Chafee vetoes ‘Choose Life’ license plates


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Governor Chafee did the constitutionally correct thing and vetoed a bill that would have funneled state money to an anti-abortion Christian group under the auspices of a “Choose Life” license plate.

Here’s the text of Chafee’s veto message:

In accordance With the provisions of Section 14, Article IX of the Constitution of the State of Rhode Island and Section 43-1-4 of the Rhode Island General Laws, I transmit, with my disapproval, 2013 H 5053, Substitute A, “An Act Relating to Motor and Other Vehicles –  Registration of Vehicles.”

This bill Would allow the Division of Motor Vehicles to offer specialty license plates imprinted  with the words “Choose Life.” In addition to the regularly prescribed motor vehicle registration fee, “Choose Life” plates Would be subject to a $40.00 surcharge; $20.00 Would be allocated to the general fund and $20.00 would be distributed to Care-Net  Rhode Island “to support the  alternative choices of infant adoption and Rhode Island’s Safe Haven.”

The function of a license plate is to register and identify a motor vehicle. Rhode Island residents  may choose to purchase specialty license plates that support politically neutral secular  organizations such as the Rhode Island Community Food Bank, the Friends of the Plum Beach  Lighthouse or the Red Sox Foundation. Conversely, Care-Net – Rhode Island is an affiliate of  CareNet, a private organization originally founded as the Christian Action Council. On its website,  CareNet states that its ultimate aim is to “to share the love and truth of Jesus Christ in Word and

The Framers of the United States and Rhode Island Constitutions constructed strong Walls of  separation between church and state. This bill compels the state to collect and distribute funds to  an organization that advocates a particular religious and political viewpoint. It is my belief that  state participation in the transmission of funds to this organization Would violate the separation of  church and state, one of the fundamental principles upon Which our state was founded.

For this reason, I disapprove of this legislation and respectfully urge your support of this Veto.

Bad Reputation: RI Leads US in Anticorruption and Transparency

Queue the cries of anguish from the haters: the Better Government Association, a Chicago-based nonprofits that aims to expose corruption and inefficiency, announced today that Rhode Island was the state with the soundest anticorruption and transparency laws in the nation; according to its 2013 “Integrity Index“.

This will undoubtedly come as a shock to many who view Rhode Island through the over a century-old prism of “a state for sale, and cheap” created in 1905 by journalist Lincoln Steffens when documenting how the Republican Party stayed in power here. Or those like Bloomberg Businessweek, which used a corruption trial over a decade old as an example of our supposed corruption.

According to the Integrity Index, Rhode Island leads the country in its Open Meetings laws, while staying within the top 15 for all other categories which also included Freedom of Information (ranked 10th), Whistleblower Protection (in a four-way tie for 14th) and Conflict of Interest (ranked 15th). Rhode Island scored a 69.77% out of a 100 percent scale.

While it’s no cause for celebration (and is troubling for the nation), it continues to resist against the falsified perception that Rhode Island is somehow more corrupt than other states. Legally, corruption is the least tolerated in Rhode Island. This sort of information strikes a mortal blow against those that argue that corruption is more permissible under Rhode Island law when it’s pointed out that incidences of corruption in Rhode Island are middling to low when compared against other states.

Given that Rhode Island is joined by New Jersey and Illinois in the top three in the integrity, it’s hard to argue with the conclusion of the BGA’s president and CEO Andy Shaw, who suggests that because of their high-profile reputations for graft and corruption, all three states have passed tough laws to prevent it. This contrasts with states like Montana and Wyoming, which have weak anticorruption laws, likely because it hasn’t been in the public eye.

No one should suggest Common Cause RI pack its bags, though. Unless grading scales have significantly changed since I left school, a 69.77 is a D+, which is passing without much room for maneuver. There’s a lot of work left to get that into the 90s. So critics shouldn’t stop speaking up, they should just tone down the hyperbole unless they want to find themselves with their pants on fire.

I think Joan Jett has some words to play us out.

