More than 20% of General Assembly Involved with ALEC


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More than 20 percent of Rhode Island’s General Assembly is affiliated with ALEC, the right-wing group sponsored by corporate America that drafts model legislation for use at state houses across the country, according to a list provided by Rep. Jon Brien, the state chairman and a member of the group’s board of directors.

There are 24 legislators, half of whom are Democrats, associated with the conservative group that has come under fire as of late for sponsoring the Stand Your Ground law in Florida, voter ID efforts and other conservative initiatives. 11 of the members are from the Senate

Additionally, according to Brien, there are 14 former members of ALEC in the General Assembly, all of whom are Democrats, including some of the state’s most liberal legislators, such as Harold Metts, Josh Miller and Rhoda Perry. All of the former members are Senate Democrats

Here’s the list:

Current members

  1. Sen. Dennis Algiere, R – Westerly (12/31/12)
  2. Rep. Samuel Azzinaro, D – Westerly  (12/31/13)
  3. Rep. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt, D – Woonsocket (12/31/13)
  4. Rep. Jon Brien, D – Woonsocket (12/31/12)
  5. Rep. Doreen Costa, R – North Kingstown    (12/31/13)
  6. Rep. John Edwards, D – Tiverton    (12/31/13)
  7. Rep. Laurence Ehrhardt, R – North Kingstown    (12/31/10)
  8. Rep. Michael Marcello, D – Scituate    (12/31/13)
  9. Rep. Peter Martin, D – Newport    (12/31/13)
  10. Rep. Brian Newberry, R – North Smithfield    (12/31/12)
  11. Rep. Daniel Reilly, R – Portsmouth    (12/31/13)
  12. Rep. John Savage, R – East Providence   (12/31/12)
  13. Rep. Lisa  Tomasso, D – Coventry    (12/31/13)
  14. Rep. Robert Watson, R – East Greenwich    (12/31/12)
  15. Sen. David Bates, R – Barrington    (12/31/12)
  16. Sen. Marc Cote, D – Woonsocket (12/31/12)
  17. Sen. Walter Felag, D – Bristol    (12/31/12)
  18. Sen. Dawson Hodgson, R – North Kingstown    (12/31/12)
  19. Sen. Frank Lombardo, D – Johnston    (12/31/12)
  20. Sen. Francis Maher, R – Exeter    (12/31/12)
  21. Sen. Christopher Ottiano, R – Portsmouth    (12/31/12)
  22. Sen. Glenford Shibley, R – Coventry    (12/31/12)
  23. Sen. John Tassoni, D – Smithfield    (12/31/12)
  24. Sen.  William  Walaska, D – Warwick    (12/31/12)

Past members

  1. Sen. Daniel DaPonte, D – East Providence (12/31/10)
  2. Sen. Louis DiPalma, D – Newport   (12/31/10)
  3. Sen. James Doyle, D – Pawtucket    (12/31/10)
  4. Sen. Paul Fogarty, D – Burrillville   ( 12/31/10)
  5. Sen. Hanna Gallo, D – Cranston    (12/31/10)
  6. Sen. Maryellen Goodwin, D – Providence    (12/31/10)
  7. Sen. Paul Jabour, D – Providence    (12/31/10)
  8. Sen. Beatrice Lanzi, D – Cranston    (12/31/10)
  9. Sen. Michael McCaffrey, D – Warwick    (12/31/10)
  10. Sen. Harold  Metts, D – Providence    (12/31/10)
  11. Sen. Joshua Miller, D – Cranston    (12/31/10)
  12. Sen. Rhoda Perry, D – Providence    (12/31/10)
  13. Sen. Roger Picard, D – Woonsocket    (12/31/10)
  14. Sen.  V. Susan Sosnowski, D – South Kingstown    (12/31/10)

 

Brien Joins ALEC Board as Group Comes Under Fire


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Conservative House Democrat Jon Brien of Woonsocket is not only a card carrying member of ALEC, the right wing group backed by some of America’s most powerful corporations that writes model legislation for use in statehouses around the country, but he’s also the lone Democrat on the group’s 17 member board of directors.

“I don’t feel it’s largely Republican but I think it’s a conservative group,” he said, noting that ALEC stands up for low taxes and free market policies which are also core values of his. “I’m a conservative, I make no bones about that.”

He added, “It’s a collaboration between business and legislators. It’s no different than a U.S. senator getting a donation from a corporation.”

Brien said he was just named to the group’s “governing body” in the past month. He said he was introduced to ALEC by former Woonsocket lawmaker and majority leader Jerry Martineau, a past state chair of ALEC who served jail time for political corruption for using his position in the General Assembly to curry business favors with CVS and Blue Cross.

“Jerry and I have always been friends,” Brien said. “I wanted to pick up that mantle.”

Brien will be attending ALEC’s spring task force meeting in Charlotte this May where, he said, “we’ll probably be talking about everything that is going on in the court of public opinion.”

