Obama Delivers Compelling Case for Re-Election


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President Obama makes his case for re-election at DNC

CHARLOTTE, NC –– President Barack Obama, in a crisp, straight-forward speech at the Democratic National Convention last night, laid out the central choice embodied in his re-election campaign.

“Over the next few years,” said the president, “big decisions will be made in Washington, on jobs and the economy; taxes and deficits; energy and education; war and peace – decisions that will have a huge impact on our lives and our children’s lives for decades to come. On every issue, the choice you face won’t be just between two candidates or two parties. It will be a choice between two different paths for America.  A choice between two fundamentally different visions for the future.”

Obama’s speech did not have the rhetorical flash of former President Bill Clinton, or the moving narrative of First Lady Michelle Obama, or the fire-in-the-belly grit of Vice President Joe Biden. But it did something else, something quite substantial, in knitting together all the themes we had heard — and for those in the hall, that was something like 15 hours of speeches across three days — crystallizing the complex and ramified into the simple logic of decision-making.

In a word, the speech was presidential. Because while we do expect our presidents to have rhetorical flash (“Yes our road is longer – but we travel it together.  We don’t turn back.  We leave no one behind.”) and self-revelatory (“I began my career helping people in the shadow of a shuttered steel mill, at a time when too many good jobs were starting to move overseas.”) and even with a bit of grit (“”Feel a cold coming on? Take two tax cuts, roll back some regulations, and call us in the morning!”), at the end of the day, we know that the person in the Oval Office needs to have, in addition to those necessary-but-not-sufficient skills, a powerful ability to synthesize.

We need a president who can look out across the pressing challenges, the spectrum of issues, the diversity of voices — and anyone who attended to the full content of previous 15 hours could not miss their range and import — and, guided by their values, develop a vision and manage a path forward. It is an act of synthesis, not brute-force reduction to binary choices so painfully on display in Tampa.

In an election, this is of necessity reduced to a single decision point, a “go-no-go” decision (like the one pointedly evoked multiple times during the convention. You know the one I mean.)

And in perhaps the boldest rhetorical move, Obama turned this entire process inside out to show us how implicated we, the voters are: “So you see, the election four years ago wasn’t about me. It was about you. My fellow citizens – you were the change.”

It was a brilliant way to make his case. “As I stand here tonight,” Obama said, “I have never been more hopeful about America. Not because I think I have all the answers. Not because I’m naïve about the magnitude of our challenges. I’m hopeful because of you.”

Because if you had listened, really listened to what speaker after speaker testified to in Charlotte, and you had followed the logic of Obama’s framing (Sandra Fluke said it best: “Six months from now, you’re going to be living in one of these futures.”), and if you were the kind of person that the President thought you were — the kind of person you hope, in your best moments, to be — then you had to rise above the cynicism or “other voices will fill the void.”

Brilliant.

Whither the Ron Paul Voter


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Did you hear about how Ron Paul was snubbed at the Republican National Convention? (snubbed video)

Ron Paul has said he won’t be running for President again, or Congress for that matter. Whatever his imperfections, I will miss the guy, and I’m not alone. The question is what will become of his many followers.

It’s safe to say that Libertarian Gary Johnson will be on the ballot in Rhode Island, and that he’ll pick up some of the votes that Paul would have gotten if he were on it. Other Paul voters will be divvied up between Romney, Obama, Jill Stein, or perhaps most likely not show up to vote. I fear in particular that many of his young supporters will simply opt out.

Ron Paul’s anti-Fed, pro-peace, and pro-legalization stances have garnered him a large and enthusiastic youth following, and it would be unfortunate to lose it from political engagement. It doesn’t help that the other champion of these causes, Dennis Kucinich, has himself been pushed out of Congress. The last real hope for leadership on these taboo policies is Bernie Sanders in the Senate, and he is no spring chicken himself. Who will keep the independent minded voters involved when all their heroes are gone?

Well, I can’t speak for the rest of the races in the country, but I can offer Paul voters some solace here in District 2. On November 6th, there will be a Congressional candidate who will work for Federal Reserve System accountability and reform,  support the legalization of cannabis, work for peace, and call for an audit of the Pentagon. That candidate is me, and if you’re interested in learning more about my platform, I encourage you to visit my website and follow me on facebook and twitter.

URI Profs Get Hearing for Unfair Labor Complaint


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The state Labor Relations Board has “upheld the charge and issued a complaint” concerning the University of Rhode Island professors’ union unfair labor practice accusation against the Board of Governors for Higher Education, said Robyn Golden, administrator for the board.

The complaint alleges that the Board of Governors violated state labor laws when it declined to vote on the professors’ contract that had been agreed to in scope after Gov. Chafee indicated he thought 3 percent raises for professors was too expensive for the state.

Golden said the board voted unanimously to hear the charge.  That a hearing date has been set does not indicate fault, she said, but added that Labor Relations Board members “see something there. Now they need to take testimony to see if it is a valid charge.” A hearing at which both sides will testify is set for Tuesday, October 23, she said.

Louis Kirschenbaum, president of the URI professors’ union, in an email to union members said the unanimity of the decision may bode well for their complaint. “According to our attorney, unanimous decisions are extremely rare. Such unanimity indicates the gravity of the Board of Governors actions in bargaining in bad faith with the URI AAUP.”

The professors’ union brought the unfair labor practice complaint after Governor Chafee intervened in their contract negotiations with the Board of Governors. The Board was prepared to take action on the contract in March that included 3 percent raises, but it delayed a vote. In April, Chafee was vocal about the . On May 6, the board voted 7-5 to reject the contract proposal. Two days later, the AAUP filed an unfair labor practice complaint.

Chafee could not be immediately reached for comment. I’ll update this story when i hear back from him or his staff.

The Board of Governors have a meeting on September 24. Spokesman Michael Trainor, who would not comment on the labor board’s fidning, said he did not know if the matter would be on the agenda for the next meeting.

