David Cicilline Wins Debate Against Brendan Doherty


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David Cicilline said Brendan Doherty would side with conservative House Republicans if elected to Congress and effectively do damage to social security and Medicare, while Doherty said he would be his own man who would work to protect social security and Medicare.

Can both be true? Cicilline may have made such a point at the WPRI debate at PPAC Tuesday night when he said because Doherty supports the very conservative House Republican leaders how he would vote is less important than who he would vote for.

By the time it comes to voting, Cicilline said, the damage would already have been done. “They don’t need him at that point. He already put them in power.”

Another area where the two candidates disagreed: Cicilline said he would improve the local and national economy by investing in the manufacturing sector; Doherty said he would do so by drilling for more oil.

Seriously, in his appeal to Rhode Island voters, Doherty actually recycled the old Sarah Palin logic of “drill baby drill.”

Cicilline, on the other hand, said high wages in China and rising costs for transportation are making manufacturing a more viable option for growth again. Since we can bring more manufacturing jobs than oil drilling jobs to Rhode Island, the advantage on this one has to go to the incumbent.

A highlight was when moderator Tim White asked Doherty is he took exception to Cicilline’s previous career as a criminal defense attorney.  Doherty said it only became a campaign issue because the Cicilline campaign took him to task for not supporting the Violence Against Women Act, to which White said, “You’re basically saying he started it.”

He started it is not indicative of uncommon integrity. Just sayin.

Another interesting moment was when neither candidate would endorse the landmark pension reform bill the General Assembly passed during a special session last year.

“Pension reform is best done by negotiations,” said Ciciline. “People made life decisions based on those commitments.”

Doherty added, “I wish it was done fairer and more equitable. We know we needed pension reform. I wish they put a little bit more effort into it.”

MERI to Frank Schubert, NOM: Bring It


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Sometimes, you just know you’re gonna get hit.

A recent New York Times story confirmed what we’ve been predicting for months: The chief strategist and leader of the national anti-equality effort has his sights fixed on Rhode Island in 2013.

“Frank Schubert, a former corporate public relations executive, ran the $40 million, come-from-behind push for Proposition 8 in California in 2008. He went on to mount successful campaigns to defeat same-sex marriage in Maine and North Carolina. Now, with marriage initiatives on the ballot in Maryland, Minnesota, Washington State and Maine, Mr. Schubert is the chief strategist in all four at once…

Mr. Schubert already has his eye on the next year or two, when he sees marriage battles brewing in Rhode Island, New Jersey and several other states.”

Frank Schubert is well-known for running some of the most divisive, misleading and hurtful campaigns this country has ever seen. And now he’s coming to our state to spend untold amounts of money pushing the anti-gay agenda of the so-called National Organization for Marriage.

So today, we’re asking equality supporters to donate just $6.00 to make Rhode Island the sixth New England state to win marriage equality. We’re not a big money organization, and maybe we never will be, but with your help we can beat back Frank Schubert’s anti-gay rhetoric.

We don’t run from bullies in Rhode Island, we stand our ground and dig in. If Frank Schubert wants to pick a fight in our backyard, MERI says “bring it.”

Dalai Lama in Providence

Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th Dalai Lama, is currently about halfway through his two week visit to the United States, and will be speaking on Wednesday at Brown University’s 86th Stephen A. Ogden Jr. ’06 Memorial Lecture on International Affairs to be held at the Rhode Island Convention Center.

The talk is entitled, “A Global Challenge: Creating a Culture of Peace” and will presumably offer spiritual and philosophical arguments bearing on the Dalai Lama’s commitment to a rejection of the means of violence to achieve political ends.

Over the 77 years of his life the Dalai Lama has continually advocated for the rights of the Tibetan people, especially after he was forced to flee his home country after the the People’s Republic of China took control while quashing the 1959 uprising. He led the Tibetan government in exile until last year, when he stepped down after instituting a democratic process for future leadership. His unique status as leader of a government in exile and exalted religious leader has allowed him to travel the world, denouncing the Chinese takeover of his homeland, teaching about the beliefs of Buddhism and advocating on a broad range of topics such as the environment, economics (he considers himself a Marxist), women’s rights (he has also claimed to be a feminist) reproductive rights and sexuality.