Defending Abortion Rights in Rhode Island

DSCF1162You wouldn’t know it from the national media’s lack of interest or coverage, but yesterday, across the country, there were a series of pro-choice events organized to protest the theocratic, retrograde and down right dangerous bills being passed in state legislatures from Texas to North Carolina and even (to our shame) Rhode Island. Organized locally by Lindsay Goss and the Rhode Island Anti-Sexism League, yesterday’ protest started at Burnside Park and marched to the State House, where Paula Hodges of Planned Parenthood gave a talk about the political landscape in Rhode Island concerning women’s reproductive rights.

Hodges ended her talk with “three asks,”

Register to vote and vote. Elections matter here, especially in a state with Democratic primaries with such low voter turnouts. The next major election isn’t for another year but mark your calendars. September 9th (2014) it is important to vote in that primary.

Call Governor Chafee (401-222-2080) and ask him to veto the “Choose Life” license plate bill. He has until Wednesday to act and veto the bill. Governor Chafee has been a strong proponent of women’s choice.

Last thing we need is that we need you to sign up and get involved. We need you to run for office and get behind candidates who are running.

Lindsay Goss talked about institutions like CareNet, who, if the “Choose Life” bill passes, stands to collect tens of thousands of dollars with the government acting as its deacon, passing the collection plate, saying, “Crisis pregnancy centers, [like CareNet], give out false medical information to women who are in difficult or complex situations. We don’t need to be intimidated, ashamed or embarrassed instead of being spoken to like the adults that we are.”

Later, Goss added, “This doesn’t end with abortion and reproductive health care. This about full comprehensive health care for every single person.”

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Sherrie Anne Andre and Linsay Goss

Sherrie Anne Andre has a background in working with indigenous women in North Dakota who are victims of domestic violence and spoke movingly of women who found themselves in a situation where the nearest clinic that provided access to abortion was a three or four hour drive away. Many of these women could not afford to support a child, but could also not afford to miss a day’s work or risk losing their job to go to the clinic. She added, “Not only is access to abortion important, but if women don’t have access to clean water, clean air and safe environments then really isn’t a reason to advocate for abortion because we’re not maintaining healthy lives.”

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Amija
Amija's Grandmother must be proud of her
Amija’s Grandmother must be proud of her

Amija, a brave sixteen year old girl spoke to the crowd. She attended the rally with her grandmother. “I would like to think that personally I would have a child, but I’m one person in seven billion, and it’s not my choice for everyone.”

Pat Smith, Rhode Island Progressive Democrats
Pat Smith, Rhode Island Progressive Democrats

Pat Smith, of the Progressive Democrats of Rhode Island, said that “there’s a dreadful irony that people who believe that life begins at conception, but ends at birth. They support nothing for eduction, nothing for children’s programs… If they truly believe in the sanctity of life then they would support all the programs that help maintain quality of life, and they don’t.”

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Mary spoke about a man named “Joe” who was highlighted in an article in the Providence Journal who makes a career out out harassing women at abortion clinics. This man records license plates of people who come and go and even hands a pair of baby socks to women as they leave the clinic.

Mary and some others decided to go out and counter protest this man, who worked to harass women at a place that should have been safe ground. It just so happens that Mary was visibly pregnant with her son at the time…

Ashley
Ashley

Ashley, recently from Texas! spoke about meeting a woman who was actively promoting reproductive rights in the 1960’s and the horrors and tragedies she encountered.

Reclaiming Jesus from the "Pro-Life" crowd
Reclaiming Jesus from the “Pro-Life” crowd

A woman who identified herself as a person of faith said that “At one point in my life I would never have considered myself to be pro-choice, but I realized it’s not just about abortion. It’s never just about abortion it’s about access to contraception, and it’s about the access to women of [post partum] mental health care and what they want to do is strip everything away. They really want to take it all.” She concluded with,

As a person of faith I want to say that these people who are speaking out in the name of God against abortion should be told that Jesus never shamed women.

Mariah spoke of her own abortion experience, and being forced to walk by the protesters who treat every woman on their way in or out of a clinic as going there for abortion, when in fact most of what these clinics do has little to do with abortion. These judgements serve to intimidate women from accessing needed health care.

Full video of all the speakers available here.

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