Kirschenbaum, in his email, said:

We have written the Board of Governors to ask them to reconsider our collective bargaining agreement at their September 24, 2012 meeting. We have informed them that because of the unanimity of the decision they have little or no chance to prevail and that they should ratify our contract in everyone’s interest. We have also let them know that we intend to depose every board member, under oath, to ascertain what happened in Executive Sessions and whether members of the Executive Branch may have interfered in matters of the Board of Governors, in violation of the RI separation of powers statute.

I would like to make it clear that our goal is to have our contract ratified and put into effect. URI faculty should receive one year of a retroactive 3 percent pay raise (minus the increase in the premium sharing), and should have started on July 1, 2012 to receive their second three percent pay raise.

Progress Report: Central Falls Plan Protects Investors Over Locals; Poverty Plagues Public Education; Obama’s Speech


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Beavertail in Jamestown. (Photo by Bob Plain)

Central Falls is again making national news. And unlike last year, both the city and the state are winning praise from the press for their ability to quickly bandage the struggling city’s fiscal woes in bankruptcy court. But the national media is focusing on an aspect of Central Falls’ restructuring that local reporters here in Rhode Island don’t like to talk about.

According to the New York Times: “The plan, which is expected to become effective in mid-October, will ensure that the city repays its bondholders, largely by raising taxes and making deep cuts in pensions and other employee benefits.” And according to Reuters: “The case has garnered attention for its treatment of the city’s bondholders, who remain unscathed while pensioners took a huge hit, in contrast with some other recent U.S. municipal bankruptcies.”

The Providence Journal story, on the other hand, contains no such reference to the preference given to out-of-state investors over in-state economic participants.

Did you miss President Obama’s acceptance speech at the DNC last night? If so, here it is. He made the case that he can better grow the economy, protect the middle class and handle foreign policy. Some reactions here.

One of the most hotly contested State House primary races is Laura Pisaturo’s challenge to Michael McCaffrey, and it’s now making national news with a story with a story in the Washington Blade (Hat tip to Ian Donnis). McCaffrey is a staunch opponent of marriage equality but enjoys the backing of organized labor because he supports binding arbitration. Pisaturo, on the other hand, is a lesbian and a lawyer who enjoys the support of the rest of the progressive community. Our prediction: it will be close.

Verizon can keep them, but it seems that a judge has ruled that text messages are protected by the Fourth Amendment.

Here in the DINO capital of the Northeast, we like to pretend that teachers’ unions are to blame for our poor public education system. More likely, though, poverty is the real problem.

One way to make Anthony Gemma look sane is to stand him next to Chris Young.

It turns out we are better off than we were four years ago.

Ever wonder how the U.S. got the nickname Uncle Sam?

Today in 1933, Cape Cod cranberry bog workers go on strike.

Three years later Buddy Holly is born.

Local Media Enabled Gemma’s Recklessness


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Anthony Gemma continues his scorched-earth quest for the Democratic nomination for Congress in District 1, and local reporters are helping to do the scorching.

Look at all the great headlines he’s gotten out of allegations that amount to nothing:

Golocalprov.com: “Gemma Accuses Cicilline of Voter Fraud“, “Cicilline Aides Named in Gemma’s Accusations“, “Gemma to Call on Cicilline to Resign Today.”  Providence Journal: “Gemma sets up ‘tip hotline’ in voter fraud probe“, “In secretly recorded video, an offer to deliver absentee ballot votes for money“, “RI Congressional Candidate sent ballot fraud complaint to a campaign finance commission“, “Republican congressional candidate Doherty ‘troubled’ by allegations against opponent Cicilline“, “Gemma to detail findings at noon of probe into voter fraud“, “Gemma campaign hired Warwick detective firm to look into voter fraud“.

The morning after Gemma’s press conference where he let these charges fly, the Journal actually had this headline:  “Gemma alleges voter fraud; Cicilline denies accusation.”  This was after a press conference where not a shred of evidence was presented to make the link, despite a couple of weeks’ worth of promises otherwise.

The stories behind these headlines did not appear out of the air, though lots of them did begin with press releases from the Gemma campaign. These stories were written by real writers, with real names, like Philip Marcelo, John Mulligan, Kathy Gregg, and Zachary Malinowski of the Providence Journal and Dan McGowan of golocalprov.com, Dan Jaehnig and Katie Davis of Channel 10, and more.

Let’s be clear, too. There has been no evidence presented for these allegations beyond the allegations themselves. To me, they seem the invention of a few people who appear to want to seem like players, and relentlessly (and effectively) flogged by Gemma.

If you’ve been around politics in RI for any length of time, you’ve met some of these people. They want you to know how important they are and how worldly, i.e. cynical. They tell you fabulous stories about corruption and influence and the things they’ve seen that would curl your hair, and so on. The real purpose of these tales is not the transfer of information, but the aggrandizement of the teller in the eyes of the gullible. After all, only someone with connections would be privy to such wild tales.

In truth, I doubt that the reporters who have been writing these stories are all that gullible, but it is undeniable fact that the stories they have written and the headlines laid on those stories have abetted the dirty and unprincipled campaign strategy Anthony Gemma has chosen. He has successfully taken an idiotic story of no news value except as it reflects on his own judgment, and turned it into weeks of headlines. And it wasn’t the partisan media — the John DePetros and Travis Rowleys of the state — who helped him most effectively. It was the leaders of the mainstream press who kept the story alive, teasing Gemma’s “tell-all” press conference, broadcasting his videos, reprinting his press releases about how much he’d spent on the probe.  However skeptical they style themselves, they have done his bidding.

The allegations themselves are ridiculous. Please remember that the Mayoral elections in question, in 2002 and 2006, were not close races. In the 2002 Democratic primary, Cicilline won a clear majority in a 4-way race and went on to win the general election with 84% of the vote. In 2006 he faced only token opposition in the primary and general elections, and won 83% of the vote.  None of these outcomes were in any doubt at the time, though David Igliozzi, Keven McKenna, and Joe Paolino may remember the 2002 primary somewhat differently than I do.