Looking at the long course of the Dalai Lama’s career one cannot help but notice a secular shift in the Dalai Lama’s views. Recently he has been quoted as saying, “…if science proves facts that conflict with Buddhist understanding, Buddhism must change accordingly.” It is difficult to imagine Pope Benedict or a high ranking Muslim Imam making such a comment.

The Dalai Lama has also said, in his latest book Beyond Religion Ethics for a Whole World, “…the reality of the world today is that grounding ethics in religion is no longer adequate. This is why I am increasingly convinced that the time has come to find a way of thinking about spirituality and ethics beyond religion altogether.” You might expect such a statement from atheist firebrand Richard Dawkins, not a man who is held by many to be a manifestation of Jainraisig, the Bodhisattva of Compassion.

The talk is sold out and security, provided by the U.S. State Department, will be quite high, but you can watch the talk live-streamed in its entirety and I will have a full report on my impressions of the event right here, tomorrow.

Collins’ Own Email Poll Shows Different Results


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Either independent congressional candidate Abel Collins is doing better than previous polls predicted, or how well he is doing is in the eye – or methodology – of the pollster asking the question.

The Collins campaign would have you believe the former.

It released an email-based poll conducted by CCRI political science professor Eric Siegel showing Collins garnering 16.1 percent support among respondents. That’s compared with 9.2 percent in a recent WPRI poll, and 4.7 percent in a more recent Brown poll.

The email poll showed incumbent Democrat Jim Langevin with 47.6 percent, compared to 52.6 in the WPRI poll and 49.4 percent in the Brown poll. Mike Riley, the Republican, got just 22.3 percent support in the Collins poll, compared with a similarly paltry 29.1 percent in the WPRI poll and 31.5 percent in the Brown poll.

Siegel, a former Green Party committee chair whose business Aqua Opinion and Policy Research was hired to conduct the poll though he is also serving as a volunteer with the Collins campaign, said email polls better reflect the electorate than do polls that utilize landlines, like the WPRO and Brown polls.

The logic goes that those who still utilize landlines tend to skew conservative – so even if the landline-using respondent is a registered Democrat, for example, he or she may tend to be a more conservative Democrat than, say, a registered Democrat who has ditched the landline for a cell phone or Skype. However, the same logic only politically reversed should also hold true … would those who would respond to an email poll tend to skew left? My guess is yes.

In other words, in either circumstance you might get the same amount of registered Democrats (or Republicans, for that matter) responding, but they might tend to be from different ends of the spectrum of registered Democrats or Republicans or unaffiliated voters.

There’s another difference in the Collins poll. Siegel weights his responses to match the demographics of the district, whereas the other two polls call the requisite number of households until they reach a demographic sample that matches the district.

Progress Report: Footloose in Middletown; Doherty’s Dishonesty; Financial Literacy, Candy Crowley


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Footloose has come to Middletown High School. Educators there banned a sexually explicit kind of dancing called grinding and at the homecoming dance Saturday night students protested causing the principal to cancel the dance and send the students home early. Amazing! I promise you the students did much worse than grinding once they were unchaperoned outside of the dance than they did while at the dance.

I say let ’em dance, and have a big long talk with them about how to treat potential sex partners with honor and respect. That said, get ready for a culture war over this one. Middletown Patch has a great story on what happened, with some really fascinating comments from the local parents.

It seems we aren’t the only members of the media who thinks the Doherty campaign is falling short of uncommon integrity. ProJo columnist Ed Fitzpatrick  takes Doherty to task for manipulating Cicilline’s career as a defense attorney in a robocall writing, “the GOP robocall hits below the belt, and it calls for someone to state the obvious: Defense lawyers play an essential role in our criminal justice system and the sins of the client are not visited upon the attorney.” Scott MacKay, of RIPR, lambasts Doherty for getting facts wrong on Simpson-Bowles politics and for the paper tiger Democrats for Doherty, which looks more like a PC Friar alumni group than a political powerhouse.

