Bad Week for Gordon Fox


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It’s not a great week to be Gordon Fox. As his leadership team is literally crumbling around him, his political opponent Mark Binder is stepping up his campaign.

Problems with Fox’s leadership team have been mounting for weeks now. Two of the most conservative members of the team lost in primaries: Peter Petrarca and Jon Brien. And, John McCauley, who recently pleaded guilty to two tax-related felonies, isn’t running for reelection.

Then yesterday, Whip Patrick O’Neil resigned.

In a letter to Fox, O’Neil said he was stepping down, in part, because, “there are glaring signs that the leadership team is neither working together to bring about real change not has a clear plan for addressing the issues this state is facing.”

O’Neil, by the way, was the highest ranking legislator to support tax equity legislation last session – and he’d love to be the next Speaker.

All this as former friend and ally Jeff Britt is now running Binder’s campaign.

Binder, a frequent RI Future contributor, has a piece in the ProJo today which makes a pretty pointed accusation of Fox: “Again and again, the speaker uses his power to rule by fiat and whim.”

He cites Fox’s inside information about the 38 Studios deal, the strange and silent death of the popular payday loan bill and the surprise of the budget bill this year: consolidating the board that oversees elementary and secondary education with the one that oversees higher education.

About that last example, Binder writes:

Despite a promise to present legislation in an “orderly” manner to help the house “fully vet and consider the information” at the close of the session, Gordon Fox and his Band of Merry Men rammed through the mash-up of the Board of Governors for Higher Education and the Board of Regents for Elementary and Secondary Education into a single committee. No public discussion, no debate about its merits or potential problems. Just put it in the budget and vote for it.

And Binder says he will turn over evidence to the State Police showing that House spokesman Larry Berman is illegally serving as Fox’s campaign spokesman as well. Some of Binder’s evidence that Berman is doing work for Fox’s campaign includes reports from this website, as well as many other media reports.

Every political reporter in Rhode Island knows Berman, technically the spokesperson for the Speaker’s office, is also the de facto spokesman for Fox’s campaign. I’m not even sure if Fox has an official campaign spokesperson outside of Berman.  If David Cicilline did as much, who by the way has a separate campaign spokesperson from his congressional staff, you’d likely see many more pixels devoted to it.

Fox did manage to eek out some positive press this week too. At the ProJo’s Publick Occurrences forum last night, Alix and Ani CEO Giovanni Feroce made an off-color comment not unlike Mitt Romney’s 47 percent comment. Here’s the ProJo’s coverage of the exchange:

Just as the two-hour event started winding down, things heated up between Giovanni Feroce, CEO of jewelry company Alex and Ani, and House Speaker Gordon Fox. Feroce, who had complained earlier that the nation “has created a work force that doesn’t know how to work,” went even further in response to a question from the audience, saying, “I don’t understand when it became fashionable to not work.”

Fox responded that 59,000 Rhode Islanders aren’t out of work because they’re “lazy and shiftless” but rather because the state has failed to connect them to jobs.

“If we do a better job connecting them,” said Fox, “we will create the best products in the world.”

Doherty Doesn’t Want to Protect Transgender People


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Brendan Doherty demonstrating uncommon integrity

Amidst the diversionary tactics Republican congressional candidate Brendan Doherty attempted to perpetuate Wednesday, the root cause of his opposition to expanding and strengthening the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) for some of society’s most vulnerable populations – Native Americans, immigrants and members of the LGBT community – has become apparent.

In response to a media inquiry from Ian Donnis, a political reporter for WRNI, regarding concerns related to VAWA, the Doherty camp told Donnis:

“To the extent that federal funds are directed to investigate and prosecute violence against male transgender individuals, it should not be part of VAWA.”

“Every victim of domestic violence deserves equal access to services, regardless of ethnicity, gender, identity or sexual orientation. A victim is a victim; and all individuals should be treated equally,” said RI Democratic Party spokesperson Bill Fischer. “Expanding and strengthening VAWA would extend protections to domestic violence victims who are most vulnerable.”

The Senate passed bipartisan legislation to expand and reauthorize VAWA, which had 68 votes, including the support of every Republican woman Senator. It also had widespread support among anti-domestic violence groups. GOP House leadership has blocked the Senate bill from becoming law.