The “Larger Story”

What of the larger story?  The idea that these allegations buttress what we already “know” about Cicilline’s dishonesty?  These mostly stem from the chaos of Providence’s budget during 2010, when the state slashed a tremendous amount of aid to the city in the final quarter of the fiscal year and when the City Council refused to ratify a budget until after some of the savings it anticipated were impossible to achieve.

I’ve looked into that story about David Cicilline’s management of Providence’s finances and found little there beyond widespread confusion about the difference between a budget reserve and a cash reserve, along with a collection of city and state officials who all saw political advantage in blaming the recently departed Mayor for problems most of them had a hand in creating.

There was also the matter of a single poorly chosen word by Cicilline who I choose to excuse for that because the cash reserves that got the city through its vicious cuts in state funding were built up under his administration. (Did you think they were a legacy of the Cianci years?)  I might not have used the word “excellent”, but I do think it obvious that only a city in good financial shape could have gotten through the “Category 5” fiscal storm created by those aid cuts in 2008, 2009, and 2010.

What’s more incredible to me is that all the criticism revolves around the claim that Mayor Cicilline should have raised taxes sooner and farther, the “hard choices” recommended by former Carcieri aide Gary Sasse who was commissioned by the City Council to write a report about the issue. I’m certainly not going to defend every decision Cicilline ever made, but people who imagine his mandate did not involve holding the line on property taxes by any means at hand are apparently living on a different planet than me. He held taxes down, and now gets blame for that?  The fact remains that David Cicilline has been tarred far beyond his share in order that the people actually responsible for Providence’s troubles can evade blame.

We’ve seen this show before

 What’s going on here is only slightly different than the way the mainstream press invented all the narratives about Al Gore’s “lies” in 1999 and 2000, and then allowed George Bush and the partisan media to take advantage of them. You know the list, about the internet, Love Story, Love Canal, and all the rest. Each of those was an invention of writers at the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the Associated Press. All the Bush campaign had to do was gently pile on, which they happily did.

In almost exactly the same way, what’s happened here is that reporters have taken claims by interested parties — Providence City Council members, General Assembly insiders, ex-Governors and members of their staff — at face value, and helped invent a narrative about a dishonest Cicilline. These were all people who played a part in Providence’s fiscal nightmare, but by deflecting blame to the former Mayor, they can avoid it themselves. Anthony Gemma has been astute and unprincipled enough to see that he could profit by buttressing that narrative.

Why is that unprincipled?  Consider the claim that Gemma cares one wit about the nation’s economy, the state’s jobless, Social Security, the air we breathe, the availability and cost of health care (including abortion and contraception), and all the other actual issues in question during this election. Gemma claims to hold views about these issues in direct opposition to the national Republican party, whose well-funded representative the winner of next week’s primary will face.

There’s a balancing test here. On the one hand, Gemma might actually care about the issues before Congress more than he cares about further damaging David Cicilline’s reputation and future. He might think that taking a step towards a more rational and affordable health care system is more important than what appears to be his own irrational hatred of Cicilline. On the other hand, he might not. The evidence of his actions says he cares more about the personal than the policy, and that, it seems to me, is the very definition of unprincipled.

RI Democratic Leaders Praise Clinton Speech


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President Clinton and Obama after the nominating speech at the DNC, Sept. 5

CHARLOTTE, NC —  Rhode Island’s two Democratic Senators were effusive in their praise for the barnburner of a speech that former President Bill Clinton delivered last night nominating Barack Obama.

At the delegation’s breakfast meeting this morning, there were a lot of smiles (and more than a few extra cups of coffee, given that Speaker Fox’s own speech delivering the delegation’s votes didn’t happen until well past midnight.)

You may have thought it was a good speech on TV, but from inside the hall, it was electric. It was like watching an actor at the height of their powers give the performance of a lifetime.  The only analogy I can think of – and this will only resonate for some classical buffs – was watching Glenn Gould perform the “Goldberg Variations.”

Clinton held the audience of almost 20 thousand rapt, whipsawed them across a spectrum of emotions, had them ready to laugh and cry, and, effortlessly, had them on their feet cheering. And then, When President Obama made his surprise appearance, the noise level in the Time-Warner area went offscale, a solid wall of sound that you felt rather than  heard.

“No one can do it better than Bill Clinton,” Sen. Jack Reed told the delegates this morning. “He did a great job of laying out clearly the stakes in this election.” With a smile, he said, “If I were a really good lawyer like Sheldon Whitehouse, I’d simply say, ‘I rest my case.”

“It was great to see the master in action,” said Whitehouse. He noted that last night, the Democrats out their last president in a prime-time slot, while during the Republican convention, George W. Bush was nowhere to be seen. It was all about substance, Whithouse argued. “When you [talk about] the policies of the Democratic Party, you get results that made Bill Clinton light up not just the room, but the whole country.”

RI Democratic Party Chair Ed Pacheco echoed that theme. “Clinton was able to articulate not just the genuine, sincere reasons [for supporting the Prsident] but also the depths of his policy.” He urged delegates to take the messages they had heard this week back to Rhode Island. “We need to motivate each and every person in the state to get behind the Democratic team.”

For those who may not have stayed up quite as late as the folks in Charlotte, during the roll call, RI House Speaker Gordon Fox gave an impassioned speech  linking Rhode Island’s motto, “Hope” and how it was reflected in the Democratic platform supporting marriage equality.

You can see a video of the speech here, shot from the convention floor by RI delegation page Jonathan Boucher.

Fox said the theme had developed for him during the past two days. “That’s the power of conventions,” he said. “You’re almost swept up by the speeches and the passion.” Listening to speaker after speaker, like Lily Ledbetter, articulate messages of their hope and dreams crystallized the idea, he told RI Future.

One special guest stopped by to visit delegates this morning. Maryland Senator Barbara Mikulski, who also delivered a powerful speech with the Democratic women Senators last night, popped by to rally folks to continue the work back home, and she promised to do what she could to help. “We need Rhode Island to be true blue, and we’re going to work until we’re blue in the face.”

