Care about Global Warming? Vote Jill Stein for President


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• Jill Stein has called for a “Green New Deal,” with jobs for all who want to work.
• Stein’s campaign manager predicts Obama may win Rhode Island easily, but Greens will do better than expected in the Ocean State.
• If Stein wins 5% of the national and Rhode Island vote, the Green Party will earn state as well as federal status.

Jill Stein in Texas on October 31, protesting the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline

We’ve reached the final weekend of a long Green Party campaign. Since early spring, Greens and other Rhode Island progressives have been working to get Jill Stein on the ballot, introduce her to Rhode Island, and ask voters to help the Greens reach five percent of the presidential turnout.

Should Greens win 5% of the national and state vote, they’ll earn state and federal status. Five percent wins national Greens up to $20 million in financing from the federal presidential campaign fund. Five percent of Rhode Island’s votes—about 24,000—also earns our state party its official status, primary elections, and share of public financing.

Kathleen Rourke of Providence, the Rhode Island party’s state secretary, says that “Jill Stein offers Americans great reasons to vote Green. She’s the only candidate to speak forcefully against climate change, and the only one who’s called for a Green economy, with jobs for all who want to work. And, she’s the only candidate building state-level progressive parties everywhere in the country. Greens are the party for America’s future.”

Greg Gerritt campaigns for Jill Stein, greeting commuters in Providence

Stein herself campaigned in Rhode Island twice this year. She headlined an August 18 rally for “Jobs, Peace, and Planet” at the Roger Williams National Memorial, and talked strategy with local volunteers at a downtown reception on October 11.

Just a few days ago (October 31), Stein joined a blockade of Keystone XL pipeline construction in East Texas, where she linked the massive Canadian tar sands project to extreme weather like Hurricane Sandy. “Hurricane Sandy,” Stein says, “is just a taste of what’s to come under the climate destroying policies of Romney and Obama.”

But when Jill showed up with supplies for tree-sitting protesters at the Tar Sands Blockade, she was arrested—for the second time this year. On October 17, Stein and Honkala were both arrested and detained in handcuffs for eight hours, to prevent their protest at Hofstra University’s presidential debate.

The national Stein campaign has made Rhode Island a priority, placing ads on cable television here, for broadcast during the Democratic Convention. Stein’s national campaign manager Ben Manski explained that President Obama may win Rhode Island easily, but Greens will do better than expected in the Ocean State.

If you’re a progressive voting in Rhode Island, there’s no chance whatsoever that your vote will be decisive in the outcome of the presidential race; Obama will win the state no matter what you do. But there’s every chance that your vote for Jill Stein will bring the Green Party one vote closer to building a permanent progressive option in this state. Don’t waste your vote. Vote Green!

Contact Jill Stein at: http://www.JillStein.org

Tony Affigne is state committee chair for the Green Party of Rhode Island http://www.RIGreens.org

Dickinson Helps Binder; Gordon Fox Cries Foul


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Rep. Spencer Dickinson (Democrat – District 35, South Kingstown)

Soon after learning from Ted Nesi that South Kingstown Rep. Spencer Dickinson invested another $3,820 in a somewhat brazen attempt of defeating his political enemy House Speaker Gordon Fox, we learn that Fox’s campaign has filed yet another complaint with the Board of Elections “against opponent Mark Binder after learning that Rep. Spencer Dickinson donated $3,820.31 to Binder after he had already donated the maximum allowable limit of $1,000,” according to a press release.

“There is nothing independent about his illegal contribution to the Binder campaign,” said Fox spokesperson Bill Fischer in the statement. “This is a clear case of collusion between Rep. Dickinson and the Binder campaign and it violates state law. This campaign has a pattern of complete disregard for the law. At this point voters should be extremely skeptical about Mr. Binder’s ability to serve.”

Update: Peter Kerwin, who works for Binder, sent along this statement:

Spencer Dickinson gave the Binder campaign a generous contribution of $1,000.00.  Beyond that, any expenditure made by Mr. Dickinson was never approved of, authorized or sought by the Binder campaign.  Rep. Dickinson clearly has strong feelings about the Speaker’s corrosive influence on the political process in Rhode Island and the Speaker Fox clearly does not like to have his authority challenged.

The Fox campaign seems to be working on the theory that any expenditure made by anyone who doesn’t like Gordon Fox must be directly connected to the Binder campaign.  That is absurd on its face, as is this latest attempt to distract voters from Gordon Fox’s central role in the 38 Studios debacle, which is back in the news and apparently causing heartburn among the insiders running the Fox campaign.  The fact that 3 of the 5 people who were in the room with Gordon Fox and Michael Corso when the 38 Studios deal got hatched were named in the lawsuit filed by the state yesterday.  It’s been a rough week for the Fox campaign, but making phony complaints with Board of Elections isn’t going to make people forget that Gordon Fox hung the people of Rhode Island out to dry on the 38 Studios deal.

