The warped politics of a 38 Studios default


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38_Studios_LogoRhode Island’s politics are often pretty messy. But with the 38 Studios bonds, they party lines are crystal-clear. There’s a pro-default party and there’s an anti-default party.

I’m am clearly on the anti-default party. I think it tends to be a more coherent; it’s solely about protecting Rhode Island’s credit rating. There’s a lot of bull about “protecting bondholders” and backing Wall Street, but I think the anti-default party couldn’t care less about protecting Wall Street wankers and are thinking that in the event we ever need to borrow again (which is a pretty common -and popular- request of voters on Election Day), we should do so with the best interest rates possible.

The pro-default party is less coherent. My favorite argument so far is the belief in the kinda-smart investor, as proposed by Justin Katz:

What if the state of Rhode Island went out to sell general obligation bonds and set its own terms for the debt?  Maybe Moody’s and S&P would call the bonds junk, but that would simply be a lie.  Backed by the full faith and credit of the state, with the express approval of the voters, the bonds would be as good and as safe a bet as if 38 Studios had never happened.

Are we to believe that the state couldn’t find enough investors who are sufficiently savvy to identify how badly rated the bonds are and to ignore the agencies?

Here’s the thing – the investors Katz has proposed are savvy enough to ignore the credit ratings of the bonds, yet not savvy enough to realize they stand to gain far more by getting the high-interest yield that junk bonds provide. Why buy these bonds when the interest could be much higher? I should walk my abuse of them for saying this, but the investors in the 38 Studios bonds were actually pretty smart. No matter what happens, they get their cash back. By the way, here’s the 10 companies who hold 90% of the bonds.

The left-wing pro-defaulters are more about refusing to dance to the whims of the credit ratings agencies and Wall Street – though I think it also assumes Katz’s magic investors as well. And while I think the impulse to defy Wall Street is admirable, we lack the economy, the population size, and the power to do so.

I’ve arrived at the same conclusion as Bob Plain, conservatives don’t actually care what happens in a default. But this applies to all of RI’s conservatives, Democrat and Republican. Either way a default plays out, it’s a win for them. If there are no substantial penalties, then they were right. If they’re wrong, then the inability of Rhode Island to effectively borrow achieves a long-standing goal for the “starve the beast” crowd. RI budgets couldn’t rely on any borrowing. A greater share of the budget going to service on interest payments means less money spent on social services – which means drastic cuts to programs and government payrolls.

Pro-defaulters are fond of saying the anti-defaulters are kowtowing to Wall Street, but the kind of budget RI would have to implement across the state should there be a default would undoubtedly make conservatives and the credit ratings agencies leap for joy. We’d probably see a budget that did more and more to favor the rich while cutting assistance to the poor. And we only need to look at Greece or Spain for the types of austerity Wall Street would like to see imposed on us.

However, pro- and anti-default are not the only type of political parties we have here in Rhode Island. That’s part of what makes 38 Studios so unique, it was a bipartisan screw-up. It was hatched by a Republican governor, a Republican businessman. It was enabled by a Democratic-led General Assembly. A Republican-led EDC signed off on it. And an independent administration failed to provide proper oversight.

The man who seems to have the cards in his hands right now is Speaker of the House Nicholas Mattiello. The question is how serious Mattiello is about his bipartisan budget. If Republicans follow House Minority leader Brian Newberry’s old advice of using 38 Studios against Democrats in 2014, they’ll have to vote against any budget containing service on the 38 Studios debt. Otherwise, they’ll undercut the argument that Democrats’ responsibility for 38 Studios has led to these straits. Right now they have a pretty decent narrative of “Democrats are in charge right now, so 38 Studios belongs to the Democrats.” They vote for service, they lose the ability to say that.

Mattiello (and Newberry) also has to realize that 38 Studios is a really good argument against incumbents; especially any incumbent who voted for giving the EDC the money it used for the 38 Studios deal. At this point, incumbents have already weathered one campaign with 38 Studios looming over their heads, but a default would really be bad. The status quo of payment for 38 Studios is painful for the state, but bearable. Default would be a massive blow to Rhode Island. It might spur a large-scale primary challenge to Democratic candidates, and rally independent and Republican candidates for the general election.