Uht Campaign Complains Valley Breeze Is Biased


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It’s hard enough to run against an incumbent but Gus Uht, a progressive running to represent Cumberland in the state legislature against conservative Karen MacBeth, feels like he’s running against the local newspaper too.

His campaign says the Valley Breeze has not only displayed an editorial bias against him, but has also not run advertisements in the paper and online that he paid for.

“I would like to think it’s not deliberate,” said Robin Dionne, who is managing Uht’s campaign for him. “If it were an isolated incident I would think it was an oversight.”

She said Uht paid a premium price for his ad to appear on page 2 of the paper three times but it only appeared there once. Uht’s campaign paid 25 percent more for the ad so that it would be on page 2 of the Valley Breeze but instead was on page 18. Instead, his opponent’s ad was on page 2. There were also instances of his ad not appearing online, which was part of what they paid for.

“It was an oversight by the person involved,” said Valley Breeze publisher Tom Ward. He said Uht’s campaign was refunded money for the oversight.

Dionne said the campaign would have preferred the ad to the refund.

She also said the paper has shown an editorial bias towards MacBeth.

“I would say they definitely aren’t acting as an impartial news source,” Dionne said. As evidence, she offered this article from August 15, and this one published today.

Today’s article describes Uht’s campaign as “offering what may be the most unusual of candidate qualifications” while MacBeth is described as “touting a strong record on pro-business votes.”

Valley Breeze editor Marcia Green said she did “everything I could” to be fair to both candidates. Publisher Tom Ward said it is the paper’s policy to be neutral.

“There are no politics involved,” he said. “We do all we can to be as fair as possible. We knock ourselves out to be right down the middle. I’m a conservative guy, but if you think I play it that way with my business, I just don’t.”

Dionne also said the Valley Breeze has run more press releases from MacBeth than it has from Uht. Earlier today, she said there was no press release online this week from Uht but there was one from MacBeth. Green, the editor, said there was a press release online. Dionne said it was uploaded after the Valley Breeze was contacted by me for this story.

Both Uht and MacBeth are squaring off in the Democrat primary but are vastly different as candidates. Uht is campaigning on a progressive platform of income tax fairness and jobs. MacBeth calls herself a fiscal conservative but she is best known for being one of the most conservative members of the General Assembly when it comes to a woman’s right to an abortion. She sponsors the annual bill that would require women to have an ultrasound performed prior to an abortion.

The Raimondo-Michael Nutter Connection


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I know this past week end Rhode Islanders were busy saying good bye to summer. Some shut down their beach houses for the last time while others prepare their children for pre-K, elementary and high school and still others made the trip to return their teens to college. So it is quite understandable that many missed this small paragraph about Gina Raimondo on Page A11 of Sunday’s Projo:

“one of her goals will be to seek out like minded Democrats such as Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter to swap ideas –how best to tackle pension overhaul for example.”

Let me explain to you who Michael Nutter is. He is the mayor of Philadelphia, a city whose state has an abundance of untested charters. Nutter recently said:

“He saw no difference between public, private and religious schools and thinks they should all be funded .”

This is the state where its Pennsylvania Governor Corbett and the Republican controlled legislature acted as fast as they could to slash $1 billion from public schools, install voucher-like tax credit programs, and privatize struggling districts, handing their schools over to corporations run by their largest campaign donors.

So why would Gina Raimondo want to associate herself with Pennsylvania’s ways unless she too, wants to follow the path of vouchers and privatization like PA does.

She may wish to join the municipal pension reform crowd as her outward agenda but then again she may be looking at possible future education changes since she does want to run for 2014 governor.

The facts show that Deborah Delisle, USDE Assistant Secretary noted that 30 states applied for NCLB waivers to gain some flexibility in dealing with its stringent requirements. However, Pennsylvania was not one of them.

Again I reiterate, I find it very curious that Raimondo wants to speak with Philly’s mayor on municipal pensions and who knows what other topics can crop up in discussion….

There was a White House Conference where many in the room expressed serious frustration with Governor Corbett’s apparent preference to have schools labeled failures and refusal to seek relief through the waiver program. The PA Department of Education declined to send anyone to this White House forum, but Students First PA was there.(Michelle Rhee, founded Students First in Florida-Rhee was DC school leader where rampant high stakes testing cheating took place under her so-called leadership ) This group funnels superPAC millions to the campaigns of lawmakers who promise to deliver vouchers and give away public funds to private and religious schools through tax credit schemes.

So again, I wonder why one of Gina Raimondo’s convention goals is to associate with Philly Mayor Nutter.

In this blog from Dr Diane Ravitch, historian and former Asst Sec of Education, she says this:

Philly Mayor: No Difference Among Public, Private, Religious Schools?

August 28, 2012

The mayor of Philadelphia says there is no difference among different kinds of schools, be they public, private, religious, charter, whatever.
He sees no special responsibility to support public education.

In a sense it is understandable since the people of Philadelphia lost control of their schools to the state years ago.
And the state imposed a massive privatization scheme, which failed.

And now the state control board for the public schools wants to try privatization again.

Parent activist Helen Gym explains to Mayor Michael Nutter why public education matters to the people of Philadelphia.

Investigative reporter Daniel Denvir followed the money trail and uncovered a reason for Mayor Nutter’s indifference to the powerless people of Philadelphia: the big money in the city and suburbs is betting on privatization. The campaign to privatize the schools of Philadelphia has raised $50 million, while the public schools are neglected.

PS  You might want to read this:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390444301704577629342468215790.html?mod=WSJ_Opinion_LEADTop

You see, I believe that who a person associates with, adds immeasurably to who they really are…Their persona, temperament,  belief system, views, character, personality and behavior create their image. It is this image we need to explore  to determine if we really want these people making important decisions for us if and when they decide to run for political office.

I will not vote for anyone who says one thing and does another. And I am sure the readers of this blog feel the same way. This is why we must be vigilant to the words and actions of potential candidates. If they turn out to be hypocrites, then you know they never had your personal interests in mind but their own agendas.