The press release from Fox went on to read:

This is the fourth complaint that the Fox campaign has filed in the past week involving contributions and expenditures surrounding the Binder campaign. Most recently, the Fox campaign reported Mr. Binder to the state Board of Elections for not reporting $2,000 of television advertising in his most recent campaign finance report.

“Mr. Binder has established a clear track record of disregarding campaign finance laws,” Fischer said. “Mr. Dickinson is skirting the law by making additional contributions to the Binder campaign.”

 

Correction: The original version of this story implied that Dickinson donated the $3,820 directly to Mark Binder. That was incorrect.

Excellent: Monty Burns Endorses Mitt Romney


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Ok, if it wasn’t before it is now … with the endorsement of fellow hardhearted millionaire Monty Burns, Mitt Romney is now officially the candidate of the 1 percent. You can watch Mr. Burns’ endorsement video here:

Notice the book titles on Burns’ coffee table, and the pictures over the mantle!

h/t Politicalwire.

Fundraising vs. Good Govt: Which Matters More?


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Harvard professor Lawrence Lessig told the Common Cause annual dinner said it’s not enough to reverse Citizens United, but it’s the place to start.

Note the irony that while one prospective 2014 Democratic candidate for governor was making headlines for raising an almost unfair amount of money from corporate interests from outside of Rhode Island, the other prospective candidate was busy not making headlines for being honored by good government group Common Cause RI with its 2012 Excellence in Public Service Award.

Providence Mayor Angel Taveras was honored with the award for “for his work on redistricting, voting rights, and ethics as a community activist, and now as Mayor,” said a Common Cause release about their annual meeting. “The award is given to those who demonstrate integrity, courage and leadership in pursuit of open and accountable government.”

Adding to the irony is that Harvard professor Lawrence Lessig was also at the Common Cause event to talk on the dangers of such unfettered money in our electoral process. If you’re a fan of good government or even just politics, you’ll really appreciate his presentation, which you can watch here:

Send Congressman David Cicilline Back to Beltway


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Congressman David Cicilline made some mistakes as Mayor of Providence. He made some enemies and he also made some friends. Many will say that a vote for David will be only to prevent the loss of a Democratic seat in the House of Representatives to a Republican. Fair enough. However, to Congressman Cicilline’s credit, he has voted in favor of jobs and the preservation of Medicare and Medicaid as we know it. He has legal experience, mayoral experience and US Congressional experience.

Brendan Doherty, on the other hand, has experience in political ads that bear almost no resemblance to the truth, contradicting his campaign slogan of “uncommon integrity.” He has also allied himself with Mitt Romney and the GOP platform. This includes an infrastructure bill that has been described by Transportation Secretary, Ray La Hood (a former republican) as the worst he’s seen in thirty years of public service. Doherty’s description of Romney as “fantastic” within a week or so of the viral disclosure of Mitt’s infamous 47% diatribe burned his bridges with many of the Democrats for Doherty.

My endorsement goes to David Cicilline.

Progress Report: State of Local Media; At Last, Three-Way Debate; Energy Politics; Dems on Doherty Gets Little Press


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Every progressive – indeed every Rhode Islander, if not all Americans! – owe it to themselves to spend some time reading Providence Monthly’s awesome feature on the state of journalism in Rhode Island. The magazine put together a group of the best and brightest reporters we’ve got here in the Ocean State who kicked around everything from the future of news and how we consume it to media bias and responsibility. Please read this to understand a little better how local journalism is trying to serve you!

Speaking of local journalism … thank heavens for the local debates so we can hear the candidates actually discuss the issues that we should be making our decisions on. Both networks deserve credit for their investment in these commercial drains. Last night WJAR hosted all three CD1 candidates and it made for a much better conversation on the issues than the false narrative of only two viewpoints that the WPRI debates fostered. You can watch the whole thing here if you missed it or read the ProJo’s account here.

Their back and forth on energy policy, I think, is interesting to note: Doherty’s idea is to drill baby drill, a disastrous idea from an environmental perspective.Everyone short of Sarah Palin and Dick Cheney pretty much agreed on this until we started realizing how poor we are back in 2008/09.

Cicilline, on the other hand, had a much more nuanced approach that doesn’t make for as a good as sound byte. He spoke of a bill he introduced that would better regulate Wall Street trading of oil. After all, it isn’t supply, which is down, that is driving up the price of oil, it’s quite literally the stock market’s need to maximize money-making on all trad-able commodities. More drilling would serve Big Oil and Wall Street  more than the consumer. More regulation would serve the consumer more than Big Oil and Wall Street.

In a nutshell, that’s the big policy difference between Doherty and Cicilline: the Doherty, whether he even understands this or not, would serve the 1 percent while Cicilline would represent the rest of us.

Speaking of the Cicilline Doherty campaign, and local media bias … the entire Democratic party came together to call out Brendan “Uncommon Integrity” Doherty for his historically negative and misleading campaign. And it hardly got covered at all. This is actually a very important component of what voters should know about Brendan Doherty, who is asking us to trust that he won’t be a shill for the GOP if we elect him to Congress … but what we know of his campaign is that he represents himself differently from how he behaves. If local political reporters truly believe it is part of their jobs to call balls and strikes, they should be doing so on this issue.