Since even with that, it’s likely Democrats will hang on to power, implementing a Wall Street-spurred austerity budget would shift more momentum to the Republicans. Regardless of the economic policies of the opposition party, voters tend to vote them in. I think a best-case scenario for Republicans would be ending the veto-proof majority of Democrats; given the strong partisan preference of RI voters for Democrats and the RI Republican Party’s own ineffectiveness.  But with a Republican governor, that might well be enough to implement their policy preferences, especially if bolstered by support from the conservative faction of Democrats.

So defaulting on 38 Studios isn’t just bad policy for the state; for the Democratic Party it’s also bad politics. I’d hope the Democrats realize this, and take their lumps from 38 Studios.

Chafee blasts Block and Fung ‘unfit to be governor’


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chafee_bryantGovernor Linc Chafee has long been the staunchest critic of the 38 Studios loan. He’s also one of the biggest critic of not repaying it.

Today he blasted Republican gubernatorial candidates Ken Block and Allan Fung for suggesting the state shouldn’t make payment on the moral obligation bond to service the 38 Studios loan debt.

Here’s the governor’s statement in its entirety:

The candidates who can’t understand these two obvious truths are unfit to be Governor. The consequences of default would place Rhode Island as one of the lowest state bond ratings in the nation, and the industry would reduce Rhode Island to ‘junk bond’ status. We have been told in no uncertain terms that the reaction to not paying our debt obligations will be severe and have an adverse impact on Rhode Island. In addition, failure to honor our obligations could have harmful effects on the pending lawsuit.

The push by Allan Fung and Ken Block to default is disheartening. We hear from them populist rhetoric that lacks any empirical research or credible support. Common sense dictates that you pay your debts however distasteful.

From the beginning, I have been the most vocal and strongest opponent of the 38 Studios deal. In the summer of 2010, I was denied access to a Rhode Island Economic Development Corporation (now called Commerce RI) meeting where I hoped to speak and state the case on behalf of Rhode Islanders on why this was a bad investment.

Earlier today, I wrote that the Republican candidates for governor have political motivation to not make the payment. Yesterday, Sam Howard wrote that it should be repaid regardless of how bitter the pill.

The state owes $12.5 million on the moral obligation bond to pay for the 38 Studios loan. Because it is a moral obligation bond there are no legal ramifications to default, though there are likely to be fiscal implications. The General Assembly could not include the money in its budget. So, in effect, the state legislature gets to decide the fate of the state’s credit rating during its annual budget process this year.

Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed supports making payment on the bond and House Speaker Nick Mattiello has not yet committed.

Why conservatives play fast and loose with RI’s credit


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Don Carcieri
Don Carcieri

Don Carcieri’s epic economic fail of investing in 38 Studios may have a silver lining for the local conservative movement he once led. And both Republican candidates for governor are for it, while the Democrats are opposed.

The Providence Journal points out that gubernatorial candidates are split along party lines when it comes to repaying the 38 Studios bond.

Allan Fung said the warnings from Wall Street about fiscal repercussions are overstated and Ken Block, who never met a opportunity to issue a press release he didn’t exploit, railed against “the threats coming from Wall Street insiders of dire consequences for the state if they fail to make good on the 38 Studios bond,” according to the ProJo. Leading Democratic candidates were equally united that the bond should be repaid and Sam Howard wrote about why the bond payment should be made in a post yesterday.

Rhode Island owes $12.5 million on the bond we floated to loan Curt Schilling $75 million to move his unproven and ultimately unsuccessful video game company here from Massachusetts – an economic growth strategy birthed by Don Carcieri, the last politically powerful Republican in Rhode Island. The gamble failed in spectacular fashion when 38 Studios went bankrupt in 2012. Because we took a moral obligation bond rather than a general obligation bond, there is no legal responsibility to pay the bond, though not paying would likely make future borrowing more expensive.

That may be a bad outcome for Rhode Island, but that’s not necessarily a bad outcome for the Grand Old Party in Rhode Island. Best known for espousing 40 years of Democratic failure and seeking to shrink the size of government, damage to the state’s credit rating as a result of not paying the 38 Studios bond would serve both these conservative political objectives. It would also make it more expensive to repair aging infrastructure, which would give the construction industry a nice boost. These are policies pushed by local Democratic candidates that Republicans generally don’t care for.