Progress Report: Spending on State House Races; RI Has a Budget Surplus; Verizon Saves Your Texts, Henry Thoreau


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The other end of the #egriviera, the one not featured in the Projo today. (Photo by Bob Plain)

One has to like not only the name, but also the motivation, of a group backing progressive candidates for State House seats.

According to WPRI’s Ted Nesi: “People for Rhode Island’s Future spent $26,500 this week to support six pro-gay-marriage candidates (David Gorman, Gene Dyszlewski, Lewis Pryeor, Adam Satchell, Laura Pisaturo and Roberto DaSilva) and oppose six others on the ballot (Lou Raptakis, Frank Lombardi, Marc Cote, Michael Pinga, Michael McCaffrey and Dan DaPonte).”

Fight Back RI, a local group working for marriage equality, also endorsed some legislative candidates recently.

Meanwhile, Nesi goes on to report that 50CAN, a national PAC that supports the corporate charter school model for public education, is also spending money supporting local candidates. “50CAN Action Fund said it spent $44,902 on Aug. 30 supporting four candidates in next week’s primary: DaPonte, Jon Brien, Maura Kelly and Mia Ackerman,” Nesi writes. “The group’s Rhode Island chapter endorsed all of them except DaPonte.”

Rhode Island should be concerned that RI-CAN, the major proponent of the big box charter school model in the state, is supporting Brien. He’s one of the most conservative members of the General Assembly who is already a direct conduit for corporate America into our political system through his involvement with ALEC.

And spending money is only one of the ways in which the corporate charter school agenda is trying to influence local politics. Ed Fitzpatrick looks at the race for Senate District 3, which pits former RI-CAN executive director Maryellen Butke against Gayle Goldin, who works for the Women’s Fund of Rhode Island.

Here’s one of the biggest problems with our political process: many pretend that the state is broke but it isn’t. In fact, it turns out Rhode Island enjoys a $115 million surplus in its budget this year.

Yet still, the state is cutting services that help those hardest hit by the recession.

Such contradictions are just one of the many reasons we should discount blowhards like Harriet Loyd of RISC … especially when she uses inflammatory rhetoric like trying to “eradicate” incumbents.

Speaking of nonsense from GoLocal, there is so much that is offensive about this story and the way it is presented, I hardly know where to start. How about with the stock photo of the bloody knife? GoLocal could write the same story about any weekend night on the East Greenwich waterfront, but I think it’s safe to say it wouldn’t.

Verizon is keeping a copy of the texts you send, and if asked they’ll share them with law enforcement.

Bill Clinton’s line of the night at the DNC: “We believe ‘we’re all in this together’ is a better philosophy than ‘you’re on your own.'”

Elizabeth Warren had a pretty good one too when she explained how corporations are not, in fact, people.

On this day in 1847, Henry David Thoreau leaves Walden after two years of living deliberately and moves in with Ralph Waldo Emerson.

Clean Water Action Endorses Candidates


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State House Dome from North Main Street
State House Dome from North Main Street
The State House dome from North Main Street. (Photo by Bob Plain)

With September 11th just around the corner, it is time for RI Primary voters to make up their mind. I’m sure you have been sitting up half the night wondering which candidate has the strongest voice for our environment. Look no further.

Clean Water Action is proud to announce that, after vetting the candidates who seek the green stamp of approval, we have a list of those that we believe to be valuable allies. Whether your concerns are about sustainable funding for public transportation, keeping the ban on incineration in place, preserving and extending the life of our landfill, investing in water infrastructure or, more simply, protecting the beauty of Narragansett Bay and our endless coastline, consider these candidates when going to the poll next week.

For next Tuesday’s Statewide Primary, Clean Water Action has endorsed the following candidates:

– David Cicilline (D) – 1st Congressional District

– Chris Blazejewski (D) – House District 2 (Providence)

– Libby Kimzey (D) – House District 8 (Providence)

– Joe Almeida (D) – House District 12 (Providence)

– Art Handy (D) – House District 18 (Cranston)

– Jay O’Grady (D) – House District 46 (Lincoln and Pawtucket)

– Stephen Casey (D) – House District 50 (Woonsocket)

– Gus Uht (D) – House District 52 (Cumberland)

– Gayle Goldin (D) – Senate District 3 (Providence)

– Adam Satchell (D) – Senate District 9 (West Warwick)

– Bob DaSilva (D) – Senate District 14 (East Providence)

– Lewis Pryeor (D) – Senate District 24 (Woonsocketand and North Smithfield)

– Gene Dyzlewski (D) – Senate District 26 (Cranston)

– Laura Pisaturo (D) – Senate District 29 (Warwick)

Clean Water is contacting its members in these districts by going door-to-door, making phone calls, and mailing letters to urge them to vote for environmental candidates. Another round of endorsements will be made for the General Election.

RI Delegation Welcomes a First-Night Speaker


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Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Kilmartin and Gov. Linc Chafee (Photo by John McDaid)

CHARLOTTE, NC –– The Rhode Island delegation was buzzing this morning over last night’s speeches and events at the Democratic National Convention, and they had a surprise visitor when Gov. Lincoln Chafee stopped by their breakfast.

“We may have our differences back home,” Chafee told the delegates, “But here, we’re all united to support the re-election of Barack Obama”

From inside the hall, last night, probably not visible on tv,  the audience response seemed a bit muted when Chafee started off by talking about being a former Republican. But it was evident that the audience warmed up to him almost immediately, and by the end, he got an enthusiastic round of applause.

Asked how he felt the speech went, Chafee  told RI Future he was happy to have the opportunity.  “Those were some points that I wanted to share with Americans…strong feelings that I’ve had since my time in the Senate.”

But although it was his speech, Chafee was clear that his main mission was supporting the President. “I know conventions, the point is to promote the candidate; I wanted to make sure I did that.”

In addition to a lot of positive words about our our local favorite, delegates were also delighted by the rest of last night’s lineup.