“Today we understand what Doherty meant when he told the Providence Journal in September that he was against reauthorizing and expanding the Violence Against Women Act because of the legislation’s ‘protections for people in other walks of life,’” said Fischer. “Unfortunately, Mr. Doherty has decided to support his Republican colleagues on this important issue and embrace the right-wing cultural values of exclusion.”

Progress Report: Wishful Thinking with Mitt Romney; Good Week for Liberals; Collins Quest to Debate, Highway Murals


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A lot of wishful thinking going on with this ProJo headline. Yes, Romney won the debate, easily in fact, but as we reported yesterday he had to tack far to the left in order to do so, so far in fact that he blatantly misrepresented his actual positions in order to do so. That’s not going to make this next month very easy for the candidate who was already seen as a flip-flopper.

Of course if he flip-flops to the left, America may forgive him for that. But there’s no reason to suspect that Romney will govern like he campaigns … and remember George Bush said he would raise taxes on the wealthy when he was running for office too, and went on to do the exact opposite.

Notice that Dan McGowan’s weekly list of political winners and losers is heavy on victories for local liberals. Save for Obama’s poor debate performance, it was a pretty good week for the left.

Brendan Doherty won’t support the Violence Against Women Act because it also offers protections to transgender people. Now please tell me why Doherty doesn’t want to prevent violence against transgender people??

Congrats to Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, who was honored with a national award for his efforts to restore the health of oceans and coastlines.

Bob Kerr features Abel Collins in his column today …  Collins’ quest to be included in the WPRI televised debate continues, though the candidate says he’s not confident it will be successful.

It’s a great idea to locate murals on our highways, especially at the urban northeasterly gateway, which is not the prettiest introduction to the otherwise beautiful Ocean State.

The Board of Regents say they won’t consider scaling back a new rule that makes high-stakes testing a graduation requirement.

Honestly, I just liked this headline!

More McCarthyism from Mean-Spirited Mike Riley


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Photo courtesy of 630wpro.com

As I’ve argued here, outside of being a member of a major political party, there’s no good reason why WPRI would include Mike Riley in its CD2 debate and not Abel Collins.

Unlike the ultra-conservative Riley, Collins espouses some pretty mainstream ideas. The independent wants citizens more involved in their government and corporations to be less involved. He wants to shift away from an economic policy that caters to the 1 percent to one that caters more toward the middle class.

Mike Riley, on the other hand, thinks people who believe in such policies are communists.

Tom Sgouros detailed as much in a post showing Riley’s correspondences with him when he was writing for the Narragansett Times.

But berating Sgouros isn’t the only time Riley has confused being progressive with being a communist. In July Ian Donnis quoted him as equating progressive political positions to “time-release communism.

Calling progressives communists is as narrow-minded as it is mean-spirited. And it doesn’t bode very well for Riley’s potential to work across the isle.

But don’t expect much bipartisanship from the former Wall Street hedge fund manager. He once wrote in GoLocal, “Government exists to protect and preserve our individual freedoms and property rights so that we may pursue our dreams and our happiness. Real leaders will accept this limited role of government and seek to constrain its growth and influence over our lives.”

If this reads like creepy Ayn Rand weirdness that’s because it is. Riley is the worst kind of conservative: he espouses to be a libertarian but he’s really a tool for the corporate interests.

He won’t comment to RI Future, but here’s how Congressman Jim Langevin described him.

“Michael Riley clearly plans to go to Washington to fight for the wealthiest one percent of Americans,” said the incumbent. “He’s going to Washington clearly to fight for tax advantages for major corps and oil and gas companies. He’s going down there to support the Ryan budget. and he’s going down there to turn medicare into a voucher system.”

And here’s a comment from Abel Collin’s new campaign manager Dave Fisher:

“The fact that Mike Riley has not supported the inclusion of Abel in the WPRI debate is indicative of his hardline right-wing policies that would squelch free speech and many of our other rapidly eroding freedoms in the U.S. There is only one candidate in the race that offers a real option to the baton passing between the two major parties that goes on in Washington, and that is Abel Collins. I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again; the only difference between Democrats and Republicans is this: Republicans want to drive the bus toward Armageddon with the gas pedal on the floor. Democrats are willing to obey the speed limit.”

For more on Riley, listen to him on Political Roundtable this morning.