Rhode Island is the only state in the nation with a law that stipulates bond holders will be paid prior to other obligations when it comes to municipal financing. The general assembly passed that law at the expressed interest of protecting city’s and the state’s credit ratings. Maybe the General Assembly should consider legislation that would prevent Republicans from damaging our credit rating too?

John DePetro’s tacit antisemitism


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depetro“The people have won. The atheists have lost! The people have won. The atheists have lost,” crowed John DePetro as he began broadcasting last Tuesday, May 6th, about the Supreme Court decision Greece v. Galloway that ruled that the “practice of beginning legislative sessions with prayers does not violate the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment.”

Was DePetro’s contention that the Supreme Court decision was a victory of “people” over atheists (not “people”) a fair or complete assessment? Given DePetro’s penchant for playing rather loosely with reality, you probably know the answer. But there was an odious undercurrent to DePetro’s celebratory monologuing that morning, a strain of something far darker and more historically dangerous. As DePetro celebrated the Supreme Court’s decision as a victory for Christianity over atheism, he was also celebrating a victory of Christianity over Judaism.

Susan Galloway, who is named in the case, is Jewish, not an atheist. Linda Stephens, her co-plaintiff, is an atheist. The pair were represented not by the ACLU, but by Americans United for the Separation of Church and State. The American Jewish Committee and the Anti-Defamation League, among other Jewish organizations, filed amicus briefs. If the decision can be celebrated as a victory of “the people” over atheists, it can equally be celebrated as a victory of “the people” over Jews. Moreover, the Supreme Court split along religious lines, as all “five justices in the majority were Catholics, and three out of the four dissenters were Jewish.”

Imagine if DePetro had declared this ruling as a victory of Catholics over Jews. We would have immediately recognized such speech as hateful bigotry. Why is it different when he goes after atheists?

Cranston City Councillor Michael Farina spoke* to Gene Valicenti that morning, and DePetro used the clip endlessly on his show. Farina said, “We don’t typically try to push religion on anybody in the city. That doesn’t mean we can’t. This ruling, I think, will give us the ability, if we wanted to say a brief prayer, we could.”

Which prompted DePetro to say, “You would think that this idiot in Cranston would implement [prayer] right away, instead of cowering like the cowards they are, to the ACLU and the atheists” and “Cranston is the worst. First they fold to the ACLU and the atheists with the banner, and now they’re ‘Oh, we’re not pushing religion.’ No one is pushing religion.”

Try this experiment. Replace the word ‘atheists’ with ‘Jews.’ After all, a Jewish woman was at least 50% responsible for bringing this case, and many Jewish groups were involved.

“Cranston is the worst. First they fold to the ACLU and the Jews with the banner, and now they’re ‘Oh, we’re not pushing religion.’ No one is pushing religion.”

“You would think that this idiot in Cranston would implement it right away, instead of cowering like the cowards they are, to the ACLU and the Jews.”

Using the Greece v. Galloway decision as an opportunity to attack atheists reveals Depetro’s ugly bigotry. By neglecting the facts of the case, and pretending the case was brought entirely by atheists, DePetro omitted the fact that many religious minorities and including Jewish Americans, are equally marginalized by such prayers.

Ignoring the opinions and even the very existence of Jewish Americans involved in this court decision is tacit, if not overt antisemitism. I would be interested in hearing DePetro explain exactly how atheists are “mean spirited individuals” for bringing this lawsuit but Jews are not. I’d be interested in hearing John DePetro explain the opening words of his broadcast, “The people have won. The atheists have lost! The people have won. The atheists have lost!” in such a way as to dismiss the humanity of the atheist woman who brought the suit but not the humanity of the Jewish woman involved.

Atheists according to DePetro, are not people. Following DePetro’s logic, neither are Jews, or any other religious minority, for that matter. After a while, one wonders if there is any group, aside from rich, white, non-union Catholic males, that DePetro considers worthy of consideration and humanity.

John DePetro is contemptible.

You can listen to the entirety of his comments on Greece v. Galloway below.

*When will people learn that there is no difference between going on WPRO News and WPRO Talk? Did Cranston City Councillor Michael Farina know that his soundbite for the Gene Valicenti newscast was going to be played relentlessly by DePetro, or that DePetro would spend a half hour of showtime calling him an idiot? How often do I have to point this out?