Rep. Frank Ferri thought the whole evening was powerful.  “It was great to hear some positive messages,” he said. “Finally, let’s talk about what Obama has accomplished.”

Former gubernatorial candidate Myrth York particularly liked Cory Booker. “Cory was on fire,” she said. And she offered an observation about the picture offfered by the whole evening. “The party is young,” she said. “It has the look and feel of the future

Democratic National Committee member Frank Montanaro was especially moved by the video memorial to the late Sen. Ted Kennedy.  “As far as I’m concerned,” he said. “that was worth the show.”

And, of course, there was praise all around for the job that First Lady Michelle Obama did. Speaker Gordon Fox perhaps summed it up best: “Any man who has the sense to marry that woman deserves to be President.”

The Public Education / Transportation Challenge


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I’ve found a way for the Providence Public School System to save more than $400,000 annually in transportation costs.

Every month, the School Department buys thousands of RIPTA bus passes, which it distributes to high school students from low income families or who live more than three miles from their school. In May of 2012, according to RIPTA, the School Department purchased around 2,000 bus passes.

How much does the city pay for these? Full price: $62 per pass.

After making several phone calls, I learned that RISD and Brown University, which issue passes to their students and faculty, pay $1.15 per ride, if the number of rides exceeds 500,000.

If the Providence Public School system used this model, the savings to the schools would be more than $400,000 annually. The savings actually increases because this year, the school is giving out more bus passes to ninth graders.

The School Department’s goal is to get students from their homes to their classrooms. If “giving” them a bus pass makes that happen, then they believe it’s money well spent. At the same time, someone needs to use the power of those numbers negotiate a better deal for Providence.

The downside, of course is that this means a $400,000 annual cut to RIPTA.

What is a supporter of both public schools and public transportation to do?

Imagine abundance and pleasure in public transportation

Last week, while the Republicans were busy in Tampa imagining a future with no taxes, smaller government, no unions and a plethora of jobs and millionaires, was  dreaming about how we can get around our small state for the next 50 or so years.

I call for Rhode Island to become a leader in public transportation for the 21st century. Through an integrated system of trolley, bus, light rail, and commuter rail, citizens will be able to quickly and efficiently get to work, market, other cities and towns, and even to the beach. They’ll even be able to ride home after a late movie or show. (Currently RIPTA service ends around midnight.)

A high quality public transportation system will change the demographics of Rhode Island. It will encourage smart growth and eliminate sprawl.

I call for a system that can elegantly handle a tenfold increase in ridership within the next 10 years, reducing the need for one car per resident, reducing wear and tear on the roads and highways, and decreasing pollution and carbon waste.

Riding the bus doesn’t need to be free, but it does need to cost less, become more efficient and get you where you need to go when you need to go there.

We need a public transit authority whose goal is to maximize and increase ridership. As citizens we need to find a different model to fund it.

Current RIPTA funding is based on a fixed percentage of the tax on gasoline. This means that every time the price of gas goes up and people drive less, revenue for RIPTA goes down at the same time that the bus company is paying more for fuel and the ridership increases. This leaves RIPTA with less money to provide more services.

If we are determined to fund RIPTA through a gasoline tax, then it must be a percentage of the cost of gas, and a higher one at that – except that won’t work because people will drive out of state to buy gas. If we fund RIPTA through automobile registration, we must plan for a time when there are fewer automobiles registered. We must explore other options—public/private cooperatives, trolleys systems, jitney buses and so on.

Ultimately, to create a 21st century public transportation system, we must decouple RIPTA and the automobile. The goal of public transportation ought not to be just to provide free transportation to seniors , students and the disabled, but to reduce the need for and impact of cars on our cities and towns.

The Numbers

Approximate number of High School Students receiving bus passes in May 2012: 2,000
Number of days in the school year: 180
Cost of 2,000 bus passes per month for September-June: $1.24 Million
Maximum number of rides for those students during that time: 720,000
Cost of 720,000 rides @$1.15 per ride: $828,000
Minimum estimated annual savings to School Department: $412,000
Dollars cut from RIPTA, if these savings are implemented: $412,000

 

Progress Report: Grading Chafee’s Speech; Cicilline, Gemma and WPRO; Costly State House Seats; ‘On the Road’


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The cable networks may have cut away from Linc Chafee’s speech at the DNC last night, but trust those of us who were streaming it on the internet: Rhode Island’s independent governor nailed it.

He spoke about pride in country, love of the land, social responsibility and fiscal responsibility, and then said, “The values I have spoken of tonight aren’t Republican or Democratic values – they’re American values.”

You can read his speech here or watch it here.

Meanwhile over at the Salty Shrine, David Cicilline and Anthony Gemma had a much more substantive and subdued debate than they did last week. Gemma scored some points for not engaging in his smear campaign (talk about a low bar!) and he also finally addressed his phony following on Twitter and Facebook. He said his fake followers have nothing to do with his campaign. Not true: his social networking fraud has everything to do with his character, which he himself has made an issue.

Let’s all take a moment to enjoy the irony of WPRO hosting a more subdued and substantive debate than anyone, let alone WPRI, which offers some of the fairest political coverage in the state. The lack of a crowd was a giant factor in this, but so was the professionalism with which Bill Halberman handled last night’s debate.

Check out this really cool interactive graphic of the most common words being used at the DNC, and who is using them.

One of the most moving parts of the evening was a video tribute to Ted Kennedy … if you missed it you can watch it here.

It’s more expensive to run for a seat in the State House than one might think … or at least, in some races it is.

New affordable housing is coming to Southern Rhode Island – good news seeing how this is one of the areas of the state that suffers the most from economic inequality.

On this day in 1957, Jack Kerouac’s “On the Road” was first published. Here’s what the New York Times review thought if it then.

Why Baby Formula Is Locked Up at Grocery Store


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Photo courtesy of MSNBC

In between campaign meetings, canvasses and some precious moments of free time with my partner this weekend I scraped together a few minutes to run to the grocery store to pick up a few pre-election essentials (you haven’t forgotten that there is a primary election next week, right?).  As I walked to the checkout counter with my essentials (basically that means coffee) in hand I noticed a sad sight.