Aaron Regunberg writes an excellent piece in GoLocal today about Gordon Fox’s come-to-progressive awakening this campaign season. Here’s the comment Regunberg, one of the best local opinion writers and thinkers around, made on my Gordon Fox endorsement. By the way, read all the comments to see how disappointed some RI Future readers are with my supporting Gordon Fox over Mark Binder…

Narragansett Patch has a fun story about a recently-returned Charlie-O’s flag that was stolen from the popular bar with URI students, mysteriously enough, during my days as an undergrad and Charlie O’s patron… (Sorry Steve Greenwell – some mysteries are better left unsolved…)

Speaking of URI, the Rhody Rams mens hoops team opens its exhibition season against the Coast Guard Academy tonight in the Keaney Closet. Being the biggest publicly-financed sports team in the state, the URI Rams are, in my humble opinion, the official athletic squad of the local progressive community!

And speaking of sports … we’re suing Curt Schilling. I’m glad from an informational perspective and it’s certainly necessary from a legal liability point of view, but I’m also worried this whole thing ends with Big Schill putting some sort of Ruthian hex on the Ocean State.

Reforming the Legislature


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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)

Ask 100 people about Rhode Island’s government and 105 will say it’s broken, and probably not fixable.

Phase 1: Attack the Assumptions

From day one, my campaign for House District 4 has been about challenging that truism. It was clear to me at the start that the Speaker of the House used his power to push through the 38 Studios Video Game disaster, and then denied any responsibility for the outcome.

The most powerful man in the state of Rhode Island beaten by an unknown independent? That would create an opportunity for a breath of fresh air. At the start of the campaign, many people questioned whether my attempt was even credible. Today, few doubt that it is. We’ve had our fair share of media publicity. The smiles on the faces of neighbors and strangers throughout the district when I knock on their doors and give my pitch are reassuring too.

Currently, it’s looking like a close race, so we’re pushing ahead our next plan…

Phase 2: Change the Rules

Politics abhors a power vacuum, and many have expressed fears that whoever comes post-Fox will be “worse.” Better the devil you know? That’s so old school. How about a new way of running the State government that actually works for the State?

The old system works like this. Thirty-eight representatives agree to elect one of their members a Speaker. Then they give all their power to the Speaker, do whatever he (or she) says, and beg for scraps.

Why? I realize that the existence of a Speaker is specified in the State’s Constitution, but the system seems to work well only for the leadership. And the special interests who contribute to campaigns and lobbyists.

It doesn’t seem to work very well for the citizens, voters and taxpayers of this state. It doesn’t seem to work very well for the individual legislators outside the circle of power. Arrangements are made in back rooms, deals are cut, and votes are delayed until the last minute so that no one really knows what is going on.

Today I am inviting and challenging the current and future reps to adopt a government reform proposal in caucus before electing the next Speaker of the House.

Members of the House can and must make it a priority to fix the structural problems that led to such controversial decisions as the 38 Studios deal and this year’s last minute mash-up of the Board of Regents and the Office of Higher Education.  We must adopt a drastic reform plan and secure a commitment from any candidate for Speaker to support the plan before committing our votes.

The starter elements for this plan include:

  • The proposal put forth by State Representative Spencer Dickinson to prohibit campaign fundraising during the legislative session. This will prevent the corrosive contributions before, during and after working on legislation that benefit the special interests.
  • Amending the House rules to prevent the House Finance Chair from introducing amendments to the budget without prior notice. This will prevent late night amendments, like the one that smashed together the Board of Regents and office of Higher Ed.
  • Requiring the General Assembly to comply with the 48-hour notice provision of the Open Meetings Law for both committee and floor actions, thus making our government truly open and public.

There are other ideas floating around: a deadline for bringing bills out of committee before the end of the session to prevent the onslaught of last-minute votes and give legislators time to actually read the bills; allotting time in the calendar for legislators to call for votes from the floor for bills, thus short-circuiting the dead-in-committee morass.

Putting the power of the legislator into the hands of one person doesn’t work for the State. It doesn’t work for the voters, and it costs taxpayers money.  Meaningful steps have to be taken to prevent the kind of scandals and abuses of power we have seen under Gordon Fox and his predecessors.  It’s time to move ahead.

We know that every candidate is getting the message that people are fed up with the kinds of deals and abuses that produced 38 Studios.  So let’s do something about it and make fixing state government a priority.

Legislators need to come together in caucus and say that there will be no vote for Speaker until a roadmap for government reform is in place and has the support of the woman or man elected speaker.

Every legislator who supports this roadmap to reform will be able to tell his or her constituents that ‘I stood up and fought to change the way business is done in the State House.’

Most important, these kinds of changes are wins for the people, the voters and the taxpayers.

The rules that we have haven’t been working. It’s time to change the rules.