ALEC, which has for years flown below the mainstream media’s radar, has been in the news of late for authoring the Stand Your Ground law in Florida that came under fire when it almost allowed George Zimmerman to go un-prosecuted for the killing of Trayvon Martin. Brien said last week ALEC decided to no longer work on non-economic policy after several large corporations dropped their membership

More recently, Common Cause has accused ALEC of tax evasion because the group is registered as an educational non-profit when it engages in lobbying efforts.

“It’s a corporate front group that is cheating the tax payers,” said John Marion, the executive director of Common Cause RI. Marion and Brien exchanged tweets on the issue yesterday afternoon. “They should own up to the fact that they are lobbyists and register as every other group has to do.”

Brien denied the allegations, saying ALEC has done nothing wrong with its taxes. He said Common Cause has targeted ALEC not because the group is flouting its tax obligation but because ALEC, like Brien, support Voter ID laws, which Common Cause works against.

“They can’t beat us legislatively, so they are coming after us in another way,” Brien said.”Do you think Common Cause is mad about taxes or because we are beating them on Voter ID?”

While he referred to himself as the “godfather of Voter ID in Rhode Island,” he said he did not use the ALEC  model bill for Voter ID. He said he has never proposed an ALEC model bill in the House but he often proposes legislative issues that are also near and dear to ALEC such as anti-tax bills, education reform efforts and others.

Brien said since becoming the state co-chair of ALEC he has signed up some 10 new members from the legislature. He named Reps. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt, Dan Reilly, Doreen Costa, Lisa Tomasso, and Samuel Azzinaro. He said he hopes many of them join him at the annual meeting this August in Salt Lake City.

At that meeting, he will appoint Rhode Island legislators to ALEC task forces. The task forces, he said, pairs legislative members with corporate sponsors to hammer out new model legislation.

Brien, Common Cause Spar over ALEC on Twitter


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Rep. Jon Brien is the local co-chair of ALEC, the pro-business political group that drafts model legislation that supporters, often elected members of state legislatures like Brien, propose at the local level. ALEC has come under fire as of late for authoring the Stand your Ground law in Florida that initially protected George Zimmerman from prosecution.

Common Cause filed a complaint with the IRS today saying the ALEC is violating its status as a non-profit by engaging in lobbying efforts.

Here’s the exchange on Twitter today between Brien and John Marion, the executive director of the local chapter of Common Cause:

RI Progress Report: Taveras Budget, DD Cuts, Welcome Wickford Junction


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Providence Mayor Angel Taveras announces his proposed budget tonight … it’ll be interesting to see how he plugs that $22 million hole in the city’s operating expenses. We’ll learn tonight if any more of the local non-profits decided to pony up and help out the Capital City.

A great editorial from the Projo about the cuts the General Assembly made to services for the developmentally disabled. They write, “…how do administrators’ salaries play in all this? There has been a tendency in some non-profits as well many for-profits for the salaries of top people to rise even as those at lower levels are cut. (Our winner-take-all society . . . .)”

Starting today, you can take the train from Wickford Junction to Providence for $2.50.

Scott MacKay handicaps the one congressional race, CD1, that seems to have grabbed Rhode Island’s attention. And if you’re ready to start paying attention to the campaigns for seats in the General Assembly.

Common Cause says ALEC, the pro-business lobby group that drafts conservative model legislation for state legislatures, is abusing its status as a non-profit.

This page may be updated throughout the day. Click HERE for an archive of the RI Progress Report.

RI Progress Report: Romney in RI and Wildfire Warnings


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Mitt Romney will make his second campaign stop in the Ocean State today. The GOP presidential hopeful will be at the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Warwick for what his campaign calls a Small Business Town Hall. The last time Romney was in Rhode Island he held a fundraiser at a Newport mansion, where the millionaire famous for being out of touch no doubt felt more at home than he will at a hotel in Warwick.

Meanwhile, yesterday at the Crowne Plaza Hotel, business owners disagreed with the congressional delegation on the reasons for RI’s high unemployment rate.

Not the AFL-CIO, though, which endorsed the three Democrats running for re-election to Congress this year.

I thought we only got springtime wildfire warnings in the West? Not only is it a particularly dry year here in Rhode Island, it’s also the warmest year on record.

Speaking of putting out fires … Ozzie Guillen, the new manager of the Miami Marlins, displays how NOT to ingratiate oneself to baseball fans in Florida by praising Fidel Castro.

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation becomes the latest organization to sever ties with ALEC, the business (and, evidently, non-profit)-backed political powerhouse that authors right-wing model legislation for state legislatures.

Need a free bike? Head to South County on Saturday for the Bicycle Recycle, part of Bike Day in South Kingstown.

Gov. Chafee tells the Johnston City Council that the state didn’t do enough over the past three years to help struggling cities.