Baby formula.

Not so sad in and of itself but what broke my heart was that at my local grocery store baby formula is behind lock and key in a glass security case. We have come to expect extra security on high-ticket items – security tags on TVs, leather jackets, and even CDs – but baby formula in a case typically reserved for diamonds and gold?

I suppose there is really nothing more valuable.

I remember what it was like to be hungry. In my early twenties when I was scraping by waiting tables, a couple slow nights or an unexpected expense like a trip to the doctor or a parking ticket could leave me without the money to buy food. But even then, it was only me.  I cannot begin to imagine how much worse it must be as the mother of child desperate for baby formula.

With 62,000 Rhode Islanders unemployed, a state level minimum wage of $7.75 per hour, and nearly 17 percent of Rhode Island’s children living below the federal poverty level, it shouldn’t surprise me to see baby formula locked behind glass. But it should shock and disturb each and every one of us. We have a responsibility for more than charity.

We have a responsibility to change the broken economic system we live in. Income inequality causes real and tangible harm to our neighbors.  A “jobless recovery” is not a recovery. A minimum wage that provides an annual income that will leave a mother and her children living below the federal poverty level is not acceptable.  And the stubborn refusal of some in Congress to fund SNAP (Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program) and WIC (Women, Infants and Children) which provides nutrition assistance to women and children by holding up reauthorization of the Farm Bill, is just shameful.

In less than one week and again in November you will have the opportunity to vote for elected officials to represent you in School Committees, City Halls, the RI Statehouse, Congress and the White House. I beg you to ask each and every one of people who ask for your vote – what are you going to do to help the Rhode Islanders who cannot find work or feed their families? And ask yourself – what am I going to do to?

Originally posted on RightHer www.wfri.org/blog

Full Text of Gov. Linc Chafee’s DNC Speech


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Gov. Linc Chafee as seen from the press box at the DNC (Photo by John McDaid)

“Good evening, and thank you for having me here to celebrate with all of you. As the nation’s only independent Governor, I am here tonight to join with my Democratic friends, on the eve of an election critical to the future of our children and their country.

As a former Republican, I represent a group of Americans who all too often have no one to speak for them. This group doesn’t necessarily have a name.

We’ve been called “moderates,” but that term can be misleading. There is nothing moderate about our love of country or our passion for America’s future. There is nothing moderate about our desire to work together within the broad political center in which most Americans live.

No matter what you call us though, this is certain: there are a lot of us all over the country, and in November we will once again help elect Barack Obama President of the United States.

We are, at our core, conservatives, in the best sense of the word. Thoughtful, responsible with public resources, and respectful of personal freedom. And we are liberal, in the best sense of the word.

We believe that government can and should be an instrument for the greater good. And although my former party has hijacked the term, there is really nothing conservative about today’s Republican Party. In fact, there is no room there for traditional conservatives like us. But I am proud to say that in my friend President Barack Obama we have found a champion for the principles we hold dear.

First, we love this land — literally. We believe in environmental stewardship… protecting our air and our water. Because despite what big business and this Republican Party would have you believe, destroying these precious resources will cost us far more in the future than preserving them now.

Second, we believe in personal freedom. We do not want the government controlling our personal lives, or our most personal decisions. Believing in freedom, as we do, we don’t think it’s the role of government to pass judgment on a relationship between two consenting adults, regardless of their orientation. Believing in freedom, we believe a woman should make her own reproductive decisions.

Third, we take seriously the decision to enter into foreign entanglements.

During the last Administration, then-Senator Obama and I served together on the Foreign Relations Committee.

There, we shared a mutual desire to end the prevailing attitude of arrogance and recklessness on matters of war and peace that characterized those years.

President Obama knows that wars are not to be entered into lightly; he knows that overseas conflicts don’t only do damage in the land in which they are fought, but in the land of those who  fight them, as well.

Fourth, we believe in using the tools of government to help Americans help themselves. For instance, programs such as Head Start and the Pell Grants have brightened the futures of countless American young people and given them a hand up into the middle class. Now, Mitt Romney and the Republicans are proposing a budget that would squeeze the life out of Head Start and Pell grants.

Let me ask you: Should only children of the wealthy have access to quality early education? Should only children of the wealthy have access to a college degree? The answer — the only answer – is:  No. American education is still the wonder of the world, and we must open the schoolhouse doors, not close them. A strong, educated middle class is what made America the greatest country in the world. Students of America, working families of America: President Obama will not turn his back on you.

Finally, we believe in fiscal responsibility. We think it’s reasonable to pay for a valuable service that the people want by asking everyone to do their part. The lack of fiscal responsibility is one of the main reasons I finally left my old Party.

In 2001 President Bill Clinton handed the Republicans a surplus. They went on to squander this surplus by launching two wars, expanding the cost of Medicare, and giving tax cuts to the wealthiest Americans – and failing to pay for any of these.

Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan want to return us to the fantasy land of never having to pay for the things we buy, such as education, medical research, good roads, and clean energy.

That’s not conservative. That’s not responsible. And it’s not what this country needs.

The values I have spoken of tonight aren’t Republican or Democratic values – they’re American values.

They are the values of Abraham Lincoln, who affirmed the fundamental dignity of all Americans – regardless of the color of their skin.

They are the values of Theodore Roosevelt, who protected millions of acres from development and exploitation, so that future Americans – today’s Americans – could enjoy them as fully as he did.

They are the values of Dwight Eisenhower, who presided over an era of peace and prosperity – because he knew that those two conditions go together.

These are American values.

But because they have no place in today’s Republican Party, neither do I – and neither do millions like me.

But, my fellow traditional conservatives… my fellow moderates… my fellow independents… there is a candidate who shares our values.

A candidate who shares our belief in: Environmental protection. Personal liberties. Smart and responsible American leadership. Growing the middle class. and fiscal discipline.

That candidate is our President, Barack Obama.