While Doherty has more money, as Ted Nesi reports, it seems the rest of the media has concluded that – amazingly – Cicilline has the truth on his. The two debate live at PPAC tonight, 7 p.m.

Want to know how to fix Rhode Island’s economy? Sink every resource we can into the I-195 redevelopment project. There is no city or state in the country that wouldn’t love the opportunity to re-develop its cultural and commercial center.

Treasurer Gina Raimondo’s financial literacy program to help Rhode Islanders better manage their money (or lack thereof) is a fantastic idea, and we’re thrilled she is working with the Capital Good Fund. Financial literacy is one of the huge natural advantages the haves enjoy and the have-nots often do not.

Rhode Island is exporting progressives!! Cynthia Dill is a progressive Democrat, who grew up in Barrington, hoping to win the Maine Senate seat formerly occupied by moderate Republican Olympia Snow.

Dan Barry has the best beat in America. If you aren’t, you should read his multi-part profile on a small town in Ohio.

The person with the hardest task [in tonight’s debate] probably isn’t President Obama: it’s moderator and CNN anchor Candy Crowley.”

Justin Katz: Wrong for Tiverton School Committee


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Tiverton should be very wary of school committee candidate and conservative blogger Justin Katz. He’s a good enough guy and you’ve got to admire his tireless work ethic, but politically he’s way outside of the mainstream – and often on issues that matter to public education.

In fact, Katz is radically conservative on social issues and his religious convictions frequently trumps his regard for the Constitution, students and their rights.

Case in point: on Monday I retweeted a high school student’s tweet about a teacher who was forcing her students to pray to Jesus. Katz belittled the situation and the high school student’s initial tweet with this sarcastic reply: “My goodness. Are the kids OK?”

After this pretty obnoxious reply, the rebuttals to Katz came fast and furious. I captured some of them here in this Storify of twitter conversation.

Tiverton parents don’t want a school committee member who reacts this way to a teacher violating student rights. They probably don’t even want a member of their school committee to think that is a funny joke!

What if Katz were elected to the school committee and he had to choose between defending students’ rights and his own religion? Anyone who has ever endured a Justin Katz diatribe on why marriage equality would lead to the degradation of families everywhere, or why gay people should be banned from Boy Scouts would have a hard time believing he would even make a veiled attempt at pretending to put any set of beliefs above his Christianity.

Here’s an example of what he posted to EG Patch when a local church decided not to let the Cub Scouts meet there because of the Boy Scouts prohibition against gay people:

I believe Jesus said, “Let the children come to me.” He also said that, where two are three are gathered in His name, He is there. I’m no theologian, either, but it’s awfully curious that the rector supports the boys one by one, but not by twos and threes.

The passage about children is miraculously relevant, here (Matthew 19:13). Jesus had just finished explaining why Old Testament rules allowing divorce should not apply to His followers, and the disciples said that the impossibility of divorce meant it would be “better not to marry.” He then likens men who cannot abide by such rules to eunuchs.

That’s when the children come forward and the disciples attempt to stop them. “The kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these.”

It’s a profound passage.

Hmm, I’d say it’s more of a creepy and weird passage than a profound one … but either way, I’m pretty sure Tiverton parents don’t want someone on their school committee who thinks a parable about Jesus likening would-be divorcees to eunuchs is profound.

Full disclosure: I am a progressive blogger. So perhaps I’m prone to viewing a fiscal libertarian and social conservative such as Katz as being outside of the political mainstream. So take this for what you think it is worth, and I firmly encourage the local media in Tiverton to do their own due diligence on the matter.

In fact, they already have. Both Tiverton Patch and East Bay Newspapers recently covered inappropriate tweet from Katz about how the Sandywoods Farm development – which combines affordable housing, with live/work spaces for artists and a farm – was perhaps a “good way to subsidize the ‘right’ kind of poor people.” (Tiverton Patch even put together this super cool Storify on the Twitter exchange between Katz and RI Future founder Matt Jerzyk)

But they should do some more. Katz’s adamant belief in far-out Christian dogma is not what the average parent in Tiverton wants from school committee members, and it is up to Tiverton Patch and East Bay Newspapers to at the very least let their readers know that this is what they’d be getting if they voted for Justin Katz.