This page may be updated throughout the day. Click HERE for an archive of the RI Progress Report.

Occupy PVD to protest Pfizer, ALEC today


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An Occupy Providence protester at an action against Pfizer in Groton Conn. (photo courtesy Occupy Providence)

Occupy Providence crosses state lines today for a protest at a Pfizer facility in Groton, Conn. The action is being endorsed by several Occupy groups from Connecticut and Massachusetts, and will include “protest, street theater, puppetry, teach-ins, speakers, music, food, and more,” according to a press release sent this morning.

“Pfizer feels it is their right to control our government with money, have their interests held above the interests of the people,” according to the press release. “Now it is our time to show them we want our cities, our state, and our country back. Plans are being made to show Pfizer we are no longer silent, and refuse to allow their horrors to continue any longer.”

The protest is part of a national day of action designed to target corporations that are involved with ALEC, the American Legislative Exchange Council. Funded by companies like Pfizer, Exxon Mobil and Koch Industries, ALEC writes and then, through local supporters, advocates for legislation at the state level.

“It is no coincidence that so many state legislatures have spent the last year taking the same destructive actions: making it harder for minorities and other groups that support Democrats to vote, obstructing health care reform, weakening environmental regulations and breaking the spines of public- and private-sector unions,” according to a New York Times editorial earlier this month. “All of these efforts are being backed — in some cases, orchestrated — by a little-known conservative organization financed by millions of corporate dollars.”

The Times wrote that ALEC “had been involved with” writing a bill in Virginia that would “require voters to show a form of identification.” A similar bill passed in Rhode Island last legislative session and its sponsor, Rep Jon Brien, D-Woonsocket, has been identified as one of two state chairmen of ALEC in Rhode Island by SourceWatch.org.

“ALEC that has modeled hideous anti-consumer protection laws, anti-democracy voter suppression laws and even disinformation programs about global warming,” according to the Occupy Providence press release. “We call on people to target corporations that are part of the American Legislative Exchange Council which is a prime example of the way corporations buy off legislators and craft legislation that serves the interests of corporations and not people.”

Six RI Legislators Join ALEC, a Pro-Corporate “Model” Legislation Advocate

The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) is a consortium of corporations which drafts and approves “model” legislation for right-wing state legislators on virtually every area of law. As one example, reported by Mike Elk of The Nation, in today’s interview on DemocracyNow!:

“One of the most perverse effects that ALEC has had on American society is the dramatic increase in the amount of prisoners incarcerated in this country. In 1980, there were only half a million people incarcerated in this country. Now that number has quadrupled to nearly 2.4 million…the majority for non-violent offenses. The U.S. has four per cent of the world’s population, but has 25% of the world’s prisoners in this country–and a big part of the reason for that is ALEC.”

As Elk further reports, their advocacy of tougher sentencing laws for drug violations and other offenses benefits the private prison industry–including the Corrections Corporation of America, a member of ALEC. “So they put a mass amount of people in jail,” says Elk, “and then they created a situation where they could exploit that.”

Moreover, using ALEC-approved legislation, states are increasingly using cheap prison labor to displace union workers. Thus, through ALEC’s efforts, are not Blacks, Latinos and poor Whites being subjected to a new form of legalized slavery?

This is but the tip of the iceberg for ALEC’s impact on our political and economic system. As ALECexposed.org summarizes:

“ALEC is not a lobby; it is not a front group. It is much more powerful than that. Through ALEC, behind closed doors, corporations hand state legislators the changes to the law they desire that directly benefit their bottom line. Along with legislators, corporations have membership in ALEC. Corporations sit on all nine ALEC task forces and vote with legislators to approve “model” bills. They have their own corporate governing board which meets jointly with the legislative board. (ALEC says that corporations do not vote on the board.) They fund almost all of ALEC’s operations. Participating legislators, overwhelmingly conservative Republicans, then bring those proposals home and introduce them in statehouses across the land as their own brilliant ideas and important public policy innovations—without disclosing that corporations crafted and voted on the bills. ALEC boasts that it has over 1,000 of these bills introduced by legislative members every year, with one in every five of them enacted into law.”

As cited by ALECexposed.org, six members of the Rhode Island legislature are ALEC members:

  • Sen. Leo Blais
  • Sen. Francis Maher*
  • Sen. Leonidas Raptakis* (Retired to run for Sec. of State)
  • Sen. V. Sosnowski*
  • Sen. Paul Fogarty**
  • Sen. Walter Felag**
  • Rep. Laurence Ehrhardt**

*Alternate, ALEC Energy, Environment and Agriculture Task Force
**Member, ALEC Energy, Environment and Agriculture Task Force

If you are a constituent of any of these members, you may want to ask questions such as these:  Why are you a member of ALEC? What legislative measures have you reviewed?  Have you introduced ALEC legislation at the RI statehouse?  Did you pay the $50 membership fee personally–or did you charge this to taxpayers?


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