Thank you.”

A Tribute to Ted Kennedy


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Democrats honored the late Senator Ted Kennedy on the first night of their convention with a moving video.

Here’s what John McDaid, our correspondent in Charlotte, tweeted about it: “Enormous cheers in the hall for the Ted Kennedy memorial video #dnc2012
Follow all his #DNC2012 tweets here.

In case you missed the tribute, you can watch it here:

Livestream: Democratic National Convention


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Watch the Democratic National Convention live from Charlotte, North Carolina right here on your computer.

Recovery Caucus Pushes for Mental Health Parity


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From left: Carol Dhue, David Wellstone and Patrick Kennedy. (Photo by John McDaid)

CHARLOTTE, NC — Former RI Representative Patrick Kennedy was a guest speaker at this afternoon’s Recovery Caucus meeting at the Democratic National Convention and he brought his message of full mental health parity to a standing-room-only session.

The panel was chaired by RI delegate Tom Coderre, who works for Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed. It also featured David Wellstone, son of the late Senator, and former cable network anchor Carol Dhue.

Coderre recognized the work of Kennedy in backing the Recovery Caucus, which is sponsoring recovery rooms every day in all of the DNC’s venues. “This is the most recovery-friendly convention ever,” he said, and praised the 2012 Democratic platform which “recognizes recovery as the public-health crisis that it is.”

But Coderre and the other speakers also stressed how much work remains to be done.

Although legislation ensuring parity in mental health coverage was signed into law, Kennedy argued that it was time for the department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to issue the final rules that would enable enforcement.

“We expect implementation that will not have any loopholes,” he said. “Right now, these issues affect a new population: veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan.” Kennedy expressed outrage that more veterans are now dying  by suicide than enemy action.   “Our vets are being caught behind the enemy lines of addiction and depression,” he said.

Closing potential loopholes is especially critical, Kennedy said,  for those members of the National Guard and Reserve returning to their jobs after deployment.

And veterans are only part of the “besieged minority” affected by these diseases, said Wellstone, quoting his his father, who was an early advocate. “It is not just the right thing to do, it’s the fiscally responsible thing to do,” Wellstone said, given the estimated $400B yearly cost of untreated addiction and mental health issues. Without the final HHS rule, said Wellstone, “we don’t have the teeth.”

“If your father was here,” Dhue told Wellstone, “we’d already have teeth in the bill.”

She lamented the fact that unlike other diseases, addiction and mental health are improperly overlaid with moral attributes.

“It comes down to science,” she said. “I was wired to be an addict.”

Carol McDaid, a DC-based advocate, asked caucus-goers for their support in launching a petition to fight for the final regulations, and announced a web site for the effort, parityispersonal.org.

RI Delegation Meets National Advocates for Breakfast


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SEIU NW President David Rolf and RI Delegate Onna Moniz-John
SEIU NW President David Rolf and RI Delegate Onna Moniz-John
SEIU NW President David Rolf and RI Delegate Onna Moniz-John

CHARLOTTE, NC — Each morning at the Democratic National Convention, delegations gather for breakfast to plan the day and hear from a couple of speakers. On Tuesday, the Rhode Island delegation was visited by the VP of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) David Rolf and former Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs Douglas Wilson, one of the architects of the repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.”

Wilson, who served as the highest-ranking openly gay senior official at the Pentagon shared his perspective on DADT and the Obama administration.

For Wilson, the most significant fact about the repeal was the way it was accepted by the men and women of the armed forces. “The greatest testament,” he said, “Was that nothing happened. The earth did not shift.”

He praised the Obama administration for the support they had shown to the troops — not just with the repeal of this measure, but also in hosting earlier this year the first state dinner ever for returning veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan.

And his respect extended to President Obama’s role as Commander in Chief as well. “I was glad to work for an administration where the President can show he’s tough — but not stupid.”

The other guest at yesterday’s breakfast offered thoughts on the election from the vantage point of the 2-million member SEIU. In remarks that presaged the floor speech by SEIU President Mary Kay Henry later that night, Rolf stressed the differing visions of labor rights offered by Obama and Romney.

The Republican party, he said, “Led a generation-long assault on every institution that supports the middle class.”

“And I’m not a conspiracy theorist,” he said of the Republicans. “They tell you everything they’re going to do.”

That’s why SEIU was working hard to re-elect the president with member contacts, outreach in swing states, and financial support through 527 groups. He lamented the necessary evil of large-dollar campaigns, but noted pragmatically, “There’s no reason you should bring a butter knife to a gun fight.”

Gayle Goldin for Senate


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Please join me in supporting Gayle Goldin’s campaign for State Senate — she’s running on Providence’s East Side, inclusive of the Fox Point and Wayland Square portions of the district I used to represent.

Over the course of my decade or so fighting for progressive change in Rhode Island, I’ve learned the crucial role that committed, active, progressive champions can play up at the State House. I’ve seen what a small group of dedicated advocates could accomplish, and have learned how important it is that we elect more progressive activists who are willing to put Rhode Island first and commit themselves to the hard work and collaboration it takes to make change.

On the East Side, we’ve been fortunate enough to have this kind of leadership from Rhoda Perry. But it is absolutely critical that we continue to have a progressive champion representing us up at Smith Hill. That’s why I am whole-heartedly supporting Gayle’s candidacy for State Senate — because I know Gayle will continue fighting day in and day out for the progressive values we share.

Will you join me in supporting Gayle in the September 11th Democratic Primary?
Gayle Goldin for Senate – About Gayle – Volunteer for Gayle – Donate to Gayle

Gayle has the policy expertise we need in our elected officials, and a history of bringing people together to find shared solutions. Gayle’s experience fighting for women’s economic success, children’s well-being, and access to quality health care for all makes her uniquely qualified to advocate for us. I hope you will consider supporting her candidacy for State Senate in this extremely important race.  If you live on the East Side, please offer her your vote.  If you live elsewhere, please consider donating or volunteering for her effort — Election Day is September 11th.


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