s not how a debt gets repaid that determines the borrowers standing but that it gets repaid.

But, really, that’s just a technical detail that doesn’t speak to Doherty’s honesty.

His campaign was pretty clearly trying to imply that David Cicilline’s administration had forgiven a loan awarded to a campaign supporter. Given that it’s always hard to prove a negative, the onus is on the Doherty camp to back up this seemingly unsubstantiated assertion. Until that happens, I find it to fall far short of being true. It doesn’t even meet the Stephen Colbert standard of truthiness.

Politifact was right to reexamine its ruling but not to reverse it.


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